786 research outputs found
When are Multiples of Polygonal Numbers again Polygonal Numbers?
Euler showed that there are infinitely many triangular numbers that are three
times other triangular numbers. In general, it is an easy consequence of the
Pell equation that for a given square-free m > 1, the relation P=mP' is
satisfied by infinitely many pairs of triangular numbers P, P'.
After recalling what is known about triangular numbers, we shall study this
problem for higher polygonal numbers. Whereas there are always infinitely many
triangular numbers which are fixed multiples of other triangular numbers, we
give an example that this is false for higher polygonal numbers. However, as we
will show, if there is one such solution, there are infinitely many. We will
give conditions which conjecturally assure the existence of a solution. But due
to the erratic behavior of the fundamental unit in quadratic number fields,
finding such a solution is exceedingly difficult. Finally, we also show in this
paper that, given m > n > 1 with obvious exceptions, the system of simultaneous
relations P = mP', P = nP'' has only finitely many possibilities not just for
triangular numbers, but for triplets P, P', P'' of polygonal numbers, and give
examples of such solutions.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables. New version added a table of solutions
to the second proble
Queering Veganism: A Biographical, Visual and Autoethnographic Study of Animal Advocacy.
I am vegan. This means I eschew animal products (such as meat, dairy and eggs) for ethical reasons. Academic interest in animal advocacy is expanding, as evidenced in the emerging field of Critical Animal Studies (Taylor and Twine, 2014). However, concurrent with a âcriminalizationâ of legitimate protest since 9/11 (Gilmore, 2013), empirical research suggests a tendency for mainstream media sources to ridicule, misrepresent and discredit vegans (Cole and Morgan, 2011). I examine the events and experiences that have been significant in shaping the biographies of vegan animal advocates. I use biographical interviews with twelve (12) vegans alongside visual methods, and autoethnography. Participants created comics -the narrative juxtaposition of words and images- about their lives, and I created an âautoethnographicâ comic about my biography as a vegan researcher, thus examining animal advocacy from a reflexive, situated vegan perspective. I found that vegan identity is often subject to normalizing processes (Foucault, 1977), and is necessarily fluid across social situations (as evidenced in descriptions of âcoming outâ vegan). Vegan identity is performed and achieved in various embodied ways. These processes intersect with other social structures such as gender and sexuality. Access to cultural narratives about veganism is also significant in the experience of participants. The project contributes to the diverse fields of Biographical Research and Critical Animal Studies, adding rich biographical and visual data to existing empirical evidence around animal advocacy. It sets a precedent for the potential use of comics in research, particularly in connection with queer methodological approaches that challenge existing representational forms and focus on fluidity. It also offers novel applications for autoethnographic and visual biographical approaches
Real-Time Control of a Virtual Hand Using Surface Electromyography
Most multi-articulate prostheses allow the user to control the prosthesis through a range of pre-determined grip patterns with fixed force outputs. Although these pre-determined movements can make the prosthesis more reliable, user commands are limited to these grips and cannot be controlled naturally in real-time. Using surface electromyography (sEMG) and a modified Kalman Filter, upper limb amputees can intuitively control arm prostheses with independent, proportional control. We created an inexpensive sleeve of 32, dry sEMG electrodes (plus reference and ground) and built a graphical user interface in Matlab to train and control an 8 degree-of-freedom virtual arm (MuJoCo, Roboti). First, the user trains the Kalman filter by mimicking a predetermined set of movements while recording muscle signals. The mean-absolute-value of all possible differential pairs (528 features) was calculated over a 300-ms window and aligned with the movement data. Gram Schmidt forward selection identified the 48 most unique and useful features which were used to train a steady-state Kalman filter and control the virtual arm in real-time. We incorporated thresholds and a latching filter to reduce noise in the system. This system will enable our lab to study proportional control algorithms and low-cost, non-invasive sensory feedback in a virtual environment
Achieving Low-Cost, High-Reliability Payload Services Through a Collegiate Approach Using Standardized Satellite Bus Architectures
The space community is rapidly expanding, especially in the Small Sat sector. The incremental implementation of more compact technology and the decline of launch costs lowers the barrier to entry into space, allowing for new actors to expand into the market. Two important players in this incremental process are collegiate satellite programs and commercial satellite-as-a-service (SataaS) providers. Collegiate satellite programs have previously occupied the low-cost, low-reliability market. These are often in a one-time collaboration with a professor or company, always resulting in the design of a unique bus derived by mission-specific stakeholder needs. In contrast with university programs, current commercial SataaS providers occupy the medium/high-cost, high-reliability market. This reliability is accomplished by developing standardized satellite bus systems and implementing recurrent engineering. It would be highly desirable for a player to create a low-cost solution without sacrificing the high reliability that common industry entities provide. Such a solution would tremendously increase access to space for actors within industry, academia, and government.
This paper introduces the concept of a collegiate SataaS program, wherein student satellite teams develop a standardized bus to host a variety of customer payloads across separate missions. The paper features this type of programâs life cycle, benefits, and trade-offs, as well as an example in Purdue Space Programâs Boiler Bus program. These collegiate SataaS programs create and exclusively occupy a low-cost, semi-high-reliability market space by combining the inherent low cost of collegiate programs with the high reliability and quick development times brought about by standardization seen in industry. If widely adapted, this type of program could have substantial benefits for the space industry, lowering the barrier to entry for new players and allowing for further proliferation of scientific and industry driven progress
Impedance Tube Alternative via the Transfer Function Method
Typical industry-ready impedance tube systems for measuring sound absorption cost between 60,000. The scope of this project was to explore an industrial impedance tube and its functions as well as iteratively reduce the cost of each component of the system to its lowest possible conclusion without severely sacrificing quality of data acquisition. Replacement of the hardware and software with âoff-the-shelfâ alternatives and custom-made components can reduce the overall cost by as much as two orders of magnitude in order to be used in the education sector, mainly high schools. We find that the designed tube and driver replacements resulted in less than optimal performance as compared to an industrial system. We also explore alternatives to the proprietary software used for our application and improvements to the originally designed system
Tuning transcriptional regulation through signaling: A predictive theory of allosteric induction
Allosteric regulation is found across all domains of life, yet we still lack
simple, predictive theories that directly link the experimentally tunable
parameters of a system to its input-output response. To that end, we present a
general theory of allosteric transcriptional regulation using the
Monod-Wyman-Changeux model. We rigorously test this model using the ubiquitous
simple repression motif in bacteria by first predicting the behavior of strains
that span a large range of repressor copy numbers and DNA binding strengths and
then constructing and measuring their response. Our model not only accurately
captures the induction profiles of these strains but also enables us to derive
analytic expressions for key properties such as the dynamic range and
. Finally, we derive an expression for the free energy of allosteric
repressors which enables us to collapse our experimental data onto a single
master curve that captures the diverse phenomenology of the induction profiles.Comment: Substantial revisions for resubmission (3 new figures, significantly
elaborated discussion); added Professor Mitchell Lewis as another author for
his continuing contributions to the projec
#Notallcops: Exploring âRotten Appleâ Narratives In Media Reporting Of Lushâs 2018 âSpycopsâ Undercover Policing Campaign
This article offers a commentary on the media framing of high-street âethical cosmeticsâ firm Lushâs 2018 âpaid to lieâ campaign. The viral nature of Lushâs intervention into the undercover policing of activism in the UK highlights the significance of media reporting in the construction of narratives surrounding policing and activism. Based on a qualitative content analysis of articles published online in the immediate aftermath of the campaign launch, this article argues that the intensely polarised debate following Lushâs âpaid to lieâ campaign was representative of a wider discursive framing battle that persists. Within this battle, the state and police establishment promote ârotten appleâ explanations of the undercover policing scandal, which seek to individualise blame, and shirk institutional accountability (Punch, 2003). This is significant as identifying systemic dimensions to the spycops scandal is a key focus for activists involved in the on-going Undercover Policing Inquiry (UCPI) (Schlembach, 2016)
Comics and Visual Biography: Sequential Art in Social Research
This article describes the use of comics in a mixed methods biographical research project aimed at understanding the experiences of vegans (i.e. people who eschew animal products such as meat, dairy and eggs). It begins with a discussion of Comics Studies as a growing interdisciplinary field of academic inquiry, and attempts to trace a connection between this and Visual Sociology more broadly. It then provides examples of the way in which comics were used in the project and the rationale underpinning this. Participants were asked to create comics about their lives, which aimed to supplement biographical interviews that had already taken place, eliciting rich âvisual biographicalâ data that an interview would not produce. Comics were also used as a mode of representation, whereby a âvisual autoethnographyâ was produced, outlining the authorâs reflexive autobiographical relationship with veganism, and telling the story of the research. This project presented challenges, specifically around participation, ethics and anonymity, and data analysis. Despite this, the comics produced provided an unusual and valuable insight into the lives and experiences of vegans. To conclude, this article argues that the visual biographical data yielded through the use of the Comics medium represents a valuable tool in visual sociology
- âŠ