3,387 research outputs found
Bayesian Symbol Detection in Wireless Relay Networks via Likelihood-Free Inference
This paper presents a general stochastic model developed for a class of
cooperative wireless relay networks, in which imperfect knowledge of the
channel state information at the destination node is assumed. The framework
incorporates multiple relay nodes operating under general known non-linear
processing functions. When a non-linear relay function is considered, the
likelihood function is generally intractable resulting in the maximum
likelihood and the maximum a posteriori detectors not admitting closed form
solutions. We illustrate our methodology to overcome this intractability under
the example of a popular optimal non-linear relay function choice and
demonstrate how our algorithms are capable of solving the previously
intractable detection problem. Overcoming this intractability involves
development of specialised Bayesian models. We develop three novel algorithms
to perform detection for this Bayesian model, these include a Markov chain
Monte Carlo Approximate Bayesian Computation (MCMC-ABC) approach; an Auxiliary
Variable MCMC (MCMC-AV) approach; and a Suboptimal Exhaustive Search Zero
Forcing (SES-ZF) approach. Finally, numerical examples comparing the symbol
error rate (SER) performance versus signal to noise ratio (SNR) of the three
detection algorithms are studied in simulated examples
John Chalmers DaCosta (1863-1933): restoration of the old operating table.
John Chalmers DaCosta was an influential chairman and the first Samuel D. Gross Professor of Surgery at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. He was well known throughout the field as a skilled surgeon, passionate speaker, and exceptional writer. In addition to countless accomplishments during his career, DaCosta was deeply dedicated to the preservation and commemoration of surgical history. This ideology was exemplified when he set out on a mission to recover the old wooden operating table used by many of his iconic mentors including Samuel D. Gross, Joseph Pancoast, and William W. Keen. This table was originally used for surgical demonstrations and anatomy lessons in a lecture room of the Ely Building and later in the great amphitheater of the Jefferson Sansom Street Hospital. It was found forgotten in the basement of the College Building and was promptly refurbished, donned with dedicatory plaques, and returned to its honored position in the medical college. Dr. DaCosta also contributed a detailed article recalling the history of the table and the notable leaders in surgery who taught and practiced on its surface. The old table currently stands proudly in the entranceway of the Department of Surgery where it will remain as a cherished symbol of the early beginnings of surgical practice and education
A kinetic reaction model for biomass pyrolysis processes in Aspen Plus
This paper presents a novel kinetic reaction model for biomass pyrolysis processes. The model is based on the three main building blocks of lignocellulosic biomass, cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin and can be readily implemented in Aspen Plus and easily adapted to other process simulation software packages. It uses a set of 149 individual reactions that represent the volatilization, decomposition and recomposition processes of biomass pyrolysis. A linear regression algorithm accounts for the secondary pyrolysis reactions, thus allowing the calculation of slow and intermediate pyrolysis reactions. The bio-oil is modelled with a high level of detail, using up to 33 model compounds, which allows for a comprehensive estimation of the properties of the bio-oil and the prediction of further upgrading reactions. After showing good agreement with existing literature data, our own pyrolysis experiments are reported for validating the reaction model. A beech wood feedstock is subjected to pyrolysis under well-defined conditions at different temperatures and the product yields and compositions are determined. Reproducing the experimental pyrolysis runs with the simulation model, a high coincidence is found for the obtained fraction yields (bio-oil, char and gas), for the water content and for the elemental composition of the pyrolysis products. The kinetic reaction model is found to be suited for predicting pyrolysis yields and product composition for any lignocellulosic biomass feedstock under typical pyrolysis conditions without the need for experimental data
A Deep ROSAT HRI Observation of NGC 1313
We describe a series of observations of NGC 1313 using the ROSAT HRI with a
combined exposure time of 183.5 ksec. The observations span an interval between
1992 and 1998; the purpose of observations since 1994 was to monitor the X-ray
flux of SN1978K, one of several luminous sources in the galaxy. No diffuse
emission is detected in the galaxy to a level of ~1-2x10^37 ergs/s/arcmin^-2. A
total of eight sources are detected in the summed image within the D_25
diameter of the galaxy. The luminosities of five of the eight range from
\~6x10^37 to ~6x10^38 erg/s; these sources are most likely accreting X-ray
binaries, similar to sources obseved in M31 and M33. The remaining three
sources all emit above 10^39 erg/s. We present light curves of the five
brightest sources. Variability is detected at the 99.9% level from four of
these. We identify one of the sources as an NGC 1313 counterpart of a Galactic
X-ray source. The light curve, though crudely sampled, most closely resembles
that of a Galactic black hole candidate such as GX339-4, but with considerably
higher peak X-ray luminosity. An additional seven sources lie outside of the
D_25 diameter and are either foreground stars or background AGN.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures; accepted AJ, scheduled for November 200
Victims of Domestic Violence and Front-Line Workers: A Helping Paradigm
Victims of domestic violence present a challenge to law enforcement and emergency room personnel. The authors propose a helping approach to assist these professionals. This paradigm is composed of: active and empathetic listening, acceptance without judgment, identifying victims’ strengths, honoring victims as experts, and the process of leaving an abusive relationship
Tactical Themes for Rangeland Research
The problems threatening the conservation and management of rangeland, over one-half of the world’s terrestrial surfaces, are significant and growing. Current assessments of drivers and externalities shaping these problems have resulted in strategies intended to result in sustainable development of these lands and their resources. However, how can individual scientists and individual research programs support the needed strategies and goals? What can we realistically contribute and accomplish? We believe that technology can connect individual scientists and their science to the problems manifest in rangelands over the world, in a more rapid exchange than has occurred in the past. Recognition of local challenges, innovations, and scientific tests of the effectiveness of our technological solutions to these problems can keep pace with rapid change and help us adapt to that change. However, to do this, we have to invest in a process of connecting science to landscapes. Our tactics are to link, openly and collaboratively, the scientific method to discrete, specific, managed landscapes. We term these collective tactics, our fundamental research theme, “Landscape Portals”. All of the elements of this theme exist currently, to various degrees, but they lack cohesion and interactive, real-time connections. Future investment requires two basic, tactical scientific behaviors: a post-normal application of science in support of land management by hypothesis and a scientific method modified to accommodate a data intensive scientific inquiry directed towards adaptive management. These behaviors support our “Landscape Portals” theme: science conducted in a highly interactive, transparent, data enriched, locally relevant, globally connected, popularly translated, and ecologically robust manner
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Winter 1972
The Mode of Action of Arsenicals in the Soil by Cecil F. Kerr (page 3) The Golf Course Superintendent: A Job Description (5) Factors Affecting Carbohydrate Reserves of Cool Season Turfgrasses by L.J. Zanoni, L. F. Michelson, W.G. COlby, and M. Drake (6) Turf Bulletin\u27s Photo Quiz by Frederick G. Cheney (9) A Close Look at TCDD (10) Environmental News--Environmental Protection Agency Cancels Registration of Herbicide Amitrole (11) Homeowner\u27s Section--Crabgrass in Perspective by R.A. Peters (12) Merion Tees--Maintenance Suggestions (14) Use of Ammonium Sulfate in Fluid Fertilizers by Frank P. Achorn and W.C. Scott, Jr. (15) River Ecology and the Impact on Man (17) To Roll or Not to Roll (18) Editorial--Talkin\u27 Turfie (24
New Five Dimensional Black Holes Classified by Horizon Geometry, and a Bianchi VI Braneworld
We introduce two new families of solutions to the vacuum Einstein equations
with negative cosmological constant in 5 dimensions. These solutions are static
black holes whose horizons are modelled on the 3-geometries nilgeometry and
solvegeometry. Thus the horizons (and the exterior spacetimes) can be foliated
by compact 3-manifolds that are neither spherical, toroidal, hyperbolic, nor
product manifolds, and therefore are of a topological type not previously
encountered in black hole solutions. As an application, we use the
solvegeometry solutions to construct Bianchi VI braneworld cosmologies.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, 2 figures Typographical errors corrected, and
references to printed matter added in favour of preprints where possibl
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