1,120 research outputs found
Structural Refinement for the Modal nu-Calculus
We introduce a new notion of structural refinement, a sound abstraction of
logical implication, for the modal nu-calculus. Using new translations between
the modal nu-calculus and disjunctive modal transition systems, we show that
these two specification formalisms are structurally equivalent.
Using our translations, we also transfer the structural operations of
composition and quotient from disjunctive modal transition systems to the modal
nu-calculus. This shows that the modal nu-calculus supports composition and
decomposition of specifications.Comment: Accepted at ICTAC 201
Modal Interface Automata
De Alfaro and Henzinger's Interface Automata (IA) and Nyman et al.'s recent
combination IOMTS of IA and Larsen's Modal Transition Systems (MTS) are
established frameworks for specifying interfaces of system components. However,
neither IA nor IOMTS consider conjunction that is needed in practice when a
component shall satisfy multiple interfaces, while Larsen's MTS-conjunction is
not closed and Bene\v{s} et al.'s conjunction on disjunctive MTS does not treat
internal transitions. In addition, IOMTS-parallel composition exhibits a
compositionality defect. This article defines conjunction (and also
disjunction) on IA and disjunctive MTS and proves the operators to be
'correct', i.e., the greatest lower bounds (least upper bounds) wrt. IA- and
resp. MTS-refinement. As its main contribution, a novel interface theory called
Modal Interface Automata (MIA) is introduced: MIA is a rich subset of IOMTS
featuring explicit output-must-transitions while input-transitions are always
allowed implicitly, is equipped with compositional parallel, conjunction and
disjunction operators, and allows a simpler embedding of IA than Nyman's. Thus,
it fixes the shortcomings of related work, without restricting designers to
deterministic interfaces as Raclet et al.'s modal interface theory does.Comment: 28 page
An Institutional Framework for Heterogeneous Formal Development in UML
We present a framework for formal software development with UML. In contrast
to previous approaches that equip UML with a formal semantics, we follow an
institution based heterogeneous approach. This can express suitable formal
semantics of the different UML diagram types directly, without the need to map
everything to one specific formalism (let it be first-order logic or graph
grammars). We show how different aspects of the formal development process can
be coherently formalised, ranging from requirements over design and Hoare-style
conditions on code to the implementation itself. The framework can be used to
verify consistency of different UML diagrams both horizontally (e.g.,
consistency among various requirements) as well as vertically (e.g.,
correctness of design or implementation w.r.t. the requirements)
Quantitative Modal Transition Systems
International audienceThis extended abstract offers a brief survey presentation of the specification formalism of modal transition systems and its recent extensions to the quantitative setting of timed as well as stochastic systems. Some applications will also be briefly mentioned
Hennessy-Milner Logic with Greatest Fixed Points as a Complete Behavioural Specification Theory
There are two fundamentally different approaches to specifying and verifying
properties of systems. The logical approach makes use of specifications given
as formulae of temporal or modal logics and relies on efficient model checking
algorithms; the behavioural approach exploits various equivalence or refinement
checking methods, provided the specifications are given in the same formalism
as implementations.
In this paper we provide translations between the logical formalism of
Hennessy-Milner logic with greatest fixed points and the behavioural formalism
of disjunctive modal transition systems. We also introduce a new operation of
quotient for the above equivalent formalisms, which is adjoint to structural
composition and allows synthesis of missing specifications from partial
implementations. This is a substantial generalisation of the quotient for
deterministic modal transition systems defined in earlier papers
The Magnetic Phase Diagram and the Pressure and Field Dependence of the Fermi Surface in UGe
The ac susceptibility and de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect in UGe are
measured at pressures {\it P} up to 17.7 kbar for the magnetic field {\it B}
parallel to the {\it a} axis, which is the easy axis of magnetization. Two
anomalies are observed at {\it B}({\it P}) and {\it B}({\it P}) ({\it
B} {\it B} at any {\it P}), and the {\it P}-{\it B} phase diagram
is presented. The Fermi surface and quasiparticle mass are found to vary
smoothly with pressure up to 17.7 kbar unless the phase boundary {\it
B}({\it P}) is crossed. The observed dHvA frequencies may be grouped into
three according to their pressure dependences, which are largely positive,
nearly constant or negative. It is suggested that the quasiparticle mass
moderately increases as the boundary {\it B}({\it P}) is approached. DHvA
effect measurements are also performed across the boundary at 16.8 kbar.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
Change detection of isolated housing using a new hybrid approach based on object classification with optical and TerraSAR-X data
Optical and microwave high spatial resolution images are now available for a wide range of applications. In this work, they have been applied for the semi-automatic change detection of isolated housing in agricultural areas. This article presents a new hybrid methodology based on segmentation of high-resolution images and image differencing. This new approach mixes the main techniques used in change detection methods and it also adds a final segmentation process in order to classify the change detection product. First, isolated building classification is carried out using only optical data. Then, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) information is added to the classification process, obtaining excellent results with lower complexity cost. Since the first classification step is improved, the total change detection scheme is also enhanced when the radar data are used for classification. Finally, a comparison between the different methods is presented and some conclusions are extracted from the study. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.Vidal Pantaleoni, A.; Moreno Cambroreno, MDR. (2011). Change detection of isolated housing using a new hybrid approach based on object classification with optical and TerraSAR-X data. International Journal of Remote Sensing. 32(24):9621-9635. doi:10.1080/01431161.2011.571297S962196353224BLAES, X., VANHALLE, L., & DEFOURNY, P. (2005). Efficiency of crop identification based on optical and SAR image time series. Remote Sensing of Environment, 96(3-4), 352-365. doi:10.1016/j.rse.2005.03.010Chen, Y., Shi, P., Fung, T., Wang, J., & Li, X. (2007). Objectâoriented classification for urban land cover mapping with ASTER imagery. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 28(20), 4645-4651. doi:10.1080/01431160500444731Dalla Mura, M., Benediktsson, J. A., Bovolo, F., & Bruzzone, L. (2008). An Unsupervised Technique Based on Morphological Filters for Change Detection in Very High Resolution Images. IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, 5(3), 433-437. doi:10.1109/lgrs.2008.917726DellâAcqua, F., & Gamba, P. (2006). Discriminating urban environments using multiscale texture and multiple SAR images. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 27(18), 3797-3812. doi:10.1080/01431160600557572Haralick, R. M., Shanmugam, K., & Dinstein, I. (1973). Textural Features for Image Classification. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, SMC-3(6), 610-621. doi:10.1109/tsmc.1973.4309314Im, J., Jensen, J. R., & Tullis, J. A. (2008). Objectâbased change detection using correlation image analysis and image segmentation. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 29(2), 399-423. doi:10.1080/01431160601075582Lhomme, S., He, D., Weber, C., & Morin, D. (2009). A new approach to building identification from veryâhighâspatialâresolution images. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 30(5), 1341-1354. doi:10.1080/01431160802509017LOBO, A., CHIC, O., & CASTERAD, A. (1996). Classification of Mediterranean crops with multisensor data: per-pixel versus per-object statistics and image segmentation. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 17(12), 2385-2400. doi:10.1080/01431169608948779Lu, D., Mausel, P., BrondĂzio, E., & Moran, E. (2004). Change detection techniques. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 25(12), 2365-2401. doi:10.1080/0143116031000139863Shimabukuro, Y. E., AlmeidaâFilho, R., Kuplich, T. M., & de Freitas, R. M. (2007). Quantifying optical and SAR image relationships for tropical landscape features in the AmazĂŽnia. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 28(17), 3831-3840. doi:10.1080/01431160701236829Stramondo, S., Bignami, C., Chini, M., Pierdicca, N., & Tertulliani, A. (2006). Satellite radar and optical remote sensing for earthquake damage detection: results from different case studies. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 27(20), 4433-4447. doi:10.1080/01431160600675895Yuan, D., & Elvidge, C. D. (1996). Comparison of relative radiometric normalization techniques. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 51(3), 117-126. doi:10.1016/0924-2716(96)00018-
Non-Centrosymmetric Heavy-Fermion Superconductors
In this chapter we discuss the physical properties of a particular family of
non-centrosymmetric superconductors belonging to the class heavy-fermion
compounds. This group includes the ferromagnet UIr and the antiferromagnets
CeRhSi3, CeIrSi3, CeCoGe3, CeIrGe3 and CePt3Si, of which all but CePt3Si become
superconducting only under pressure. Each of these superconductors has
intriguing and interesting properties. We first analyze CePt3Si, then review
CeRhSi3, CeIrSi3, CeCoGe3 and CeIrGe3, which are very similar to each other in
their magnetic and electrical properties, and finally discuss UIr. For each
material we discuss the crystal structure, magnetic order, occurrence of
superconductivity, phase diagram, characteristic parameters, superconducting
properties and pairing states. We present an overview of the similarities and
differences between all these six compounds at the end.Comment: To appear in "Non-Centrosymmetric Superconductors: Introduction and
Overview", Lecture Notes in Physics 847, edited by E. Bauer and M. Sigrist
(Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg, 2012) Chap. 2, pp. 35-7
System-size dependence of the pion freeze-out volume as a potential signature for the phase transition to a Quark Gluon Plasma
Hanburry-Brown-Twiss (HBT) correlation functions and radii of negatively
charged pions from C+C, Si+Si, Cu+Cu, and In+In at lower RHIC/SPS energies are
calculated with the UrQMD transport model and the CRAB analyzing program. We
find a minimum in the excitation function of the pion freeze-out volume at low
transverse momenta and around GeV which can be related to
the transition from hadronic to string matter (which might be interpreted as a
pre-cursor of the QGP). The existence of the minimum is explained by the
competition of two mechanisms of the particle production, resonance decays and
string formation/fragmentation.Comment: 12 pages, 4 fig
Recent developments in unconventional superconductivity theory
The review of recent developments in the unconventional superconductivity
theory is given. In the fist part I consider the physical origin of the Kerr
rotation polarization of light reflected from the surface of superconducting
. Then the comparison of magneto-optical responses in
superconductors with orbital and spin spontaneous magnetization is presented.
The latter result is applied to the estimation of the magneto-optical
properties of neutral superfluids with spontaneous magnetization. The second
part is devoted to the natural optical activity or gyrotropy properties of
noncentrosymmetric metals in their normal and superconducting states. The
temperature behavior of the gyrotropy coefficient is compared with the
temperature behavior of paramagnetic susceptibility determining the noticeable
increase of the paramagnetic limiting field in noncentrosymmetric
superconductors. In the last chapter I describe the order parameter and the
symmetry of superconducting state in the itinerant ferromagnet with
orthorhombic symmetry. Finally the Josephson coupling between two adjacent
ferromagnet superconducting domains is discussed.Comment: 15 page
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