6,450 research outputs found
Bounds for Invariance Pressure
This paper provides an upper for the invariance pressure of control sets with
nonempty interior and a lower bound for sets with finite volume. In the special
case of the control set of a hyperbolic linear control system in R^{d} this
yields an explicit formula. Further applications to linear control systems on
Lie groups and to inner control sets are discussed.Comment: 16 page
Fuzzy logic control for camera tracking system
A concept utilizing fuzzy theory has been developed for a camera tracking system to provide support for proximity operations and traffic management around the Space Station Freedom. Fuzzy sets and fuzzy logic based reasoning are used in a control system which utilizes images from a camera and generates required pan and tilt commands to track and maintain a moving target in the camera's field of view. This control system can be implemented on a fuzzy chip to provide an intelligent sensor for autonomous operations. Capabilities of the control system can be expanded to include approach, handover to other sensors, caution and warning messages
Optimization conditions of UV-C radiation combined with ultrasound-assisted extraction of cherry tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) lycopene extract
The aim of this work was to study the effect of UV-C radiation on ultrasound assisted extraction
(UAE) of cherry tomato bioactive compounds. Cherry tomatoes were exposed to two UV-C radiation
doses (0.5 and 1.0 J cm−2
) and stored at 20 ± 0.5 oC for 7 days. Next, they were lyophilized, and
the bioactive compounds were extracted by UAE at 20 KHz. To evaluate the effectiveness of the
extraction process of the bioactive compounds, a CCRD (central composite rotational design) was
used together with RSM (response surface methodology), for extraction times from 4 to 12 minutes
and concentrations (g of lyophilized product / L of ethanol) of 1:10, 1:20 and 1:30. The extracts
obtained from the irradiated tomatoes presented 5.8 times more lycopene content than the controls
and higher antioxidant activity was obtained for 4 and 8 min, in the concentrations 1:10 and 1:20 (m
v−1). Through numerical model optimization, optimal extraction conditions were obtained. The results
demonstrated that by previously irradiating tomatoes with UV-C light, the UAE yielded considerably
higher amounts of lycopene and other bioactives.CNPq (National Council of Technological and Scientific
Development, Brazil), Erasmus Mundus action 2; Fellow
Mundus Project; Department of Chemical Engineering and Food Engineering
(UFSC - Brazil) and the Department of Food Engineering (UAlg - Portugal) .info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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Impact experiments in support of “Lithopanspermia”: The route from Mars to Earth
Shock recovery experiments on a Martian analogue rock (gabbro) loaded with three types of microorganisms reveal that these organisms survive the impact and ejection phase on Mars at shock pressures up to about 50 GPa with exponentially decreasing survival rates
The distribution of silicate strength in Spitzer spectra of AGNs and ULIRGs
A sample of 196 AGNs and ULIRGs observed by the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS)
on Spitzer is analyzed to study the distribution of the strength of the 9.7
micron silicate feature. Average spectra are derived for quasars, Seyfert 1 and
Seyfert 2 AGNs, and ULIRGs. We find that quasars are characterized by silicate
features in emission and Seyfert 1s equally by emission or weak absorption.
Seyfert 2s are dominated by weak silicate absorption, and ULIRGs are
characterized by strong silicate absorption (mean apparent optical depth about
1.5). Luminosity distributions show that luminosities at rest frame 5.5 micron
are similar for the most luminous quasars and ULIRGs and are almost 10^5 times
more luminous than the least luminous AGN in the sample. The distributions of
spectral characteristics and luminosities are compared to those of optically
faint infrared sources at z~2 being discovered by the IRS, which are also
characterized by strong silicate absorption. It is found that local ULIRGs are
a similar population, although they have lower luminosities and somewhat
stronger absorption compared to the high redshift sources.Comment: Accepted for publication on ApJ
Photon trains and lasing : The periodically pumped quantum dot
We propose to pump semiconductor quantum dots with surface acoustic waves
which deliver an alternating periodic sequence of electrons and holes. In
combination with a good optical cavity such regular pumping could entail
anti-bunching and sub-Poissonian photon statistics. In the bad-cavity limit a
train of equally spaced photons would arise.Comment: RevTex, 5 pages, 1 figur
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Air cushion effect in the short-pulse initiation of explosives
When thin flyer plates are used to shock initiate high explosive (HE), any air present ahead of the flyer may cause a significant desensitization of the HE. The effect of the air in cushioning the impact of plastic flyers faced with metal films is analyzed here with MACRAME, a code which calculates wave interactions and traces wave propagation. The authors find that the second air shock into the HE has sufficient pressure to collapse the HE to crystal density or higher. Precompressed regions of HE do not react rapidly when the main impact pulse does arrive. Define y{sup *} as the depth where the major shock overtakes the precompression wave (for no air y{sup *} {r_arrow} 0). For various flyers and air combinations, the authors compare pressure profiles at y = y{sup *} + {epsilon}. The shock pressure profile associated with metal film impact may be greatly attenuated at the depth y{sup *}. Density profiles (p(t) at y) show that the shock heating for y > y{sup *} is greater than that for y < y{sup *}
Significant initial results from the environmental measurements experiment on ATS-6
The Applications Technology Satellite (ATS-6), launched into synchronous orbit on 30 May 1974, carried a set of six particle detectors and a triaxial fluxgate magnetometer. The particle detectors were able to determine the ion and electron distribution functions from 1 to greater than 10 to the 8th power eV. It was found that the magnetic field is weaker and more tilted than predicted by models which neglect internal plasma and that there is a seasonal dependence to the magnitude and tilt. ATS-6 magnetic field measurements showed the effects of field-aligned currents associated with substorms, and large fluxes of field-aligned particles were observed with the particle detectors. Encounters with the plasmasphere revealed the existence of warm plasma with temperatures up to 30 eV. A variety of correlated waves in both the particles and fields were observed: pulsation continuous oscillations, seen predominantly in the plasmasphere bulge; ultralow frequency (ULF) standing waves; ring current proton ULF waves; and low frequency waves that modulate the energetic electrons. In additon, large scale waves on the energetic-ion-trapping boundary were observed, and the intensity of energetic electrons was modulated in association with the passage of sector boundaries of the interplanetary magnetic field
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