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Main Authors: Karras, Oliver, Göpfert, Jan, Kuckertz, Patrick, Pelser, Tristan, Auer, Sören
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.13365
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author Karras, Oliver
Göpfert, Jan
Kuckertz, Patrick
Pelser, Tristan
Auer, Sören
author_facet Karras, Oliver
Göpfert, Jan
Kuckertz, Patrick
Pelser, Tristan
Auer, Sören
contents Engineering sciences, such as energy system research, play an important role in developing solutions to technical, environmental, economic, and social challenges of our modern society. In this context, the transformation of energy systems into climate-neutral systems is one of the key strategies for mitigating climate change. For the transformation of energy systems, engineers model, simulate and analyze scenarios and transformation pathways to initiate debates about possible transformation strategies. For these debates and research in general, all steps of the research process must be traceable to guarantee the trustworthiness of published results, avoid redundancies, and ensure their social acceptance. However, the analysis of energy systems is an interdisciplinary field as the investigations of large, complex energy systems often require the use of different software applications and large amounts of heterogeneous data. Engineers must therefore communicate, understand, and (re)use heterogeneous scientific knowledge and data. Although the importance of FAIR scientific knowledge and data in the engineering sciences and energy system research is increasing, little research has been conducted on this topic. When it comes to publishing scientific knowledge and data from publications, software, and datasets (such as models, scenarios, and simulations) openly available and transparent, energy system research lags behind other research domains. According to Schmitt et al. and Nieße et al., engineers need technical support in the form of infrastructures, services, and terminologies to improve communication, understanding, and (re)use of scientific knowledge and data.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_13365
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Organizing Scientific Knowledge From Energy System Research Using the Open Research Knowledge Graph
Karras, Oliver
Göpfert, Jan
Kuckertz, Patrick
Pelser, Tristan
Auer, Sören
Digital Libraries
Engineering sciences, such as energy system research, play an important role in developing solutions to technical, environmental, economic, and social challenges of our modern society. In this context, the transformation of energy systems into climate-neutral systems is one of the key strategies for mitigating climate change. For the transformation of energy systems, engineers model, simulate and analyze scenarios and transformation pathways to initiate debates about possible transformation strategies. For these debates and research in general, all steps of the research process must be traceable to guarantee the trustworthiness of published results, avoid redundancies, and ensure their social acceptance. However, the analysis of energy systems is an interdisciplinary field as the investigations of large, complex energy systems often require the use of different software applications and large amounts of heterogeneous data. Engineers must therefore communicate, understand, and (re)use heterogeneous scientific knowledge and data. Although the importance of FAIR scientific knowledge and data in the engineering sciences and energy system research is increasing, little research has been conducted on this topic. When it comes to publishing scientific knowledge and data from publications, software, and datasets (such as models, scenarios, and simulations) openly available and transparent, energy system research lags behind other research domains. According to Schmitt et al. and Nieße et al., engineers need technical support in the form of infrastructures, services, and terminologies to improve communication, understanding, and (re)use of scientific knowledge and data.
title Organizing Scientific Knowledge From Energy System Research Using the Open Research Knowledge Graph
topic Digital Libraries
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.13365