14,834 research outputs found
Performance of the Lester battery charger in electric vehicles
Tests are performed on an improved battery charger. The primary purpose of the testing is to develop test methodologies for battery charger evaluation. Tests are developed to characterize the charger in terms of its charge algorithm and to assess the effects of battery initial state of charge and temperature on charger and battery efficiency. Tests show this charger to be a considerable improvement in the state of the art for electric vehicle chargers
Z2SAL: a translation-based model checker for Z
Despite being widely known and accepted in industry, the Z formal specification language has not so far been well supported by automated verification tools, mostly because of the challenges in handling the abstraction of the language. In this paper we discuss a novel approach to building a model-checker for Z, which involves implementing a translation from Z into SAL, the input language for the Symbolic Analysis Laboratory, a toolset which includes a number of model-checkers and a simulator. The Z2SAL translation deals with a number of important issues, including: mapping unbounded, abstract specifications into bounded, finite models amenable to a BDD-based symbolic checker; converting a non-constructive and piecemeal style of functional specification into a deterministic, automaton-based style of specification; and supporting the rich set-based vocabulary of the Z mathematical toolkit. This paper discusses progress made towards implementing as complete and faithful a translation as possible, while highlighting certain assumptions, respecting certain limitations and making use of available optimisations. The translation is illustrated throughout with examples; and a complete working example is presented, together with performance data
Dynamics of hard-sphere suspension using Dynamic Light Scattering and X-Ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy: dynamics and scaling of the Intermediate Scattering Function
Intermediate Scattering Functions (ISF's) are measured for colloidal hard
sphere systems using both Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) and X-ray Photon
Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS). We compare the techniques, and discuss the
advantages and disadvantages of each. Both techniques agree in the overlapping
range of scattering vectors. We investigate the scaling behaviour found by
Segre and Pusey [1] but challenged by Lurio et al. [2]. We observe a scaling
behaviour over several decades in time but not in the long time regime.
Moreover, we do not observe long time diffusive regimes at scattering vectors
away from the peak of the structure factor and so question the existence of a
long time diffusion coefficients at these scattering vectors.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
Generating Extended Resolution Proofs with a BDD-Based SAT Solver
In 2006, Biere, Jussila, and Sinz made the key observation that the
underlying logic behind algorithms for constructing Reduced, Ordered Binary
Decision Diagrams (BDDs) can be encoded as steps in a proof in the extended
resolution logical framework. Through this, a BDD-based Boolean satisfiability
(SAT) solver can generate a checkable proof of unsatisfiability for a set of
clauses. Such a proof indicates that the formula is truly unsatisfiable without
requiring the user to trust the BDD package or the SAT solver built on top of
it.
We extend their work to enable arbitrary existential quantification of the
formula variables, a critical capability for BDD-based SAT solvers. We
demonstrate the utility of this approach by applying a prototype solver to
several problems that are very challenging for search-based SAT solvers,
obtaining polynomially sized proofs on benchmarks for parity formulas, as well
as the Urquhart, mutilated chessboard, and pigeonhole problems.Comment: Extended version of paper published at TACAS 202
Defying jet-gas alignment in two radio galaxies at z~2 with extended light profiles: Similarities to brightest cluster galaxies
We report the detection of extended warm ionized gas in two powerful
high-redshift radio galaxies, NVSS J210626-314003 at z=2.10 and TXS 2353-003 at
z=1.49, that does not appear to be associated with the radio jets. This is
contrary to what would be expected from the alignment effect, a characteristic
feature of distant, powerful radio galaxies at z> 0.6. The gas also has smaller
velocity gradients and line widths than most other high-z radio galaxies with
similar data. Both galaxies are part of a systematic study of 50 high-redshift
radio galaxies with SINFONI, and are the only two that are characterized by the
presence of high surface-brightness gas not associated with the jet axis and by
the absence of such gas aligned with the jet. Both galaxies are spatially
resolved with ISAAC broadband imaging covering the rest-frame R band, and have
extended wings that cannot be attributed to line contamination. We argue that
the gas and stellar properties of these galaxies are more akin to gas-rich
brightest cluster galaxies in cool-core clusters than the general population of
high-redshift radio galaxies at z>2. In support of this interpretation, one of
our sources, TXS 2353-003, for which we have H\alpha\ narrowband imaging, is
associated with an overdensity of candidate H\alpha\ emitters by a factor of 8
relative to the field at z=1.5. We discuss possible scenarios of the
evolutionary state of these galaxies and the nature of their emission line gas
within the context of cyclical AGN feedback.Comment: A&A in pres
Two universal results for Wilson loops at strong coupling
We present results for Wilson loops in strongly coupled gauge theories. The
loops may be taken around an arbitrarily shaped contour and in any field theory
with a dual IIB geometry of the form M x S^5. No assumptions about
supersymmetry are made. The first result uses D5 branes to show how the loop in
any antisymmetric representation is computed in terms of the loop in the
fundamental representation. The second result uses D3 branes to observe that
each loop defines a rich sequence of operators associated with minimal surfaces
in S^5. The action of these configurations are all computable. Both results
have features suggesting a connection with integrability.Comment: 1+12 pages. LaTeX. No figure
Numerical Linked-Cluster Approach to Quantum Lattice Models
We present a novel algorithm that allows one to obtain temperature dependent
properties of quantum lattice models in the thermodynamic limit from exact
diagonalization of small clusters. Our Numerical Linked Cluster (NLC) approach
provides a systematic framework to assess finite-size effects and is valid for
any quantum lattice model. Unlike high temperature expansions (HTE), which have
a finite radius of convergence in inverse temperature, these calculations are
accurate at all temperatures provided the range of correlations is finite. We
illustrate the power of our approach studying spin models on {\it kagom\'e},
triangular, and square lattices.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Modelling the Northeast Atlantic circulation : implications for the spring invasion of shelf regions by Calanus finmarchicus
The appearance in spring of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus in continental shelf waters of the northeastern Atlantic has been hypothesized to be mainly attributable to invasion from across the continental slope rather than in situ overwintering. This paper describes the application of a hydrodynamic circulation model and a particle-tracking model to Northeast Atlantic waters in order to assess the influence of the flow field and ascent migration parameters on the spring invasion of C. finmarchicus. For hydrodynamic modelling, the Hamburg Shelf-Ocean Model (HAMSOM) was applied to the North Atlantic and Nordic Seas and forced with daily mean atmospheric data. Simulated flow fields from HAMSOM serve as forcing functions for a particle-tracking model of the same region. The robustness of the simulated shelf invasion in three target boxes of the Northeast Atlantic Shelf was assessed by means of a sensitivity analysis with respect to variations in four key migration parameters: overwintering depth, ascent rate, ascent timing, and depth during residence in upper layers. The invasion of the northern North Sea and Norwegian Shelf waters is more sensitive to ascent migration parameters than invasion of the Faroese Shelf. The main reason for enhanced sensitivity of the North Sea invasion is the time and space-dependent flow structure in the Faroe-Shetland Channel. Dense aggregations of overwintering C. finmarchicus are found in the Channel, but because of the complex flow field only a proportion of the overwintering stock has the capacity to reach the North Sea
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