105,199 research outputs found
Polarization diversity monopulse tracking receiver Patent
Polarization diversity monopulse tracking receiver design without radio frequency switche
Unoriented geometric functors
Farrell and Hsiang noticed that the geometric surgery groups defined By Wall,
Chapter 9, do not have the naturality Wall claims for them. They were able to
fix the problem by augmenting Wall's definitions to keep track of a line
bundle.
The definition of geometric Wall groups involves homology with local
coefficients and these also lack Wall's claimed naturality.
One would hope that a geometric bordism theory involving non-orientable
manifolds would enjoy the same naturality as that enjoyed by homology with
local coefficients. A setting for this naturality entirely in terms of local
coefficients is presented in this paper.
Applying this theory to the example of non-orientable Wall groups restores
much of the elegance of Wall's original approach. Furthermore, a geometric
determination of the map induced by conjugation by a group element is given.Comment: 12 pages, LaTe
STADAN antenna gain calibration using radio stars
An antenna gain measurement method was developed which utilizes a signal emitted from a radio star to determine absolute antenna gain at 136 MHz and 400 MHz for antennas in the STADAN network. An error analysis of the radio star method shows that the overall standard deviation uncertainty in antenna gain is + or - 0.6 db (1 sigma)
Stellar calibration of L-/S-band and VHF receiving systems
STADAN reducing antenna calibration at 137, 402, and 1702 MHz using absolute flux density from Cassiopeia A or Cygnus
Thermodynamics of D-brane Probes
We discuss the dynamics and thermodynamics of particle and D-brane probes
moving in non-extremal black hole/brane backgrounds. When a probe falls from
asymptotic infinity to the horizon, it transforms its potential energy into
heat, , which is absorbed by the black hole in a way consistent with the
first law of thermodynamics. We show that the same remains true in the
near-horizon limit, for BPS probes only, with the BPS probe moving from AdS
infinity to the horizon. This is a quantitative indication that the brane-probe
reaching the horizon corresponds to thermalization in gauge theory. It is shown
that this relation provides a way to reliably compute the entropy away from the
extremal limit (towards the Schwarzschild limit).Comment: 12 pages; Based on talks presented at the midterm meeting of the TMR
network "Physics beyond the standard model," held in Trieste in March 1999,
and at the 1998 Corfu Summer Institute on Elementary Particle Physic
L-band, 1.2 m parabolic antenna-noise temperature measurement
Extensive antenna-noise temperature measurements at 1.6 GHz (L-band) were made using a 1.2 m (4 ft. diameter) parabolic dish antenna mounted on the flying bridge of a modern 15,690-ton, commercial-container ship. Both in-harbor and at-sea radiometer measurements were made that indicated a steady background, antenna-noise temperature value slightly less than 70 degrees Kelvin (K) at elevation angles of 5 percent, and greater, at 1.6 GHz. A comparison of theoretical and measured values indicate excellent agreement within about 5K for at-sea data. These measurements are helpful to RF equipment designers of maritime, L-band shipboard terminals for operation with the two, geostationary, maritime satellites, Marisat-A and -B
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Elicitation and representation of expert knowledge for computer aided diagnosis in mammography
To study how professional radiologists describe, interpret and make decisions about micro-calcifications in mammograms. The purpose was to develop a model of the radiologists' decision making for use in CADMIUM II, a computerized aid for mammogram interpretation that combines symbolic reasoning with image processing
Navigation system and method
In a global positioning system (GPS), such as the NAVSTAR/GPS system, wherein the position coordinates of user terminals are obtained by processing multiple signals transmitted by a constellation of orbiting satellites, an acquisition-aiding signal generated by an earth-based control station is relayed to user terminals via a geostationary satellite to simplify user equipment. The aiding signal is FSK modulated on a reference channel slightly offset from the standard GPS channel. The aiding signal identifies satellites in view having best geometry and includes Doppler prediction data as well as GPS satellite coordinates and identification data associated with user terminals within an area being served by the control station and relay satellite. The aiding signal significantly reduces user equipment by simplifying spread spectrum signal demodulation and reducing data processing functions previously carried out at the user terminals
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