6,070 research outputs found
Evaluation of Conjugate Stresses to Seth’s Strain Tensors
An explicit expression providing the symmetric stress tensor T(m) conjugate to the Seth’s strain measure E(m) for each integer m unequal 0 is presented. The result is obtained by exploiting an original approach for the solution of a tensor equation in the unknown T(m) expressed as function of the powers of the right stretch tensor U. The proposed approach is based upon the spectral decomposition of U and exploits some peculiar features of the set of fourth-order tensors obtained as linear combination of dyadic and square tensor products of the eigenprojectors of U. On the basis of such properties it is shown that the unknown T(m) can be expressed in the given reference frame as linear combination of six fourth-order tensors scaled through coefficients which are rational functions of the eigenvalues of U
Medical Device Software: From Requirements to Certification
The role of software in healthcare is getting more and more pervasive. Nevertheless, manufacturers sometimes forget that these software are medical devices and must be certified according to the EU Medical Device Regulation 2017/745. In this work we propose a pipeline for developing a Medical Device Software (MDS) compliant with the regulations and certifiable. The pipeline includes the phase of requirements elicitation, risk assessment and analysis of effectiveness as key elements. The preparation of the technical file should be carried out in parallel with the MDS development. In the overall, it can be stated that the certification process starts with the conceptualization of the MDS and proceeds all along its design and implementation
The sub-mJy radio sky in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South: source population
The sub-mJy radio population is a mixture of active systems, that is star
forming galaxies (SFGs) and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We study a sample of
883 radio sources detected at 1.4 GHz in a deep Very Large Array survey of the
Extended Chandra Deep Field South (E-CDFS) that reaches a best rms sensitivity
of 6 microJy. We have used a simple scheme to disentangle SFGs, radio-quiet
(RQ), and radio-loud (RL) AGNs based on the combination of radio data with
Chandra X-ray data and mid-infrared observations from Spitzer. We find that at
flux densities between about 30 and 100 microJy the radio population is
dominated by SFGs (~60%) and that RQ AGNs become increasingly important over RL
ones below 100 microJy. We also compare the host galaxy properties of the three
classes in terms of morphology, optical colours and stellar masses. Our results
show that both SFG and RQ AGN host galaxies have blue colours and late type
morphology while RL AGNs tend to be hosted in massive red galaxies with early
type morphology. This supports the hypothesis that radio emission in SFGs and
RQ AGNs mainly comes from the same physical process: star formation in the host
galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
The micro-Jy Radio Source Population: the VLA-CDFS View
We analyse the 267 radio sources from our deep (flux limit of 42 microJy at
the field center at 1.4 GHz) Chandra Deep Field South 1.4 and 5 GHz VLA survey.
The radio population is studied by using a wealth of multi-wavelength
information, including morphology and spectral types, in the radio, optical,
and X-ray bands. The availability of redshifts for ~ 70% of our sources allows
us to derive reliable luminosity estimates for the majority of the objects.
Contrary to some previous results, we find that star-forming galaxies make up
only a minority (~ 1/3) of sub-mJy sources, the bulk of which are faint radio
galaxies, mostly of the Fanaroff-Riley I type.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "At the Edge of
the Universe", Sintra, Portugal, Oct. 9 - 13, 200
Hard x-ray broad band Laue lenses (80 - 600 keV): building methods and performances
We present the status of the laue project devoted to develop a technology for
building a 20 meter long focal length Laue lens for hard x-/soft gamma-ray
astronomy (80 - 600 keV). The Laue lens is composed of bent crystals of Gallium
Arsenide (GaAs, 220) and Germanium (Ge, 111), and, for the first time, the
focusing property of bent crystals has been exploited for this field of
applications. We show the preliminary results concerning the adhesive employed
to fix the crystal tiles over the lens support, the positioning accuracy
obtained and possible further improvements. The Laue lens petal that will be
completed in a few months has a pass band of 80 - 300 keV and is a fraction of
an entire Laue lens capable of focusing X-rays up to 600 keV, possibly
extendable down to 20 - 30 keV with suitable low absorption crystal materials
and focal length. The final goal is to develop a focusing optics that can
improve the sensitivity over current telescopes in this energy band by 2 orders
of magnitude
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