28,607 research outputs found
Integrated multilevel converter and battery management
A cascaded H-bridge multilevel converter is proposed as a BLDC drive incorporating real-time battery management. Intelligent H-bridges are used to monitor battery cells whilst simultaneously increasing their performance by reducing the variation between cells and controlling their discharge profiles
Computer control study for a manned centrifuge Final technical report
Analog simulation of manned centrifuge capability for production of various gravity levels - centrifuge control syste
Hardware-in-the-loop tuning of a feedback controller for a buck converter using a GA
This paper presents a methodology for tuning a PID-based feedback controller for a buck converter using the ITAE controller performance index. The controller parameters are optimized to ensure that a reasonable transient response can be achieved whilst retaining stable operation. Experimental results demonstrate the versatility of the on-line tuning methodology
Photovoltaic Oscillations Due to Edge-Magnetoplasmon Modes in a Very-High Mobility 2D Electron Gas
Using very-high mobility GaAs/AlGaAs 2D electron Hall bar samples, we have
experimentally studied the photoresistance/photovoltaic oscillations induced by
microwave irradiation in the regime where both 1/B and B-periodic oscillations
can be observed. In the frequency range between 27 and 130 GHz we found that
these two types of oscillations are decoupled from each other, consistent with
the respective models that 1/B oscillations occur in bulk while the
B-oscillations occur along the edges of the Hall bars. In contrast to the
original report of this phenomenon (Ref. 1) the periodicity of the
B-oscillations in our samples are found to be independent of L, the length of
the Hall bar section between voltage measuring leads.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Non-perturbative corrections to mean-field behavior: spherical model on spider-web graph
We consider the spherical model on a spider-web graph. This graph is
effectively infinite-dimensional, similar to the Bethe lattice, but has loops.
We show that these lead to non-trivial corrections to the simple mean-field
behavior. We first determine all normal modes of the coupled springs problem on
this graph, using its large symmetry group. In the thermodynamic limit, the
spectrum is a set of -functions, and all the modes are localized. The
fractional number of modes with frequency less than varies as for tending to zero, where is a constant. For an
unbiased random walk on the vertices of this graph, this implies that the
probability of return to the origin at time varies as ,
for large , where is a constant. For the spherical model, we show that
while the critical exponents take the values expected from the mean-field
theory, the free-energy per site at temperature , near and above the
critical temperature , also has an essential singularity of the type
.Comment: substantially revised, a section adde
Heat pipes for wing leading edges of hypersonic vehicles
Wing leading edge heat pipes were conceptually designed for three types of vehicle: an entry research vehicle, aero-space plane, and advanced shuttle. A full scale, internally instrumented sodium/Hastelloy X heat pipe was successfully designed and fabricated for the advanced shuttle application. The 69.4 inch long heat pipe reduces peak leading edge temperatures from 3500 F to 1800 F. It is internally instrumented with thermocouples and pressure transducers to measure sodium vapor qualities. Large thermal gradients and consequently large thermal stresses, which have the potential of limiting heat pipe life, were predicted to occur during startup. A test stand and test plan were developed for subsequent testing of this heat pipe. Heat pipe manufacturing technology was advanced during this program, including the development of an innovative technique for wick installation
Dilepton Production in Nucleon-Nucleon Reactions With and Without Hadronic Inelasticities
We calculate elementary proton-proton and neutron-proton bremsstrahlung and
their contribution to the invariant mass distribution. At 4.9 GeV, the
proton-proton contribution is larger than neutron-proton, but it is small
compared to recent data. We then make a first calculation of bremsstrahlung in
nucleon-nucleon reactions with multi-hadron final states. Again at 4.9 GeV, the
many-body bremsstrahlung is larger than simple nucleon-nucleon bremsstrahlung
by more than an order of magnitude in the low-mass region. When the
bremsstrahlung contributions are summed with Dalitz decay of the ,
radiative decay of the and from two-pion annihilation, the result
matches recent high statistics proton-proton data from the Dilepton
Spectrometer collaboration.Comment: 1+17 pages plus 11 PostScript figures uuencoded and appended,
McGill/93-9, TPI-MINN-93/18-
Persistence of magnons in a site-diluted dimerized frustrated antiferromagnet
We present inelastic neutron scattering and thermodynamic measurements
characterizing the magnetic excitations in a disordered non-magnetic
substituted spin-liquid antiferromagnet. The parent compound Ba3Mn2O8 is a
dimerized, quasi-two-dimensional geometrically frustrated quantum disordered
antiferromagnet. We substitute this compound with non-magnetic vanadium for the
S = 1 manganese atoms, Ba3(Mn1-xVx)2O8, and find that the singlet-triplet
excitations which dominate the spectrum of the parent compound persist for the
full range of substitution examined, x = 0.02 to 0.3. We also observe
additional low-energy magnetic fluctuations which are enhanced at the greatest
substitution values. These excitations may be a precursor to a low-temperature
random singlet phase which may exist in Ba3(Mn1-xVx)2O8Comment: 30 pages, 9 figure
Stringent Phenomenological Investigation into Heterotic String Optical Unification
For the weakly coupled heterotic string (WCHS) there is a well-known factor
of twenty conflict between the minimum string coupling unification scale,
Lambda_H ~5x10^(17) GeV, and the projected MSSM unification scale, Lambda_U ~
2.5x10^(16) GeV, assuming an intermediate scale desert (ISD). Renormalization
effects of intermediate scale MSSM-charged exotics (ISME) (endemic to
quasi-realistic string models) can resolve this issue, pushing the MSSM scale
up to the string scale. However, for a generic string model, this implies that
the projected Lambda_U unification under ISD is accidental. If the true
unification scale is 5.0x10^(17) GeV, is it possible that illusionary
unification at 2.5x10^(17) GeV in the ISD scenario is not accidental? If it is
not, then under what conditions would the assumption of ISME in a WCHS model
imply apparent unification at Lambda_U when ISD is falsely assumed? Geidt's
"optical unification" suggests that Lambda_U is not accidental, by offering a
mechanism whereby a generic MSSM scale Lambda_U < Lambda_H is guaranteed. A
WCHS model was constructed that offers the possibility of optical unification,
depending on the availability of anomaly-cancelling flat directions meeting
certain requirements. This paper reports on the systematic investigation of the
optical unification properties of the set of stringent flat directions of this
model. Stringent flat directions can be guaranteed to be F-flat to all finite
order (or to at least a given finite order consistent with electroweak scale
supersymmetry breaking) and can be viewed as the likely roots of more general
flat directions. Analysis of the phenomenology of stringent flat directions
gives an indication of the remaining optical unification phenomenology that
must be garnered by flat directions developed from them.Comment: standard latex, 18 pages of tex
Raman spectroscopy for medical diagnostics - From in-vitro biofluid assays to in-vivo cancer detection
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Raman spectroscopy is an optical technique based on inelastic scattering of light by vibrating molecules and can provide chemical fingerprints of cells, tissues or biofluids. The high chemical specificity, minimal or lack of sample preparation and the ability to use advanced optical technologies in the visible or near-infrared spectral range (lasers, microscopes, fibre-optics) have recently led to an increase in medical diagnostic applications of Raman spectroscopy. The key hypothesis underpinning this field is that molecular changes in cells, tissues or biofluids, that are either the cause or the effect of diseases, can be detected and quantified by Raman spectroscopy. Furthermore, multivariate calibration and classification models based on Raman spectra can be developed on large "training" datasets and used subsequently on samples from new patients to obtain quantitative and objective diagnosis. Historically, spontaneous Raman spectroscopy has been known as a low signal technique requiring relatively long acquisition times. Nevertheless, new strategies have been developed recently to overcome these issues: non-linear optical effects and metallic nanoparticles can be used to enhance the Raman signals, optimised fibre-optic Raman probes can be used for real-time in-vivo single-point measurements, while multimodal integration with other optical techniques can guide the Raman measurements to increase the acquisition speed and spatial accuracy of diagnosis. These recent efforts have advanced Raman spectroscopy to the point where the diagnostic accuracy and speed are compatible with clinical use. This paper reviews the main Raman spectroscopy techniques used in medical diagnostics and provides an overview of various applications
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