545 research outputs found
The Monopole Antenna With a Small Number of Radials
This paper reports a study of an antenna system consisting of a vertical monopole and a small number of insulated horizontal radials lying lightly on the ground.
The monopole antenna has long been popular for medium frequency broadcasting because of its inherent simplicity and economy. Although quarter-wavelength resonant structures were used in the early days, it was shown by Ballantine (1924) that for a given power, the strongest field strength at the radio horizon was produced by an antenna about 0.6 wavelength long. This ignored the sky wave and was based on the assumption of a perfectly conducting (and reflecting) earth. With the same assumption, Brown (1935) computed the earth currents produced by a vertical monopole having a sinusoidal current distribution. He also estimated the ground power loss for a ground of infinite conductivity, assuming it had the same tangential magnetic field on its surface as when perfectly conducting. This is a reasonably good approximation under certain conditions and has been used by many writers following Brown (e.g. Wait &Surtees (1954), Monteath (1958), etc.)
Backscatter of Electromagnetic Waves from a Rough Layer
Backscatter of electromagnetic waves from rough surfac
The KSU Acoustic Simulator for Radar Studies
Equipment and instrumentation for acoustic simulation of electromagnetic wave propagation and radar systems design studie
Backscatter of Ultrasonic Waves from a Rough Layer
Kirchhoff approximation used to calculate backscatter of ultrasonic waves from rough laye
Channel, Phase Noise, and Frequency Offset in OFDM Systems: Joint Estimation, Data Detection, and Hybrid Cramer-Rao Lower Bound
Oscillator phase noise (PHN) and carrier frequency offset (CFO) can adversely
impact the performance of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)
systems, since they can result in inter carrier interference and rotation of
the signal constellation. In this paper, we propose an expectation conditional
maximization (ECM) based algorithm for joint estimation of channel, PHN, and
CFO in OFDM systems. We present the signal model for the estimation problem and
derive the hybrid Cramer-Rao lower bound (HCRB) for the joint estimation
problem. Next, we propose an iterative receiver based on an extended Kalman
filter for joint data detection and PHN tracking. Numerical results show that,
compared to existing algorithms, the performance of the proposed ECM-based
estimator is closer to the derived HCRB and outperforms the existing estimation
algorithms at moderate-to-high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In addition, the
combined estimation algorithm and iterative receiver are more computationally
efficient than existing algorithms and result in improved average uncoded and
coded bit error rate (BER) performance
A philosophical context for methods to estimate origin-destination trip matrices using link counts.
This paper creates a philosophical structure for classifying methods which estimate origin-destination matrices using link counts. It is claimed that the motivation for doing so is to help real-life transport planners use matrix estimation methods effectively, especially in terms of trading-off observational data with prior subjective input (typically referred to as 'professional judgement'). The paper lists a number of applications that require such methods, differentiating between relatively simple and highly complex applications. It is argued that a sound philosophical perspective is particularly important for estimating trip matrices in the latter type of application. As a result of this argument, a classification structure is built up through using concepts of realism, subjectivity, empiricism and rationalism. Emphasis is put on the fact that, in typical transport planning applications, none of these concepts is useful in its extreme form. The structure is then used to make a review of methods for estimating trip matrices using link counts, covering material published over the past 30 years. The paper concludes by making recommendations, both philosophical and methodological, concerning both practical applications and further research
Comparison of Subjective Responses to Oral and Intravenous Alcohol Administration under Similar Systemic Exposures
Objective
To test whether an individual's subjective responses to alcohol are similar when the breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) trajectory resulting from oral administration is matched by intravenous administration.
Background
Individuals perceive the effects of alcohol differently, and the variation is commonly used in research assessing the risk for developing an alcohol use disorder. Such research is supported by both oral and intravenous alcohol administration techniques, and any differences attributable to the route employed should be understood.
Methods
We conducted a 2āsession, withināsubject study in 44 young adult, healthy, nonādependent drinkers (22 females and 22 males). In the first session, subjects ingested a dose of alcohol which was individually calculated, on the basis of total body water, to yield a peak BrAC near 80 mg/dl, and the resulting BrAC trajectory was recorded. A few days later, subjects received an intravenous alcohol infusion rate profile, preācomputed to replicate each individual's oral alcohol BrAC trajectory. In both sessions, we assessed 4 subjective responses to alcohol: SEDATION, SIMULATION, INTOXICATION, and HIGH; at baseline and frequently for 4 hours. We compared the individualsā baselineācorrected responses at peak BrAC and at halfāpeak BrAC on both the ascending and descending limbs. We also computed and compared Pearsonāproduct moment correlations of responses by route of administration, the Mellanby measure of acute adaptation to alcohol, and the area under the entire response curve for each subjective response.
Results
No significant differences in any measure could be attributed to the route of alcohol administration. Eleven of 12 response comparisons were significantly correlated across the routes of alcohol administration, with 9 surviving correction for multiple measures, as did the Mellanby effect and area under the response curve correlations.
Conclusion
The route of alcohol administration has a minimal effect on subjective responses to alcohol when an individual's BrAC exposure profiles are similar
- ā¦