8,755 research outputs found
Analog voicing detector responds to pitch
Modified electronic voice encoder /Vocoder/ includes an independent analog mode of operation in addition to the conventional digital mode. The Vocoder is a bandwidth compression equipment that permits voice transmission over channels, having only a fraction of the bandwidth required for conventional telephone-quality speech transmission
Design of the flutter suppression system for DAST ARW-IR
The design of the flutter suppression system for a remotely-piloted research vehicle is described. The modeling of the aeroelastic system, the methodology used to synthesized the control law, the analytical results used to evaluate the control law performance, and ground testing of the flutter suppression system onboard the aircraft are discussed. The major emphasis is on the use of optimal control techniques employed during the synthesis of the control law
Effects of a feeding strategy to increase intramuscular fat content of pork under the conditions of organic farming
In an ongoing study, the effect of the implementation of a specific feeding strategy using a high portion of home-grown grain legumes on the intramuscular fat (IMF) content of pork, is assessed under different conditions on organic farms in Germany and Austria. Preliminary results indicate that variation in the IMF content seems to be higher between farms than between treatments within each farm
Solitonic supersymmetry restoration
Q-balls are a possible feature of any model with a conserved, global U(1)
symmetry and no massless, charged scalars. It is shown that for a broad class
of models of metastable supersymmetry breaking they are extremely influential
on the vacuum lifetime and make seemingly viable vacua catastrophically short
lived. A net charge asymmetry is not required as there is often a significant
range of parameter space where statistical fluctuations alone are sufficient.
This effect is examined for two supersymmetry breaking scenarios. It is found
that models of minimal gauge mediation (which necessarily have a messenger
number U(1)) undergo a rapid, supersymmetry restoring phase transition unless
the messenger mass is greater than 10^8 GeV. Similarly the ISS model, in the
context of direct mediation, quickly decays unless the perturbative
superpotential coupling is greater than the Standard Model gauge couplings.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, minor comments added, accepted for publication
in JHE
Direct Mediation and Metastable Supersymmetry Breaking for SO(10)
We examine a metastable Macroscopic SO(N) SQCD model of
Intriligator, Seiberg and Shih (ISS). We introduce various baryon and meson
deformations, including multitrace operators and explore embedding an SO(10)
parent of the standard model into two weakly gauged flavour sectors. Direct
fundamental messengers and the symmetric pseudo-modulus messenger mediate SUSY
breaking to the MSSM. Gaugino and sfermion masses are computed and compared for
each deformation type. We also explore reducing the rank of the magnetic quark
matrix of the ISS model and find an additional fundamental messenger.Comment: 43 pages, Latex. Version to appear in JHEP
A natural renormalizable model of metastable SUSY breaking
We propose a model of metastable dynamical supersymmetry breaking in which
all scales are generated dynamically. Our construction is a simple variant of
the Intriligator-Seiberg-Shih model, with quark masses induced by
renormalizable couplings to an auxiliary supersymmetric QCD sector. Since all
scales arise from dimensional transmutation, the model has no fundamental
dimensionful parameters. It also does not rely on higher-dimensional operators.Comment: 9 pages; v2: typos correcte
Chiral N=1 4d Orientifolds with D-branes at Angles
D6-branes intersecting at angles allow for phenomenologically appealing
constructions of four dimensional string theory vacua. While it is
straightforward to obtain non-supersymmetric realizations of the standard
model, supersymmetric and stable models with three generations and no exotic
chiral matter require more involved orbifold constructions. The T^6/(Z_4 x Z_2
x OmegaR) case is discussed in detail. Other orbifolds including fractional
D6-branes are treated briefly.Comment: Invited brief review, 16 pages, 2 figures; references adde
Radiative Transfer in Star Formation: Testing FLD and Hybrid Methods
We perform a comparison between two radiative transfer algorithms commonly
employed in hydrodynamical calculations of star formation: grey flux limited
diffusion and the hybrid scheme, in addition we compare these algorithms to
results from the Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code MOCASSIN. In disc like
density structures the hybrid scheme performs significantly better than the FLD
method in the optically thin regions, with comparable results in optically
thick regions. In the case of a forming high mass star we find the FLD method
significantly underestimates the radiation pressure by a factor of ~100.Comment: 4 Pages; to appear in the proceedings of 'The Labyrinth of Star
Formation', Crete, 18-22 June 201
Relic Neutralino Density in Scenarios with Intermediate Unification Scale
We analyse the relic neutralino density in supersymmetric models with an
intermediate unification scale. In particular, we present concrete cosmological
scenarios where the reheating temperature is as small as
MeV). When this temperature is associated to the decay of moduli fields
producing neutralinos, we show that the relic abundance increases considerably
with respect to the standard thermal production. Thus the neutralino becomes a
good dark matter candidate with 0.1\lsim \Omega h^2 \lsim 0.3, even for
regions of the parameter space where large neutralino-nucleon cross sections,
compatible with current dark matter experiments, are present. This is obtained
for intermediate scales GeV, and moduli masses
GeV. On the other hand, when the above temperature is
associated to the decay of an inflaton field, the relic abundance is too small.Comment: Latex, 11 pages, 2 figure
Active controls: A look at analytical methods and associated tools
A review of analytical methods and associated tools for active controls analysis and design problems is presented. Approaches employed to develop mathematical models suitable for control system analysis and/or design are discussed. Significant efforts have been expended to develop tools to generate the models from the standpoint of control system designers' needs and develop the tools necessary to analyze and design active control systems. Representative examples of these tools are discussed. Examples where results from the methods and tools have been compared with experimental data are also presented. Finally, a perspective on future trends in analysis and design methods is presented
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