229 research outputs found
Axessibility: a LaTeX Package for Mathematical Formulae Accessibility in PDF Documents
Accessing mathematical formulae within digital documents is challenging for blind people. In particular, document formats designed for printing, such as PDF, structure math content for visual access only. While accessibility features exist to present PDF content non-visually, formulae support is limited to providing replacement text that can be read by a screen reader or displayed on a braille bar. However, the operation of inserting replacement text is left to document authors, who rarely provide such content. Furthermore, at best, description of the formulae are provided. Thus, conveying detailed understanding of complex formulae is nearly impossible. In this contribution we report our ongoing research on Axessibility, a LATEX package framework that automates the process of making mathematical formulae accessible by providing the formulae LATEX code as PDF replacement text. Axessibility is coupled with external scripts to automate its integration in existing documents, expand user shorthand macros to standard LATEX representation, and custom screen reader dictionaries that improve formulae reading on screen readers
State space modelling and data analysis exercises in LISA Pathfinder
LISA Pathfinder is a mission planned by the European Space Agency to test the
key technologies that will allow the detection of gravitational waves in space.
The instrument on-board, the LISA Technology package, will undergo an
exhaustive campaign of calibrations and noise characterisation campaigns in
order to fully describe the noise model. Data analysis plays an important role
in the mission and for that reason the data analysis team has been developing a
toolbox which contains all the functionalities required during operations. In
this contribution we give an overview of recent activities, focusing on the
improvements in the modelling of the instrument and in the data analysis
campaigns performed both with real and simulated data.Comment: Plenary talk presented at the 9th International LISA Symposium, 21-25
May 2012, Pari
A strategy to characterize the LISA-Pathfinder cold gas thruster system
The cold gas micro-propulsion system that will be used during the LISA-Pathfinder mission will be one of the most important component used to ensure the "free-fall" of the enclosed test masses. In this paper we present a possible strategy to characterize the effective direction and amplitude gain of each of the 6 thrusters of this system
Free-flight experiments in LISA Pathfinder
The LISA Pathfinder mission will demonstrate the technology of drag-free test
masses for use as inertial references in future space-based gravitational wave
detectors. To accomplish this, the Pathfinder spacecraft will perform drag-free
flight about a test mass while measuring the acceleration of this primary test
mass relative to a second reference test mass. Because the reference test mass
is contained within the same spacecraft, it is necessary to apply forces on it
to maintain its position and attitude relative to the spacecraft. These forces
are a potential source of acceleration noise in the LISA Pathfinder system that
are not present in the full LISA configuration. While LISA Pathfinder has been
designed to meet it's primary mission requirements in the presence of this
noise, recent estimates suggest that the on-orbit performance may be limited by
this `suspension noise'. The drift-mode or free-flight experiments provide an
opportunity to mitigate this noise source and further characterize the
underlying disturbances that are of interest to the designers of LISA-like
instruments. This article provides a high-level overview of these experiments
and the methods under development to analyze the resulting data.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to Journal Of Physics, Conference
Series. Presented at 10th International LISA Symposium, May 2014,
Gainesville, FL, US
Beyond the required LISA free-fall performance: new LISA pathfinder results down to 20 μHz
In the months since the publication of the first results, the noise performance of LISA Pathfinder has improved because of reduced Brownian noise due to the continued decrease in pressure around the test masses, from a better correction of noninertial effects, and from a better calibration of the electrostatic force actuation. In addition, the availability of numerous long noise measurement runs, during which no perturbation is purposely applied to the test masses, has allowed the measurement of noise with good statistics down to 20 μHz. The Letter presents the measured differential acceleration noise figure, which is at (1.74±0.05) fm s^{-2}/sqrt[Hz] above 2 mHz and (6±1)×10 fm s^{-2}/sqrt[Hz] at 20 μHz, and discusses the physical sources for the measured noise. This performance provides an experimental benchmark demonstrating the ability to realize the low-frequency science potential of the LISA mission, recently selected by the European Space Agency
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