3,005 research outputs found
Assessment of fissionable material behaviour in fission chambers
A comprehensive study is performed in order to assess the pertinence of fission chambers coated with different fissile materials for high neutron flux detection. Three neutron scenarios are proposed to study the fast component of a high neutron flux: (i) high neutron flux with a significant thermal contribution such as BR2, (ii) DEMO magnetic fusion reactor, and (iii) IFMIF high flux test module.
In this study, the inventory code ACAB is used to analyze the following questions: (i) impact of different deposits in fission chambers; (ii) effect of the irradiation time/burn-up on the concentration; (iii) impact of activation cross-section uncertainties on the composition of the deposit for all the range of burn-up/irradiation neutron fluences of interest. The complete set of nuclear data (decay, fission yield, activation cross-sections, and uncertainties) provided in the EAF2007 data library are used for this evaluation
A Bayesian approach to filter design: detection of compact sources
We consider filters for the detection and extraction of compact sources on a
background. We make a one-dimensional treatment (though a generalization to two
or more dimensions is possible) assuming that the sources have a Gaussian
profile whereas the background is modeled by an homogeneous and isotropic
Gaussian random field, characterized by a scale-free power spectrum. Local peak
detection is used after filtering. Then, a Bayesian Generalized Neyman-Pearson
test is used to define the region of acceptance that includes not only the
amplification but also the curvature of the sources and the a priori
probability distribution function of the sources. We search for an optimal
filter between a family of Matched-type filters (MTF) modifying the filtering
scale such that it gives the maximum number of real detections once fixed the
number density of spurious sources. We have performed numerical simulations to
test theoretical ideas.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. SPIE Proceedings "Electronic Imaging II", San
Jose, CA. January 200
On the regularity of the covariance matrix of a discretized scalar field on the sphere
We present a comprehensive study of the regularity of the covariance matrix
of a discretized field on the sphere. In a particular situation, the rank of
the matrix depends on the number of pixels, the number of spherical harmonics,
the symmetries of the pixelization scheme and the presence of a mask. Taking
into account the above mentioned components, we provide analytical expressions
that constrain the rank of the matrix. They are obtained by expanding the
determinant of the covariance matrix as a sum of determinants of matrices made
up of spherical harmonics. We investigate these constraints for five different
pixelizations that have been used in the context of Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) data analysis: Cube, Icosahedron, Igloo, GLESP and HEALPix, finding that,
at least in the considered cases, the HEALPix pixelization tends to provide a
covariance matrix with a rank closer to the maximum expected theoretical value
than the other pixelizations. The effect of the propagation of numerical errors
in the regularity of the covariance matrix is also studied for different
computational precisions, as well as the effect of adding a certain level of
noise in order to regularize the matrix. In addition, we investigate the
application of the previous results to a particular example that requires the
inversion of the covariance matrix: the estimation of the CMB temperature power
spectrum through the Quadratic Maximum Likelihood algorithm. Finally, some
general considerations in order to achieve a regular covariance matrix are also
presented.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures; minor changes in the text, matches published
versio
SAT based Enforcement of Domotic Effects in Smart Environments
The emergence of economically viable and efficient sensor technology provided impetus to the development of smart devices (or appliances). Modern smart environments are equipped with a multitude of smart devices and sensors, aimed at delivering intelligent services to the users of smart environments. The presence of these diverse smart devices has raised a major problem of managing environments. A rising solution to the problem is the modeling of user goals and intentions, and then interacting with the environments using user defined goals. `Domotic Effects' is a user goal modeling framework, which provides Ambient Intelligence (AmI) designers and integrators with an abstract layer that enables the definition of generic goals in a smart environment, in a declarative way, which can be used to design and develop intelligent applications. The high-level nature of domotic effects also allows the residents to program their personal space as they see fit: they can define different achievement criteria for a particular generic goal, e.g., by defining a combination of devices having some particular states, by using domain-specific custom operators. This paper describes an approach for the automatic enforcement of domotic effects in case of the Boolean application domain, suitable for intelligent monitoring and control in domotic environments. Effect enforcement is the ability to determine device configurations that can achieve a set of generic goals (domotic effects). The paper also presents an architecture to implement the enforcement of Boolean domotic effects, and results obtained from carried out experiments prove the feasibility of the proposed approach and highlight the responsiveness of the implemented effect enforcement architectur
A multifrequency method based on the Matched Multifilter for the detection of point sources in CMB maps
In this work we deal with the problem of simultaneous multifrequency
detection of extragalactic point sources in maps of the Cosmic Microwave
Background. We apply a linear filtering technique that uses spatial information
and the cross-power spectrum. To make this, we simulate realistic and
non-realistic flat patches of the sky at two frequencies of Planck: 44 and 100
GHz. We filter to detect and estimate the point sources and compare this
technique with the monofrequency matched filter in terms of completeness,
reliability, flux and spectral index accuracy. The multifrequency method
outperforms the matched filter at the two frequencies and in all the studied
cases in the work.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
The estimation of the SZ effects with unbiased multifilters
In this work we study the performance of linear multifilters for the
estimation of the amplitudes of the thermal and kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich
effects. We show that when both effects are present, estimation of these
effects with standard matched multifilters is intrinsically biased. This bias
is due to the fact that both signals have basically the same spatial profile.
We find a new family of multifilters related to the matched multifilters that
cancel this systematic bias, hence we call them Unbiased Matched Multifilters.
We test the unbiased matched multifilters and compare them with the standard
matched multifilters using simulations that reproduce the future Planck
mission's observations. We find that in the case of the standard matched
multifilters the systematic bias in the estimation of the kinematic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect can be very large, even greater than the statistical
error bars. Unbiased matched multifilters cancel effectively this kind of bias.
In concordance with other works in the literature, our results indicate that
the sensitivity and resolution of Planck will not be enough to give reliable
estimations of the kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich of individual clusters.
However, since the estimation with the unbiased matched multifilters is not
intrinsically biased, it can be possible to use them to statistically study
peculiar velocities in large scales using large sets of clusters.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
Low frequency noise due to magnetic inhomogeneities in submicron FeCoB/MgO/FeCoB magnetic tunnel junctions
We report on room temperature low frequency noise due to magnetic
inhomogeneities/domain walls (MI/DWs) in elliptic submicron FeCoB/MgO/FeCoB
magnetic tunnel junctions with an area between 0.0245 and 0.0675{\mu}m2. In the
smaller area junctions we found an unexpected random telegraph noise (RTN1),
deeply in the parallel state, possibly due to stray field induced MI/DWs in the
hard layer. The second noise source (RTN2) is observed in the antiparallel
state for the largest junctions. Strong asymmetry of RTN2 and of related
resistance steps with current indicate spin torque acting on the MI/DWs in the
soft layer at current densities below 5x10^5 A/cm2.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
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