2,837 research outputs found
Statistical Mechanics of Time Domain Ensemble Learning
Conventional ensemble learning combines students in the space domain. On the
other hand, in this paper we combine students in the time domain and call it
time domain ensemble learning. In this paper, we analyze the generalization
performance of time domain ensemble learning in the framework of online
learning using a statistical mechanical method. We treat a model in which both
the teacher and the student are linear perceptrons with noises. Time domain
ensemble learning is twice as effective as conventional space domain ensemble
learning.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Statistical Mechanics of Linear and Nonlinear Time-Domain Ensemble Learning
Conventional ensemble learning combines students in the space domain. In this
paper, however, we combine students in the time domain and call it time-domain
ensemble learning. We analyze, compare, and discuss the generalization
performances regarding time-domain ensemble learning of both a linear model and
a nonlinear model. Analyzing in the framework of online learning using a
statistical mechanical method, we show the qualitatively different behaviors
between the two models. In a linear model, the dynamical behaviors of the
generalization error are monotonic. We analytically show that time-domain
ensemble learning is twice as effective as conventional ensemble learning.
Furthermore, the generalization error of a nonlinear model features
nonmonotonic dynamical behaviors when the learning rate is small. We
numerically show that the generalization performance can be improved remarkably
by using this phenomenon and the divergence of students in the time domain.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
A critical review of airport privatisation in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: Case study of Medina Airport
Saudi Arabia is one of the few Middle-Eastern states to have undertaken an airport privatisation programme. Medina was one of several airports that have been privatised in Saudi Arabia when it was awarded to Tibah Airports in 2012 under a Build-Transfer-Operate agreement. This paper compares the performance of Medina Airport in terms of traffic, revenues, costs and profitability with projections made during the due-diligence period prior to the airport’s privatisation. We found that the airport benefitted from favourable market conditions post-privatisation which facilitated the attainment of some important achievements with regard to route development and customer service. However, we also found that profitability was lower than forecast during the due-diligence process prior to privatisation and that this was mainly as a result of unexpected interventions by the regulator GACA. We have raised important policy implications for future privatisation transactions, the success of which is crucially dependent on the Kingdom minimising the level of regulatory risk facing potential investors. There are cultural dimensions, human resources strategies and administrative governance issues in addition to the very specific nature of the socio-political environment which are all factors that need to be considered in future privatisation transactions
The Surface Texturing of Monocrystalline Silicon with NH4OH and Ion Implantation for Applications in Solar Cells Compatible with CMOS Technology
AbstractThis work presents the development of photovoltaic cells based on p+/n junction in Si substrates, aimed at compatibility with fabrication processes with CMOS technology. The compatible processes, which are developed in this study, are the techniques:i) Si surface texturing, with the textured surface reflection of 15% obtained by the formation of micro-pyramids (heights between 3 and 7μm) using NH4OH (ammonium hydroxide) alkaline solution, which is free of undesirable contamination by Na+ and K+ ions, when NaOH and KOH traditional solutions are used, respectively, and ii) of the ECR-CVD (ElectronCyclotron Resonance - Chemical Vapor Deposition) deposition of SiNx (silicon nitride) anti-reflective coating (ARC), which is carried out at room temperature and can be performed after the end of cell fabrication without damage on metallic tracks and without variation of p+/n junction depth. The ARC coating characterization presented that the silicon nitride has a refractive index of 1.92 and a minimum reflectance of 1.03%, which is an excellent result for application in solar (or photovoltaic) cells. For the formation of the pn junction was used ion implantation process with 11B+, E=20KeV, dose of 1x1015cm2 and four rotations of 90° to get uniformity on texturized surfaces
Synthesis, Characterization, and Magnetic Properties of gamma-NaxCoO2 (0.70 < x <0.84)
Powder NaCoO () samples were synthesized and
characterized carefully by X-ray diffraction analysis, inductive-coupled plasma
atomic emission spectroscopy, and redox titration. It was proved that
-NaCoO is formed only in the narrow range of . Nevertheless, the magnetic properties depend strongly on . We
found, for the first time, two characteristic features in the magnetic
susceptibility of NaCoO, a sharp peak at K and an
anomaly at K, as well as the transition at K and the broad
maximum at K which had already been reported. A type of weak
ferromagnetic transition seems to occur at . The transition at ,
which is believed to be caused by spin density wave formation, was observed
clearly for with constant and independent of .
On the other hand, ferromagnetic moment varies systematically depending on .
These facts suggest the occurrence of a phase separation at the microscopic
level, such as the separation into Na-rich and Na-poor domains due to the
segregation of Na ions. The magnetic phase diagram and transition mechanism
proposed previously should be reconsidered.Comment: 4 pages (2 figures included) and 2 extra figures (gif), to be
published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 73 (8) with possible minor revision
Top-down estimate of a large source of atmospheric carbon monoxide associated with fuel combustion in Asia
We simulate the oceanic and atmospheric distribution of methyl iodide (CH3I) with a global 3-D model driven by assimilated meteorological observations from the Goddard Earth Observing System of the NASA Data Assimilation Office and coupled to an oceanic mixed layer model. A global compilation of atmospheric and oceanic observations is used to constrain and evaluate the simulation. Seawater CH3I(aq) in the model is produced photochemically from dissolved organic carbon, and is removed by reaction with Cl− and emission to the atmosphere. The net oceanic emission to the atmosphere is 214 Gg yr−1. Small terrestrial emissions from rice paddies, wetlands, and biomass burning are also included in the model. The model captures 40% of the variance in the observed seawater CH3I(aq) concentrations. Simulated concentrations at midlatitudes in summer are too high, perhaps because of a missing biological sink of CH3I(aq). We define a marine convection index (MCI) as the ratio of upper tropospheric (8–12 km) to lower tropospheric (0–2.5 km) CH3I concentrations averaged over coherent oceanic regions. The MCI in the observations ranges from 0.11 over strongly subsiding regions (southeastern subtropical Pacific) to 0.40 over strongly upwelling regions (western equatorial Pacific). The model reproduces the observed MCI with no significant global bias (offset of only +11%) but accounts for only 15% of its spatial and seasonal variance. The MCI can be used to test marine convection in global models, complementing the use of radon-222 as a test of continental convection.Engineering and Applied Science
Athena: A New Code for Astrophysical MHD
A new code for astrophysical magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) is described. The
code has been designed to be easily extensible for use with static and adaptive
mesh refinement. It combines higher-order Godunov methods with the constrained
transport (CT) technique to enforce the divergence-free constraint on the
magnetic field. Discretization is based on cell-centered volume-averages for
mass, momentum, and energy, and face-centered area-averages for the magnetic
field. Novel features of the algorithm include (1) a consistent framework for
computing the time- and edge-averaged electric fields used by CT to evolve the
magnetic field from the time- and area-averaged Godunov fluxes, (2) the
extension to MHD of spatial reconstruction schemes that involve a
dimensionally-split time advance, and (3) the extension to MHD of two different
dimensionally-unsplit integration methods. Implementation of the algorithm in
both C and Fortran95 is detailed, including strategies for parallelization
using domain decomposition. Results from a test suite which includes problems
in one-, two-, and three-dimensions for both hydrodynamics and MHD are given,
not only to demonstrate the fidelity of the algorithms, but also to enable
comparisons to other methods. The source code is freely available for download
on the web.Comment: 61 pages, 36 figures. accepted by ApJ
Thermal and Electrical Properties of gamma-NaxCoO2 (0.70 < x < 0.78)
We have performed specific heat and electric resistivity measurements of
NaCoO (-0.78). Two anomalies have been observed in the
specific heat data for , corresponding to magnetic transitions at
K and K reported previously. In the electrical
resistivity, a steep decrease at and a bending-like variation at
(=120K for ) have been observed. Moreover, we have investigated
the -dependence of these parameters in detail. The physical properties of
this system are very sensitive to , and the inconsistent results of previous
reports can be explained by a small difference in . Furthermore, for a
higher value, a phase separation into Na-rich and Na-poor domains occurs as
we previously proposed, while for a lower value, from characteristic
behaviors of the specific heat and the electrical resistivity at the
low-temperature region, the system is expected to be in the vicinity of the
magnetic instability which virtually exists below .Comment: 4 pages (3 figures included) and an extra figure (gif), to be
published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 73 (9) with possible minor revision
LHR band emissions at mid-latitude and their relationship to ionospheric ELF hiss and relativistic electrons
LHR band emissions observed at mid-latitude were investigated using data from the EXOS-C (Ohzora) satellite. A typical feature of the LHR band emissions is a continuous banded structure without burst-like and cut-off features whose center frequency decreases as the satellite moves to higher latitudes. A statistical analysis of the occurrence characteristics of the phenomena showed that mid-latitude LHR emissions are distributed inside the plasmapause during magnetically quiet periods, and the poleward boundary of the emission region moves to lower latitudes as the magnetic activity increases. The altitude distribution of the waves suggests that the propagation in the LHR duct formed horizontally in the mid-latitude upper-ionosphere. The emission is closely related to the occurrence of ionospheric ELF hiss. It is also shown that LHR emissions are commonly observed in the slot region of the radiation belt, and they sometimes accompany the enhancement of the ionospheric electron temperature. The generation of the LHR band emissions is discussed based on the observed characteristics
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