1,135 research outputs found
Synchronous demodulator
A synchronous demodulator includes a switch which is operated in synchronism with an incoming periodic signal and both divides and applies that signal to two signal channels. The two channels each include a network for computing and holding, for a predetermined length of time, the average signal value on that channel and applies those valves, in the form of two other signals, to the inputs of a differential amplifier. The networks may be R-C networks. The output of the differential amplifier may or may not form the output of the synchronous detector and may or may not be filtered. The output will not include a periodic signal due to the presence of a dc offset. Additionally, the output will not contain any substantial ripple due to periodic components in the input signal. In a somewhat more complex version, containing twice the structural components of the above synchronous demodulator with a more complex switching mechanism, essentially all ripple due to periodic components in the input signal are eliminated
Classical electron mass and fields 2
Continued here is the development of a model of the electron (HYDRA), which includes rotational and magnetic terms. The atomic electron state is discussed and a comparison is made with a simple harmonic oscillator. Experimental data is reviewed that supports the possibility of a new lepton
Active antenna
An antenna, which may be a search coil, is connected to an operational amplifier circuit which provides negative impedances, each of which is in the order of magnitude of the positive impedances which characterize the antenna. The antenna is connected to the inverting input of the operational amplifier; a resistor is connected between the inverting input and the output of the operational amplifier; a capacitor-resistor network, in parallel, is connected between the output and the noninverting input of the operational amplifier; and a resistor is connected from the noninverting input and the circuit common. While this circuit provides a negative resistance and a negative inductance, in series, which appear, looking into the noninverting input of the operational amplifier, in parallel with the antenna, these negative impedances appear in a series loop with the antenna positive impedances, so as to algebraically add. This circuit is tuned by varying the various circuit components so that the negative impedances are very close, but somewhat less, in magnitude, to the antenna impedances. The result is to increase the sensitivity of the antenna by lowering its effective impedance. This, in turn, increases the effective area of the antenna, which may be broadband
Methods for Measuring Breadth and Depth of Knowledge
In elite sport, the advantages demonstrated by expert performers over novices are sometimes
due in part to their superior physical fitness or to their greater technical precision in executing
specialist motor skills. However at the very highest levels, all competitors typically share
extraordinary physical capacities and have supremely well-honed techniques. Among the extra
factors which can differentiate between the best performers, psychological skills are paramount.
These range from the capacities to cope under pressure and to bounce back from setbacks, to the
knowledge of themselves, opponents, and the domain, which experts access and apply in
performance. In the companion chapter on breadth and depth of knowledge in expert sport (see
Chapter 11), we discussed the forms or kinds of knowledge deployed by elite athletes, and described
some lines of research which seek to tap and study such expert knowledge (McPherson &
MacMahon, 2008; McRobert, Ward, Eccles & Williams, 2011). In this chapter we focus more directly
on questions about methods for measuring or more accurately assessing expert knowledge, in
particular addressing a wider range of methods to help us understand what experts know.
Suggesting that sport researchers can productively adopt and adapt existing qualitative methodologies for integration with more standard quantitative methods, we introduce and survey a
number of areas of qualitative research in psychology
Apparatus for measuring high frequency currents
An apparatus for measuring high frequency currents includes a non-ferrous core current probe that is coupled to a wide-band transimpedance amplifier. The current probe has a secondary winding with a winding resistance that is substantially smaller than the reactance of the winding. The sensitivity of the current probe is substantially flat over a wide band of frequencies. The apparatus is particularly useful for measuring exposure of humans to radio frequency currents
A New Vespertilionine Bat from the Barstovian Deposits of Montana
During the 1972 field season, a small collection of micromammals was obtained from the Anceney Local Fauna located 13 miles west of Bozeman, Gallatin County, Montana. The fauna is Barstovian in age (Upper Miocene) and is preserved in an ash-filled channel deposit in the Madison Valley Formation (Dorr, 1956). A single partial jaw of a chiropteran was recovered along with numerous bones and teeth of other mammals, birds, amphibians, and reptiles. The jaw is complete from incisors back to the level of the m2. Examination of the jaw and comparisons with Recent and fossil chiropterans has convinced us that it represents a new genus and species of the subfamily Vespertilioninae
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