5,652 research outputs found
Oribatid assemblies of tropical high mountains on some points of the “Gondwana-Bridge” – a case study
This work is the first part of a series of studies, which introduces the methodological possibilities of coenological and zoogeographical indication and – following the climate, vegetation and elevation zones – the pattern-describing analysis of the main Oribatid sinusia of the world explored till our days.This current work is a case-study, which displays the comparison of 9 examination sites from 3
different geographical locations. On each location, three vegetation types have been examined: a plain
rain-forest, a mossforest and a mountainous paramo. Analyses are based on the hitherto non-published
genus-level database and coenological tables of the deceased János Balogh professor. Occurrence of 18
genera is going to be published as new data for the given zoogeographical region
Physiologically structured populations with diffusion and dynamic boundary conditions
We consider a linear size-structured population model with diffusion in the
size-space. Individuals are recruited into the population at arbitrary sizes.
The model is equipped with generalized Wentzell-Robin (or dynamic) boundary
conditions. This allows modelling of "adhesion" at extremely small or large
sizes. We establish existence and positivity of solutions by showing that
solutions are governed by a positive quasicontractive semigroup of linear
operators on the biologically relevant state space. This is carried out via
establishing dissipativity of a suitably perturbed semigroup generator. We also
show that solutions of the model exhibit balanced exponential growth, that is
our model admits a finite dimensional global attractor. In case of strictly
positive fertility we are able to establish that solutions in fact exhibit
asynchronous exponential growth
Steady states in hierarchical structured populations with distributed states at birth
We investigate steady states of a quasilinear first order hyperbolic partial
integro-differential equation. The model describes the evolution of a
hierarchical structured population with distributed states at birth.
Hierarchical size-structured models describe the dynamics of populations when
individuals experience size-specific environment. This is the case for example
in a population where individuals exhibit cannibalistic behavior and the chance
to become prey (or to attack) depends on the individual's size. The other
distinctive feature of the model is that individuals are recruited into the
population at arbitrary size. This amounts to an infinite rank integral
operator describing the recruitment process. First we establish conditions for
the existence of a positive steady state of the model. Our method uses a fixed
point result of nonlinear maps in conical shells of Banach spaces. Then we
study stability properties of steady states for the special case of a separable
growth rate using results from the theory of positive operators on Banach
lattices.Comment: to appear in Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems - Series
On Fuglede’s conjecture and the existence of universal spectra
Recent methods developed by, Too [18], Kolountzakis and Matolcsi [7] have led to counterexamples to Fugelde's Spectral Set Conjecture in both directions. Namely, in R(5) Tao produced a spectral set which is not a tile, while Kolountzakis and Matolcsi showed all example of a nonspectral tile. In search of lower dimensional nonspectral tiles we were led to investigate the Universal Spectrum Conjecture (USC) of Lagarias and Wang [14]. In particular, we prove here that the USC and the "tile --> spectral " direction of Fuglede's conjecture are equivalent in any dimensions. Also, we show by an example that the sufficient condition of Lagarias and Szabo [13] for the existence of universal spectra is not necessary. This fact causes considerable difficulties in producing lower dimensional examples of tiles which have no spectra. We overcome these difficulties by invoking some ideas of Revesz and Farkas [2], and obtain nonspectral tiles in R(3)
Semigroup analysis of structured parasite populations
Motivated by structured parasite populations in aquaculture we consider a
class of size-structured population models, where individuals may be recruited
into the population with distributed states at birth. The mathematical model
which describes the evolution of such a population is a first-order nonlinear
partial integro-differential equation of hyperbolic type. First, we use
positive perturbation arguments and utilise results from the spectral theory of
semigroups to establish conditions for the existence of a positive equilibrium
solution of our model. Then, we formulate conditions that guarantee that the
linearised system is governed by a positive quasicontraction semigroup on the
biologically relevant state space. We also show that the governing linear
semigroup is eventually compact, hence growth properties of the semigroup are
determined by the spectrum of its generator. In the case of a separable
fertility function, we deduce a characteristic equation, and investigate the
stability of equilibrium solutions in the general case using positive
perturbation arguments.Comment: to appear in Mathematical Modelling of Natural Phenomen
Connectivity-Based Self-Localization in WSNs
Efficient localization methods are among the major challenges in wireless sensor networks today. In this paper, we present our so-called connectivity based approach i.e, based on local connectivity information, to tackle this problem. At first the method fragments the network into larger groups labeled as packs. Based on the mutual connectivity relations with their surrounding packs, we identify border nodes as well as the central node. As this first approach requires some a-priori knowledge on the network topology, we also present a novel segment-based fragmentation method to estimate the central pack of the network as well as detecting so-called corner packs without any a-priori knowledge. Based on these detected points, the network is fragmented into a set of even larger elements, so-called segments built on top of the packs, supporting even more localization information as they all reach the central node
Analysis of Minimal LDPC Decoder System on a Chip Implementation
This paper presents a practical method of potential replacement of several different Quasi-Cyclic Low-Density Parity-Check (QC-LDPC) codes with one, with the intention of saving as much memory as required to implement the LDPC encoder and decoder in a memory-constrained System on a Chip (SoC). The presented method requires only a very small modification of the existing encoder and decoder, making it suitable for utilization in a Software Defined Radio (SDR) platform. Besides the analysis of the effects of necessary variable-node value fixation during the Belief Propagation (BP) decoding algorithm, practical standard-defined code parameters are scrutinized in order to evaluate the feasibility of the proposed LDPC setup simplification. Finally, the error performance of the modified system structure is evaluated and compared with the original system structure by means of simulation
Analysis of Aperture-coupled Microstrip Antenna Using Method of Moments
A microstrip patch antenna that is coupled to a microstripline by an aperture in the intervening ground plane is analyzed by using the method of moments. Integral equation is formulated by considering the exact dyadic Green's function in spectral domain for grounded dielectric slab so that the analysis includes all coupling effects and the radiation and surface wave effects of both substrates. The combination of the reciprocity method analysis and a Galerkin moment method solution seems to be suitable for a number of planar antenna problems, especially when coupling slots in the ground plane are included. Results for antenna input impedance are compared with other authors and verified by experimental results
Thermal measurement and modeling of multi-die packages
Thermal measurement and modeling of multi-die packages became a hot topic
recently in different fields like RAM chip packaging or LEDs / LED assemblies,
resulting in vertical (stacked) and lateral arrangement. In our present study
we show results for a mixed arrangement: an opto-coupler device has been
investigated with 4 chips in lateral as well as vertical arrangement. In this
paper we give an overview of measurement and modeling techniques and results
for stacked and MCM structures, describe our present measurement results
together with our structure function based methodology of validating the
detailed model of the package being studied. Also, we show how to derive
junction-to-pin thermal resistances with a technique using structure functions.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Segregation of granular binary mixtures by a ratchet mechanism
We report on a segregation scheme for granular binary mixtures, where the
segregation is performed by a ratchet mechanism realized by a vertically shaken
asymmetric sawtooth-shaped base in a quasi-two-dimensional box. We have studied
this system by computer simulations and found that most binary mixtures can be
segregated using an appropriately chosen ratchet, even when the particles in
the two components have the same size, and differ only in their normal
restitution coefficient or friction coefficient. These results suggest that the
components of otherwise non-segregating granular mixtures may be separated
using our method.Comment: revtex, 4 pages, 4 figures, submitte
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