33,028 research outputs found
Characterizing CDMA downlink feasibility via effective interference
This paper models and analyses downlink power assignment feasibility in Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) mobile networks. By discretizing the area into small segments, the power requirements are characterized via a matrix representation that separates user and system characteristics. We obtain a closed-form analytical expression of the so-called Perron-Frobenius eigenvalue of that matrix, which provides a quick assessment of the feasibility of the power assignment for each distribution of calls over the segments. Although the obtained relation is non-linear, it basically provides an effective interference characterisation of downlink feasibility. Our results allow for a fast evaluation of outage and blocking probabilities, and enable a quick evaluation of feasibility that may be used for Call Acceptance Control. \u
Scientific, institutional and personal rivalries among Soviet geographers in the late Stalin era
Scientific, institutional and personal rivalries between three key centres of geographical research and scholarship (the Academy of Sciences Institute of Geography and the Faculties of Geography at Moscow and Leningrad State Universities) are surveyed for the period from 1945 to the early 1950s. It is argued that the debates and rivalries between members of the three institutions appear to have been motivated by a variety of scientific, ideological, institutional and personal factors, but that genuine scientific disagreements were at least as important as political and ideological factors in influencing the course of the debates and in determining their final outcome
Double strand DNA cleavage with a binuclear iron complex
Covalently linking two single strand DNA cleaving agents resulted in a new biomimetic binuclear iron complex capable of effecting oxidative double strand DNA cleavage.
Large-scale Monte Carlo simulations of the isotropic three-dimensional Heisenberg spin glass
We study the Heisenberg spin glass by large-scale Monte Carlo simulations for
sizes up to 32^3, down to temperatures below the transition temperature claimed
in earlier work. The data for the larger sizes show more marginal behavior than
that for the smaller sizes, indicating the lower critical dimension is close
to, and possibly equal to three. We find that the spins and chiralities behave
in a quite similar manner.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. Replaced with published versio
Thermodynamics of two lattice ice models in three dimensions
In a recent paper we introduced two Potts-like models in three dimensions,
which share the following properties: (A) One of the ice rules is always
fulfilled (in particular also at infinite temperature). (B) Both ice rules hold
for groundstate configurations. This allowed for an efficient calculation of
the residual entropy of ice I (ordinary ice) by means of multicanonical
simulations. Here we present the thermodynamics of these models. Despite their
similarities with Potts models, no sign of a disorder-order phase transition is
found.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
The signature of dissipation in the mass-size relation: are bulges simply spheroids wrapped in a disc?
The relation between the stellar mass and size of a galaxy's structural
subcomponents, such as discs and spheroids, is a powerful way to understand the
processes involved in their formation. Using very large catalogues of
photometric bulge+disc structural decompositions and stellar masses from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release Seven, we carefully define two large
subsamples of spheroids in a quantitative manner such that both samples share
similar characteristics with one important exception: the 'bulges' are embedded
in a disc and the 'pure spheroids' are galaxies with a single structural
component. Our bulge and pure spheroid subsample sizes are 76,012 and 171,243
respectively. Above a stellar mass of ~ M, the mass-size
relations of both subsamples are parallel to one another and are close to lines
of constant surface mass density. However, the relations are offset by a factor
of 1.4, which may be explained by the dominance of dissipation in their
formation processes. Whereas the size-mass relation of bulges in discs is
consistent with gas-rich mergers, pure spheroids appear to have been formed via
a combination of 'dry' and 'wet' mergers.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 6 pages, 3 figure
High-throughput on-chip DNA fragmentation
free microfluidic deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) fragmentation chip that is based on hydrodynamic shearing. Genomic DNA has been reproducibly fragmented with 2-10 kbp fragment lengths by applying hydraulic pressure ĪP across micromachined constrictions in the microfluidic channels. The utilization of a series of constrictions reduces the variance of the fragmented DNA length distribution; and parallel microfluidic channels design eliminates the device clogging
- ā¦