1,317 research outputs found
Reducing Interconnect Cost in NoC through Serialized Asynchronous Links
This work investigates the application of serialization as a means of reducing the number of wires in NoC combined with asynchronous links in order to simplify the clocking of the link. Throughput is reduced but savings in routing area and reduction in power could make this attractiv
Dual-mode hyperbolicity, supercanalization, and leakage in self-complementary metasurfaces
Anisotropic Self-Complementary Metasurfaces (SC-MTSs) are structures constituted by an alternation of complementary inductive and capacitive strips, which are "self-dual" according to Babinet's duality principle. They support the propagation of two orthogonally polarized surface-wave modes with the same phase velocity along the principal directions (i.e., along the strips and normal to them). The isofrequency dispersion curves of these modes are hyperbolas, and therefore, these MTSs fall in the category of hyperbolic MTSs. It is shown here that the hyperbolic dispersion curves may degenerate in same cases into almost straight lines, which implies that the velocity of energy transport is constantly directed along the same direction for any possible phasing orthogonal to the strips. In this circumstance, the SC-MTS can be conveniently used to design dual-polarized leaky-wave antennas by modulating the impedances of the complementary strips
On the geometry of string duals with backreacting flavors
Making use of generalized calibrated geometry and G-structures we put the
problem of finding string-duals with smeared backreacting flavor branes in a
more mathematical setting. This more formal treatment of the problem allows us
to easily smear branes without good coordinate representations, establish
constraints on the smearing form and identify a topological central charge in
the SUSY algebra. After exhibiting our methods for a series of well known
examples, we apply them to the problem of flavoring a supergravity-dual to a
d=2+1 dimensional N=2 super Yang-Mills-like theory. We find new solutions to
both the flavored and unflavored systems. Interpretating these turns out to be
difficult.Comment: 38 pages - Typos corrected and references added - As published in
JHE
Hyperdimensional Computing-based Multimodality Emotion Recognition with Physiological Signals
To interact naturally and achieve mutual sympathy between humans and machines, emotion recognition is one of the most important function to realize advanced human-computer interaction devices. Due to the high correlation between emotion and involuntary physiological changes, physiological signals are a prime candidate for emotion analysis. However, due to the need of a huge amount of training data for a high-quality machine learning model, computational complexity becomes a major bottleneck. To overcome this issue, brain-inspired hyperdimensional (HD) computing, an energy-efficient and fast learning computational paradigm, has a high potential to achieve a balance between accuracy and the amount of necessary training data. We propose an HD Computing-based Multimodality Emotion Recognition (HDC-MER). HDCMER maps real-valued features to binary HD vectors using a random nonlinear function, and further encodes them over time, and fuses across different modalities including GSR, ECG, and EEG. The experimental results show that, compared to the best method using the full training data, HDC-MER achieves higher classification accuracy for both valence (83.2% vs. 80.1%) and arousal (70.1% vs. 68.4%) using only 1/4 training data. HDC-MER also achieves at least 5% higher averaged accuracy compared to all the other methods in any point along the learning curve
Dynamics of transcendental hÉnon maps III: Infinite entropy
Very little is currently known about the dynamics of non-polynomial entire maps in several complex variables. The family of transcendental Hénon maps offers the potential of combining ideas from transcendental dynamics in one variable and the dynamics of polynomial Hénon maps in two. Here we show that these maps all have infinite topological and measure theoretic entropy. The proof also implies the existence of infinitely many periodic orbits of any order greater than two
Dynamics of transcendental Hénon maps-II
Transcendental Hénon maps are the natural extensions of the well investigated complex polynomial Hénon maps to the much larger class of holomorphic automorphisms. We prove here that transcendental Hénon maps always have non-trivial dynamical behavior, namely that they always admit both periodic and escaping orbits, and that their Julia sets are non-empty and perfect
Gravity duals of 2d supersymmetric gauge theories
We find new supergravity solutions generated by D5-branes wrapping a
four-cycle and preserving four and two supersymmetries. We first consider the
configuration in which the fivebranes wrap a four-cycle in a Calabi-Yau
threefold, which preserves four supersymmetries and is a gravity dual to the
Coulomb branch of two-dimensional gauge theories with N=(2,2) supersymmetry. We
also study the case of fivebranes wrapping a co-associative four-cycle in a
manifold of G_2-holonomy, which provides a gravity dual of N=(1,1)
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory in two dimensions. We also discuss the
addition of unquenched fundamental matter fields to these backgrounds and find
the corresponding gravity solutions with flavor brane sources.Comment: 34 pages + appendices; v2: minor improvement
Conceptual-level evaluation of a variable stiffness skin for a morphing wing leading edge
A morphing leading edge produces a continuous aerodynamic surface that has no gaps between the moving and fixed parts. The continuous seamless shape has the potential to reduce drag, compared to conventional devices, such as slats that produce a discrete aerofoil shape change. However, the morphing leading edge has to achieve the required target shape by deforming from the baseline shape under the aerodynamic loads. In this paper, a conceptual-level method is proposed to evaluate the morphing leading edge structure. The feasibility of the skin design is validated by checking the failure index of the composite when the morphing leading edge undergoes the shape change. The stiffness of the morphing leading edge skin is spatially varied using variable lamina angles, and comparisons to the skin with constant stiffness are made to highlight its potential to reduce the actuation forces. The structural analysis is performed using a two-level structural optimisation scheme. The first level optimisation is applied to find the optimised structural proper- ties of the leading edge skin and the associated actuation forces. The structural properties of the skin are given as a stiffness distribution, which is controlled by a B spline interpolation function. In the second level, the design solution of the skin is investigated. The skin is assumed to be made of variable stiffness composite. The stack sequence of the composite is optimised element-by-element to match the target stiffness. A failure criterion is employed to obtain the failure index when the leading edge is actuated from the baseline shape to the target shape. Test cases are given to demonstrate that the optimisation scheme is able to provide the stiffness distribution of the leading edge skin and the actuation forces can be reduced by using a spatially variable stiffness skin
Cooling Strategies for Heated Cylinders Using Pulsating Airflow with Different Waveforms
Pulsate flow is an effective technique applied for cooling several engineering systems depending on their pulsate frequency. One very sound external flow pulsation application is heat transfer over heated bodies. In present work, an experimental design and numerical model of controlled pulsating flow according to generated pulsating frequency and wave shape around a heated cylinder were performed. The effects of pulsating frequency, amplitude, and mean velocity on the fluid flow and heat transfer characteristics over a heated cylinder were studied. The wave frequency varied from 2 to 12 Hz, and the amplitude varied from 0.2 to 0.8 m/s. Moreover, different waveforms were investigated to determine their effect on wall cooling. For constant wave frequency and amplitude, the most efficient wave in cooling was the sawtooth wave, with the average wall temperature after 30 s was 1.6 °C cooler than that of the forced convection case, followed by the triangular wave at 1.2 °C less. The heat transfer rate and the flow field were drastically influenced by the variations of these parameters. Optimization was conducted for each wave type to find the optimum wave frequency and amplitude. The optimizing showed that, the most efficient wave was the sawtooth with 12°C temperature reduction compared with that of the forced convection case, followed by the triangular. Furthermore, regression analysis was conducted to estimate the relationships between these variables and surface temperature. It was found that the wave amplitude had a greater role in cooling than that of the frequency
Bulk Viscosity Effects on the Early Universe Stability
We present a discussion of the effects induced by the bulk viscosity on the
very early Universe stability. The matter filling the cosmological (isotropic
and homogeneous) background is described by a viscous fluid having an
ultrarelativistic equation of state and whose viscosity coefficient is related
to the energy density via a power-law of the form . The
analytic expression of the density contrast (obtained for ) shows
that, for small values of the constant , its behavior is not
significantly different from the non-viscous one derived by E.M. Lifshitz. But
as soon as overcomes a critical value, the growth of the density
contrast is suppressed forward in time by the viscosity and the stability of
the Universe is favored in the expanding picture. On the other hand, in such a
regime, the asymptotic approach to the initial singularity (taken at ) is
deeply modified by the apparency of significant viscosity in the primordial
thermal bath i.e. the isotropic and homogeneous Universe admits an unstable
collapsing picture. In our model this feature regards also scalar perturbations
while in the non-viscous case it appears only for tensor modes.Comment: 8 pages, no figur
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