2,653 research outputs found

    NSSDC Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies for Space and Earth Science Applications, volume 1

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    Papers and viewgraphs from the conference are presented. This conference served as a broad forum for the discussion of a number of important issues in the field of mass storage systems. Topics include magnetic disk and tape technologies, optical disks and tape, software storage and file management systems, and experiences with the use of a large, distributed storage system. The technical presentations describe, among other things, integrated mass storage systems that are expected to be available commercially. Also included is a series of presentations from Federal Government organizations and research institutions covering their mass storage requirements for the 1990's

    NSSDC Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies for Space and Earth Science Applications, volume 2

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    This report contains copies of nearly all of the technical papers and viewgraphs presented at the NSSDC Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies for Space and Earth Science Application. This conference served as a broad forum for the discussion of a number of important issues in the field of mass storage systems. Topics include the following: magnetic disk and tape technologies; optical disk and tape; software storage and file management systems; and experiences with the use of a large, distributed storage system. The technical presentations describe, among other things, integrated mass storage systems that are expected to be available commercially. Also included is a series of presentations from Federal Government organizations and research institutions covering their mass storage requirements for the 1990's

    Study on Performance, Strength and Durability Of Metallic And Non-Metallic Fibre Reinforced Concrete With Inclusion Of Waste Ceramic Aggregates – A Review

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    Every year, the world generates millions of tons of waste, much of which cannot be recycled due to the high energy consumption and pollution involved in the recycling process. Ceramic is increasingly used in modern construction, especially in the production of tiles, but the material's fragility causes significant waste during processing, transportation, and installation. Even recycling the waste ceramic for further processing is currently not feasible. However, by using waste ceramic as a material in concrete production in the right way, we can eliminate waste and improve the properties of concrete. As the sustainable or green concrete industry continues to expand, many metallic and non-metallic wastes are generated in each processing and usage stage. This review article examines the utilisation of alternative materials in concrete to find solutions for waste disposal and provides construction contractors and developers with a vast range of ideas to improve and adopt new construction methods. The paper also gives a brief review of the properties from concrete produced from waste ceramic can be utilised as replacement for coarse aggregates by metallic and non-metallic fibers, and the resulting hardened concrete properties are studied

    Four-photon interference: a realizable experiment to demonstrate violation of EPR postulates for perfect correlations

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    Bell's theorem reveals contradictions between the predictions of quantum mechanics and the EPR postulates for a pair of particles only in situations involving imperfect statistical correlations. However, with three or more particles, contradictions emerge even for perfect correlations. We describe an experiment which can be realized in the laboratory, using four-photon entangled states generated by parametric down-conversion, to demonstrate this contradiction at the level of perfect correlations.Comment: publishe

    Griffiths phase-like behaviour and spin-phonon coupling in double perovskite Tb2_{2}NiMnO6_{6}

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    The Griffiths phase-like features and the spin-phonon coupling effects observed in Tb2_2NiMnO6_6 are reported. The double perovskite compound crystallizes in monoclinic P21/nP2_1/n space group and exhibits a magnetic phase transition at TcT_c \sim 111 K as an abrupt change in magnetization. A negative deviation from ideal Curie-Weiss law exhibited by 1/χ(T)\chi(T) curves and less-than-unity susceptibility exponents from the power-law analysis of inverse susceptibility are reminiscent of Griffiths phase-like features. Arrott plots derived from magnetization isotherms support the inhomogeneous nature of magnetism in this material. The observed effects originate from antiferromagnetic interactions which arise from inherent disorder in the system. Raman scattering experiments display no magnetic-order-induced phonon renormalization below TcT_c in Tb2_2NiMnO6_6 which is different from the results observed in other double perovskites and is correlated to the smaller size of the rare earth. The temperature evolution of full-width-at-half-maximum for the {\it stretching} mode at 645 cm1^{-1} presents an anomaly which coincides with the magnetic transition temperature and signals a close connection between magnetism and lattice in this material.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures; accepted in J. Appl. Phy

    Frequency-aware rate adaptation and MAC protocol

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    There has been burgeoning interest in wireless technologies that can use wider frequency spectrum. Technology advances, such as 802.11n and ultra-wideband (UWB), are pushing toward wider frequency bands. The analog-to-digital TV transition has made 100-250 MHz of digital whitespace bandwidth available for unlicensed access. Also, recent work on WiFi networks has advocated discarding the notion of channelization and allowing all nodes to access the wide 802.11 spectrum in order to improve load balancing. This shift towards wider bands presents an opportunity to exploit frequency diversity. Specifically, frequencies that are far from each other in the spectrum have significantly different SNRs, and good frequencies differ across sender-receiver pairs. This paper presents FARA, a combined frequency-aware rate adaptation and MAC protocol. FARA makes three departures from conventional wireless network design: First, it presents a scheme to robustly compute per-frequency SNRs using normal data transmissions. Second, instead of using one bit rate per link, it enables a sender to adapt the bitrate independently across frequencies based on these per-frequency SNRs. Third, in contrast to traditional frequency-oblivious MAC protocols, it introduces a MAC protocol that allocates to a sender-receiver pair the frequencies that work best for that pair. We have implemented FARA in FPGA on a wideband 802.11-compatible radio platform. Our experiments reveal that FARA provides a 3.1x throughput improvement in comparison to frequency-oblivious systems that occupy the same spectrum.Industrial Technology Research InstituteNational Science Foundation (U.S.)

    A Theory and Experiments for Detecting Shock Locations

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    In this paper we present a simplified one-dimensional theory for predicting locations of normal shocks in a converging diverging nozzle. The theory assumes that the flow is quasi one-dimensional and the flow is accelerated in the throat area. Optical aspects of the model consider propagation of electromagnetic fields transverse to the shock front. The theory consists of an inverse problem in which from the measured intensity it reconstructs an index of refraction profile for the shock. From this profile and the Dale-Gladstone relation, the density in the flow field is determined, thus determining the shock location. Experiments show agreement with the theory. In particular the location is determined within 10 percent of accuracy. Both the theoretical as well as the experimental results are presented to validate the procedures in this work
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