492 research outputs found

    Echo statistics associated with discrete scatterers: A tutorial on physics-based methods

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    Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2018. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 144(6), (2018): 3124-3171. doi: 10.1121/1.5052255.When a beam emitted from an active monostatic sensor system sweeps across a volume, the echoes from scatterers present will fluctuate from ping to ping due to various interference phenomena and statistical processes. Observations of these fluctuations can be used, in combination with models, to infer properties of the scatterers such as numerical density. Modeling the fluctuations can also help predict system performance and associated uncertainties in expected echoes. This tutorial focuses on “physics-based statistics,” which is a predictive form of modeling the fluctuations. The modeling is based principally on the physics of the scattering by individual scatterers, addition of echoes from randomized multiple scatterers, system effects involving the beampattern and signal type, and signal theory including matched filter processing. Some consideration is also given to environment-specific effects such as the presence of boundaries and heterogeneities in the medium. Although the modeling was inspired by applications of sonar in the field of underwater acoustics, the material is presented in a general form, and involving only scalar fields. Therefore, it is broadly applicable to other areas such as medical ultrasound, non-destructive acoustic testing, in-air acoustics, as well as radar and lasers.The content of this work is based on research conducted in the past from years of support from the U.S. Office of Naval Research and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA. Writing of the manuscript by W.-J.L. was also supported by the Science and Engineering Enrichment and Development Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, WA. The authors are grateful to Dr. Benjamin A. Jones of the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA for his thoughtful suggestions on an early draft of the manuscript. The authors are also grateful to the reviewer for the in-depth and constructive recommendations. W.-J.L. and K.B. contributed equally to this work.2019-06-0

    Ambiguity Function Analysis and Direct-Path Signal Filtering of the Digital Audio Broadcast (DAB) Waveform for Passive Coherent Location (PCL)

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    This research presents an ambiguity function analysis of the digital audio broadcast (DAB) waveform and one signal detection approach based on signal space projection techniques that effectively filters the direct-path signal from the receiver target channel. Currently, most Passive Coherent Location (PCL) research efforts are focused and based on frequency modulated (FM) radio broadcasts and analog television (TV) waveforms. One active area of PCL research includes the search for new waveforms of opportunity that can be exploited for PCL applications. As considered for this research, one possible waveform of opportunity is the European digital radio standard DAB. For this research, the DAB performance is analyzed for application as a PCL waveform of opportunity. For this analysis, DAB ambiguity function calculations and ambiguity surface plots are created and evaluated. Signal detection capability, to include characterization of time-delay and Doppler-shift measurement accuracy and resolution, is investigated and determined to be quite acceptable for the DAB wavefor

    Cavity Field Control for Linear Particle Accelerators

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    High-energy linear particle accelerators enable exploration of the microscopic structure of pharmaceuticals, solar cells, fuel cells, high-temperature superconductors, and the universe itself. These accelerators accelerate charged particles using oscillating magnetic fields that are confined in metal cavities. The amplitudes and phases of the electromagnetic fields need to be accurately controlled by fast feedback loops for proper accelerator operation.This thesis is based on the author's work on performance analysis and control design for the field control loops of the linear accelerator at the European Spallation Source (ESS), a neutron microscope that is under construction in Lund, Sweden. The main contribution of the thesis is a comprehensive treatment of the field control problem during flat-top, which gives more insight into the control aspects than previous work. The thesis demonstrates that a key to understand the dynamics of the field control loop is to represent it as a single-input single-output system with complex coefficients. This representation is not new itself but has seen limited use for field control analysis.The thesis starts by developing practical and theoretical tools for analysis and control design for complex-coefficients systems. This is followed by two main parts on cavity field control. The first part introduces parametrizations that enable a better understanding of the cavity dynamics and discusses the most essential aspects of cavity field control. The second part builds on the first one and treats a selection of more advanced topics that all benefit from the complex-coefficient representation: analysis of a polar controller structure, field control design in the presence of parasitic cavity resonances, digital downconversion for low-latency feedback, energy-optimal excitation of accelerating cavities, and an intuitive design method for narrowband disturbance rejection. The results of the investigations in this thesis provide a better understanding of the field control problem and have influenced the design of the field controllers at ESS

    Technique for Measurement of Weld Resistance for AC Resistance Spot Welding via Instantaneous Phasor Measurement

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    The resistance measurement in the resistance spot welding (RSW), is an ongoing research topic. The high current flow during the welding process induces an electromagnetic field in the wires which are attached to the electrodes to measure tip voltage. This results an additional voltage drop which is proportional to the derivative of current. Also the presence of silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) in the welding power supply generates harmonics in both supply voltage and current. These issues together complicate the methods for resistance estimation. A set of simultaneous linear equations is derived for the on-line measurement of dynamic resistance and induced voltage constant by using the dynamic circuit analysis of weld setup. This can be solved to determine the weld resistance using instantaneous phasors measurements for the 1st, 3rd and 5th harmonics of current and measured voltage signals. The instantaneous phasor measurements for these desired harmonics are obtained by employing the following proposed method. In this thesis, a new method for the measurement of instantaneous phasor is proposed for the narrow band signals. The proposed algorithm is based on the internal model principle (IMP) defined for the cancellation of a sinusoidal disturbance signal. The IMP has two states, exhibiting the properties of being sinusoidal and orthogonal. The instantaneous values of IMP states are defined as real and imaginary components of a complex signal at each time instant. The instantaneous measurements of envelope and phase of a sinusoidal signal are determined from instantaneous values of complex signal by using arithmetic properties of complex numbers. In case of signal comprising of sum of sinusoids of different frequencies, the approach for obtaining instantaneous phasor for each sinusoidal component is presented by connecting multiple internal models in the parallel and open-loop configuration. The instantaneous phasor measurement of fundamental frequency signal is not only advantageous in detecting faults like short circuiting, harmonic distortion and frequency variations but it can also be applied to protect power system from these faults. In this work, the applicability of the proposed instantaneous phasor measurement algorithm is analyzed for scenarios of power disturbances due to the the harmonic distortion and decaying DC offset. The results are discussed and compared with few existing methods

    Wideband active antenna cancellation

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    Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (leaf 91).There exists a simultaneous transmit and receive antenna system where the transmitted signal is creating wideband interference of the receiver. To resolve this interference problem, the isolation between the transmit antenna and the receive antenna must be increased. This thesis analyzes and discusses various strategies for antenna isolation and demonstrates the feasibility of an adaptive filtering approach on active signal cancellation. The final system design demonstrates that, with a broadband interference source in close proximity to a receiver, it is possible to provide 30 dB of isolation by using active cancellation.by Hana L. Adaniya.M.Eng

    Basics of RF electronics

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    RF electronics deals with the generation, acquisition and manipulation of high-frequency signals. In particle accelerators signals of this kind are abundant, especially in the RF and beam diagnostics systems. In modern machines the complexity of the electronics assemblies dedicated to RF manipulation, beam diagnostics, and feedbacks is continuously increasing, following the demands for improvement of accelerator performance. However, these systems, and in particular their front-ends and back-ends, still rely on well-established basic hardware components and techniques, while down-converted and acquired signals are digitally processed exploiting the rapidly growing computational capability offered by the available technology. This lecture reviews the operational principles of the basic building blocks used for the treatment of high-frequency signals. Devices such as mixers, phase and amplitude detectors, modulators, filters, switches, directional couplers, oscillators, amplifiers, attenuators, and others are described in terms of equivalent circuits, scattering matrices, transfer functions; typical performance of commercially available models is presented. Owing to the breadth of the subject, this review is necessarily synthetic and non-exhaustive. Readers interested in the architecture of complete systems making use of the described components and devoted to generation and manipulation of the signals driving RF power plants and cavities may refer to the CAS lectures on Low-Level RF.Comment: 36 pages, contribution to the CAS - CERN Accelerator School: Specialised Course on RF for Accelerators; 8 - 17 Jun 2010, Ebeltoft, Denmar
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