2,041 research outputs found

    Single-mask thermal displacement sensor in MEMS

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    In this work we describe a one degree-of-freedom microelectromechanical thermal\ud displacement sensor integrated with an actuated stage. The system was fabricated in the device layer of a silicon-on-insulator wafer using a single-mask process. The sensor is based on the temperature dependent electrical resistivity of silicon and the heat transfer by conduction through a thin layer of air. On a measurement range of 50 Ī¼m and using a measurement bandwidth of 30 Hz, the 1-sigma noise corresponds to 3.47 nm. The power consumption of the sensor is 209 mW, almost completely independent of stage position. The drift of the sensor over a measurement period of 32 hours was 32 nm

    Long-range elastic guidance mechanisms for electrostatic comb-drive actuators

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    The range of motion and output force of the often used electrostatic comb-drive with folded flexure straight guidance, as shown in Figure 1, is limited by sideways instability due to poor sideways stiffness of the folded flexure at relatively large deflections [1]

    Phase of beta-frequency tACS over primary motor cortex modulates corticospinal excitability

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    The assessment of corticospinal excitability by means of transcranial magnetic stimulation-induced motor evoked potentials is an established diagnostic tool in neurophysiology and a widely used procedure in fundamental brain research. However, concern about low reliability of these measures has grown recently. One possible cause of high variability of MEPs under identical acquisition conditions could be the influence of oscillatory neuronal activity on corticospinal excitability. Based on research showing that transcranial alternating current stimulation can entrain neuronal oscillations we here test whether alpha or beta frequency tACS can influence corticospinal excitability in a phase-dependent manner. We applied tACS at individually calibrated alpha- and beta-band oscillation frequencies, or we applied sham tACS. Simultaneous single TMS pulses time locked to eight equidistant phases of the ongoing tACS signal evoked MEPs. To evaluate offline effects of stimulation frequency, MEP amplitudes were measured before and after tACS. To evaluate whether tACS influences MEP amplitude, we fitted one-cycle sinusoids to the average MEPs elicited at the different phase conditions of each tACS frequency. We found no frequency-specific offline effects of tACS. However, beta-frequency tACS modulation of MEPs was phase-dependent. Post hoc analyses suggested that this effect was specific to participants with low (<19 Hz) intrinsic beta frequency. In conclusion, by showing that beta tACS influences MEP amplitude in a phase-dependent manner, our results support a potential role attributed to neuronal oscillations in regulating corticospinal excitability. Moreover, our findings may be useful for the development of TMS protocols that improve the reliability of MEPs as a meaningful tool for research applications or for clinical monitoring and diagnosis. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Basic and regional characteristics of streamflow in the Upper Colorado River Basin:Ā interim report

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    CER70-71GBE-HJMSS6.December 1970.Includes bibliographical reference (pages 23-24).Prepared for: Bureau of Reclamation, Division of Atmospheric Water Resources Management, Denver, Colorado, Project Skywater.This report describes the first phase of a research project concerned with two somewhat related subjects: 1. The study of the flow regimen of the rivers in the Upper Colorado River Basin and their relation to differences in geology, geomorphology, latitude, longitude, and physiographic parameters. 2. The application of such relations to the selection of hydrologically suitable basins for precipitation management. In this report, only general results about the flow characteristics of the streams in the Upper Colorado River Basin are presented. The determination of the streamflow characteristics was obtained from monthly flow data as published by the U.S. Geological Survey and corrected for diversions and regulations. Corrected records, stored on magnetic tape, for 707 stations were used in the study. From the monthly flow data mean yearly hydrographs have been computed for all stations. These hydrographs are expressed as specific yield in units of inches, cfs/sq. mi and liters per second per km2. The hydrographs are drawn on regular (linear), semi-logarithmic and double logarithmic scales. Monthly duration curves and mean yearly graphs of monthly coefficients of variation are also presented. This report contains a brief description of the methodology for the calculations, samples of computer output, tables of the calculated values and samples of various kinds of graphs which present in a concise and appealing visual way the characteristics of each gaging station. Maps with the results for the Colorado River Basin Project Area, a Bureau of Reclamation program of precipitation management in the San Juan Mountains area of Colorado, are given. A second report to be published later will contain an interpretation of the results and the implications for precipitation management.Under contract no. 14-06-D-6597

    Smart Search in Newspaper Archives Using Topic Maps

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    The OmniPaper project has implemented three information retrieval prototypes in the area of electronic news publishing. One prototype uses SOAP as communication protocol between the central system and a number of distributed news archives. The second prototype uses an RDF metadata database, enabling direct metadata queries to the central system. Finally the Topic Map prototype uses query expansion and semantic linking for smart metadata search. The Topic Map prototype enhances thesearch experience by implementing a knowledge layer that combines the semantic content of a lexical database, consisting of concepts and keywords, with a metadata-set of newspaper articles. The linking between both is currently implemented at the level of keywords but will be developed at the level of concepts in the final prototype. The knowledge layer has been designed from a Topic Map point of view, although the XTM syntax has not been used to avoid performance issues. The consortiumā€™s adopted view on information publishing and retrieval considers querying and navigation as two very related actions that can both be captured under the name ā€œsearch for relevant informationā€. Navigation forces the user to followpredefined paths whereas querying enables the user to look freely for a suitable starting point. The query and navigation functionality is provided through a web engine and is build on top of the information structure of the knowledge layer

    A single-mask thermal displacement sensor in MEMS

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    Position sensing in MEMS is often based on the principle of varying capacitance [1]. Alternative position sensing principles include using integrated optical waveguides [2] or varying thermal conductance [3]. Lantz et al demonstrated a thermal displacement sensor achieving nanometre resolution on a 100mm range. However a multi-mask production process and manual assembly were needed to fabricate this displacement sensor. In this work we present a 1-DOF thermal displacement sensor integrated with an actuated stage, and its experimental characterization. The system was fabricated in the device layer of a silicon-on-\ud insulator (SOI) wafer using a single-mask process.\ud \u

    Program transformations using temporal logic side conditions

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    This paper describes an approach to program optimisation based on transformations, where temporal logic is used to specify side conditions, and strategies are created which expand the repertoire of transformations and provide a suitable level of abstraction. We demonstrate the power of this approach by developing a set of optimisations using our transformation language and showing how the transformations can be converted into a form which makes it easier to apply them, while maintaining trust in the resulting optimising steps. The approach is illustrated through a transformational case study where we apply several optimisations to a small program

    Measuring primordial gravitational waves from CMB B-modes in cosmologies with generalized expansion histories

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    We evaluate our capability to constrain the abundance of primordial tensor perturbations in cosmologies with generalized expansion histories in the epoch of cosmic acceleration. Forthcoming satellite and sub-orbital experiments probing polarization in the CMB are expected to measure the B-mode power in CMB polarization, coming from PGWs on the degree scale, as well as gravitational lensing on arcmin scales; the latter is the main competitor for the measurement of PGWs, and is directly affected by the underlying expansion history, determined by the presence of a DE component. In particular, we consider early DE possible scenarios, in which the expansion history is substantially modified at the epoch in which the CMB lensing is most relevant. We show that the introduction of a parametrized DE may induce a variation as large as 30% in the ratio of the power of lensing and PGWs on the degree scale. We find that adopting the nominal specifications of upcoming satellite measurements the constraining power on PGWs is weakened by the inclusion of the extra degrees of freedom, resulting in a reduction of about 10% of the upper limits on r in fiducial models with no GWs, as well as a comparable increase in the error bars in models with non-zero r. Moreover, we find that the inclusion of sub-orbital CMB experiments, capable of mapping the B-mode power up to the angular scales affected by lensing, can restore the forecasted performances with a cosmological constant. Finally, we show how the combination of CMB data with Type Ia SNe, BAO and Hubble constant allows to constrain simultaneously r and the DE quantities in the parametrization we consider, consisting of present abundance and first redshift derivative of the energy density. We compare this study with results obtained using the forecasted lensing potential measurement precision from CMB satellite observations, finding consistent results.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication by JCAP. Modified version after the referee's comment
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