5,637 research outputs found
Definition study for photovoltaic residential prototype system
A site evaluation was performed to assess the relative merits of different regions of the country in terms of the suitability for experimental photovoltaic powered residences. Eight sites were selected based on evaluation criteria which included population, photovoltaic systems performance and the cost of electrical energy. A parametric sensitivity analysis was performed for four selected site locations. Analytical models were developed for four different power system implementation approaches. Using the model which represents a direct (or float) charge system implementation the performance sensitivity to the following parameter variations is reported: (1) solar roof slope angle; (2) ratio of the number of series cells in the solar array to the number of series cells in the lead-acid battery; and (3) battery size. For a Cleveland site location, a system with no on site energy storage and with a maximum power tracking inverter which feeds back excess power to the utility was shown to have 19 percent greater net system output than the second place system. The experiment test plan is described. The load control and data acquisition system and the data display panel for the residence are discussed
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Paradoxical perception of surfaces in the Shepard tabletop illusion
The Shepard tabletop illusion, consisting of different perspective embeddings of two identical parallelograms as tabletops, affords a profound difference in their perceived surface shapes. My analysis reveals three further paradoxical aspects of this illusion, in addition to its susceptibility to the ‘inverse perspective illusion’ of the implied orthographic perspective of the table images. These novel aspects of the illusion are: a paradoxical slant of the tabletops, a paradoxical lack of perceived depth, and a paradoxical distortion of the length of the rear legs. The construction of the illusion resembles scenes found in ancient Chinese scroll paintings, and an analysis of the source of the third effect shows that the interpretation in terms of surfaces can account for the difference in treatment of the filled-in versus open forms in the Chinese painting from more than 1000 years ago
Multiple Charge State Beam Acceleration at Atlas
A test of the acceleration of multiple charge-state uranium beams was
performed at the ATLAS accelerator. A 238U+26 beam was accelerated in the ATLAS
PII linac to 286 MeV (~1.2 MeV/u) and stripped in a carbon foil located 0.5 m
from the entrance of the ATLAS Booster section. A 58Ni9+ 'guide' beam from the
tandem injector was used to tune the Booster for 238U+38. All charge states
from the stripping were injected into the booster and accelerated. Up to 94% of
the beam was accelerated through the Booster linac, with losses mostly in the
lower charge states. The measured beam properties of each charge state and a
comparison to numerical simulations are reported in this paper.Comment: LINAC2000, MOD0
Consanguinity and rare mutations outside of MCCC genes underlie nonspecific phenotypes of MCCD.
Purpose3-Methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase deficiency (MCCD) is an autosomal recessive disorder of leucine catabolism that has a highly variable clinical phenotype, ranging from acute metabolic acidosis to nonspecific symptoms such as developmental delay, failure to thrive, hemiparesis, muscular hypotonia, and multiple sclerosis. Implementation of newborn screening for MCCD has resulted in broadening the range of phenotypic expression to include asymptomatic adults. The purpose of this study was to identify factors underlying the varying phenotypes of MCCD.MethodsWe performed exome sequencing on DNA from 33 cases and 108 healthy controls. We examined these data for associations between either MCC mutational status, genetic ancestry, or consanguinity and the absence or presence/specificity of clinical symptoms in MCCD cases.ResultsWe determined that individuals with nonspecific clinical phenotypes are highly inbred compared with cases that are asymptomatic and healthy controls. For 5 of these 10 individuals, we discovered a homozygous damaging mutation in a disease gene that is likely to underlie their nonspecific clinical phenotypes previously attributed to MCCD.ConclusionOur study shows that nonspecific phenotypes attributed to MCCD are associated with consanguinity and are likely not due to mutations in the MCC enzyme but result from rare homozygous mutations in other disease genes.Genet Med 17 8, 660-667
Mars Spacecraft Power System Development Final Report
Development of optimum Mariner spacecraft power system for application to future flyby and orbiter mission
Relative Comparison Kernel Learning with Auxiliary Kernels
In this work we consider the problem of learning a positive semidefinite
kernel matrix from relative comparisons of the form: "object A is more similar
to object B than it is to C", where comparisons are given by humans. Existing
solutions to this problem assume many comparisons are provided to learn a high
quality kernel. However, this can be considered unrealistic for many real-world
tasks since relative assessments require human input, which is often costly or
difficult to obtain. Because of this, only a limited number of these
comparisons may be provided. In this work, we explore methods for aiding the
process of learning a kernel with the help of auxiliary kernels built from more
easily extractable information regarding the relationships among objects. We
propose a new kernel learning approach in which the target kernel is defined as
a conic combination of auxiliary kernels and a kernel whose elements are
learned directly. We formulate a convex optimization to solve for this target
kernel that adds only minor overhead to methods that use no auxiliary
information. Empirical results show that in the presence of few training
relative comparisons, our method can learn kernels that generalize to more
out-of-sample comparisons than methods that do not utilize auxiliary
information, as well as similar methods that learn metrics over objects
C4 olefin conversion on reduced nickel y faujasite. Evidence for C5 olefin formation via C4 olefin disproportionation
Shift-encoded optically multiplexed imaging
In a multiplexed image, multiple fields-of-view (FoVs) are superimposed onto a common focal plane. The attendant gain in sensor FoV provides a new degree of freedom in the design of an imaging system, allowing for performance tradeoffs not available in traditional optical designs. We explore design choices relating to a shift-encoded optically multiplexed imaging system and discuss their performance implications. Unlike in a traditional imaging system, a single multiplexed image has a fundamental ambiguity regarding the location of objects in the image. We present a system that can shift each FoV independently to break this ambiguity and compare it to other potential disambiguation techniques. We then discuss the optical, mechanical, and encoding design choices of a shift-encoding midwave infrared imaging system that multiplexes six 15×15 deg FoVs onto a single one megapixel focal plane. Using this sensor, we demonstrate a computationally demultiplexed wide FoV video.United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA8721-05-C-0002
Symmetric and asymmetric action integration during cooperative object manipulation in virtual environments
Cooperation between multiple users in a virtual environment (VE) can take place at one of three levels. These
are defined as where users can perceive each other (Level 1), individually change the scene (Level 2), or
simultaneously act on and manipulate the same object (Level 3). Despite representing the highest level of
cooperation, multi-user object manipulation has rarely been studied. This paper describes a behavioral
experiment in which the piano movers' problem (maneuvering a large object through a restricted space) was
used to investigate object manipulation by pairs of participants in a VE. Participants' interactions with the object
were integrated together either symmetrically or asymmetrically. The former only allowed the common
component of participants' actions to take place, but the latter used the mean. Symmetric action integration was
superior for sections of the task when both participants had to perform similar actions, but if participants had to
move in different ways (e.g., one maneuvering themselves through a narrow opening while the other traveled
down a wide corridor) then asymmetric integration was superior. With both forms of integration, the extent to
which participants coordinated their actions was poor and this led to a substantial cooperation overhead (the
reduction in performance caused by having to cooperate with another person)
On the Non-invasive Measurement of the Intrinsic Quantum Hall Effect
With a model calculation, we demonstrate that a non-invasive measurement of
intrinsic quantum Hall effect defined by the local chemical potential in a
ballistic quantum wire can be achieved with the aid of a pair of voltage leads
which are separated by potential barriers from the wire. B\"uttiker's formula
is used to determine the chemical potential being measured and is shown to
reduce exactly to the local chemical potential in the limit of strong potential
confinement in the voltage leads. Conditions for quantisation of Hall
resistance and measuring local chemical potential are given.Comment: 16 pages LaTex, 2 post-script figures available on reques
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