44 research outputs found
Nonhermitian transport effects in coupled-resonator optical waveguides
Coupled-resonator optical waveguides (CROWs) are known to have interesting
and useful dispersion properties. Here, we study the transport in these
waveguides in the general case where each resonator is open and asymmetric,
i.e., is leaky and possesses no mirror-reflection symmetry. Each individual
resonator then exhibits asymmetric backscattering between clockwise and
counterclockwise propagating waves, which in combination with the losses
induces non-orthogonal eigenmodes. In a chain of such resonators, the coupling
between the resonators induces an additional source of non-hermiticity, and a
complex band structure arises. We show that in this situation the group
velocity of wave packets differs from the velocity associated with the
probability density flux, with the difference arising from a non-hermitian
correction to the Hellmann-Feynman theorem. Exploring these features
numerically in a realistic scenario, we find that the complex band structure
comprises almost-real branches and complex branches, which are joined by
exceptional points, i.e., nonhermitian degeneracies at which not only the
frequencies and decay rates coalesce but also the eigenmodes themselves. The
non-hermitian corrections to the group velocity are largest in the regions
around the exceptional points.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Integration of Car-2-Car Communication as a Virtual Sensor in Automotive Sensor Fusion for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems
Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) require a comprehensive and accurate situation model. Often in-vehicle sensors do not provide sufficient quality and quantity of information to fulfill the demanding requirements. Car-2-Car communication can be seen as an adaptive sensor that provides additional information regularly but also on demand. Due to the fact that Car-2-Car communication strongly depends on the penetration rate, we argue for a seamless integration of Car-2-Car communication as an additional sensor in automotive sensor fusion. With increasing penetration rate the sensor fusion will significantly benefit and eventually unfold its full potential. Due to the fundamentally different measuring principles of in-vehicle sensors and information provided by Car-2-Car communication, redundancy and complementarity can be leveraged to a great extent, thus, increasing accuracy, reliability and robustness of the situation assessment. In addition to a detailed description of the fusion algorithm this paper outlines DLR’s system architecture for ADAS and an enhanced ACC as an application example to show the potential of our approach
The conformal current algebra on supergroups with applications to the spectrum and integrability
We compute the algebra of left and right currents for a principal chiral
model with arbitrary Wess-Zumino term on supergroups with zero Killing form. We
define primary fields for the current algebra that match the affine primaries
at the Wess-Zumino-Witten points. The Maurer-Cartan equation together with
current conservation tightly constrain the current-current and current-primary
operator product expansions. The Hilbert space of the theory is generated by
acting with the currents on primary fields. We compute the conformal dimensions
of a subset of these states in the large radius limit. The current algebra is
shown to be consistent with the quantum integrability of these models to
several orders in perturbation theory.Comment: 45 pages. Minor correction
Massless particles on supergroups and AdS3 x S3 supergravity
Firstly, we study the state space of a massless particle on a supergroup with
a reparameterization invariant action. After gauge fixing the
reparameterization invariance, we compute the physical state space through the
BRST cohomology and show that the quadratic Casimir Hamiltonian becomes
diagonalizable in cohomology. We illustrate the general mechanism in detail in
the example of a supergroup target GL(1|1). The space of physical states
remains an indecomposable infinite dimensional representation of the space-time
supersymmetry algebra. Secondly, we show how the full string BRST cohomology in
the particle limit of string theory on AdS3 x S3 renders the quadratic Casimir
diagonalizable, and reduces the Hilbert space to finite dimensional
representations of the space-time supersymmetry algebra (after analytic
continuation). Our analysis provides an efficient way to calculate the
Kaluza-Klein spectrum for supergravity on AdS3 x S3. It may also be a step
towards the identification of an interesting and simpler subsector of
logarithmic supergroup conformal field theories, relevant to string theory.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
A pseudointegrable Andreev billiard
A circular Andreev billiard in a uniform magnetic field is studied. It is
demonstrated that the classical dynamics is pseudointegrable in the same sense
as for rational polygonal billiards. The relation to a specific polygon, the
asymmetric barrier billiard, is discussed. Numerical evidence is presented
indicating that the Poincare map is typically weak mixing on the invariant
sets. This link between these different classes of dynamical systems throws
some light on the proximity effect in chaotic Andreev billiards.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in PR
Topological Cigar and the c=1 String : Open and Closed
We clarify some aspects of the map between the c=1 string theory at self-dual
radius and the topologically twisted cigar at level one. We map the ZZ and FZZT
D-branes in the c=1 string theory at self dual radius to the localized and
extended branes in the topological theory on the cigar. We show that the open
string spectrum on the branes in the two theories are in correspondence with
each other, and their two point correlators are equal. We also find a
representation of an extended N=2 algebra on the worldsheet which incorporates
higher spin currents in terms of asymptotic variables on the cigar.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figures, corrections to section 3.1, references adde
Open strings in Lie groups and associative products
Firstly, we generalize a semi-classical limit of open strings on D-branes in
group manifolds. The limit gives rise to rigid open strings, whose dynamics can
efficiently be described in terms of a matrix algebra. Alternatively, the
dynamics is coded in group theory coefficients whose properties are translated
in a diagrammatical language. In the case of compact groups, it is a simplified
version of rational boundary conformal field theories, while for non-compact
groups, the construction gives rise to new associative products. Secondly, we
argue that the intuitive formalism that we provide for the semi-classical
limit, extends to the case of quantum groups. The associative product we
construct in this way is directly related to the boundary vertex operator
algebra of open strings on symmetry preserving branes in WZW models, and
generalizations thereof, e.g. to non-compact groups. We treat the groups SU(2)
and SL(2,R) explicitly. We also discuss the precise relation of the
semi-classical open string dynamics to Berezin quantization and to star product
theory.Comment: 47 pages, 14 figure
Towards Highly Automated Driving: Intermediate report on the HAVEit-Joint System
International audienceThis overview article describes the goals, concepts and very preliminary results of the subproject Joint System within the EU-project HAVEit. The goal of HAVEit is to develop and investigate vehicle automation beyond ADAS systems, especially highly automated driving, where the automation is doing a high percentage of the driving, while the driver is still meaningfully involved in the driving task. In HAVEit, an overarching architecture and several prototypes will be built up over time by manufacturers and suppliers. As a trail blazer, a Joint System prototype is under development by an interdisciplinary team of several European research institutes in order to investigate and demonstrate the basic principles of highly automated driving, which will then be gradually applied to vehicles closer to serial production. Starting with sensor data fusion, the Co-System part of the Joint Systems plans manoeuvres and trajectories, which are then used to control active interfaces and, taking into account the results of an online driver assessment, joined with the actions of the driver. While many aspects of this research undertaking are still under investigation, the concept, a first prototype and first results from a simulator evaluation will be sketched