52,771 research outputs found
Investigation of the utilisation of social networks in e-learning at universities
Over the years universities have considered to use social networks for learning purposes as most of their students now engage on them. However, questions on the impact social networks would have on learning and how they can be utilised further for more effective teaching and learning are still unclear. To solve these questions, an in-depth investigation has been conducted to understand the benefits and drawback of social network features available for students. The investigation results show that students strongly believe that social network features will help enhance learning and the key ways of utilising such features have been suggested
Electrostatic Structures in Space Plasmas: Stability of Two-dimensional Magnetic Bernstein-Greene-Kruskal Modes
Electrostatic structures have been observed in many regions of space plasmas,
including the solar wind, the magnetosphere, the auroral acceleration region,
and in association with shocks, turbulence, and magnetic reconnection. Due to
potentially large amplitude of electric fields within these structures, their
effects on particle heating, scattering, or acceleration can be important. One
possible theoretical description of some of these structures is the concept of
Bernstein-Greene-Kruskal (BGK) modes, which are exact nonlinear solutions of
the Vlasov-Poisson system of equations in collisionless kinetic theory. BGK
modes have been studied extensively for many decades, predominately in one
dimension (1D), although there have been observations showing that some of
these structures have clear 3D features. While there have been approximate
solutions of higher dimensional BGK modes, an exact 3D BGK mode solution in a
finite magnetic field has not been found yet. Recently we have constructed
exact solutions of 2D BGK modes in a magnetized plasma with finite magnetic
field strength in order to gain insights of the ultimate 3D theory [Ng,
Bhattacharjee, and Skiff, Phys. Plasmas 13, 055903 (2006)]. Based on the
analytic form of these solutions, as well as Particle-in-Cell (PIC)
simulations, we will present numerical studies of their stability for different
levels of background magnetic field strength.Comment: Submitted to AIP Journal Proceedings for "Tenth Annual International
Astrophysics Conference
On the Computation of EXIT Characteristics for Symbol-Based Iterative Decoding
In this paper we propose an efficient method for computing index-based extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) charts, which are useful for estimating the convergence properties of non-binary iterative decoding. A standard method is to apply <i>a priori</i> reliability information to the <i>a posteriori</i> probability (APP) constituent decoder and compute the resulting average extrinsic information at the decoder output via multidimensional histogram measurements. However, this technique is only reasonable for very small index lengths as the complexity of this approach grows exponentially with the index length. We show that by averaging over a function of the extrinsic APPs for a long block the extrinsic information can be estimated with very low complexity. In contrast to using histogram measurements this method allows to generate EXIT charts even for larger index alphabets. Examples for a non-binary serial concatenated code and for turbo trellis-coded modulation, resp., demonstrate the capabilities of the proposed approach
Improved Dark Energy Detection through the Polarization-assisted WMAP-NVSS ISW Correlation
Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect can be estimated by cross-correlating
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) sky with tracers of the local matter
distribution. At late cosmic time, the dark energy induced decay of gravitation
potential generates a cross-correlation signal on large angular scales. The
dominant noise are the intrinsic CMB anisotropies from the inflationary epoch.
In this Letter we use CMB polarization to reduce this intrinsic noise. We
cross-correlate the microwave sky observed by Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe (WMAP) with the radio source catalog compiled by NRAO VLA Sky Survey
(NVSS) to study the efficiency of the noise suppression . We find that the
error bars are reduced about 5-12 %, improving the statistical power.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Integrated Wireless Multimedia Turbo-Transceiver Design Approaching the Rayleigh Channel's Capacity: Interpreting Shannon's Lessons in the Turbo-Era
Claude Shannon's pioneering work quantified the performance limits of communications systems operating over classic wireline Gaussian channels. However, his source and channel coding theorems were derived for a range of idealistic conditions, which may not hold in low-delay, interactive wireless multimedia communications. Firstly, Shannon's ideal lossless source encoder, namely the entropy encoder may have an excessive codeword length, hence exhibiting a high delay and a high error sensitivity. However, in practice most multimedia source signals are capable of tolerating lossy, rather than lossless delivery to the human eye, ear and other human sensors. The corresponding lossy and preferably low-delay multimedia source codecs however exhibit unequal error sensitivity, which is not the case for Shannon's ideal entropy codec. There are further numerous differences between the Shannonian lessons originally outlined for Gaussian channels and their ramifications for routinely encountered dispersive wireless channels, where typically bursty, rather than random errors are encountered. This paper elaborates on these intriguiging lessons in the context of a few turbo-transceiver design examples, using a jointly optimised turbo transceiver capable of providing unequal error protection in the context of MPEG-4 aided wireless video telephony. The transceiver investigated consists of Space-Time Trellis Coding (STTC) invoked for the sake of mitigating the effects of fading, Trellis Coded Modulation (TCM) or Bit-Interleaved Coded Modulation (BICM) as well as two different-rate Non-Systematic Convolutional codes (NSCs) or Recursive Systematic Convolutional codes (RSCs). A single-class protection based benchmarker scheme combining STTC and NSC is used for comparison with the unequal-protection scheme advocated. The video performance of the various schemes is evaluated when communicating over uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. It was found that the achievable performance of the proposed scheme is within 0.99~dB of the corresponding capacity of the Rayleigh fading channel
Turbo-Detected Unequal Protection MPEG-4 Wireless Video Telephony using Multi-Level Coding, Trellis Coded Modulation and Space-Time Trellis Coding
Most multimedia source signals are capable of tolerating lossy, rather than lossless delivery to the human eye, ear and other human sensors. The corresponding lossy and preferably low-delay multimedia source codecs however exhibit unequal error sensitivity, which is not the case for Shannonâs ideal entropy codec. This paper proposes a jointly optimised turbo transceiver design capable of providing unequal error protection for MPEG-4 coding aided wireless video telephony. The transceiver investigated consists of space-time trellis coding (STTC) invoked for the sake of mitigating the effects of fading, in addition to bandwidth efficient trellis coded modulation or bit-interleaved coded modulation, combined with a multi-level coding scheme employing either two different-rate non-systematic convolutional codes (NSCs) or two recursive systematic convolutional codes for yielding a twin-class unequal-protection. A single-class protection based benchmark scheme combining STTC and NSC is used for comparison with the unequal-protection scheme advocated. The video performance of the various schemes is evaluated when communicating over uncorrelated Rayleigh fading channels. It was found that the proposed scheme requires about 2.8 dBs lower transmit power than the benchmark scheme in the context of the MPEG-4 videophone transceiver at a similar decoding complexity
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