8,635 research outputs found
Optimal Selection of Supply Voltages and Level Conversions During Low Power Data Path Scheduling
In t\u27his paper we will consider how to select an optimal set of supply voltages and account for level conversion costs when optimizing the schedule of a resource domina.ted data path for minimum average power dissipation. Integer linear program (ILP) and non-linear program (NLP) formulations are presented for a minimum power schedule under latency and throughput constraints. Results are presented for several data path topologies under minimum latency constraints and under more relaxed latency constraints. The optimization demonstrated substantial benefit going from one to two supply voltages, but minimal additi,onal benefit from any additional supplies. For example, a Kalman filter benchmark produced a power estimate of 356.7mW for a single 5V supply, 265.4mW for 4V and 5V supplies, but no additional improvement for three supplies. Increasing minimum schedule latency by 50% improved optimization results substantially for two and three supply voltages but in mod cases there was no improvement at all for a single optimal supply voltage
Herschel Observations of Debris Discs Orbiting Planet-hosting Subgiants
Debris discs are commonly detected orbiting main-sequence stars, yet little
is known regarding their fate as the star evolves to become a giant. Recent
observations of radial velocity detected planets orbiting giant stars highlight
this population and its importance for probing, for example, the population of
planetary systems orbiting intermediate mass stars. Our Herschel survey
observed a subset of the Johnson et al program subgiants, finding that 4/36
exhibit excess emission thought to indicate debris, of which 3/19 are
planet-hosting stars and 1/17 are stars with no current planet detections.
Given the small numbers involved, there is no evidence that the disc detection
rate around stars with planets is different to that around stars without
planets. Our detections provide a clear indication that large quantities of
dusty material can survive the stars' main-sequence lifetime and be detected on
the subgiant branch, with important implications for the evolution of planetary
systems and observations of polluted or dusty white dwarfs. Our detection rates
also provide an important constraint that can be included in models of debris
disc evolution.Comment: 12 pages, MNRAS, accepte
Interplay between function and structure in complex networks
We show that abrupt structural transitions can arise in functionally optimal
networks, driven by small changes in the level of transport congestion. Our
results offer an explanation as to why so many diverse species of network
structure arise in Nature (e.g. fungal systems) under essentially the same
environmental conditions. Our findings are based on an exactly solvable model
system which mimics a variety of biological and social networks. We then extend
our analysis by introducing a novel renormalization scheme involving cost
motifs, to describe analytically the average shortest path across
multiple-ring-and-hub networks. As a consequence, we uncover a 'skin effect'
whereby the structure of the inner multi-ring core can cease to play any role
in terms of determining the average shortest path across the network.Comment: Expanded version of physics/0508228 with additional new result
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Hotel Asset and Equity Risk Before, During, and After the Global Financial Crisis
In this paper, we use asset betas and equity betas over the period January 2000 through December 2015 to investigate the operating and financial risk of hotel industry REITs and C-Corps. We conclude that, on average over our sample period, the operating risk of C-Corps exceeds that of REITs. One interpretation of this result is that management contracts between REITs and C-Corps allocate more operating risk to C-Corps than to REITs. We also find that, on average, during our sample period, the equity betas of C-Corps exceed those of REITs. However, the difference between the average equity risk of the two sectors is much smaller than is the sectors’ difference in operating risk. Because equity betas capture both operating and financial risk, these results imply that REITs have significantly less operating risk than C-Corps and offset their lower business risk with higher financial leverage. During the global financial crisis, operating risk increases in both hotel industry subsectors, and the amount by which C-Corp asset betas exceed REIT asset betas is roughly proportionate to that observed in noncrisis periods. During the financial crisis, however, REITs experienced a greater increase in finan- cial leverage than did C-Corps, with the result being that the normal relation reverses, i.e., during the global financial crisis, REIT average equity betas significantly exceeded the average equity betas of C-Corps
Valuation of aircraft noise by time of day: a comparison of two approaches
This paper reports an innovative application of stated preference techniques to derive values of aircraft noise by time of day and day of week. Revealed preference techniques cannot provide such segmentations which would clearly be of use in policy development especially relating to airport operations. Given the lack of research on this issue the work reported here is highly experimental. Two stated preference experiments were designed. The first focussed on a single time period whilst the second asked respondents to trade between time periods. Both approaches yielded results that are plausible and mutually consistent in terms of relative values by time period. We conclude that stated preference techniques are particularly useful in this context where the use of aggregated values may lead to non-optimal policy decisions
A study of the effects of micro-gravity on seed germination
This study will identify characteristics of seed germination dependent upon gravity. To accomplish this objective, four different seed types will be germinated in space and then be compared to a control group germinated on Earth. Both the experimental and control groups will be analyzed on the cellular level for the size of cells, structural anomalies, and gravitational effects. The experiment will be conducted in a Get Away Special Canister (GAS Can no. 608) owned by the U.S. Space and Rocket Center and designed for students. The GAS Can will remain in the cargo bay of the Space Shuttle with minimal astronaut interaction
Light-Scattering Technique for the Study of Dynamic Thickness Fluctuations in Thin Liquid Films
The authors describe a light-scattering technique capable of probing the dynamics of thickness fluctuations in lipid bilayers. The technique, which they call reflectance fluctuation spectroscopy (RFS), is keenly sensitive to light scattered from the squeeze modes of motion in a thin liquid film, and insensitive to light scattered from the bend modes. A laser beam is focused to a small spot on the film, and the power in the specularly reflected beam is recorded in real time. Thickness fluctuations associated with the squeeze modes of motion give rise to fluctuations in the power of the specularly reflected light. The frequency spectrum of the fluctuations in detected power (RFS spectrum) can be analyzed to yield values for the film viscosity and thickness compressibility. The authors present two independent theoretical derivations of the RFS spectrum and show that scattering from the bend mode can be neglected. The theoretical expression for the RFS spectrum is compared with experimental spectra obtained from glycerylmonooleate-decane bilayers. The fit of the theory to the data is excellent and the values deduced for the film viscosity and thickness compressibility are reasonable
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