38,564 research outputs found
EACOF: A Framework for Providing Energy Transparency to enable Energy-Aware Software Development
Making energy consumption data accessible to software developers is an
essential step towards energy efficient software engineering. The presence of
various different, bespoke and incompatible, methods of instrumentation to
obtain energy readings is currently limiting the widespread use of energy data
in software development. This paper presents EACOF, a modular Energy-Aware
Computing Framework that provides a layer of abstraction between sources of
energy data and the applications that exploit them. EACOF replaces platform
specific instrumentation through two APIs - one accepts input to the framework
while the other provides access to application software. This allows developers
to profile their code for energy consumption in an easy and portable manner
using simple API calls. We outline the design of our framework and provide
details of the API functionality. In a use case, where we investigate the
impact of data bit width on the energy consumption of various sorting
algorithms, we demonstrate that the data obtained using EACOF provides
interesting, sometimes counter-intuitive, insights. All the code is available
online under an open source license. http://github.com/eaco
Secure, performance-oriented data management for nanoCMOS electronics
The EPSRC pilot project Meeting the Design Challenges of nanoCMOS Electronics (nanoCMOS) is focused upon delivering a production level e-Infrastructure to meet the challenges facing the semiconductor industry in dealing with the next generation of ‘atomic-scale’ transistor devices. This scale means that previous assumptions on the uniformity of transistor devices in electronics circuit and systems design are no longer valid, and the industry as a whole must deal with variability throughout the design process. Infrastructures to tackle this problem must provide seamless access to very large HPC resources for computationally expensive simulation of statistic ensembles of microscopically varying physical devices, and manage the many hundreds of thousands of files and meta-data associated with these simulations. A key challenge in undertaking this is in protecting the intellectual property associated with the data, simulations and design process as a whole. In this paper we present the nanoCMOS infrastructure and outline an evaluation undertaken on the Storage Resource Broker (SRB) and the Andrew File System (AFS) considering in particular the extent that they meet the performance and security requirements of the nanoCMOS domain. We also describe how metadata management is supported and linked to simulations and results in a scalable and secure manner
Potential algebra approach to position dependent mass Schroedinger equation
It is shown that for a class of position dependent mass Schroedinger equation
the shape invariance condition is equivalent to a potential symmetry algebra.
Explicit realization of such algebras have been obtained for some shape
invariant potentials
Phase properties of a new nonlinear coherent state
We study phase properties of a displacement operator type nonlinear coherent
state. In particular we evaluate the Pegg-Barnett phase distribution and
compare it with phase distributions associated with the Husimi Q function and
the Wigner function. We also study number- phase squeezing of this state.Comment: 8 eps figures. to appear in J.Opt
New nonlinear coherent states and some of their nonclassical properties
We construct a displacement operator type nonlinear coherent state and
examine some of its properties. In particular it is shown that this nonlinear
coherent state exhibits nonclassical properties like squeezing and
sub-Poissonian behaviour.Comment: 3 eps figures. to appear in J.Opt
Two-dimensional numerical simulation of a Stirling engine heat exchanger
The first phase of an effort to develop multidimensional models of Stirling engine components is described; the ultimate goal is to model an entire engine working space. More specifically, parallel plate and tubular heat exchanger models with emphasis on the central part of the channel (i.e., ignoring hydrodynamic and thermal end effects) are described. The model assumes: laminar, incompressible flow with constant thermophysical properties. In addition, a constant axial temperature gradient is imposed. The governing equations, describing the model, were solved using Crank-Nicloson finite-difference scheme. Model predictions were compared with analytical solutions for oscillating/reversing flow and heat transfer in order to check numerical accuracy. Excellent agreement was obtained for the model predictions with analytical solutions available for both flow in circular tubes and between parallel plates. Also the heat transfer computational results are in good agreement with the heat transfer analytical results for parallel plates
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