14,325 research outputs found
Noise Power Spectrum Scene-Dependency in Simulated Image Capture Systems
The Noise Power Spectrum (NPS) is a standard measure for image capture system noise. It is derived traditionally from captured uniform luminance patches that are unrepresentative of pictorial scene signals. Many contemporary capture systems apply non- linear content-aware signal processing, which renders their noise scene-dependent. For scene-dependent systems, measuring the NPS with respect to uniform patch signals fails to characterize with accuracy: i) system noise concerning a given input scene, ii) the average system noise power in real-world applications. The scene- and-process-dependent NPS (SPD-NPS) framework addresses these limitations by measuring temporally varying system noise with respect to any given input signal. In this paper, we examine the scene-dependency of simulated camera pipelines in-depth by deriving SPD-NPSs from fifty test scenes. The pipelines apply either linear or non-linear denoising and sharpening, tuned to optimize output image quality at various opacity levels and exposures. Further, we present the integrated area under the mean of SPD-NPS curves over a representative scene set as an objective system noise metric, and their relative standard deviation area (RSDA) as a metric for system noise scene-dependency. We close by discussing how these metrics can also be computed using scene-and-process- dependent Modulation Transfer Functions (SPD-MTF)
Comment on "Accelerated Detectors and Temperature in (Anti) de Sitter Spaces"
It is shown how the results of Deser and Levin on the response of accelerated
detectors in anti-de Sitter space can be understood from the same general
perspective as other thermality results in spacetimes with bifurcate Killing
horizons.Comment: 5 pages, LaTe
The Spectrum of Crab Nebula X-Rays to 120 Kev
Counting rate and pulse height distribution spectral data of Crab Nebula telemetered from balloon detector
s-Processing in the Galactic Disk. I. Super-Solar Abundances of Y, Zr, La, Ce in Young Open Clusters
In a recent study, based on homogeneous barium abundance measurements in open
clusters, a trend of increasing [Ba/Fe] ratios for decreasing cluster age was
reported. We present here further abundance determinations, relative to four
other elements hav- ing important s-process contributions, with the aim of
investigating whether the growth found for [Ba/Fe] is or not indicative of a
general property, shared also by the other heavy elements formed by slow
neutron captures. In particular, we derived abundances for yttrium, zirconium,
lanthanum and cerium, using equivalent widths measurements and the MOOG code.
Our sample includes 19 open clusters of different ages, for which the spectra
were obtained at the ESO VLT telescope, using the UVES spectrometer. The growth
previously suggested for Ba is confirmed for all the elements analyzed in our
study. This fact implies significant changes in our views of the Galactic
chemical evolution for elements beyond iron. Our results necessarily require
that very low-mass AGB stars (M < 1.5M\odot) produce larger amounts of
s-process elements (hence acti- vate the 13 C-neutron source more effectively)
than previously expected. Their role in producing neutron-rich elements in the
Galactic disk has been so far underestimated and their evolution and
neutron-capture nucleosynthesis should now be reconsidered.Comment: ApJ accepte
Rotary high power transfer apparatus
An apparatus for reducing terminal-to-terminal circuit resistance and enhancing heat transfer in a rotary power transfer apparatus of the roll ring type comprising a connecting thimble for attaching an external power cable to a cone shaped terminal which is attached to a tab integral to an outer ring. An inner ring having a spherical recess mates with the spherical end of a tie connector. A cone shaped terminal is fitted to a second connecting thimble for attaching a second external power cable
Collapse of Kaluza-Klein Bubbles
Kaluza-Klein theory admits ``bubble" configurations, in which the
circumference of the fifth dimension shrinks to zero on some compact surface. A
three parameter family of such bubble initial data at a moment of time-symmetry
(some including a magnetic field) has been found by Brill and Horowitz,
generalizing the (zero-energy) ``Witten bubble" solution. Some of these data
have negative total energy. We show here that all the negative energy bubble
solutions start out expanding away from the moment of time symmetry, while the
positive energy bubbles can start out either expanding or contracting. Thus it
is unlikely that the negative energy bubbles would collapse and produce a naked
singularity.Comment: 6 pages, plain LaTeX, UMDGR-94-08
General covariance, and supersymmetry without supersymmetry
An unusual four-dimensional generally covariant and supersymmetric SU(2)
gauge theory is described. The theory has propagating degrees of freedom, and
is invariant under a local (left-handed) chiral supersymmetry, which is half
the supersymmetry of supergravity. The Hamiltonian 3+1 decomposition of the
theory reveals the remarkable feature that the local supersymmetry is a
consequence of Yang-Mills symmetry, in a manner reminiscent of how general
coordinate invariance in Chern-Simons theory is a consequence of Yang-Mills
symmetry. It is possible to write down an infinite number of conserved
currents, which strongly suggests that the theory is classically integrable. A
possible scheme for non-perturbative quantization is outlined. This utilizes
ideas that have been developed and applied recently to the problem of
quantizing gravity.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX, two minor errors correcte
Quantum field theory on a growing lattice
We construct the classical and canonically quantized theories of a massless
scalar field on a background lattice in which the number of points--and hence
the number of modes--may grow in time. To obtain a well-defined theory certain
restrictions must be imposed on the lattice. Growth-induced particle creation
is studied in a two-dimensional example. The results suggest that local mode
birth of this sort injects too much energy into the vacuum to be a viable model
of cosmological mode birth.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures; v.2: added comments on defining energy, and
reference
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