55 research outputs found
Compressed sensing and sparsity in photoacoustic tomography
Increasing the imaging speed is a central aim in photoacoustic tomography. This issue is especially important in the case of sequential scanning approaches as applied for most existing optical detection schemes. In this work we address this issue using techniques of compressed sensing. We demonstrate, that the number of measurements can significantly be reduced by allowing general linear measurements instead of point-wise pressure values. A main requirement in compressed sensing is the sparsity of the unknowns to be recovered. For that purpose, we develop the concept of sparsifying temporal transforms for three-dimensional photoacoustic tomography. We establish a two-stage algorithm that recovers the complete pressure signals in a first step and then apply a standard reconstruction algorithm such as back-projection. This yields a novel reconstruction method with much lower complexity than existing compressed sensing approaches for photoacoustic tomography. Reconstruction results for simulated and for experimental data verify that the proposed compressed sensing scheme allows for reducing the number of spatial measurements without reducing the spatial resolution.ope
Inverse characterization of plates using zero group velocity Lamb modes
AbstractIn the presented work, the characterization of plates using zero group velocity Lamb modes is discussed. First, analytical expressions are shown for the determination of the kâĎ location of the zero group velocity Lamb modes as a function of the Poissonâs ratio. The analytical expressions are solved numerically and an inverse problem is formulated to determine the unknown wave velocities in plates of known thickness. The analysis is applied to determine the elastic properties of tungsten and aluminum plates based on the experimentally measured frequency spectra
Single-Electron Transistor in Strained Si/SiGe Heterostructures
A split gate technique is used to form a lateral quantum dot in a
two-dimensional electron gas of a modulation-doped silicon/silicon-germanium
heterostructure. e-beam lithography was employed to produce split gates. By
applying negative voltages to these gates the underlying electron gas is
depleted and a lateral quantum dot is formed, the size of which can be adjusted
by the gate voltage. We observe single-electron operation with Coulomb blockade
behavior below 1K. Gate leakage currents are well controlled, indicating that
the recently encountered problems with Schottky gates for this type of
application are not an inherent limitation of modulation-doped Si/SiGe
heterostructures, as had been speculated.Comment: 3 page
Population policies and education: exploring the contradictions of neo-liberal globalisation
The world is increasingly characterised by profound income, health and social inequalities (Appadurai, 2000). In recent decades development initiatives aimed at reducing these inequalities have been situated in a context of increasing globalisation with a dominant neo-liberal economic orthodoxy. This paper argues that neo-liberal globalisation contains inherent contradictions regarding choice and uniformity. This is illustrated in this paper through an exploration of the impact of neo-liberal globalisation on population policies and programmes. The dominant neo-liberal economic ideology that has influenced development over the last few decades has often led to alternative global visions being overlooked. Many current population and development debates are characterised by polarised arguments with strongly opposing aims and views. This raises the challenge of finding alternatives situated in more middle ground that both identify and promote the socially positive elements of neo-liberalism and state intervention, but also to limit their worst excesses within the population field and more broadly. This paper concludes with a discussion outling the positive nature of middle ground and other possible alternatives
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