A novel method for estimating energy consumption of networks at the national scale is presented. Accurate estimations of network energy consumption are increasingly important because of continuously increasing network traffic and the need to assess emerging energy technologies to achieve overall energy efficiency. However, direct estimations are not practical because of the complex, widely diverse, and undisclosed configurations of actual networks. The impact of each network's energy overhead, which is the energy consumed above that required to accommodate network traffic, on the energy consumption associated with these complex configurations must be inferred. In the proposed method, the energy overhead is quantitatively evaluated and introduced as overhead factors by comparing the energy consumption estimated from network configuration models (bottom-up methods) with reports of actual energy consumption (top-down methods). This proposed "unified" method is capable of long-term predictions of future technology trends, including network architecture changes. In this paper, we consider different overhead factors that serve as fitting parameters for different network areas, and demonstrate the procedure for determining each of these parameters through an estimation of the fixed broadband Internet in Japan. This unified method consistently estimates the long-term evolution of energy consumption from 2000 to 2030.Index Terms-Communication networks, Internet, network energy consumption, optical fiber communication.
An outbreak of acute gastroenteritis consisting of 57 cases occurred in a mental health care facility in Takasaki city, Japan during 6th February and 27th March 2002. A total of 18 fecal specimens collected from 17 residents and one member of the medical staff during this outbreak were tested for the presence of viral enteropathogens by RT-PCR and latex agglutination. Group A rotavirus and sapovirus were detected in 5 out of 18 fecal specimens (55.6%). To our knowledge, this is the first finding of an outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with co-circulation of different kinds of viruses such as group A rotavirus and sapovirus. All of group A rotaviruses were typed further as P[4]G2 strains. Both rotavirus and sapovirus were subjected to molecular analysis by sequencing. It was noteworthy that all rotaviruses and sapoviruses had high homologies, respectively, to each other and sapoviruses presented a potential novel sapovirus genogroup I (GI) genotype, which was obviously different from any GI genotypes (GI-a, b, c, and d). The outbreak associated with these viruses spread gradually from dormitory to dormitory, suggesting a spread by person-to-person contact, although investigation on the route of transmission of the outbreak is lacking. The findings confirm the presence of group A rotavirus and sapovirus are important in acute gastroenteritis among adults in Japan.
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