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Tsukor, V
Virrankoski, R
Strachan, I.B
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Authors
Virrankoski, R
Madetoja, M
Biswas, A
Vidana Gamage, D.N
Strachan, I.B
Tsukor, V
Scholz, C
Nietfeld, W
Heinrich, T
Mosler , T
Lorenz, F
Najdenko, E
Möller, A
Mentrup, D
Ruckelshausen, A
Hinck, S
Topics
Engineering Technologies and Advances
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
Site-Specific Nutrient, Lime and Seed Management
Type
Oral
Year
2014
2018
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1. CANopen Implementation To Wireless Sensor Network

Field buses are widely applied in the control of mobile machines. They enable us to build embedded control systems, where the sensors and actuators are connected to each other by the bus. The most commonly used bus standard for Control Area Network (CAN) between tractors and implements in agriculture and forestry is ISOBUS. Once the number of sensors and actuators increases in the implement side, a combination of ISOBUS and CANopen can be applied. CANopen is a communication protocol... R. Virrankoski, M. Madetoja

2. High Resolution Soil Moisture Monitoring Using Active Heat Pulse Method with Fiber Optic Temperature Sensing at Field Scale

Knowledge of spatial and temporal variability of soil moisture is critical for site specific irrigation management at field scale. However, installation feasibility, cost and between-sensor variability restrict the use of many point–based sensors at field scale. Active heat pulse method with fiber optic temperature sensing (AHFO) has shown a potential to provide soil moisture data at sub-meter intervals along a fiber optic cable to a distance >10000 meters. Despite the limited number... A. Biswas, D.N. Vidana gamage, I.B. Strachan

3. soil2data: Concept for a Mobile Field Laboratory for Nutrient Analysis

Knowledge of the small-scale nutrient status of arable land is an important basis for optimizing fertilizer use in crop production. A mobile field laboratory opens up the possibility of carrying out soil sampling and nutrient analysis directly on the field. In addition to the benefits of fast data availability and the avoidance of soil material transport to the laboratory, it provides a future foundation for advanced application options, e.g. a high sampling density, sampling of small sub-fields... V. Tsukor, C. Scholz, W. Nietfeld, T. Heinrich, T. Mosler , F. Lorenz, E. Najdenko, A. Möller, D. Mentrup, A. Ruckelshausen, S. Hinck