592 research outputs found

    Electrically tuned microwave devices using liquid crystal technology

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    An overview of liquid crystal technology for microwave and millimeter-wave frequencies is presented. The potential of liquid crystals as reconfigurable materials arises from their ability for continuous tuning with low power consumption, transparency, and possible integration with printed and flexible circuit technologies. This paper describes physical theory and fundamental electrical properties arising from the anisotropy of liquid crystals and overviews selected realized liquid crystal devices, throughout four main categories: resonators and filters, phase shifters and delay lines, antennas, and, finally, frequency-selective surfaces and metamaterials.Pouria Yaghmaee, Onur Hamza Karabey, Bevan Bates, Christophe Fumeaux and Rolf Jakob

    To Kick Against the Pricks: An Examination of the Oresteia and the Acts of the Apostles

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    The major themes found in the Oresteia and the books of Luke and Acts of the Apostles are compared. By focusing on the similarities found in the themes of Justice, Religion, and New versus Old, the reader may determine if the phrase in question is being used as a literary allusion in the book of Acts of the Apostles to the Oresteia trilogy. The author believes this to be the case and believes that to arrive at a full understanding of the literary meaning of the phrase in question, an understanding of the major themes of the Oresteia is necessary

    Muddled Boundaries of Digital Shrines

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    International audienceBased on an online ethnography study of 274 YouTube videos posted during the Virginia Tech or the Newtown massacres, this article discusses how users resort to participatory media during such mediatized events to create a digital spontaneous shrine. The assemblage of this sanctuary on a website hosting billions of user-generated contents is made possible by means of folksonomy and website architecture, and a two-fold social dynamic based on participatory commitment and the institutionalization of a collective entity. Unlike “physical” spontaneous shrines erected in public spaces, these digital shrines connect the bereaved with provocative or outrageous contributions, notably tributes from school shooting fans using participatory media to commemorate the killer’s memory. This side effect, generated by the technical properties of the platform, compromises the tranquility of the memorial and muddles the boundaries and the contents of such sanctuaries

    Clutter Suppression for Indoor Self-Localization Systems by Iteratively Reweighted Low-Rank Plus Sparse Recovery

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    Self-localization based on passive RFID-based has many potential applications. One of the main challenges it faces is the suppression of the reflected signals from unwanted objects (i.e., clutter). Typically, the clutter echoes are much stronger than the backscattered signals of the passive tag landmarks used in such scenarios. Therefore, successful tag detection can be very challenging. We consider two types of tags, namely low-Q and high-Q tags. The high-Q tag features a sparse frequency response, whereas the low-Q tag presents a broad frequency response. Further, the clutter usually showcases a short-lived response. In this work, we propose an iterative algorithm based on a low-rank plus sparse recovery approach (RPCA) to mitigate clutter and retrieve the landmark response. In addition to that, we compare the proposed approach with the well-known time-gating technique. It turns out that RPCA outperforms significantly time-gating for low-Q tags, achieving clutter suppression and tag identification when clutter encroaches on the time-gating window span, whereas it also increases the backscattered power at resonance by approximately 12 dB at 80 cm for high-Q tags. Altogether, RPCA seems a promising approach to improve the identification of passive indoor self-localization tag landmarks

    Fast and Miniaturized Phase Shifter With Excellent Figure of Merit Based on Liquid Crystal and Nanowire-Filled Membrane Technologies

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    This paper presents a highly miniaturized tuneable microstrip line phase shifter for 5 GHz to 67 GHz. The design takes advantage of the microstrip topology by substituting the ground plane by a metallic-nanowire-filled porous alumina membrane (NaM). This leads to a slow-wave (SW) effect of the transmission line; thus, the transmission line can be physically compact while maintaining its electric length. By applying a liquid crystal (LC) with its anisotropic permittivity as substrate between the transmission line and the NaM, a tuneable microstrip line phase shifter is realized. Three demonstrators are identically fabricated filled with different types of high-performance microwave LCs from three generations (GT3-23001, GT5-26001 and GT7-29001). The measurement results show good matching in a 50 Ω system with reflection less than −10 dB over a wide frequency range. These demonstrators are able to reach a maximum figure of merit (FoM) of 41 °/dB, 48 °/dB, and 70 °/dB for different LCs (GT3-23001, GT5-26001 and GT7-29001, respectively). In addition, experiments show that all three LCs should be biased with square wave voltage at approximately 1 kHz to achieve maximum tuneability and response speed. The achieved response times with GT3-23001, GT5-26001 and GT7-29001 are 116 ms, 613 ms, and 125 ms, respectively, which are much faster than other reported LC phase shifter implementations. Large-signal analysis shows that these implementations have high linearity with third-order interception (IP3) points of approximately 60 dBm and a power handling capability of 25 dBm
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