61,923 research outputs found
UMTV: a Single Chip TV Receiver for PDAs, PCs and Cell Phones
A zero-external-component TV receiver for portable platforms is realized in a mainstream 8GHz-f/sub t/ BiCMOS process. Die size is 5/spl times/5mm/sup 2/ and power dissipation is 50mA at 3V. The receiver includes a single tunable LNA (3mA) with less than 5dB NF from 40 to 900MHz. The programmable IF filters cover all analog and digital standards
Orbifold cup products and ring structures on Hochschild cohomologies
In this paper we study the Hochschild cohomology ring of convolution algebras
associated to orbifolds, as well as their deformation quantizations. In the
first case the ring structure is given in terms of a wedge product on twisted
polyvectorfields on the inertia orbifold. After deformation quantization, the
ring structure defines a product on the cohomology of the inertia orbifold. We
study the relation between this product and an -equivariant version of the
Chen--Ruan product. In particular, we give a de Rham model for this equivariant
orbifold cohomology
Structural Relationship between Negative Thermal Expansion and Quartic Anharmonicity of Cubic ScF_3
Cubic scandium trifluoride (ScF_3) has a large negative thermal expansion over a wide range of temperatures. Inelastic neutron scattering experiments were performed to study the temperature dependence of the lattice dynamics of ScF3 from 7 to 750 K. The measured phonon densities of states show a large anharmonic contribution with a thermal stiffening of modes around 25 meV. Phonon calculations with first-principles methods identified the individual modes in the densities of states, and frozen phonon calculations showed that some of the modes with motions of F atoms transverse to their bond direction behave as quantum quartic oscillators. The quartic potential originates from harmonic interatomic forces in the DO_9 structure of ScF_3, and accounts for phonon stiffening with the temperature and a significant part of the negative thermal expansion
Negative Link Prediction in Social Media
Signed network analysis has attracted increasing attention in recent years.
This is in part because research on signed network analysis suggests that
negative links have added value in the analytical process. A major impediment
in their effective use is that most social media sites do not enable users to
specify them explicitly. In other words, a gap exists between the importance of
negative links and their availability in real data sets. Therefore, it is
natural to explore whether one can predict negative links automatically from
the commonly available social network data. In this paper, we investigate the
novel problem of negative link prediction with only positive links and
content-centric interactions in social media. We make a number of important
observations about negative links, and propose a principled framework NeLP,
which can exploit positive links and content-centric interactions to predict
negative links. Our experimental results on real-world social networks
demonstrate that the proposed NeLP framework can accurately predict negative
links with positive links and content-centric interactions. Our detailed
experiments also illustrate the relative importance of various factors to the
effectiveness of the proposed framework
Nonlinear dynamics of self-sustained supersonic reaction waves: Fickett's detonation analogue
The present study investigates the spatio-temporal variability in the
dynamics of self-sustained supersonic reaction waves propagating through an
excitable medium. The model is an extension of Fickett's detonation model with
a state dependent energy addition term. Stable and pulsating supersonic waves
are predicted. With increasing sensitivity of the reaction rate, the reaction
wave transits from steady propagation to stable limit cycles and eventually to
chaos through the classical Feigenbaum route. The physical pulsation mechanism
is explained by the coherence between internal wave motion and energy release.
The results obtained clarify the physical origin of detonation wave instability
in chemical detonations previously observed experimentally.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Contributions to planetary meteorology Final report
Atmospheric circulation and climatology of Venus and Mar
Design and operation of the wide angular-range chopper spectrometer ARCS at the Spallation Neutron Source
The wide angular-range chopper spectrometer ARCS at the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) is optimized to provide a high neutron flux at the sample position with a large solid angle of detector coverage. The instrument incorporates modern neutron instrumentation, such as an elliptically focused neutron guide, high speed magnetic bearing choppers, and a massive array of ^3He linear position sensitive detectors. Novel features of the spectrometer include the use of a large gate valve between the sample and detector vacuum chambers and the placement of the detectors within the vacuum, both of which provide a window-free final flight path to minimize background scattering while allowing rapid changing of the sample and sample environment equipment. ARCS views the SNS decoupled ambient temperature water moderator, using neutrons with incident energy typically in the range from 15 to 1500 meV. This range, coupled with the large detector coverage, allows a wide variety of studies of excitations in condensed matter, such as lattice dynamics and magnetism, in both powder and single-crystal samples. Comparisons of early results to both analytical and Monte Carlo simulation of the instrument performance demonstrate that the instrument is operating as expected and its neutronic performance is understood. ARCS is currently in the SNS user program and continues to improve its scientific productivity by incorporating new instrumentation to increase the range of science covered and improve its effectiveness in data collection
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