90 research outputs found
VoIP over WLAN: What about the Presence of Radio Interference?
In this chapter, the performance of VoIP over WLAN is analyzed under the effect of physical
layer interference, in the presence and absence of cross-traffic. The goal is twofold: first to
underline the importance of radio interference in the behavior of a WLAN when supporting
VoIP applications; second to outline solutions to avoid interference and thus optimizing a VoIP
call over aWLAN. To this aim, an experimental approach based on cross-layermeasurements
is adopted, describing and commenting meaningful results
obtained from a number of experiments conducted by the authors on a testbed operating
in a semi-anechoic chamber and emulating two typical real life scenarios
Cross-Layer measurement on an IEEE 802.11g wireless network supporting MPEG-2 video streaming applications in the presence of interference
The performance of wireless local area networks supporting video streaming applications, based on MPEG-2 video codec, in the presence of interference is here dealt with. IEEE 802.11g standard wireless networks, that do not support QoS in according with IEEE 802.11e standard, are, in particular, accounted for and Bluetooth signals, additive white Gaussian noise, and competitive data traffic are considered as sources of interference. The goal is twofold: from one side, experimentally assessing and correlating the values that some performance metrics assume at the same time at different layers of an IEEE 802.11g WLAN delivering video streaming in the presence of in-channel interference; from the other side, deducing helpful and practical hints for designers and technicians, in order to efficiently assess and enhance the performance of an IEEE 802.11g WLAN supporting video streaming in some suitable setup conditions and in the presence of interference. To this purpose, an experimental analysis is planned following a cross-layer measurement approach, and a proper testbed within a semianechoic chamber is used. Valuable results are obtained in terms of signal-to-interference ratio, packet loss ratio, jitter, video quality, and interference data rate; helpful hints for designers and technicians are finally gained
VEGAS: A VST Early-type GAlaxy Survey. III. Mapping the galaxy structure, interactions and intragroup light in the NGC 5018 group
Most of the galaxies in the Universe at present day are in groups, which are
key to understanding the galaxy evolution. In this work we present a new deep
mosaic of 1.2 x 1.0 square degrees of the group of galaxies centered on NGC
5018, acquired at the ESO VLT Survey Telescope. We use u, g, r images to
analyse the structure of the group members and to estimate the intra-group
light. Taking advantage of the deep and multiband photometry and of the large
field of view of the VST telescope, we studied the structure of the galaxy
members and the faint features into the intra-group space and we give an
estimate of the intragroup diffuse light in the NGC 5018 group of galaxies. We
found that ~ 41% of the total g-band luminosity of the group is in the form of
intragroup light (IGL). The IGL has a (g - r) color consistent with those of
other galaxies in the group, indicating that the stripping leading to the
formation of IGL is ongoing. From the study of this group we can infer that
there are at least two different interactions involving the group members: one
between NGC 5018 and NGC 5022, which generates the tails and ring-like
structures detected in the light, and another between NGC 5022 and
MCG-03-34-013 that have produced the HI tail. A minor merging event also
happened in the formation history of NGC 5018 that have perturbed the inner
structure of this galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Robustness against parametric noise of non ideal holonomic gates
Holonomic gates for quantum computation are commonly considered to be robust
against certain kinds of parametric noise, the very motivation of this
robustness being the geometric character of the transformation achieved in the
adiabatic limit. On the other hand, the effects of decoherence are expected to
become more and more relevant when the adiabatic limit is approached. Starting
from the system described by Florio et al. [Phys. Rev. A 73, 022327 (2006)],
here we discuss the behavior of non ideal holonomic gates at finite operational
time, i.e., far before the adiabatic limit is reached. We have considered
several models of parametric noise and studied the robustness of finite time
gates. The obtained results suggest that the finite time gates present some
effects of cancellation of the perturbations introduced by the noise which
mimic the geometrical cancellation effect of standard holonomic gates.
Nevertheless, a careful analysis of the results leads to the conclusion that
these effects are related to a dynamical instead of geometrical feature.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, several changes made, accepted for publication on
Phys. Rev.
Weak Lensing Study in VOICE Survey II: Shear Bias Calibrations
The VST Optical Imaging of the CDFS and ES1 Fields (VOICE) Survey is proposed
to obtain deep optical imaging of the CDFS and ES1 fields using the VLT
Survey Telescope (VST). At present, the observations for the CDFS field have
been completed, and comprise in total about 4.9 deg down to
26 mag. In the companion paper by Fu et al. (2018), we
present the weak lensing shear measurements for -band images with seeing
0.9 arcsec. In this paper, we perform image simulations to calibrate
possible biases of the measured shear signals. Statistically, the properties of
the simulated point spread function (PSF) and galaxies show good agreements
with those of observations. The multiplicative bias is calibrated to reach an
accuracy of 3.0%. We study the bias sensitivities to the undetected faint
galaxies and to the neighboring galaxies. We find that undetected galaxies
contribute to the multiplicative bias at the level of 0.3%. Further
analysis shows that galaxies with lower signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) are
impacted more significantly because the undetected galaxies skew the background
noise distribution. For the neighboring galaxies, we find that although most
have been rejected in the shape measurement procedure, about one third of them
still remain in the final shear sample. They show a larger ellipticity
dispersion and contribute to 0.2% of the multiplicative bias. Such a bias
can be removed by further eliminating these neighboring galaxies. But the
effective number density of the galaxies can be reduced considerably. Therefore
efficient methods should be developed for future weak lensing deep surveys.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. MNRAS accepte
The Fornax Deep Survey data release 1
We present the first data release of the Fornax Deep Survey (FDS), an imaging
survey using using the wide-field imager OmegaCAM mounted on the VST in the
SDSS u', g', r', and i'-bands covering the Fornax Galaxy Cluster and the
infalling Fornax A Group. FDS is a joint project between NOVA (previously
called FOCUS - PI: R. F. Peletier) and INAF (as part of VEGAS - PIs: M.
Capaccioli and E. Iodice). With exposure times of about 9 hours over an area of
~28 square degrees, this survey is a legacy dataset for studies of members of
the Fornax Galaxy Cluster and the infalling Fornax A Group down to a surface
brightness limit of ~28 mag/arcsec^2 (1-sigma surface brightness over a 1
arcsecond^2 area) and opens a new parameter regime to investigate the role of
the cluster environment in shaping the properties of its galaxy population.
After the Virgo cluster,Fornax is the second nearest galaxy cluster to us, and
with its different mass and evolutionary state, it provides a valuable
comparison that makes it possible to understand the various evolutionary
effects on galaxies and galaxy clusters. Details about the survey can be found
in A. Venhola, R. F. Peletier, E. Laurikainen et al., 2018, A&A 620, 165. In
this release, 181 Gb of (compressed) fits files reduced using the system are
present. Catalogues with the complete sample of sources including dwarf
galaxies part of the cluster, globular clusters, and background galaxies will
be provided in forthcoming releases. The data products are available via the
ESO Science Portal at
https://archive.eso.org/scienceportal/home?publ_date=2020-08-26Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1810.0055
The Fornax Deep Survey data release 1
We present the first data release of the Fornax Deep Survey (FDS), an imaging
survey using using the wide-field imager OmegaCAM mounted on the VST in the
SDSS u', g', r', and i'-bands covering the Fornax Galaxy Cluster and the
infalling Fornax A Group. FDS is a joint project between NOVA (previously
called FOCUS - PI: R. F. Peletier) and INAF (as part of VEGAS - PIs: M.
Capaccioli and E. Iodice). With exposure times of about 9 hours over an area of
~28 square degrees, this survey is a legacy dataset for studies of members of
the Fornax Galaxy Cluster and the infalling Fornax A Group down to a surface
brightness limit of ~28 mag/arcsec^2 (1-sigma surface brightness over a 1
arcsecond^2 area) and opens a new parameter regime to investigate the role of
the cluster environment in shaping the properties of its galaxy population.
After the Virgo cluster,Fornax is the second nearest galaxy cluster to us, and
with its different mass and evolutionary state, it provides a valuable
comparison that makes it possible to understand the various evolutionary
effects on galaxies and galaxy clusters. Details about the survey can be found
in A. Venhola, R. F. Peletier, E. Laurikainen et al., 2018, A&A 620, 165. In
this release, 181 Gb of (compressed) fits files reduced using the system are
present. Catalogues with the complete sample of sources including dwarf
galaxies part of the cluster, globular clusters, and background galaxies will
be provided in forthcoming releases. The data products are available via the
ESO Science Portal at
https://archive.eso.org/scienceportal/home?publ_date=2020-08-26Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1810.0055
- âŠ