40,515 research outputs found
FDTD modeling of heatsink RF characteristics for EMC mitigation
Due to their size and complex geometry, large heatsinks such as those used in the power electronics industry may enhance the radiated emissions produced by the circuits employing them. Such enhancement of the radio frequency (rf) radiation could cause the equipment to malfunction or to contravene current EMC regulations. In this paper, the electromagnetic resonant effects of heatsinks are examined using the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method and recommendations are made concerning the optimum geometry of heatsinks and the placement of components so as to mitigate potential EMC effects
Efficient use of bit planes in the generation of motion stimuli
The production of animated motion sequences on computer-controlled display systems presents a technical problem because large images cannot be transferred from disk storage to image memory at conventional frame rates. A technique is described in which a single base image can be used to generate a broad class of motion stimuli without the need for such memory transfers. This technique was applied to the generation of drifting sine-wave gratings (and by extension, sine wave plaids). For each drifting grating, sine and cosine spatial phase components are first reduced to 1 bit/pixel using a digital halftoning technique. The resulting pairs of 1-bit images are then loaded into pairs of bit planes of the display memory. To animate the patterns, the display hardware's color lookup table is modified on a frame-by-frame basis; for each frame the lookup table is set to display a weighted sum of the spatial sine and cosine phase components. Because the contrasts and temporal frequencies of the various components are mutually independent in each frame, the sine and cosine components can be counterphase modulated in temporal quadrature, yielding a single drifting grating. Using additional bit planes, multiple drifting gratings can be combined to form sine-wave plaid patterns. A large number of resultant plaid motions can be produced from a single image file because the temporal frequencies of all the components can be varied independently. For a graphics device having 8 bits/pixel, up to four drifting gratings may be combined, each having independently variable contrast and speed
Collective Variables of Fermions and Bosonization
We first present a general method for extracting collective variables out of
non-relativistic fermions by extending the gauge theory of collective
coordinates to fermionic systems. We then apply the method to a system of
non-interacting flavored fermions confined in a one-dimensional
flavor-independent potential. In the limit of a large number of particles we
obtain a Lagrangian with the Wess-Zumino-Witten term, which is the well-known
Lagrangian describing the non-Abelian bosonization of chiral fermions on a
circle. The result is universal and does not depend on the details of the
confining potential.Comment: 12 pages, plain tex, added new preprint numbe
Effect of contrast on the perception of direction of a moving pattern
A series of experiments examining the effect of contrast on the perception of moving plaids was performed to test the hypothesis that the human visual system determines the direction of a moving plaid in a two-staged process: decomposition into component motion followed by application of the intersection-of-contraints rule. Although there is recent evidence that the first tenet of the hypothesis is correct, i.e., that plaid motion is initially decomposed into the motion of the individual grating components, the nature of the second-stage combination rule has not yet been established. It was found that when the gratings within the plaid are of different contrast the preceived direction is not predicted by the intersection-of-constraints rule. There is a strong (up to 20 deg) bias in the direction of the higher-constrast grating. A revised model, which incorporates a contrast-dependent weighting of perceived grating speed as observed for one-dimensional patterns, can quantitatively predict most of the results. The results are then discussed in the context of various models of human visual motion processing and of physiological responses of neurons in the primate visual system
Fermi distribution of semicalssical non-eqilibrium Fermi states
When a classical device suddenly perturbs a degenerate Fermi gas a
semiclassical non-equilibrium Fermi state arises. Semiclassical Fermi states
are characterized by a Fermi energy or Fermi momentum that slowly depends on
space or/and time. We show that the Fermi distribution of a semiclassical Fermi
state has a universal nature. It is described by Airy functions regardless of
the details of the perturbation. In this letter we also give a general
discussion of coherent Fermi states
Are preliminary week-to-week fluctuations in M1 biased?
Money supply ; Monetary policy
Nonlinear observers for predicting state-of-charge and state-of-health of lead-acid batteries for hybrid-electric vehicles
AbstractâThis paper describes the application of state-estimation
techniques for the real-time prediction of the state-of-charge
(SoC) and state-of-health (SoH) of lead-acid cells. Specifically,
approaches based on the well-known Kalman Filter (KF) and
Extended Kalman Filter (EKF), are presented, using a generic
cell model, to provide correction for offset, drift, and long-term
state divergenceâan unfortunate feature of more traditional
coulomb-counting techniques. The underlying dynamic behavior
of each cell is modeled using two capacitors (bulk and surface) and
three resistors (terminal, surface, and end), from which the SoC
is determined from the voltage present on the bulk capacitor. Although
the structure of the model has been previously reported for
describing the characteristics of lithium-ion cells, here it is shown
to also provide an alternative to commonly employed models of
lead-acid cells when used in conjunction with a KF to estimate
SoC and an EKF to predict state-of-health (SoH). Measurements
using real-time road data are used to compare the performance
of conventional integration-based methods for estimating SoC
with those predicted from the presented state estimation schemes.
Results show that the proposed methodologies are superior to
more traditional techniques, with accuracy in determining the
SoC within 2% being demonstrated. Moreover, by accounting
for the nonlinearities present within the dynamic cell model, the
application of an EKF is shown to provide verifiable indications of
SoH of the cell pack
State-of-charge and state-of-health prediction of lead-acid batteries for hybrid electric vehicles using non-linear observers
The paper describes the application of state-estimation techniques for the real-time prediction of state-of-charge (SoC) and state-of-health (SoH) of lead-acid cells. Approaches based on the extended Kalman filter (EKF) are presented to provide correction for offset, drift and state divergence - an unfortunate feature of more traditional coulomb-counting techniques. Experimental results are employed to demonstrate the relative attributes of the proposed methodolog
Sensorless control of deep-sea ROVs PMSMs excited by matrix converters
The paper reports the development of model-based sensorless control methodologies for driving PMSMs using matrix converters. In particular, experimental results show that observer-based state-estimation techniques normally employed for sensorless control of PMSMs using voltage source inverters (VSIs), can be readily exported to matrix converter counterparts with minimal additional computational overhead. Furthermore, zero speed start-up and speed reversal are experimentally demonstrated. Finally, the observer is designed to be fault tolerant such that upon detection of a broken terminal (phase fault), the PMSM remains operational and could be utilized to provide a limp-home capabilit
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