78,976 research outputs found
A high-accuracy optical linear algebra processor for finite element applications
Optical linear processors are computationally efficient computers for solving matrix-matrix and matrix-vector oriented problems. Optical system errors limit their dynamic range to 30-40 dB, which limits their accuray to 9-12 bits. Large problems, such as the finite element problem in structural mechanics (with tens or hundreds of thousands of variables) which can exploit the speed of optical processors, require the 32 bit accuracy obtainable from digital machines. To obtain this required 32 bit accuracy with an optical processor, the data can be digitally encoded, thereby reducing the dynamic range requirements of the optical system (i.e., decreasing the effect of optical errors on the data) while providing increased accuracy. This report describes a new digitally encoded optical linear algebra processor architecture for solving finite element and banded matrix-vector problems. A linear static plate bending case study is described which quantities the processor requirements. Multiplication by digital convolution is explained, and the digitally encoded optical processor architecture is advanced
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User interface development and software environments : the Chiron-1 system
User interface development systems for software environments have to cope with the broad, extensible and dynamic character of such environments, must support internal and external integration, and should enable various software development strategies. The Chiron-1 system adapts and extends key ideas from current research in user interface development systems to address the particular demands of software environments. Important Chiron-1 concepts are: separation of concerns, dynamism, and open architecture. We discuss the requirements on such user interface development systems, present the Chiron-1 architecture and a scenario of its usage, detail the concepts it embodies, and report on its design and prototype implementation
NICMOS Observations of Low-Redshift Quasar Host Galaxies
We have obtained Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer images of
16 radio quiet quasars observed as part of a project to investigate the
``luminosity/host-mass limit.'' The limit results were presented in McLeod,
Rieke, & Storrie-Lombardi (1999). In this paper, we present the images
themselves, along with 1- and 2-dimensional analyses of the host galaxy
properties. We find that our model-independent 1D technique is reliable for use
on ground-based data at low redshifts; that many radio-quiet quasars live in
deVaucouleurs-law hosts, although some of the techniques used to determine host
type are questionable; that complex structure is found in many of the hosts,
but that there are some hosts that are very smooth and symmetric; and that the
nuclei radiate at ~2-20% of the Eddington rate based on the assumption that all
galaxies have central black holes with a constant mass fraction of 0.6%.
Despite targeting hard-to-resolve hosts, we have failed to find any that imply
super-Eddington accretion rates.Comment: To appear in ApJ, 28 pages including degraded figures. Download the
paper with full-resolutio figures from
http://www.astro.wellesley.edu/kmcleod/mm.p
Fractal Dimensions in Perceptual Color Space: A Comparison Study Using Jackson Pollock's Art
The fractal dimensions of color-specific paint patterns in various Jackson
Pollock paintings are calculated using a filtering process which models
perceptual response to color differences (\Lab color space). The advantage of
the \Lab space filtering method over traditional RGB spaces is that the
former is a perceptually-uniform (metric) space, leading to a more consistent
definition of ``perceptually different'' colors. It is determined that the RGB
filtering method underestimates the perceived fractal dimension of lighter
colored patterns but not of darker ones, if the same selection criteria is
applied to each. Implications of the findings to Fechner's 'Principle of the
Aesthetic Middle' and Berlyne's work on perception of complexity are discussed.Comment: 21 pp LaTeX; two postscript figure
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