9 research outputs found

    Updating of a lumped model for an experimental web tension control system using a multivariable optimization method’

    No full text
    The modelling and the control of web handling systems have been studied for a long time; correct modelling is necessary in order to design a better control system or to identify the plant parameters experimentally. On the web dynamics itself, lumped parameters expressions may be used to designate a web section between two adjacent drive rolls, and there is the necessity of incorporating the property of viscoelasticity to the web. In this paper the lumped model of a new web tension experimental system is updated; the model is based on the conservation mass, torque balance and viscoelasticity (Voigt approach). The experimental system consists of four sections each of which is driven by a servomotor; the speed and tension feedback, by using encoders and tension sensors, drives simultaneously the four servomotors through a real time C programmed D/A board. Usually, as described in the literature, these kinds of models are developed in the Laplace domain and the block scheme gives a graphical interpretation of the interaction between different sections. The transformation of the block scheme in a differential equation system in the time domain is fully described in this paper; it is not a simple step and it requires the introduction of not null initial condition for the derivative of physical variables. Moreover, the problem of validation has been dealt with in detail in this paper, considering simultaneously 2 different combinations of input data in open loop and a multivariable optimization method in order to estimate a certain number of unknown parameters. The results will show the accuracy of this kind of lumped parameters model for the complex experimental systems and useful information for successively designing an efficient control strategy

    Analysis of a complex experimental web tension control system

    No full text

    Energy calibration of CALET onboard the International Space Station

    No full text
    In August 2015, the CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET), designed for long exposure observations of high energy cosmic rays, docked with the International Space Station (ISS) and shortly thereafter began to collect data. CALET will measure the cosmic ray electron spectrum over the energy range of 1 GeV to 20 TeV with a very high resolution of 2% above 100 GeV, based on a dedicated instrument incorporating an exceptionally thick 30 radiation-length calorimeter with both total absorption and imaging (TASC and IMC) units. Each TASC readout channel must be carefully calibrated over the extremely wide dynamic range of CALET that spans six orders of magnitude in order to obtain a degree of calibration accuracy matching the resolution of energy measurements. These calibrations consist of calculating the conversion factors between ADC units and energy deposits, ensuring linearity over each gain range, and providing a seamless transition between neighboring gain ranges. This paper describes these calibration methods in detail, along with the resulting data and associated accuracies. The results presented in this paper show that a sufficient accuracy was achieved for the calibrations of each channel in order to obtain a suitable resolution over the entire dynamic range of the electron spectrum measurement
    corecore