68,616 research outputs found
Strategies for Real-Time Position Control of a Single Atom in Cavity QED
Recent realizations of single-atom trapping and tracking in cavity QED open
the door for feedback schemes which actively stabilize the motion of a single
atom in real time. We present feedback algorithms for cooling the radial
component of motion for a single atom trapped by strong coupling to
single-photon fields in an optical cavity. Performance of various algorithms is
studied through simulations of single-atom trajectories, with full dynamical
and measurement noise included. Closed loop feedback algorithms compare
favorably to open-loop "switching" analogs, demonstrating the importance of
applying actual position information in real time. The high optical information
rate in current experiments enables real-time tracking that approaches the
standard quantum limit for broadband position measurements, suggesting that
realistic active feedback schemes may reach a regime where measurement
backaction appreciably alters the motional dynamics.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, submitted to J. Opt. B Quant. Semiclass. Op
MIT's interferometer CST testbed
The MIT Space Engineering Research Center (SERC) has developed a controlled structures technology (CST) testbed based on one design for a space-based optical interferometer. The role of the testbed is to provide a versatile platform for experimental investigation and discovery of CST approaches. In particular, it will serve as the focus for experimental verification of CSI methodologies and control strategies at SERC. The testbed program has an emphasis on experimental CST--incorporating a broad suite of actuators and sensors, active struts, system identification, passive damping, active mirror mounts, and precision component characterization. The SERC testbed represents a one-tenth scaled version of an optical interferometer concept based on an inherently rigid tetrahedral configuration with collecting apertures on one face. The testbed consists of six 3.5 meter long truss legs joined at four vertices and is suspended with attachment points at three vertices. Each aluminum leg has a 0.2 m by 0.2 m by 0.25 m triangular cross-section. The structure has a first flexible mode at 31 Hz and has over 50 global modes below 200 Hz. The stiff tetrahedral design differs from similar testbeds (such as the JPL Phase B) in that the structural topology is closed. The tetrahedral design minimizes structural deflections at the vertices (site of optical components for maximum baseline) resulting in reduced stroke requirements for isolation and pointing of optics. Typical total light path length stability goals are on the order of lambda/20, with a wavelength of light, lambda, of roughly 500 nanometers. It is expected that active structural control will be necessary to achieve this goal in the presence of disturbances
Mass-Market Receiver for Static Positioning: Tests and Statistical Analyses
Nowadays, there are several low cost GPS receivers able to provide both pseudorange and carrier phase measurements in the L1band, that allow to have good realtime performances in outdoor condition. The present paper describes a set of dedicated tests in order to evaluate the positioning accuracy in static conditions. The quality of the pseudorange and the carrier phase measurements let hope for interesting results. The use of such kind of receiver could be extended to a large number of professional applications, like engineering fields: survey, georeferencing, monitoring, cadastral mapping and cadastral road. In this work, the receivers performance is verified considering a single frequency solution trying to fix the phase ambiguity, when possible. Different solutions are defined: code, float and fix solutions. In order to solve the phase ambiguities different methods are considered. Each test performed is statistically analyzed, highlighting the effects of different factors on precision and accurac
The Cosmic Infrared Background Experiment (CIBER): A Sounding Rocket Payload to Study the Near Infrared Extragalactic Background Light
The Cosmic Infrared Background Experiment (CIBER) is a suite of four instruments designed to study the near infrared (IR) background light from above the Earth's atmosphere. The instrument package comprises two imaging telescopes designed to characterize spatial anisotropy in the extragalactic IR background caused by cosmological structure during the epoch of reionization, a low resolution spectrometer to measure the absolute spectrum of the extragalactic IR background, and a narrow band spectrometer optimized to measure the absolute brightness of the Zodiacal light foreground. In this paper we describe the design and characterization of the CIBER payload. The detailed mechanical, cryogenic, and electrical design of the system are presented, including all system components common to the four instruments. We present the methods and equipment used to characterize the instruments before and after flight, and give a detailed description of CIBER's flight profile and configurations. CIBER is designed to be recoverable and has flown twice, with modifications to the payload having been informed by analysis of the first flight data. All four instruments performed to specifications during the second flight, and the scientific data from this flight are currently being analyzed
Nonlocal feedback in nonlinear systems
A shifted or misaligned feedback loop gives rise to a two-point nonlocality
that is the spatial analog of a temporal delay. Important consequences of this
nonlocal coupling have been found both in diffusive and in diffractive systems,
and include convective instabilities, independent tuning of phase and group
velocities, as well as amplification, chirping and even splitting of localized
perturbations. Analytical predictions about these nonlocal systems as well as
their spatio-temporal dynamics are discussed in one and two transverse
dimensions and in presence of noise.Comment: 13 pages, to be published in EPJ
Recent Sikorsky R and D progress
The recent activities and progress in four specific areas of Sikorsky's research and development program are summarized. Since the beginning of the S-76 design in 1974, Sikorsky has been aggressively developing the technology for using composite materials in helicopter design. Four specific topics are covered: advanced cockpit/controller efforts, fly-by-wire controls on RSRA/X-Wing, vibration control via higher harmonic control, and main rotor aerodynamic improvements
Visualization and Correction of Automated Segmentation, Tracking and Lineaging from 5-D Stem Cell Image Sequences
Results: We present an application that enables the quantitative analysis of
multichannel 5-D (x, y, z, t, channel) and large montage confocal fluorescence
microscopy images. The image sequences show stem cells together with blood
vessels, enabling quantification of the dynamic behaviors of stem cells in
relation to their vascular niche, with applications in developmental and cancer
biology. Our application automatically segments, tracks, and lineages the image
sequence data and then allows the user to view and edit the results of
automated algorithms in a stereoscopic 3-D window while simultaneously viewing
the stem cell lineage tree in a 2-D window. Using the GPU to store and render
the image sequence data enables a hybrid computational approach. An
inference-based approach utilizing user-provided edits to automatically correct
related mistakes executes interactively on the system CPU while the GPU handles
3-D visualization tasks. Conclusions: By exploiting commodity computer gaming
hardware, we have developed an application that can be run in the laboratory to
facilitate rapid iteration through biological experiments. There is a pressing
need for visualization and analysis tools for 5-D live cell image data. We
combine accurate unsupervised processes with an intuitive visualization of the
results. Our validation interface allows for each data set to be corrected to
100% accuracy, ensuring that downstream data analysis is accurate and
verifiable. Our tool is the first to combine all of these aspects, leveraging
the synergies obtained by utilizing validation information from stereo
visualization to improve the low level image processing tasks.Comment: BioVis 2014 conferenc
MIT Space Engineering Research Center
The Space Engineering Research Center (SERC) at MIT, started in Jul. 1988, has completed two years of research. The Center is approaching the operational phase of its first testbed, is midway through the construction of a second testbed, and is in the design phase of a third. We presently have seven participating faculty, four participating staff members, ten graduate students, and numerous undergraduates. This report reviews the testbed programs, individual graduate research, other SERC activities not funded by the Center, interaction with non-MIT organizations, and SERC milestones. Published papers made possible by SERC funding are included at the end of the report
Dynamic clamp with StdpC software
Dynamic clamp is a powerful method that allows the introduction of artificial electrical components into target cells to simulate ionic conductances and synaptic inputs. This method is based on a fast cycle of measuring the membrane potential of a cell, calculating the current of a desired simulated component using an appropriate model and injecting this current into the cell. Here we present a dynamic clamp protocol using free, fully integrated, open-source software (StdpC, for spike timing-dependent plasticity clamp). Use of this protocol does not require specialist hardware, costly commercial software, experience in real-time operating systems or a strong programming background. The software enables the configuration and operation of a wide range of complex and fully automated dynamic clamp experiments through an intuitive and powerful interface with a minimal initial lead time of a few hours. After initial configuration, experimental results can be generated within minutes of establishing cell recording
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