149 research outputs found
One-cycle control of switching converters
A new large-signal nonlinear control technique is proposed to control the duty-ratio d of a switch such that in each cycle the average value of a switched variable of the switching converter is exactly equal to or proportional to the control reference in the steady-state or in a transient. One-cycle control rejects power source perturbations in one switching cycle; the average value of the switched variable follows the dynamic reference in one switching cycle; and the controller corrects switching errors in one switching cycle. There is no steady-state error nor dynamic error between the control reference and the average value of the switched variable. Experiments with a constant frequency buck converter have demonstrated the robustness of the control method and verified the theoretical predictions. This new control method is very general and applicable to all types of pulse-width-modulated, resonant-based, or soft-switched switching converters for either voltage or current control in continuous or discontinuous conduction mode. Furthermore, it can be used to control any physical variable or abstract signal that is in the form of a switched variable or can be converted to the form of a switched variable
Dynamics of one-cycle controlled Äuk converters
One-cycle control is a nonlinear control method. The flow-graph modeling technique is employed to study the large-signal and small-signal dynamic behavior of one-cycle controlled switching converters. Systematic design method for one-cycle control systems is provided with the Äuk converter as an example. Physical insight is given which explains how one-cycle control achieves instant control without infinite loop gain. Experimental results demonstrate that a Äuk converter with one-cycle control reflects the power source perturbation in one-cycle and the average of the diode voltage follows the control reference in one cycle
A practical approach for magnetic core-loss characterization
A practical approach for magnetic core loss characterization up to a few megahertz is presented. An error analysis is performed, revealing that corrections are needed to compensate for errors introduced by extra phase shifts inherent in a measurement setup, and by shunt parasitic capacitance associated with an inductive device under test. A simple technique is proposed to control the error, so as to satisfy prescribed tolerances. Extensive meassurements done on a TDK PC40 core yield results which support the analysis. Several sample cores are then characterized at a few megahertz
Collective state measurement of mesoscopic ensembles with single-atom resolution
For mesoscopic ensembles containing 100 or more atoms we measure the total
atom number and the number of atoms in a specific hyperfine state with
single-atom resolution. The measurement detects the atom-induced shift of the
resonance frequency of an optical cavity containing the ensemble. This work
extends the range of cavity-based detection with single-atom resolution by more
than an order of magnitude in atom number, and provides the readout capability
necessary for Heisenberg-limited interferometry with atomic ensembles.Comment: 5 pages, 4 pdf figure
On the Secular Behavior of Irregular Satellites
Although analytical studies on the secular motion of the irregular satellites
have been published recently, these theories have not yet been satisfactorily
reconciled with the results of direct numerical integrations. These
discrepancies occur because in secular theories the disturbing function is
averaged over orbital motions, whereas instead one should take into account
some large periodic terms, most notably the so-called ``evection''. We
demonstrate that such terms can be incorporated into the Kozai formalism, and
that our synthetic approach produces much better agreement with results from
symplectic integrations. Using this method, we plot the locations of secular
resonances in the orbital-element space, and we note that the distribution of
irregular satellite clusters appears to be non-random. We find that the large
majority of irregular-satellite groups cluster close to the secular resonances,
with several objects having practically stationary pericenters. None of the
largest satellites belong to this class, so we argue that this dichotomy
implies that the smaller near-resonant satellites might have been captured
differently than the largest irregulars.Comment: 56 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in The Astronomical
Journa
Mapping the Secular Resonance for Retrograde Irregular Satellites
Constructing dynamical maps from the filtered output of numerical
integrations, we analyze the structure of the secular resonance for
fictitious irregular satellites in retrograde orbits. This commensurability is
associated to the secular angle , where
is the longitude of pericenter of the satellite and
corresponds to the (fixed) planetocentric orbit of the Sun. Our study is
performed in the restricted three-body problem, where the satellites are
considered as massless particles around a massive planet and perturbed by the
Sun. Depending on the initial conditions, the resonance presents a diversity of
possible resonant modes, including librations of around zero (as found
for Sinope and Pasiphae) or 180 degrees, as well as asymmetric librations (e.g.
Narvi). Symmetric modes are present in all giant planets, although each regime
appears restricted to certain values of the satellite inclination. Asymmetric
solutions, on the other hand, seem absent around Neptune due to its almost
circular heliocentric orbit. Simulating the effects of a smooth orbital
migration on the satellite, we find that the resonance lock is preserved as
long as the induced change in semimajor axis is much slower compared to the
period of the resonant angle (adiabatic limit). However, the librational mode
may vary during the process, switching between symmetric and asymmetric
oscillations. Finally, we present a simple scaling transformation that allows
to estimate the resonant structure around any giant planet from the results
calculated around a single primary mass.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Searching for Saturn's Dust Swarm: Limits on the size distribution of Irregular Satellites from km to micron sizes
We describe a search for dust created in collisions between the Saturnian
irregular satellites using archival \emph{Spitzer} MIPS observations. Although
we detected a degree scale Saturn-centric excess that might be attributed to an
irregular satellite dust cloud, we attribute it to the far-field wings of the
PSF due to nearby Saturn. The Spitzer PSF is poorly characterised at such
radial distances, and we expect PSF characterisation to be the main issue for
future observations that aim to detect such dust. The observations place an
upper limit on the level of dust in the outer reaches of the Saturnian system,
and constrain how the size distribution extrapolates from the smallest known
(few km) size irregulars down to micron-size dust. Because the size
distribution is indicative of the strength properties of irregulars, we show
how our derived upper limit implies irregular satellite strengths more akin to
comets than asteroids. This conclusion is consistent with their presumed
capture from the outer regions of the Solar System.Comment: accepted to MNRA
A Recent Impact Origin of Saturnâs Rings and Mid-sized Moons
We simulate the collision of precursor icy moons analogous to Dione and Rhea as a possible origin for Saturn's remarkably young rings. Such an event could have been triggered a few hundred million years ago by resonant instabilities in a previous satellite system. Using high-resolution smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations, we find that this kind of impact can produce a wide distribution of massive objects and scatter material throughout the system. This includes the direct placement of pure-ice ejecta onto orbits that enter Saturn's Roche limit, which could form or rejuvenate rings. In addition, fragments and debris of rock and ice totaling more than the mass of Enceladus can be placed onto highly eccentric orbits that would intersect with any precursor moons orbiting in the vicinity of Mimas, Enceladus, or Tethys. This could prompt further disruption and facilitate a collisional cascade to distribute more debris for potential ring formation, the re-formation of the present-day moons, and evolution into an eventual cratering population of planetocentric impactors
The Robber Bride: a Dystopian Female World in Margaret Atwoodâs Mythology
The aim of this paper is to show how Atwoodâs reformulations of myths contain hidden political messages from ancient and modern history and can be interpreted from Fredric Jamesonâs views on âsymbolic acts,â discourse and the ideology of form. Several scholars have explored the symbolic relationship between the three major protagonists in The Robber Bride and fragments of the omnipotent image of the Neolithic deity the White Goddess. As the symbolic counterparts of Diana, Venus and Hecate in the novel, Tony, Roz and Charis demonstrate how womenâs integrity has been crippled and how the restoration of female principle is just a utopian idea. However, our analysis has revealed that the younger generation of âgoddessesâ does not bring hope to the female gender in either the present or the future. Augusta, Paula and Erin symbolize oversimplified and parodied versions of the destructive Hecate in an unpromising world and âthe not-good placeâ that resembles a dystopia
Secular dynamics of planetesimals in tight binary systems: Application to Gamma-Cephei
The secular dynamics of small planetesimals in tight binary systems play a
fundamental role in establishing the possibility of accretional collisions in
such extreme cases. The most important secular parameters are the forced
eccentricity and secular frequency, which depend on the initial conditions of
the particles, as well as on the mass and orbital parameters of the secondary
star. We construct a second-order theory (with respect to the masses) for the
planar secular motion of small planetasimals and deduce new expressions for the
forced eccentricity and secular frequency. We also reanalyze the radial
velocity data available for Gamma-Cephei and present a series of orbital
solutions leading to residuals compatible with the best fits. Finally, we
discuss how different orbital configurations for Gamma-Cephei may affect the
dynamics of small bodies in circunmstellar motion. For Gamma-Cephei, we find
that the classical first-order expressions for the secular frequency and forced
eccentricity lead to large inaccuracies around 50 % for semimajor axes larger
than one tenth the orbital separation between the stellar components. Low
eccentricities and/or masses reduce the importance of the second-order terms.
The dynamics of small planetesimals only show a weak dependence with the
orbital fits of the stellar components, and the same result is found including
the effects of a nonlinear gas drag. Thus, the possibility of planetary
formation in this binary system largely appears insensitive to the orbital fits
adopted for the stellar components, and any future alterations in the system
parameters (due to new observations) should not change this picture. Finally,
we show that planetesimals migrating because of gas drag may be trapped in
mean-motion resonances with the binary, even though the migration is divergent.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
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