585 research outputs found
Steady-state phase error for a phase-locked loop subjected to periodic Doppler inputs
The performance of a carrier phase locked loop (PLL) driven by a periodic Doppler input is studied. By expanding the Doppler input into a Fourier series and applying the linearized PLL approximations, it is easy to show that, for periodic frequency disturbances, the resulting steady state phase error is also periodic. Compared to the method of expanding frequency excursion into a power series, the Fourier expansion method can be used to predict the maximum phase error excursion for a periodic Doppler input. For systems with a large Doppler rate fluctuation, such as an optical transponder aboard an Earth orbiting spacecraft, the method can be applied to test whether a lower order tracking loop can provide satisfactory tracking and thereby save the effect of a higher order loop design
Impurity effect of Lambda hyperon on collective excitations of atomic nuclei
Taking the ground state rotational band in Mg as an example, we
investigate the impurity effect of hyperon on collective excitations
of atomic nuclei in the framework of non-relativistic energy density functional
theory. To this end, we take into account correlations related to the
restoration of broken symmetries and fluctuations of collective variables by
solving the eigenvalue problem of a five-dimensional collective Hamiltonian for
quadrupole vibrational and rotational degrees of freedom. The parameters of the
collective Hamiltonian are determined with constrained mean-field calculations
for triaxial shapes using the SGII Skyrme force. We compare the low-spin
spectrum for Mg with the spectrum for the same nucleus inside
Mg. It is found that the hyperon stretches the
ground state band and reduces the value by
, mainly by softening the potential energy surface towards the
spherical shape, even though the shrinkage effect on the average proton radius
is only .Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, and 1 tabl
Possible approach to improve sensitivity of a Michelson interferometer
We propose a possible approach to achieve an 1/N sensitivity of Michelson
interferometer by using a properly designed random phase modulation. Different
from other approaches, the sensitivity improvement does not depend on
increasing optical powers or utilizing the quantum properties of light.
Moreover the requirements for optical losses and the quantum efficiencies of
photodetection systems might be lower than the quantum approaches and the
sensitivity improvement is frequency independent in all detection band.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, new versio
On the Performance Limits of Map-Aware Localization
Establishing bounds on the accuracy achievable by localization techniques represents a fundamental technical issue. Bounds on localization accuracy have been derived for cases in which the position of an agent is estimated on the basis of a set of observations and, possibly, of some a priori information related to them (e.g., information about anchor positions and properties of the communication channel). In this paper, new bounds are derived under the assumption that the localization system is map-aware, i.e., it can benefit not only from the availability of observations, but also from the a priori knowledge provided by the map of the environment where it operates. Our results show that: a) map-aware estimation accuracy can be related to some features of the map (e.g., its shape and area) even though, in general, the relation is complicated; b) maps are really useful in the presence of some combination of low SNRs and specific geometrical features of the map (e.g., the size of obstructions); c) in most cases, there is no need of refined maps since additional details do not improve estimation accuracy.United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Grant FA9550-12-0287)United States. Office of Naval Research (Grant N00014-11-1-0397)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologie
Numerical Flow Analysis of an Axial Flow Pump
This paper describes the detailed study of fluid flows in an axial pump that includes impeller and guide vanes. And the comparisons of flow simulations of the axial pump impeller with guide vanes and without guide vanes are carried out in this paper. In addition to this, the effect of number of guide blades on flow behaviours is analysed numerically. The computational results are performed by using one of CFD commercial software, Solidworks Flow Simulation. The input design data of the model pump are the flow rate of 0.2m3, head of 3m and the rotational speed of 1160 rpm. The outer and inner diameter of impeller is 0.3m and 0.15m respectively. . And the impeller with four blades is used in this paper. The guide blade number is varied to 5,7,9nbsp with the same input data and other geometric parameters keep constant. In this study, the nature of velocities and pressures in an axial flow pump is analysed. The comparisons are averaged flow velocities, static pressure rise, dynamic pressure and total pressure.nbs
Optimum Quantum Error Recovery using Semidefinite Programming
Quantum error correction (QEC) is an essential element of physical quantum
information processing systems. Most QEC efforts focus on extending classical
error correction schemes to the quantum regime. The input to a noisy system is
embedded in a coded subspace, and error recovery is performed via an operation
designed to perfectly correct for a set of errors, presumably a large subset of
the physical noise process. In this paper, we examine the choice of recovery
operation. Rather than seeking perfect correction on a subset of errors, we
seek a recovery operation to maximize the entanglement fidelity for a given
input state and noise model. In this way, the recovery operation is optimum for
the given encoding and noise process. This optimization is shown to be
calculable via a semidefinite program (SDP), a well-established form of convex
optimization with efficient algorithms for its solution. The error recovery
operation may also be interpreted as a combining operation following a quantum
spreading channel, thus providing a quantum analogy to the classical diversity
combining operation.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Communication between levels of transcriptional control improves robustness and adaptivity
Regulation of eukaryotic gene expression depends on groups of related proteins acting at the levels of chromatin organization, transcriptional initiation, RNA processing, and nuclear transport. However, a unified understanding of how these different levels of transcriptional control interact has been lacking. Here, we combine genome-wide proteināDNA binding data from multiple sources to infer the connections between functional groups of regulators in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our resulting transcriptional network uncovers novel biological relationships; supporting experiments confirm new associations between actively transcribed genes and Sir2 and Esc1, two proteins normally linked to silencing chromatin. Analysis of the regulatory network also reveals an elegant architecture for transcriptional control. Using communication theory, we show that most protein regulators prefer to form modules within their functional class, whereas essential proteins maintain the sparse connections between different classes. Moreover, we provide evidence that communication between different regulatory groups improves the robustness and adaptivity of the cell
Reduced-Complexity Transmit/Receive-Diversity Systems
We consider wireless systems with transmit and receive diversity. For reduction of complexity, we propose to use hybrid selection/maximal ratio transmission at one link end, choosing L out of N antennas. We analyze the performance of such systems, giving analytical bounds and comparing them to computer simulations. Outage probability, symbol error probability, and capacity are shown. We demonstrate that in typical cases, a small number of used antennas L is sufficient to achieve considerable performance gains. We also analyze the infuence of the number of base station antennas, of fading correlation and channel estimation errors. The simulation results confirm that the proposed scheme is effective in a variety of environments
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