58,576 research outputs found
Experimental study of contact transition control incorporating joint acceleration feedback
Joint acceleration and velocity feedbacks are incorporated into a classical internal force control of a robot in contact with the environment. This is intended to achieve a robust contact transition and force tracking performance for varying unknown environments, without any need of adjusting the controller parameters, A unified control structure is proposed for free motion, contact transition, and constrained motion in view of the consumption of the initial kinetic energy generated by a nonzero impact velocity. The influence of the velocity and acceleration feedbacks, which are introduced especially for suppressing the transition oscillation, on the postcontact tracking performance is discussed. Extensive experiments are conducted on the third joint of a three-link direct-drive robot to verify the proposed scheme for environments of various stiffnesses, including elastic (sponge), less elastic (cardboard), and hard (steel plate) surfaces. Results are compared with those obtained by the transition control scheme without the acceleration feedback. The ability of the proposed control scheme in resisting the force disturbance during the postcontact period is also experimentally investigated
Scalable Compression of Deep Neural Networks
Deep neural networks generally involve some layers with mil- lions of
parameters, making them difficult to be deployed and updated on devices with
limited resources such as mobile phones and other smart embedded systems. In
this paper, we propose a scalable representation of the network parameters, so
that different applications can select the most suitable bit rate of the
network based on their own storage constraints. Moreover, when a device needs
to upgrade to a high-rate network, the existing low-rate network can be reused,
and only some incremental data are needed to be downloaded. We first
hierarchically quantize the weights of a pre-trained deep neural network to
enforce weight sharing. Next, we adaptively select the bits assigned to each
layer given the total bit budget. After that, we retrain the network to
fine-tune the quantized centroids. Experimental results show that our method
can achieve scalable compression with graceful degradation in the performance.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, ACM Multimedia 201
Objective analysis of observational data from the FGGE observing systems
An objective analysis procedure for updating the GLAS second and fourth order general atmospheric circulation models using observational data from the first GARP global experiment is described. The objective analysis procedure is based on a successive corrections method and the model is updated in a data assimilation cycle. Preparation of the observational data for analysis and the objective analysis scheme are described. The organization of the program and description of the required data sets are presented. The program logic and detailed descriptions of each subroutine are given
Unusual persistence of superconductivity against high magnetic fields in the strongly-correlated iron-chalcogenide film FeTe:O
We report an unusual persistence of superconductivity against high magnetic
fields in the iron chalcogenide film FeTe:O below ~ 2.5 K. Instead of
saturating like a mean-field behavior with a single order parameter, the
measured low-temperature upper critical field increases progressively,
suggesting a large supply of superconducting states accessible via magnetic
field or low-energy thermal fluctuations. We demonstrate that superconducting
states of finite momenta can be realized within the conventional theory,
despite its questionable applicability. Our findings reveal a fundamental
characteristic of superconductivity and electronic structure in the
strongly-correlated iron-based superconductors.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Wave mixing of optical pulses and Bose-Einstein condensates
We investigate theoretically the four-wave mixing of optical and matter waves
resulting from the scattering of a short light pulse off an atomic
Bose-Einstein condensate, as recently demonstrated by D. Schneble {\em et al.}
[ Science {\bf 300}, 475 (2003)]. We show that atomic ``pair production'' from
the condensate results in the generation of both forward- and
backward-propagating matter waves. These waves are characterized by different
phase-matching conditions, resulting in different angular distributions and
temporal evolutions.Comment: 4+\epsilon pages, 3 figure
Spherically symmetric trapping horizons, the Misner-Sharp mass and black hole evaporation
Understood in terms of pure states evolving into mixed states, the
possibility of information loss in black holes is closely related to the global
causal structure of spacetime, as is the existence of event horizons. However,
black holes need not be defined by event horizons, and in fact we argue that in
order to have a fully unitary evolution for black holes, they should be defined
in terms of something else, such as a trapping horizon. The Misner-Sharp mass
in spherical symmetry shows very simply how trapping horizons can give rise to
black hole thermodynamics, Hawking radiation and singularities. We show how the
Misner-Sharp mass can also be used to give insights into the process of
collapse and evaporation of locally defined black holes.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Transport in Graphene Tunnel Junctions
We present a technique to fabricate tunnel junctions between graphene and Al
and Cu, with a Si back gate, as well as a simple theory of tunneling between a
metal and graphene. We map the differential conductance of our junctions versus
probe and back gate voltage, and observe fluctuations in the conductance that
are directly related to the graphene density of states. The conventional
strong-suppression of the conductance at the graphene Dirac point can not be
clearly demonstrated, but a more robust signature of the Dirac point is found:
the inflection in the conductance map caused by the electrostatic gating of
graphene by the tunnel probe. We present numerical simulations of our
conductance maps, confirming the measurement results. In addition, Al causes
strong n-doping of graphene, Cu causes a moderate p-doping, and in high
resistance junctions, phonon resonances are observed, as in STM studies.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
Bistable Amphoteric Native Defect Model of Perovskite Photovoltaics
The past few years have witnessed unprecedented rapid improvement of the
performance of a new class of photovoltaics based on halide perovskites. This
progress has been achieved even though there is no generally accepted mechanism
of the operation of these solar cells. Here we present a model based on
bistable amphoteric native defects that accounts for all key characteristics of
these photovoltaics and explains many idiosyncratic properties of halide
perovskites. We show that a transformation between donor-like and acceptor-like
configurations leads to a resonant interaction between amphoteric defects and
free charge carriers. This interaction, combined with the charge transfer from
the perovskite to the electron and hole transporting layers results in the
formation of a dynamic n-i-p junction whose photovoltaic parameters are
determined by the perovskite absorber. The model provides a unified explanation
for the outstanding properties of the perovskite photovoltaics, including
hysteresis of J-V characteristics and ultraviolet light-induced degradation.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Stokes Parameters as a Minkowskian Four-vector
It is noted that the Jones-matrix formalism for polarization optics is a
six-parameter two-by-two representation of the Lorentz group. It is shown that
the four independent Stokes parameters form a Minkowskian four-vector, just
like the energy-momentum four-vector in special relativity. The optical filters
are represented by four-by-four Lorentz-transformation matrices. This
four-by-four formalism can deal with partial coherence described by the Stokes
parameters. A four-by-four matrix formulation is given for decoherence effects
on the Stokes parameters, and a possible experiment is proposed. It is shown
also that this Lorentz-group formalism leads to optical filters with a symmetry
property corresponding to that of two-dimensional Euclidean transformations.Comment: RevTeX, 22 pages, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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