14,601 research outputs found
hp-adaptive discontinuous Galerkin solver for elliptic equations in numerical relativity
A considerable amount of attention has been given to discontinuous Galerkin methods for hyperbolic problems in numerical relativity, showing potential advantages of the methods in dealing with hydrodynamical shocks and other discontinuities. This paper investigates discontinuous Galerkin methods for the solution of elliptic problems in numerical relativity. We present a novel hp-adaptive numerical scheme for curvilinear and non-conforming meshes. It uses a multigrid preconditioner with a Chebyshev or Schwarz smoother to create a very scalable discontinuous Galerkin code on generic domains. The code employs compactification to move the outer boundary near spatial infinity. We explore the properties of the code on some test problems, including one mimicking Neutron stars with phase transitions. We also apply it to construct initial data for two or three black holes
An evaluation framework for stereo-based driver assistance
This is the post-print version of the Article - Copyright @ 2012 Springer VerlagThe accuracy of stereo algorithms or optical flow methods is commonly assessed by comparing the results against the Middlebury
database. However, equivalent data for automotive or robotics applications
rarely exist as they are difficult to obtain. As our main contribution, we introduce an evaluation framework tailored for stereo-based driver assistance able to deliver excellent performance measures while
circumventing manual label effort. Within this framework one can combine several ways of ground-truthing, different comparison metrics, and use large image databases.
Using our framework we show examples on several types of ground truthing techniques: implicit ground truthing (e.g. sequence recorded without a crash occurred), robotic vehicles with high precision sensors, and to a small extent, manual labeling. To show the effectiveness of our evaluation framework we compare three different stereo algorithms on
pixel and object level. In more detail we evaluate an intermediate representation
called the Stixel World. Besides evaluating the accuracy of the Stixels, we investigate the completeness (equivalent to the detection rate) of the StixelWorld vs. the number of phantom Stixels. Among many findings, using this framework enables us to reduce the number of phantom Stixels by a factor of three compared to the base parametrization. This base parametrization has already been optimized by test driving vehicles for distances exceeding 10000 km
Independently contacted two-dimensional electron systems in double quantum wells
A new technique for creating independent ohmic contacts to closely spaced two-dimensional electron systems in double quantum well (DQW) structures is described. Without use of shallow diffusion or precisely controlled etching methods, the present technique results in low-resistance contacts which can be electrostatically switched between the two-conducting layers. The method is demonstrated with a DQW consisting of two 200 Å GaAs quantum wells separated by a 175 Å AlGaAs barrier. A wide variety of experiments on Coulomb and tunnel-coupled 2D electron systems is now accessible
Ultraslow Electron Spin Dynamics in GaAs Quantum Wells Probed by Optically Pumped NMR
Optically pumped nuclear magnetic resonance (OPNMR) measurements were
performed in two different electron-doped multiple quantum well samples near
the fractional quantum Hall effect ground state nu=1/3. Below 0.5K, the spectra
provide evidence that spin-reversed charged excitations of the nu=1/3 ground
state are localized over the NMR time scale of ~40 microseconds. Furthermore,
by varying NMR pulse parameters, the electron spin temperature (as measured by
the Knight shift) could be driven above the lattice temperature, which shows
that the value of the electron spin-lattice relaxation time lies between 100
microseconds and 500 milliseconds at nu=1/3.Comment: 6 pages (REVTEX), 6 eps figures embedded in text; published version;
minor changes to match published versio
Optimizing crop loading of apples and pears - results 2004-2006 (foliar fertilizers, thinning)
Main topics of the research-project FuE 03OE088 of “Bundesprogramm Ökologischer
Landbau” (30.04.2004-31.12.2006) were the testing of foliar fertilizers in organic apples
and pears, optimizing lime sulphur for blossom thinning, looking for alternatives to lime
sulphur for blossom thinning and looking at different combinations of thinning measures.
Only the results of testing foliar fertilizers (carried out by KoGa Ahrweiler and OVB/ÖON
Jork) and combinations of thinning measures (carried out by LVWO Weinsberg) are
described in this article. Over three years only a small increase in yield was evaluated for
the fertilizers Aminosol PS and Wuxal Ascofol (site Ahrweiler, apple variety ‘Elstar’). In
Jork (apple variety ‘Holsteiner Cox’) yield could only be judged in 2005 and 2006. Wuxal
Ascofol showed some advantage in comparison to the control. At pear variety ‘Conference’
no clear tendencies could be seen, the control had the highest yield. In 2005 the fruitsetting
of ‘Conference’ was very low because of bad conditions during blossom
Quantum wells with atomically smooth interfaces
By a cleaved-edge overgrowth method with molecular beam epitaxy and a (110)
growth-interrupt-anneal, we have fabricated a GaAs quantum well exactly 30
monolayers thick bounded by atomically smooth AlGaAs hetero-interfaces without
atomic roughness. Micro-photoluminescence imaging of this quantum well indeed
shows spatially uniform and spectrally sharp emission over areas of several
tens of m in extent. By adding a fractional GaAs monolayer to our quantum
well we are able to study the details of the atomic step-edge kinetics
responsible for flat interface formation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revTex
Single electron capacitance spectroscopy of vertical quantum dots using a single electron transistor
We have incorporated an aluminum single electron transistor (SET) directly on
top of a vertical quantum dot, enabling the use of the SET as an electrometer
that is extremely responsive to the motion of charge into and out of the dot.
Charge induced on the SET central island from single electron additions to the
dot modulates the SET output, and we describe two methods for demodulation that
permit quantitative extraction of the quantum dot capacitance signal. The two
methods produce closely similar results for the determined single electron
capacitance peaks.Comment: Submitted to Applied Physics Letters (reformatted to fit correctly on
a page
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