39,115 research outputs found
Video vehicle detection at signalised junctions: a simulation-based study
Many existing advanced methods of traffic signal control depend on information about
approaching traffic provided by inductive loop detectors at particular points in the road. But
analysis of images from CCTV cameras can in principle provide more comprehensive
information about traffic approaching and passing through junctions, and cameras may be
easier to install and maintain than loop detectors, and some systems based on video detection
have already been in use for some time.
Against this background, computer simulation has been used to explore the potential of
existing and immediately foreseeable capability in automatic on-line image analysis to extract
information relevant to signal control from images provided by cameras mounted in
acceptable positions at signal-controlled junctions. Some consequences of extracting relevant
information in different ways were investigated in the context of an existing detailed
simulation model of vehicular traffic moving through junctions under traffic-responsive signal
control, and the development of one basic and one advanced algorithm for traffic-responsive
control. The work was confined as a first step to operation of one very simple signalcontrolled
junction.
Two techniques for extraction of information from images were modelled - a more ambitious
technique based on distinguishing most of the individual vehicles visible to the camera, and a
more modest technique requiring only that the presence of vehicles in any part of the image
be distinguished from the background scene. In the latter case, statistical modelling was used
to estimate the number of vehicles corresponding to any single area of the image that
represents vehicles rather than background.
At the simple modelled junction, each technique of extraction enabled each of the algorithms
for traffic-responsive control of the signals to achieve average delays per vehicle appreciably
lower than those given by System D control, and possibly competitive with those that MOVA
would give, but comparison with MOVA was beyond the scope of the initial study.
These results of simulation indicate that image analysis of CCTV pictures should be able to
provide sufficient information in practice for traffic-responsive control that is competitive
with existing techniques. Ways in which the work could be taken further were discussed with
practitioners, but have not yet been progressed
Mechanism, dynamics, and biological existence of multistability in a large class of bursting neurons
Multistability, the coexistence of multiple attractors in a dynamical system,
is explored in bursting nerve cells. A modeling study is performed to show that
a large class of bursting systems, as defined by a shared topology when
represented as dynamical systems, is inherently suited to support
multistability. We derive the bifurcation structure and parametric trends
leading to multistability in these systems. Evidence for the existence of
multirhythmic behavior in neurons of the aquatic mollusc Aplysia californica
that is consistent with our proposed mechanism is presented. Although these
experimental results are preliminary, they indicate that single neurons may be
capable of dynamically storing information for longer time scales than
typically attributed to nonsynaptic mechanisms.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Synchronization dynamics of two nanomechanical membranes within a Fabry-Perot cavity
Spontaneous synchronization is a significant collective behavior of weakly
coupled systems. Due to their inherent nonlinear nature, optomechanical systems
can exhibit self-sustained oscillations which can be exploited for
synchronizing different mechanical resonators. In this paper, we explore the
synchronization dynamics of two membranes coupled to a common optical field
within a cavity, and pumped with a strong blue-detuned laser drive. We focus on
the system quantum dynamics in the parameter regime corresponding to
synchronization of the classical motion of the two membranes. With an
appropriate definition of the phase difference operator for the resonators, we
study synchronization in the quantum case through the covariance matrix
formalism. We find that for sufficiently large driving, quantum synchronization
is robust with respect to quantum fluctuations and to thermal noise up to not
too large temperatures. Under synchronization, the two membranes are never
entangled, while quantum discord behaves similarly to quantum synchronization,
that is, it is larger when the variance of the phase difference is smaller
Spectral Singularities of Complex Scattering Potentials and Infinite Reflection and Transmission Coefficients at real Energies
Spectral singularities are spectral points that spoil the completeness of the
eigenfunctions of certain non-Hermitian Hamiltonian operators. We identify
spectral singularities of complex scattering potentials with the real energies
at which the reflection and transmission coefficients tend to infinity, i.e.,
they correspond to resonances having a zero width. We show that a wave guide
modeled using such a potential operates like a resonator at the frequencies of
spectral singularities. As a concrete example, we explore the spectral
singularities of an imaginary PT-symmetric barrier potential and demonstrate
the above resonance phenomenon for a certain electromagnetic wave guide.Comment: Published versio
On the truncation of the harmonic oscillator wavepacket
We present an interesting result regarding the implication of truncating the
wavepacket of the harmonic oscillator. We show that disregarding the
non-significant tails of a function which is the superposition of
eigenfunctions of the harmonic oscillator has a remarkable consequence: namely,
there exist infinitely many different superpositions giving rise to the same
function on the interval. Uniqueness, in the case of a wavepacket, is restored
by a postulate of quantum mechanics
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