147,211 research outputs found
Closed loop identification based on quantization
This paper proposes a new closed-loop identification scheme for a single-input-single-output control loop. It is based upon a quantizer inserted into the feedback path. The quantizer can be used to generate an equivalent persistently exciting signal with which the well known two-stage and/or two-step method can be used directly. Simulation examples and an experimental demonstration are used to illustrate the proposed scheme
Systemic risk in dynamical networks with stochastic failure criterion
Complex non-linear interactions between banks and assets we model by two
time-dependent Erd\H{o}s Renyi network models where each node, representing
bank, can invest either to a single asset (model I) or multiple assets (model
II). We use dynamical network approach to evaluate the collective financial
failure---systemic risk---quantified by the fraction of active nodes. The
systemic risk can be calculated over any future time period, divided on
sub-periods, where within each sub-period banks may contiguously fail due to
links to either (i) assets or (ii) other banks, controlled by two parameters,
probability of internal failure and threshold ("solvency" parameter).
The systemic risk non-linearly increases with and decreases with average
network degree faster when all assets are equally distributed across banks than
if assets are randomly distributed. The more inactive banks each bank can
sustain (smaller ), the smaller the systemic risk---for some values
in I we report a discontinuity in systemic risk. When contiguous spreading
becomes stochastic (ii) controlled by probability ---a condition for the
bank to be solvent (active) is stochastic---the systemic risk decreases with
decreasing . We analyse asset allocation for the U.S. banks.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Remark on approximation in the calculation of the primordial spectrum generated during inflation
We re-examine approximations in the analytical calculation of the primordial
spectrum of cosmological perturbation produced during inflation. Taking two
inflation models (chaotic inflation and natural inflation) as examples, we
numerically verify the accuracy of these approximations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, to appear in PR
Reduced magnetohydrodynamic theory of oblique plasmoid instabilities
The three-dimensional nature of plasmoid instabilities is studied using the
reduced magnetohydrodynamic equations. For a Harris equilibrium with guide
field, represented by \vc{B}_o = B_{po} \tanh (x/\lambda) \hat{y} + B_{zo}
\hat{z}, a spectrum of modes are unstable at multiple resonant surfaces in the
current sheet, rather than just the null surface of the polodial field , which is the only resonant surface in 2D or in
the absence of a guide field. Here is the asymptotic value of the
equilibrium poloidal field, is the constant equilibrium guide field,
and is the current sheet width. Plasmoids on each resonant surface
have a unique angle of obliquity . The resonant
surface location for angle is x_s = - \lambda \arctanh (\tan \theta
B_{zo}/B_{po}), and the existence of a resonant surface requires . The most unstable angle is oblique, i.e. and , in the constant- regime, but parallel, i.e.
and , in the nonconstant- regime. For a fixed angle
of obliquity, the most unstable wavenumber lies at the intersection of the
constant- and nonconstant- regimes. The growth rate of this mode is
, in which
, is the Alfv\'{e}n speed, is the current sheet
length, and is the Lundquist number. The number of plasmoids scales as .Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Physics of Plasma
First-principles study of symmetry lowering in relaxed BaTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices
The crystal structure and local spontaneous polarization of
(BaTiO3)m/(SrTiO3)n superlattices is calculated using a first-principles
density functional theory method. The in-plane lattice constant is 1% larger
than the SrTiO3 substrate to imitate the relaxed superlattice structure and the
symmetry is lowered to monoclinic space group Cm which allows polarization to
develop along the [110] and [001] directions. The polarization component in the
[110] direction is found to develop only in the SrTiO3 layers and falls to zero
in the BaTiO3 layers, whereas the polarization in the [001] direction is
approximately uniform throughout the superlattice. These findings are
consistent with recent experimental data and first-principles results for
epitaxially strained BT and ST.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Dust-to-gas ratio, factor and CO-dark gas in the Galactic anticentre: an observational study
We investigate the correlation between extinction and H~{\sc i} and CO
emission at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10\degr) within the
footprint of the Xuyi Schmidt Telescope Photometric Survey of the Galactic
anticentre (XSTPS-GAC) on small and large scales. In Paper I (Chen et al.
2014), we present a three-dimensional dust extinction map within the footprint
of XSTPS-GAC, covering a sky area of over 6,000\,deg at a spatial angular
resolution of 6\,arcmin. In the current work, the map is combined with data
from gas tracers, including H~{\sc i} data from the Galactic Arecibo L-band
Feed Array H~{\sc i} survey and CO data from the Planck mission, to constrain
the values of dust-to-gas ratio and CO-to-
conversion factor for the entire GAC
footprint excluding the Galactic plane, as well as for selected star-forming
regions (such as the Orion, Taurus and Perseus clouds) and a region of diffuse
gas in the northern Galactic hemisphere. For the whole GAC footprint, we find
\, and \,. We have also
investigated the distribution of "CO-dark" gas (DG) within the footprint of GAC
and found a linear correlation between the DG column density and the -band
extinction: . The mass fraction of DG is found to be toward
the Galactic anticentre, which is respectively about 23 and 124 per cent of the
atomic and CO-traced molecular gas in the same region. This result is
consistent with the theoretical work of Papadopoulos et al. but much larger
than that expected in the cloud models by Wolfire et al.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Interaction-Free All-Optical Switching via Quantum-Zeno Effect
We propose a novel interaction-free scheme for all-optical switching which
does not rely on the physical coupling between signal and control waves. The
interaction-free nature of the scheme allows it to overcome the fundamental
photon-loss limit imposed by the signal-pump coupling. The same phenomenon
protects photonic-signal states from decoherence, making devices based on this
scheme suitable for quantum applications. Focusing on waveguides,
we provide device designs for traveling-wave and Fabry-Perot switches. In both
designs, the performance is optimal when the signal switching is induced by
coherent dynamical evolution. In contrast, when the switching is induced by a
rapid dissipation channel, it is less efficient.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Degenerate Fermi gas in a combined harmonic-lattice potential
In this paper we derive an analytic approximation to the density of states
for atoms in a combined optical lattice and harmonic trap potential as used in
current experiments with quantum degenerate gases. We compare this analytic
density of states to numerical solutions and demonstrate its validity regime.
Our work explicitly considers the role of higher bands and when they are
important in quantitative analysis of this system. Applying our density of
states to a degenerate Fermi gas we consider how adiabatic loading from a
harmonic trap into the combined harmonic-lattice potential affects the
degeneracy temperature. Our results suggest that occupation of excited bands
during loading should lead to more favourable conditions for realizing
degenerate Fermi gases in optical lattices.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
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