256 research outputs found
Design, implementation and evaluation of broadband law noise amplifier (LNA) for radiometer.
The two major applications of microwave remote sensors are radiometer and radar. Because of its importance and the nature of the application, much research has been made on the various aspects of the radar. This paper will focus on the various aspects of the radiometer from a design point of view and the Low Noise Amplifier will be designed and implemented. The paper is based on a study in radio Frequency Communications engineering and understanding of electronic and RF circuits. Some research study about the radiometer and practical implementation of Low Noise Amplifier for Radiometer will be the main focus of this paper. Basically the paper is divided into two parts. In the first part some background study about the radiometer will be carried out and commonly used types of radiometer will be discussed. In the second part LNA for the radiometer will be designed
Muestreo como un requisito fundamental en las ciencias experimentales (Sampling as a basic requirement in experimental sciences)
Se presentan los fundamentos básicos de muestreo, enfatizando los requisitos para determinar el tamaño óptimo de la muestra. Se discuten el muestreo absoluto y relativo y la comparación entre ellos. Se destaca la relevancia del tipo de distribución espacial en el diseño de muestreo y presenta varios modelos de uso actual para la determinación de ella. Se presentan de manera somera tres modelos de uso común, y finalmente, y por su relevancia práctica e económica, se discuten las cinco modalidades de muestreo secuencial.
The fundamentals of sampling with emphasis on determining the optimal sample size are given. Absolute and relative sampling as well as the comparison among them is stressed. The importance of spatial distribution in sampling design is noted and various current models for its determination are offered. Three current models are discussed briefly, and finally, due to the practical and economical significance of sequential sampling, five different types of this kind of sampling design are fully addressed
Transmission of Information in Active Networks
Shannon's Capacity Theorem is the main concept behind the Theory of
Communication. It says that if the amount of information contained in a signal
is smaller than the channel capacity of a physical media of communication, it
can be transmitted with arbitrarily small probability of error. This theorem is
usually applicable to ideal channels of communication in which the information
to be transmitted does not alter the passive characteristics of the channel
that basically tries to reproduce the source of information. For an {\it active
channel}, a network formed by elements that are dynamical systems (such as
neurons, chaotic or periodic oscillators), it is unclear if such theorem is
applicable, once an active channel can adapt to the input of a signal, altering
its capacity. To shed light into this matter, we show, among other results, how
to calculate the information capacity of an active channel of communication.
Then, we show that the {\it channel capacity} depends on whether the active
channel is self-excitable or not and that, contrary to a current belief,
desynchronization can provide an environment in which large amounts of
information can be transmitted in a channel that is self-excitable. An
interesting case of a self-excitable active channel is a network of
electrically connected Hindmarsh-Rose chaotic neurons.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. submitted for publication. to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Quantifying Self-Organization with Optimal Predictors
Despite broad interest in self-organizing systems, there are few
quantitative, experimentally-applicable criteria for self-organization. The
existing criteria all give counter-intuitive results for important cases. In
this Letter, we propose a new criterion, namely an internally-generated
increase in the statistical complexity, the amount of information required for
optimal prediction of the system's dynamics. We precisely define this
complexity for spatially-extended dynamical systems, using the probabilistic
ideas of mutual information and minimal sufficient statistics. This leads to a
general method for predicting such systems, and a simple algorithm for
estimating statistical complexity. The results of applying this algorithm to a
class of models of excitable media (cyclic cellular automata) strongly support
our proposal.Comment: Four pages, two color figure
Enlarged scaling ranges for the KS-entropy and the information dimension
Numerical estimates of the Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy based on a finite amount
of data decay towards zero in the relevant limits. Rewriting differences of
block entropies as averages over decay rates, and ignoring all parts of the
sample where these rates are uncomputable because of the lack of neighbours,
yields improved entropy estimates. In the same way, the scaling range for
estimates of the information dimension can be extended considerably. The
improvement is demonstrated for experimental data.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Dimension of interaction dynamics
A method allowing to distinguish interacting from non-interacting systems
based on available time series is proposed and investigated. Some facts
concerning generalized Renyi dimensions that form the basis of our method are
proved. We show that one can find the dimension of the part of the attractor of
the system connected with interaction between its parts. We use our method to
distinguish interacting from non-interacting systems on the examples of
logistic and H\'enon maps. A classification of all possible interaction schemes
is given.Comment: 15 pages, 14 (36) figures, submitted to PR
Glassy behavior of light in random lasers
A theoretical analysis [Angelani et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 065702 (2006)]
predicts glassy behaviour of light in a nonlinear random medium. This implies
slow dynamics related to the presence of many metastable states. We consider
very general equations (that also apply to other systems, like Bose-Condensed
gases) describing light in a disordered non-linear medium and through some
approximations we relate them to a mean-field spin-glass-like model. The model
is solved by the replica method, and replica-symmetry breaking phase transition
is predicted. The transition describes a mode-locking process in which the
phases of the modes are locked to random (history and sample-dependent) values.
The results are based on very general theory, and embrace a variety of physical
phenomena.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures. Revised and enlarged version. To be published in
Physical Review
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