1,516 research outputs found

    The study of surface acoustic wave charge transfer device

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    A surface acoustic wave-charge transfer device, consisting of an n-type silicon substrate, a thermally grown silicon dioxide layer, and a sputtered film of piezoelectric zinc oxide is proposed as a means of circumventing problems associated with charge-coupled device (CCD) applications in memory, signal processing, and imaging. The proposed device creates traveling longitudinal electric fields in the silicon and replaces the multiphase clocks in CCD's. The traveling electric fields create potential wells which carry along charges stored there. These charges may be injected into the wells by light or by using a p-n junction as in conventional CCD's

    Adaptive time-frequency detection and filtering for imaging in heavy clutter

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    Abstract. We introduce an adaptive approach for the detection of a reflector in a strongly scattering medium using a timefrequency representation of the array response matrix followed by a Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). We use the Local Cosine Transform (LCT) for the time-frequency representation and introduce a detection criterion that identifies anomalies in the top singular values, across frequencies and in different time windows, that are due to the reflector. The detection is adaptive because the time windows that contain the primary echoes from the reflector are not determined in advance. Their location and width is identified by searching through the time-frequency binary tree of the LCT. After detecting the presence of the reflector we filter the array response matrix to retain information only in the time windows that have been selected. We also project the filtered array response matrix to the subspace associated with the top singular value and then image using travel time migration. We show with extensive numerical simulations that this approach to detection and imaging works well in heavy clutter that is calibrated using random matrix theory so as to simulate regimes close to the experiments in [3]. While the detection and filtering algorithm presented here works well in general clutter it has been analyzed theoretically only for the case of randomly layered media [1]

    Dynamics of topological solitons in two-dimensional ferromagnets

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    Dynamical topological solitons are studied in classical two-dimensional Heisenberg easy-axis ferromagnets. The properties of such solitons are treated both analytically in the continuum limit and numerically by spin dynamics simulations of the discrete system. Excitation of internal mode causes orbital motion. This is confirmed by simulations.Comment: LaTeX, 15 pages, 6 figure

    Robust seismic velocity change estimation using ambient noise recordings

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    We consider the problem of seismic velocity change estimation using ambient noise recordings. Motivated by [23] we study how the velocity change estimation is affected by seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources. More precisely, we consider a numerical model and introduce spatio-temporal seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources. We show that indeed, as pointed out in [23], the stretching method is affected by these fluctuations and produces misleading apparent velocity variations which reduce dramatically the signal to noise ratio of the method. We also show that these apparent velocity variations can be eliminated by an adequate normalization of the cross-correlation functions. Theoretically we expect our approach to work as long as the seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources are uniform, an assumption which holds for closely located seismic stations. We illustrate with numerical simulations and real measurements that the proposed normalization significantly improves the accuracy of the velocity change estimation

    A discontinuous Galerkin method for unsteady two-dimensional convective flows

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    We develop a High-Order Symmetric Interior Penalty (SIP) Discontinuous Galerkin (DG) Finite Element Method (FEM) to investigate two-dimensional in space natural convective flows in a vertical cavity. The physical problem is modeled by a coupled nonlinear system of partial differential equations and admits various solutions including stable and unstable modes in the form of traveling and/or standing waves, depending on the governing parameters. These flows are characterized by steep boundary and internal layers which evolve with time and can be well-resolved by high-order methods that also are adept to adaptive meshing. The standard no-slip boundary conditions which apply on the lateral walls, and the periodic conditions prescribed on the upper and lower boundaries, present additional challenges. The numerical scheme proposed herein is shown to successfully address these issues and furthermore, large Prandtl number values can be handled naturally. Discontinuous source terms and coefficients are an innate feature of multiphase flows involving heterogeneous fluids and will be a topic of subsequent work. Spatially adaptive Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Elements are especially suited to such problems

    Impacts to the land-water-human system of rural Iowa from high intensity continuous maize production

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    Complementary studies from the reference Clear Creek watershed and nine typical watersheds are used to evaluate cropping practices and water quality

    Magnon dispersion and thermodynamics in CsNiF_3

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    We present an accurate transfer matrix renormalization group calculation of the thermodynamics in a quantum spin-1 planar ferromagnetic chain. We also calculate the field dependence of the magnon gap and confirm the accuracy of the magnon dispersion derived earlier through an 1/n expansion. We are thus able to examine the validity of a number of previous calculations and further analyze a wide range of experiments on CsNiF_3 concerning the magnon dispersion, magnetization, susceptibility, and specific heat. Although it is not possible to account for all data with a single set of parameters, the overall qualitative agreement is good and the remaining discrepancies may reflect departure from ideal quasi-one-dimensional model behavior. Finally, we present some indirect evidence to the effect that the popular interpretation of the excess specific heat in terms of sine-Gordon solitons may not be appropriate.Comment: 9 pages 10 figure

    Ribbons Around Mexican Hats

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    We analyze quasi-topological solitons winding around a mexican-hat potential in two space-time dimensions. They are prototypes for a large number of physical excitations, including Skyrmions of the Higgs sector of the standard electroweak model, magnetic bubbles in thin ferromagnetic films, and strings in certain non-trivial backgrounds. We present explicit solutions, derive the conditions for classical stability, and show that contrary to the naive expectation these can be satisfied in the weak-coupling limit. In this limit we can calculate the soliton properties reliably, and estimate their lifetime semiclassically. We explain why gauge interactions destabilize these solitons, unless the scalar sector is extended.Comment: 12p. Latex , Ecole Polytechnique preprint A295.02.94 and Crete preprint 94-1
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