11,156 research outputs found
High Dynamic Range RF Front End with Noise Cancellation and Linearization for WiMAX Receivers
This research deals with verification of the high dynamic range for a heterodyne radio frequency (RF) front end. A 2.6 GHz RF front end is designed and implemented in a hybrid microwave integrated circuit (HMIC) for worldwide interoperability for microwave access (WiMAX) receivers. The heterodyne RF front end consists of a low-noise amplifier (LNA) with noise cancellation, an RF bandpass filter (BPF), a downconverter with linearization, and an intermediate frequency (IF) BPF. A noise canceling technique used in the low-noise amplifier eliminates a thermal noise and then reduces the noise figure (NF) of the RF front end by 0.9 dB. Use of a downconverter with diode linearizer also compensates for gain compression, which increases the input-referred third-order intercept point (IIP3) of the RF front end by 4.3 dB. The proposed method substantially increases the spurious-free dynamic range (DRf) of the RF front end by 3.5 dB
Prediction of the number of cloud droplets in the ECHAM GCM
In this paper a prognostic equation for the number of cloud droplets (CDNC) is introduced into the ECHAM general circulation model. The initial CDNC is based on the mechanistic model of Chuang and Penner [1995], providing a more realistical prediction of CDNC than the empirical method previously used. Cloud droplet nucleation is parameterized as a function of total aerosol number concentration, updraft velocity, and a shape parameter, which takes the aerosol composition and size distribution into account. The total number of aerosol particles is obtained as the sum of marine sulfate aerosols produced from dimethyl sulfide, hydrophylic organic and black carbon, submicron dust, and sea-salt aerosols. Anthropogenic sulfate aerosols only add mass to the preexisting aerosols but do not form new particles. The simulated annual mean liquid water path, column CDNC, and effective radius agree well with observations, as does the frequency distributions of column CDNC for clouds over oceans and the variations of cloud optical depth with effective radius
A 0.8 V T Network-Based 2.6 GHz Downconverter RFIC
A 2.6 GHz downconverter RFIC is designed and implemented using a 0.18 μm CMOS standard process. An important goal of the design is to achieve the high linearity that is required in WiMAX systems with a low supply voltage. A passive T phase-shift network is used as an RF input stage in a Gilbert cell to reduce supply voltage. A single supply voltage of 0.8 V is used with a power consumption of 5.87 mW. The T network-based downconverter achieves a conversion gain (CG) of 5 dB, a single-sideband noise figure (NF) of 16.16 dB, an RF-to-IF isolation of greater than 20 dB, and an input-referred third-order intercept point (IIP3) of 1 dBm when the LO power of -13 dBm is applied
Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm as a test of quantum computation
A redundancy in the existing Deutsch-Jozsa quantum algorithm is removed and a
refined algorithm, which reduces the size of the register and simplifies the
function evaluation, is proposed. The refined version allows a simpler analysis
of the use of entanglement between the qubits in the algorithm and provides
criteria for deciding when the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm constitutes a meaningful
test of quantum computation.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, RevTex, Approved for publication in Phys Rev
Scheme for direct measurement of a general two-qubit Hamiltonian
The construction of two-qubit gates appropriate for universal quantum
computation is of enormous importance to quantum information processing.
Building such gates is dependent on accurate knowledge of the interaction
dynamics between two qubit systems. This letter will present a systematic
method for reconstructing the full two-qubit interaction Hamiltonian through
experimental measures of concurrence. This not only gives a convenient method
for constructing two qubit quantum gates, but can also be used to
experimentally determine various Hamiltonian parameters in physical systems. We
show explicitly how this method can be employed to determine the first and
second order spin-orbit corrections to the exchange coupling in quantum dots.Comment: 4 Pages, 1 Figur
First passage times and asymmetry of DNA translocation
Motivated by experiments in which single-stranded DNA with a short hairpin
loop at one end undergoes unforced diffusion through a narrow pore, we study
the first passage times for a particle, executing one-dimensional brownian
motion in an asymmetric sawtooth potential, to exit one of the boundaries. We
consider the first passage times for the case of classical diffusion,
characterized by a mean-square displacement of the form , and for the case of anomalous diffusion or subdiffusion, characterized by a
mean-square displacement of the form with
. In the context of classical diffusion, we obtain an expression
for the mean first passage time and show that this quantity changes when the
direction of the sawtooth is reversed or, equivalently, when the reflecting and
absorbing boundaries are exchanged. We discuss at which numbers of `teeth'
(or number of DNA nucleotides) and at which heights of the sawtooth potential
this difference becomes significant. For large , it is well known that the
mean first passage time scales as . In the context of subdiffusion, the
mean first passage time does not exist. Therefore we obtain instead the
distribution of first passage times in the limit of long times. We show that
the prefactor in the power relation for this distribution is simply the
expression for the mean first passage time in classical diffusion. We also
describe a hypothetical experiment to calculate the average of the first
passage times for a fraction of passage events that each end within some time
. We show that this average first passage time scales as in
subdiffusion.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures We incorporated reviewers' suggestions from
Physical Review E. We reformulated a few paragraphs in the introduction and
further clarified the issue of the (a)symmetry of passage times. In the
results section, we re-expressed the results in a form that manifest the
important features. We also added a few references concerning anomalous
diffusion. The look (but not the content) of figure 1 was also change
Unified model for vortex-string network evolution
We describe and numerically test the velocity-dependent one-scale (VOS)
string evolution model, a simple analytic approach describing a string network
with the averaged correlation length and velocity. We show that it accurately
reproduces the large-scale behaviour (in particular the scaling laws) of
numerical simulations of both Goto-Nambu and field theory string networks. We
explicitly demonstrate the relation between the high-energy physics approach
and the damped and non-relativistic limits which are relevant for condensed
matter physics. We also reproduce experimental results in this context and show
that the vortex-string density is significantly reduced by loop production, an
effect not included in the usual `coarse-grained' approach.Comment: 5 pages; v2: cosmetic changes, version to appear in PR
Conceptual Design of a Communication-Based Deep Space Navigation Network
As the need grows for increased autonomy and position knowledge accuracy to support missions beyond Earth orbit, engineers must push and develop more advanced navigation sensors and systems that operate independent of Earth-based analysis and processing. Several spacecraft are approaching this problem using inter-spacecraft radiometric tracking and onboard autonomous optical navigation methods. This paper proposes an alternative implementation to aid in spacecraft position fixing. The proposed method Network-Based Navigation technique takes advantage of the communication data being sent between spacecraft and between spacecraft and ground control to embed navigation information. The navigation system uses these packets to provide navigation estimates to an onboard navigation filter to augment traditional ground-based radiometric tracking techniques. As opposed to using digital signal measurements to capture inherent information of the transmitted signal itself, this method relies on the embedded navigation packet headers to calculate a navigation estimate. This method is heavily dependent on clock accuracy and the initial results show the promising performance of a notional system
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