2,850 research outputs found
Time-critical multirate scheduling using contemporary real-time operating system services
Although real-time operating systems provide many of the task control services necessary to process time-critical applications (i.e., applications with fixed, invariant deadlines), it may still be necessary to provide a scheduling algorithm at a level above the operating system in order to coordinate a set of synchronized, time-critical tasks executing at different cyclic rates. The scheduling requirements for such applications and develops scheduling algorithms using services provided by contemporary real-time operating systems
Southwest Research Institute assistance to NASA in biomedical areas of the technology utilization program Final report, 1 Feb. 1969 - 24 Aug. 1970
Research progress in technology transfer by NASA Biomedical Application Tea
Southwest Research Institute assistance to NASA in biomedical areas of the Technology Utilization program
Technology utilization in biomedical areas, particularly for infants and handicapped person
Southwest Research Institute assistance to NASA in biomedical areas of the technology
Significant applications of aerospace technology were achieved. These applications include: a miniaturized, noninvasive system to telemeter electrocardiographic signals of heart transplant patients during their recuperative period as graded situations are introduced; and economical vital signs monitor for use in nursing homes and rehabilitation hospitals to indicate the onset of respiratory arrest; an implantable telemetry system to indicate the onset of the rejection phenomenon in animals undergoing cardiac transplants; an exceptionally accurate current proportional temperature controller for pollution studies; an automatic, atraumatic blood pressure measurement device; materials for protecting burned areas in contact with joint bender splints; a detector to signal the passage of animals by a given point during ecology studies; and special cushioning for use with below-knee amputees to protect the integrity of the skin at the stump/prosthesis interface
A theoretical basis for the analysis of redundant software subject to coincident errors
Fundamental to the development of redundant software techniques fault-tolerant software, is an understanding of the impact of multiple-joint occurrences of coincident errors. A theoretical basis for the study of redundant software is developed which provides a probabilistic framework for empirically evaluating the effectiveness of the general (N-Version) strategy when component versions are subject to coincident errors, and permits an analytical study of the effects of these errors. The basic assumptions of the model are: (1) independently designed software components are chosen in a random sample; and (2) in the user environment, the system is required to execute on a stationary input series. The intensity of coincident errors, has a central role in the model. This function describes the propensity to introduce design faults in such a way that software components fail together when executing in the user environment. The model is used to give conditions under which an N-Version system is a better strategy for reducing system failure probability than relying on a single version of software. A condition which limits the effectiveness of a fault-tolerant strategy is studied, and it is posted whether system failure probability varies monotonically with increasing N or whether an optimal choice of N exists
Structural Transparency – A New Wood Plastic Composite Girder
Transparency is one of the significant features of modern architecture. By utilisingtransparent materials the feeling of lightness can be conveyed. This paper shows thepossibility of employing transparent plastic as a load-bearing element. In order tobe able to use a new material as part of the building structure it is essential to knowits mechanical behaviour under various conditions like different temperatures,environmental impacts or the load duration. Proposals for the design of structuralelements that consist of these materials are still rare up to now since plastics arestill fairly new to the building industry. By combining transparent withconventional building materials it is possible to merge transparency and strength ina girder that comprises a combination of transparent thermoplastics and wood
Echoes in classical dynamical systems
Echoes arise when external manipulations to a system induce a reversal of its
time evolution that leads to a more or less perfect recovery of the initial
state. We discuss the accuracy with which a cloud of trajectories returns to
the initial state in classical dynamical systems that are exposed to additive
noise and small differences in the equations of motion for forward and backward
evolution. The cases of integrable and chaotic motion and small or large noise
are studied in some detail and many different dynamical laws are identified.
Experimental tests in 2-d flows that show chaotic advection are proposed.Comment: to be published in J. Phys.
Application of queueing models to multiprogrammed computer systems operating in a time-critical environment
A model of a central processor (CPU) which services background applications in the presence of time critical activity is presented. The CPU is viewed as an M/M/1 queueing system subject to periodic interrupts by deterministic, time critical process. The Laplace transform of the distribution of service times for the background applications is developed. The use of state of the art queueing models for studying the background processing capability of time critical computer systems is discussed and the results of a model validation study which support this application of queueing models are presented
Approach to ergodicity in quantum wave functions
According to theorems of Shnirelman and followers, in the semiclassical limit
the quantum wavefunctions of classically ergodic systems tend to the
microcanonical density on the energy shell. We here develop a semiclassical
theory that relates the rate of approach to the decay of certain classical
fluctuations. For uniformly hyperbolic systems we find that the variance of the
quantum matrix elements is proportional to the variance of the integral of the
associated classical operator over trajectory segments of length , and
inversely proportional to , where is the Heisenberg
time, being the mean density of states. Since for these systems the
classical variance increases linearly with , the variance of the matrix
elements decays like . For non-hyperbolic systems, like Hamiltonians
with a mixed phase space and the stadium billiard, our results predict a slower
decay due to sticking in marginally unstable regions. Numerical computations
supporting these conclusions are presented for the bakers map and the hydrogen
atom in a magnetic field.Comment: 11 pages postscript and 4 figures in two files, tar-compressed and
uuencoded using uufiles, to appear in Phys Rev E. For related papers, see
http://www.icbm.uni-oldenburg.de/icbm/kosy/ag.htm
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