8,751 research outputs found

    High performance millimeter-wave microstrip circulators and isolators

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    Millimeter wave systems, phased array antennas, and high performance components all require wideband circulators (and isolators) to perform diplexing and switching, to improve isolation and Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR), and to construct IMPATT diode reflection amplifiers. Presently, most of the millimeter-wave circulators and isolators are available in the configurations of waveguide or stripline, both of which suffer from the shortcomings of bulky size/weight, narrow bandwidth, and poor compatibility with monolithic millimeter-wave integrated circuits (MMIC). MMW microstrip circulators/isolators can eliminate or improve these shortcomings. Stub-tuned microstrip circulator configuration were developed utilizing the electromagnetic fields perturbation technique, the adhesion problems of microstrip metallization on new ferrite substrate were overcome, the fabrication, assembly, packaging techniques were improved, and then successfully designed, fabricated a Ka band circulator which has isolation and return loss of greater than 16dB, insertion loss less than 0.7dB. To assess the steady and reliable performance of the circulator, a temperature cycling test was done over the range of -20 to +50 C for 3 continuous cycles and found no significant impact or variation of circulator performance

    Asymptotic distributions of the signal-to-interference ratios of LMMSE detection in multiuser communications

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    Let sk=1N(v1k,...,vNk)T,{\mathbf{s}}_k=\frac{1}{\sqrt{N}}(v_{1k},...,v_{Nk})^T, k=1,...,Kk=1,...,K, where {vik,i,k\{v_{ik},i,k =1,...}=1,...\} are independent and identically distributed random variables with Ev11=0Ev_{11}=0 and Ev112=1Ev_{11}^2=1. Let Sk=(s1,...,sk1,{\mathbf{S}}_k=({\mathbf{s}}_1,...,{\mathbf{s}}_{k-1}, sk+1,...,sK){\mathbf{s}}_{k+1},...,{\mathbf{s}}_K), Pk=diag(p1,...,{\mathbf{P}}_k=\operatorname {diag}(p_1,..., pk1,pk+1,...,pK)p_{k-1},p_{k+1},...,p_K) and \beta_k=p_k{\mathbf{s}}_k^T({\mathb f{S}}_k{\mathbf{P}}_k{\mathbf{S}}_k^T+\sigma^2{\mathbf{I}})^{-1}{\math bf{s}}_k, where pk0p_k\geq 0 and the βk\beta_k is referred to as the signal-to-interference ratio (SIR) of user kk with linear minimum mean-square error (LMMSE) detection in wireless communications. The joint distribution of the SIRs for a finite number of users and the empirical distribution of all users' SIRs are both investigated in this paper when KK and NN tend to infinity with the limit of their ratio being positive constant. Moreover, the sum of the SIRs of all users, after subtracting a proper value, is shown to have a Gaussian limit.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051606000000718 in the Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Ks, Lambda and Xi production at intermediate to high pT from Au+Au collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 39, 11.5 and 7.7 GeV

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    We report on the pT dependence of nuclear modification factors (RCPR_{CP}) for Ks, Lambda, Xi and the Anti-Lambda/Ks ratios at mid-rapidity from Au+Au collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 39, 11.5 and 7.7 GeV. At \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 39 GeV, the RCPR_{CP} data shows a baryon/meson separation at intermediate pT and a suppression for Ks for pT up to 4.5 GeV/cc; the Anti-Lambda/Ks shows baryon enhancement in the most central collisions. However, at \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 11.5 and 7.7 GeV, RCPR_{CP} shows much less baryon/meson separation and Anti-Lambda/Ks shows almost no baryon enhancement. These observations indicate that the matter created in Au+Au collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 11.5 or 7.7 GeV might be distinct from that created at \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 39 GeV.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of 7th International Workshop on Critical Point and Onset of Deconfinement (CPOD2011), Wuhan, China, Nov. 7-11, 201

    The Harbin Jewish Community and the Regional Conflicts of Northeast China, 1903-1963

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    This study examines the historical development of the Harbin Jewish community in Northeast China from its beginning in the early 1900s to its end in the 1960s. Scholars seldom pay enough attention to the Harbin Jewish community, the largest and most influential Jewish community in Asia. This study aims to fill this significant geopolitical gap of the history of Jews in the East. I develop two major narrative strategies in locating the Harbin Jewish Community in its historical map: (1) chronologically intertwining the development of the Harbin Jewish community within the local history of Harbin, by examining the relations between the Harbin Jewish community and its changing governors, namely, the Russian, Chinese, and Japanese policies towards the Jews; (2) investigating in parallel the contacts between the Harbin Jewish community with its contemporary Jewish communities in Shanghai, Europe and the United States, especially during the globally influential World War I and World War II period. This study challenges the argument that the Chinese and the Jews did not cross paths in these important historical events mentioned above. By tracing the history of the Harbin Jewish community, this study demonstrates that Jewish experience in China must be perceived as a whole and the survival of the Jewish refugees in Shanghai during the Holocaust in WWII should be put into its historical context rather than a single historical accident. The Harbin Jewish community thereby has an enduring legacy in the reconstruction of postmodern historiography and international relationships
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