1,209 research outputs found
Connectivity for the frisbee architecture
In this paper we investigate the kconnectivity
threshold of distributed dense ad hoc
heterogeneous wireless sensor network architecture. We
consider the situation when sensors are deployed in the
surveillance area according to a uniform distribution
perturbed by a Gaussian noise. We derive analytically
the minimum detection range which guarantees an
emerging structure in the network, namely the
connectivity, which becomes larger and larger as the
number of sensors in the network increase. This allows
the target track to be propagated almost surely
throughout the network using the minimum possible
amount ofprime energy. We report the results of some
simulation experiments which further support the
theoretical results
Algorithms for the selection of the active sensors in distributed tracking: Comparison between Frisbee and GNS methods
This paper compares two different
approaches for sensor selection for distributed tracking:
1) The Frisbee method, and 2) Global Node Selection
(GNS). The Frisbee method is based on the proximity of
the nodes to the predicted location of the target; GNS is
based on minimizing the unbiased Cramer Rao lower
bound (CRLB). Both theoretical and experimental
results indicate that the Frisbee method is as effective as
GNS. Furthermore, the Frisbee method is attractive
due to its very light computational load
Resource optimisation in a wireless sensor network with guaranteed estimator performance
New control paradigms are needed for large networks of wireless sensors and actuators in order to
efficiently utilise system resources. In this study, the authors consider the problem of discrete-time state
estimation over a wireless sensor network. Given a tree that represents the sensor communications with the
fusion centre, the authors derive the optimal estimation algorithm at the fusion centre, and provide a closedform
expression for the steady-state error covariance matrix. They then present a tree reconfiguration
algorithm that produces a sensor tree that has low overall energy consumption and guarantees a desired
level of estimation quality at the fusion centre. The authors further propose a sensor tree construction and
scheduling algorithm that leads to a longer network lifetime than the tree reconfiguration algorithm.
Examples are provided throughout the paper to demonstrate the algorithms and theory developed
Local renormalization method for random systems
In this paper, we introduce a real-space renormalization transformation for
random spin systems on 2D lattices. The general method is formulated for random
systems and results from merging two well known real space renormalization
techniques, namely the strong disorder renormalization technique (SDRT) and the
contractor renormalization (CORE). We analyze the performance of the method on
the 2D random transverse field Ising model (RTFIM).Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to the Special Issue on "Quantum
Information and Many-Body Theory", New Journal of Physics. Editors: M.B.
Plenio, J. Eiser
Second-order electronic correlation effects in a one-dimensional metal
The Pariser-Parr-Pople (PPP) model of a single-band one-dimensional (1D)
metal is studied at the Hartree-Fock level, and by using the second-order
perturbation theory of the electronic correlation. The PPP model provides an
extension of the Hubbard model by properly accounting for the long-range
character of the electron-electron repulsion. Both finite and infinite version
of the 1D-metal model are considered within the PPP and Hubbard approximations.
Calculated are the second-order electronic-correlation corrections to the total
energy, and to the electronic-energy bands. Our results for the PPP model of 1D
metal show qualitative similarity to the coupled-cluster results for the 3D
electron-gas model. The picture of the 1D-metal model that emerges from the
present study provides a support for the hypothesis that the normal metallic
state of the 1D metal is different from the ground state.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures; v2: small correction in title, added 3
references, extended and reformulated a few paragraphs (detailed information
at the end of .tex file); added color to figure
Modelling hospital bed necessity for COVID-19 patients during the decline phase of the epidemic trajectory
BACKGROUND: In the present study we aimed to create a model able to predict the short-term need of hospital beds for COVID-19 patients, during SARS-CoV-2 outbreak. METHODS: We retrospectively revised data about all COVID-19 patients hospitalized at a University Hospital in Northern Italy, between March 1 and April 29, 2020. Several polynomial models (from first to fourth order) were fitted to estimate the relationship between the time and the number of occupied hospital beds during the entire period and after the local peak of the outbreak and to provide the prediction of short-term hospital beds demand. Model selection was based on the adjusted R2 (aR2) Index and likelihood ratio test (LRT). RESULTS: We included 836 hospitalizations (800 COVID-19 patients). The median length of hospital in-stay was 12 days. According to the aR2, the fourth order models best fitted the data considering the entire time period. When only the data after the peak was selected, no statistical improvement was found adding terms of order 3 and 4 and lower order polynomial models were considered for the forecasting of the hospital beds demand. Both approaches had a decreasing trend in the number of occupied beds along with time; however, the quadratic one showed a faster reduction in the predicted number of beds required by patients affected by COVID-19. CONCLUSIONS: We propose a model to predict the hospital bed requirement during the descending phase of COVID-19 outbreak, the validation of which might contribute to decision makers policy in the next weeks of pandemic
Power laws in a 2-leg ladder of interacting spinless fermions
We use the Density-Matrix Renormalization Group to study the single-particle
and two-particle correlation functions of spinless fermions in the ground state
of a quarter-filled ladder. This ladder consists of two chains having an
in-chain extended Coulomb interaction reaching to third neighbor and coupled by
inter-chain hopping. Within our short numerical coherence lengths, typically
reaching ten to twenty sites, we find a strong renormalization of the
interchain hopping and the existence of a dimensional crossover at smaller
interactions. We also find power exponents for single-particle hopping and
interchain polarization consistent with the single chain. The total charge
correlation function has a larger power exponent and shows signs of a crossover
from incoherent fermion hopping to coherent particle-hole pair motion between
chains. There are no significant excitation energies.Comment: RevTex 4 file, 10 pages, 10 eps figure
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