56,329 research outputs found
Autonomous attitude using potential function method under control input saturation
The potential function method has been used extensively in nonlinear control for the development of feedback laws which result in global asymptotic stability for a certain prescribed operating point of the closed-loop system. It is a variation of the Lyapunov direct method in the sense that here the Lyapunov function, also called potential function, is constructed in such a way that the undesired points of the system state space are avoided. The method has been considered for the space applications where the systems involved are usually composed of the cascaded subsystems of kinematics and dynamics and the kinematic states are mapped onto an appropriate potential function which is augmented for the overall system by the use of the method of integrator backstepping. The conventional backstepping controls, however, may result in an excessive control effort that may be beyond the saturation bound of the actuators. The present paper, while remaining within the framework of conventional backstepping control design, proposes analytical formulation for the control torque bound being a function of the tracking error and the control gains. The said formulation can be used to tune to the control gains to bound the control torque to a prescribed saturation bound of the control actuators
Perturbative QCD- and Power-Corrected Hadron Spectra and Spectral Moments in the Decay
We compute the leading order (in ) perturbative QCD and power
( corrections to the hadronic invariant mass and hadron energy
spectra in the decay in standard model. This is done
both by using the heavy quark expansion technique (HQET) and a perturbative-QCD
improved Fermi motion (FM) model which takes into account -meson
wave-function effects. The corrections in the hadron energy () spectrum
are found to be small over a good part of this spectrum in both the methods.
However, the expansion in in HQET fails near the lower kinematic
end-point and at the threshold. The hadronic invariant mass ()
spectrum is calculable only over a limited range in
the heavy quark expansion, where . We also
present results for the first two hadronic moments ,
, working out their sensitivity on the HQET and FM model parameters. For
equivalent values of these parameters, the moments in these methods are
remarkably close to each other. Using the FM model, we study the effect of the
experimental cuts, used recently by the CLEO collaboration in searching for the
decay , on the hadron spectra and hadronic invariant
mass moments. The constraints following from assumed values of on
the HQET parameters and are worked out. Data from
the forthcoming B facilities could be used to measure the short-distance
contribution in and determine the HQET parameters
and . This could be combined with complementary
constrains in to determine them precisely.Comment: 44 pages, 15 figure (require epsf.sty);, March 1998; Several typos
and composition errors corrected; four references added; no change in
formulae or result
A Theoretical Reappraisal of Branching Ratios and CP Asymmetries in the Decays and Determination of the CKM Parameters
We present a theoretical reappraisal of the branching ratios and CP
asymmetries for the decays , with , taking
into account current theoretical uncertainties in the description of the
inclusive decay amplitudes from the long-distance contributions, an improved
treatment of the renormalization scale dependence, and other parametric
dependencies. Concentrating on the partial branching ratios , integrated over the invariant dilepton mass region , we calculate theoretical precision on the
charge-conjugate averaged partial branching ratios , CP asymmetries in partial decay rates
, and the ratio of the
branching ratios .
For the central values of the CKM parameters, we find , , , , and . The dependence of and on the CKM parameters is worked out and the resulting constraints on
the unitarity triangle from an eventual measurement of are
illustrated.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures (require epsf.sty
Two New Pahlavi Inscriptions from Fars Province, Iran
First edition of two previously unknown Middle Persian inscriptions from the region of Fars in Iran
Invisibility and PT-symmetry
For a general complex scattering potential defined on a real line, we show
that the equations governing invisibility of the potential are invariant under
the combined action of parity and time-reversal (PT) transformation. We
determine the PT-symmetric an well as non-PT-symmetric invisible configurations
of an easily realizable exactly solvable model that consists of a two-layer
planar slab consisting of optically active material. Our analysis shows that
although PT-symmetry is neither necessary nor sufficient for the invisibility
of a scattering potential, it plays an important role in the characterization
of the invisible configurations. A byproduct of our investigation is the
discovery of certain configurations of our model that are effectively
reflectionless in a spectral range as wide as several hundred nanometers.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, revised version, accepted for publication in
Phys.Rev.
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