3,089 research outputs found

    On electromagnetic off-shell effects in proton-proton bremsstrahlung

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    We study the influence of the off-shell structure of the nucleon electromagnetic vertex on proton-proton bremsstrahlung observables. Realistic choices for these off-shell effects are found to have considerable influences on observables such as cross sections and analyzing powers. The rescattering contribution diminishes the effects of off-shell modifications in negative-energy states.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Flexible Scheduling in Multimedia Kernels: an Overview

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    Current Hard Real-Time (HRT) kernels have their timely behaviour guaranteed on the cost of a rather restrictive use of the available resources. This makes current HRT scheduling techniques inadequate for use in a multimedia environment where we can make a considerable profit by a better and more flexible use of the resources. We will show that we can improve the flexibility and efficiency of multimedia kernels. Therefore we introduce Real Time Transactions (RTT) with Deadline Inheritance policies for a small class of scheduling algorithms and we will evaluate these algorithms for use in a multimedia environmen

    RTnet: a real-time protocol for broadcast-capable networks

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    This paper presents an overview of a real-time network protocol, meant to be used on fully-connected local area networks with a broadcast capability. The intended use of this protocol is an in-home digital network, with support for on-the-fly addition and removal of network nodes, for resource-lavish and resource-lean devices, and for multimedia, command and control and regular data traffic. Both the design and the operation are presented, together with results from measurements on a prototype of the protocol on top of Ethernet

    Experimental implementation of a real-time token-based network protocol on a microcontroller

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    The real-time token-based RTnet network protocol has been implemented on a standard Ethernet network to investigate the possibility to use cheap components with strict resource limitations while preserving Quality of Service guarantees. It will be shown that the proposed implementation is feasible on a small network. For larger networks a different approach is necessary, using delegation by means of proxies. A delegation proposal will be discussed. For small networks it is possible to use a PIC microcontroller in combination with a standard Ethernet controller to run the RTnet network protocol. As more systems are added to the network the performance of this combination becomes insufficient. When this happens it is necessary for the microcontroller to delegate some tasks to a more powerful master and to organize a low-level communication protocol between master and slave

    Lightweight EDF scheduling with deadline inheritance

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    EDFI is a lightweight real-time scheduling protocol that combines EDF with deadline inheritance over shared resources. We will show that EDFI is flexible during a tasks admission control, efficient with scheduling and dispatching, and straightforward in feasibility analysis. The application programmer only needs to specify a tasks timing constraints (deadline, period, runtime) and resource needs, after which EDFI can execute admission control, scheduling, dispatching and resource synchronisation automatically. EDFI avoids gratuitous task switching and its programming overhead as well as runtime overhead is very low, which makes it ideal for lightweight and featherweight kernels. We will illustrate the elegance of the underlying theory and we will shortly discuss the implementation of EDFI in three different operating systems

    RTnet, a new approach to in-home real-time multimedia communication

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    streams, but variable-bit-rate streams can be mapped using several techniques [3]. The EDF scheduler is distributed over the nodes and the token is the place where the schedule is kept; nodes will keep backups of the schedule though. If a node has the token and it wants to add or remove a stream, it calculates a new schedule and acts upon it. Before a new stream may be added the node does an EDF feasibility test to determine if the newly added real-time stream will meet its deadlines without making other streams miss theirs. The EDF feasibility test is simple [4]: the total of bandwidth utilizations by all streams may not exceed 100%. However, only 80% of network bandwidth is dedicated to real-time (multimedia) communications, the rest is used for non-real-time purposes. Actually, the maximum bandwidth is slightly less because of the token transmission and Ethernet packet overhead. When the scheduler at the active node decides that another node must become active it stores the global

    Comparing phenomenological recipes with a microscopic model for the electric amplitude in strangeness photoproduction

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    Corrections to the Born approximation in photo-induced strangeness production off a proton are calculated in a semi-realistic microscopic model. The vertex corrections and internal contributions to the amplitude of the γpK+Λ\gamma p \to K^+ \Lambda reaction are included on the one-loop level. Different gauge-invariant phenomenological prescriptions for the modification of the Born contribution via the introduction of form factors and contact terms are discussed. In particular, it is shown that the popular minimal-substitution method of Ohta corresponds to a special limit of the more realistic approach.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures in the tex

    Consequences of wall stiffness for a beta-soft potential

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    Modifications of the infinite square well E(5) and X(5) descriptions of transitional nuclear structure are considered. The eigenproblem for a potential with linear sloped walls is solved. The consequences of the introduction of sloped walls and of a quadratic transition operator are investigated.Comment: RevTeX 4, 8 pages, as published in Phys. Rev.

    Harmonizing Software Standards with a Semantic Model

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    The application of standards in the software development process supports interoperability between systems. Maintenance of standards must be guaranteed on the organisational and technical level. The use of semantic technologies can contribute to the standard maintenance process by providing a harmonizing bridge between standards of different knowledge domains and languages and by providing a single point of administration for standard domain concepts. This paper describes a case study of the creation of a semantic layer between software standards for water management systems in The Netherland
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