11,782 research outputs found
Considerations about Continuous Experimentation for Resource-Constrained Platforms in Self-Driving Vehicles
Autonomous vehicles are slowly becoming reality thanks to the efforts of many
academic and industrial organizations. Due to the complexity of the software
powering these systems and the dynamicity of the development processes, an
architectural solution capable of supporting long-term evolution and
maintenance is required.
Continuous Experimentation (CE) is an already increasingly adopted practice
in software-intensive web-based software systems to steadily improve them over
time. CE allows organizations to steer the development efforts by basing
decisions on data collected about the system in its field of application.
Despite the advantages of Continuous Experimentation, this practice is only
rarely adopted in cyber-physical systems and in the automotive domain. Reasons
for this include the strict safety constraints and the computational
capabilities needed from the target systems.
In this work, a concept for using Continuous Experimentation for
resource-constrained platforms like a self-driving vehicle is outlined.Comment: Copyright 2017 Springer. Paper submitted and accepted at the 11th
European Conference on Software Architecture. 8 pages, 1 figure. Published in
Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol 10475 (Springer),
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-65831-5_
Designing transformative spaces for sustainability in social-ecological systems
Transformations toward sustainability have recently gained traction, triggered in part by a growing recognition of the dramatic socio-cultural, political, economic, and technological changes required to move societies toward more desirable futures in the Anthropocene. However, there is a dearth of literature that emphasizes the crucial aspects of sustainability transformations in the diverse contexts of the Global South. Contributors to this Special Feature aim to address this gap by weaving together a series of case studies that together form an important navigational tool on the “how to” as well as the “what” and the “where to” of sustainability transformations across diverse challenges, sectors, and geographies. They propose the term “transformative space” as a “safe-enough” collaborative process whereby actors invested in sustainability transformations can experiment with new mental models, ideas, and practices that can help shift social-ecological systems onto more desirable pathways. The authors also highlight the challenges posed to researchers as they become “transformative space-makers,” navigating the power dynamics inherent in these processes. Because researchers and practitioners alike are challenged to provide answers to complex and often ambiguous or incomplete questions around sustainability, the ideas, reflections and learning gathered in this Special Feature provide some guidance on new ways of engaging with the world
Discreteness-Induced Slow Relaxation in Reversible Catalytic Reaction Networks
Slowing down of the relaxation of the fluctuations around equilibrium is
investigated both by stochastic simulations and by analysis of Master equation
of reversible reaction networks consisting of resources and the corresponding
products that work as catalysts. As the number of molecules is decreased,
the relaxation time to equilibrium is prolonged due to the deficiency of
catalysts, as demonstrated by the amplification compared to that by the
continuum limit. This amplification ratio of the relaxation time is represented
by a scaling function as , and it becomes prominent as
becomes less than a critical value , where is the inverse
temperature and is the energy gap between a product and a resource
Bethe--Salpeter equation in QCD
We extend to regular QCD the derivation of a confining
Bethe--Salpeter equation previously given for the simplest model of scalar QCD
in which quarks are treated as spinless particles. We start from the same
assumptions on the Wilson loop integral already adopted in the derivation of a
semirelativistic heavy quark potential. We show that, by standard
approximations, an effective meson squared mass operator can be obtained from
our BS kernel and that, from this, by expansion the
corresponding Wilson loop potential can be reobtained, spin--dependent and
velocity--dependent terms included. We also show that, on the contrary,
neglecting spin--dependent terms, relativistic flux tube model is reproduced.Comment: 23 pages, revte
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Simulating the Martian Chemical Enivronment
We report on new analogue materials to simulate Martian rocks and soils, especially under realistic redox conditions
The Pion-Nucleon coupling constant from np charge exchange scattering
A novel extrapolation method has been used to deduce the charged Pion-Nucleon
coupling constant from backward differential scattering cross sections. We
applied it to new measurements performed at 162 MeV at the The Svedberg
Laboratory in Uppsala. In the angular range , the
carefully normalized data are steeper than those of most previous measurements.
The extracted value, , in good agreement with
the classical value, is higher than those determined in recent nucleon-nucleon
partial-wave analyses.Comment: 6 pages, 3 encapsulated figures, epsfig, menu97.cls (included
Reduction of the QCD string to a time component vector potential
We demonstrate the equivalence of the relativistic flux tube model of mesons
to a simple potential model in the regime of large radial excitation. We make
no restriction on the quark masses; either quark may have a zero or finite
mass. Our primary result shows that for fixed angular momentum and large radial
excitation, the flux tube/QCD string meson with a short-range Coulomb
interaction is described by a spinless Salpeter equation with a time component
vector potential V(r) = ar - k/r.Comment: RevTeX4, 10 pages, 3 eps figure
From scalar to string confinement
We outline a connection between scalar quark confinement, a
phenomenologically successful concept heretofore lacking fundamental
justification, and QCD. Although scalar confinement does not follow from QCD,
there is an interesting and close relationship between them. We develop a
simple model intermediate between scalar confinement and the QCD string for
illustrative purposes. Finally, we find the bound state masses of scalar,
time-component vector, and string confinement analytically through
semi-classical quantization.Comment: ReVTeX, 9 pages, 5 figure
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