31,142 research outputs found
Vibrophonocardiograph Patent
Vibrophonocardiograph comprising low weight and small volume piezoelectric microphone with amplifier having high imput impedance for high sensitivity and low frequency respons
Creating ultracold molecules by collisions with ultracold rare gas atoms in an optical trap
We study collisions of para-H with five rare gas atomic species (He, Ne,
Ar, Kr and Xe) over the range from 1 K to 1 K and evaluate the
feasibility of sympathetic cooling H with ultracold ground state rare gas
atoms co-trapped within a deep optical trap. Collision cross-sections over this
large temperature range show that all of these species could be used to cool
H to ultracold temperatures and that argon and helium are the most
promising species for future experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, submitted for publicatio
Super-resolution imaging of a low frequency levitated oscillator
We describe the measurement of the secular motion of a levitated nanoparticle
in a Paul trap with a CMOS camera. This simple method enables us to reach
signal-to-noise ratios as good as 10 with a displacement sensitivity
better than 10/Hz. This method can be used to extract trap
parameters as well as the properties of the levitated particles. We demonstrate
continuous monitoring of the particle dynamics on timescales of the order of
weeks. We show that by using the improvement given by super-resolution imaging,
a significant reduction in the noise floor can be attained, with an increase in
the bandwidth of the force sensitivity. This approach represents a competitive
alternative to standard optical detection for a range of low frequency
oscillators where low optical powers are require
Robust decision making for agile systems development Part 2: a decomposition and analysis
The need for agility in operational systems within the defence enterprise and procurement domains has been identified by many authors, and over time, there have been a number of initiatives and programmes that have sought to identify the nature of agility, and the means by which it can be defined and employed within individual cases and scenarios. These have identified impediments to the successful realization of agile practices and methods, particularly the resilience of agile decision making throughout the conceptual understanding, design and implementation of the operational system. To further investigate the extent to which this process can be implemented in a robust and reliable manner, Cranfield University created the ‘Robust Enterprise-based Approach for Agility in Capability Through-life (REA2CT)’ framework, which provides a number of functional steps to institute a systems development lifecycle approach to producing agile solutions for use in networked systems and systems-of-systems. This paper builds upon the description of the framework[1] by applying the Axiomatic Design (AD) theory to identify where complexity exists within the requirements and design activities that underpin the framework. Using this analysis, this paper identifies ‘pain points’ within the REA2CT framework, and suggests necessary improvements to facilitate the implementation of agility throughout the systems development lifecycle
Towards sympathetic cooling of large molecules: Cold collisions between benzene and rare gas atoms
This paper reports on calculations of collisional cross sections for the complexes Z-CDH6 (X = 3He, 4He, Ne) at temperatures in the range 1)μK - 10K and shows that relatively large cross sections in the 103-105Å2 range are available for collisional cooling. Both elastic and inelastic processes are considered in this temperature range. The calculations suggest that sympathetically cooling benzene to microkelvin temperatures is feasible using these co-trapped rare gas atoms in an optical trap. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschan
Robust decision making for agile systems development Part 1: exploring the paradigm
The need for agility in operational systems within the defence enterprise and procurement domains has been identified by many authors, and over time, there have been a number of initiatives and programmes that have sought to identify the nature of agility, and the means by which it can be defined and employed within individual cases and scenarios. These have identified impediments to the successful realization of agile practices and methods, particularly the resilience of agile decision making throughout the conceptual understanding, design and implementation of the operational system. To further investigate the extent to which this process can be implemented in a robust and reliable manner, Cranfield University created the ‘Robust Enterprise-based Approach for Agility in Capability Through-life (REA2CT)’ framework, which provides a number of functional steps to institute a systems development lifecycle approach to producing agile solutions for use in networked systems and systems-of-systems. This paper briefly examines the Customer Need (CN) for the enterprise-based delivery of system (of systems) agility into the operational domain. Axiomatic Design (AD) theory is used to describe the REA2CT framework, identifying Functional Requirements (FRs) which might satisfy the CN for agility. Initial Design Parameters (DPs) are proposed to satisfy the FRs
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