4,605 research outputs found
Improved Modal Assurance Criterion using a quantification of identification errors per mode/sensor
Scanning laser vibrometer measurements generate detailed maps of modal characteristics in normal or 3D directions. Since many points are measured, individual validation of cannot be performed manually in a reasonable time frame and a notable fraction of measurements is expected to be fairly noisy. The key new notion of the paper is a quantification of identification error and level of contribution for each mode and each sensor based on the comparison of measured and synthesized transfers around each resonance. These criteria are shown to allow efficient analysis of the validity of large measurement sets to provide an automated procedure to select sensors that should be kept for each mode. This quantification, being performed before correlation, provides a priori estimates of sources of poor correlation associated with the identification process. It thus becomes possible to provide improved Modal Assurance Criterion estimations where, for each modeshape, sensors known to be incorrectly identified can be discarded. The 3D vibrometer scan of a brake component is used to illustrate the proposed strategies
Investigating Bilingual Processing: The Neglected Role of Language Processing Contexts
How do the two languages of bilingual individuals interact in everyday communication? Numerous behavioral- and event-related brain potential studies have suggested that information from the non-target language is spontaneously accessed when bilinguals read, listen, or speak in a given language. While this finding is consistent with predictions of current models of bilingual processing, most paradigms used so far have mixed the two languages by using language ambiguous stimuli (e.g., cognates or interlingual homographs) or explicitly engaging the two languages because of experimental task requirements (e.g., word translation or language selection). These paradigms will have yielded different language processing contexts, the effect of which has seldom been taken into consideration. We propose that future studies should test the effect of language context on cross-language interactions in a systematic way, by controlling and manipulating the extent to which the experiment implicitly or explicitly prompts activation of the two languages
Risk Management Lessons from Madoff Fraud
In December 2008, as the nancial and economic crisis continued on its devastating course, a new scandal erupted. After the 1998's failure of Long-Term Capital Management, Madoff's fraud once again discredits the hedge funds industry. This scandal is however of a dierent kind. Indeed, Madoff's rm is not a standard hedge fund but a developed Ponzi scheme. By explaining Madoff's system and exploring the reasons for its collapse, this paper draws risk management lessons from this fraud, especially for operational risk management. Present day risk management processes have partially failed to prevent the Madoff scandal. This paper presents the issues for risk capital requirements raised by the collapse of the Madoff scheme. Implications for due diligence processes, including the use of quantitative replication to assess the credibility of the performance of a hedge fund, are also considered. Finally, consideration is given to the regulatory and standardizing approaches of the hedge fund industry as a response to frauds similar to that of Madoff.Madoff fraud, Ponzi scheme, operational risk, due diligence, supervision, hedge funds, bull spread strategy, split strike conversion
Generic design of Chinese remaindering schemes
We propose a generic design for Chinese remainder algorithms. A Chinese
remainder computation consists in reconstructing an integer value from its
residues modulo non coprime integers. We also propose an efficient linear data
structure, a radix ladder, for the intermediate storage and computations. Our
design is structured into three main modules: a black box residue computation
in charge of computing each residue; a Chinese remaindering controller in
charge of launching the computation and of the termination decision; an integer
builder in charge of the reconstruction computation. We then show that this
design enables many different forms of Chinese remaindering (e.g.
deterministic, early terminated, distributed, etc.), easy comparisons between
these forms and e.g. user-transparent parallelism at different parallel grains
Analysis and Diversion of Duqu's Driver
The propagation techniques and the payload of Duqu have been closely studied
over the past year and it has been said that Duqu shared functionalities with
Stuxnet. We focused on the driver used by Duqu during the infection, our
contribution consists in reverse-engineering the driver: we rebuilt its source
code and analyzed the mechanisms it uses to execute the payload while avoiding
detection. Then we diverted the driver into a defensive version capable of
detecting injections in Windows binaries, thus preventing further attacks. We
specifically show how Duqu's modified driver would have detected Duqu.Comment: Malware 2013 - 8th International Conference on Malicious and Unwanted
Software (2013
Time/frequency analysis of contact-friction instabilities. Application to automotive brake squeal.
Robust design of silent brakes is a current industrial challenge. Braking systems enter in the more general context of unstable systems featuring contact friction interaction. Their simulation requires time integra- tion schemes usually not adapted to combination of large industrial models (over 600,000 DOF) and long simulations (over 150,000 time steps). The paper first discusses selection of the contact/friction model and adaptations of the integration scheme. The relation between the nominal steady state tangent modes and the system evolution over time is then evaluated. The time response shows a nearly periodic response that is analyzed as a limit cycle. It is shown that instantaneous dynamic stability predictions show stable/unstable transitions due to changes in the contact/friction state. These transitions are thought to give an understanding of the mechanism that limits levels for these self sustained vibrations. The concept is exploited to suggest novel ways to analyze complex modes
A new blind adaptive antenna array for GNSS interference cancellation
This paper introduces a new blind adaptive antenna array as a possible solution to the interference cancellation problem. This new technique is compared to three classical ones over two different sensor radiation patterns. Special attention is paid to the array compatibility with a conventional GNSS receiver. A wide radiation pattern sensor is shown to improve the positioning accuracy by maximizing the satellite constellation visibility. Finally, the new processor demonstrates its superiority in term of positioning accuracy in presence of strong interferences. However, its phase response may make it incompatible with classical GNSS receivers. Some efforts must be done to stabilize it
Dynamical evolution of the Gliese 436 planetary system - Kozai migration as a potential source for Gliese 436b's eccentricity
The close-in planet orbiting GJ 436 presents a puzzling orbital eccentricity
considering its very short orbital period. Given the age of the system, this
planet should have been tidally circularized a long time ago. Many attempts to
explain this were proposed in recent years, either involving abnormally weak
tides, or the perturbing action of a distant companion. We address here the
latter issue based on Kozai migration. We propose that GJ 436b was formerly
located further away from the star and that it underwent a migration induced by
a massive, inclined perturber via Kozai mechanism. In this context, the
perturbations by the companion trigger high amplitude variations to GJ 436b
that cause tides to act at periastron. Then the orbit tidally shrinks to reach
its present day location. We numerically integrate the 3-body system including
tides and General Relativity correction. We first show that starting from the
present-day location of GJ 436b inevitably leads to damping the Kozai
oscillations and to rapidly circularizing the planet. Conversely, starting from
5-10 times further away allows the onset of Kozai cycles. The tides act in peak
eccentricity phases and reduce the semi-major axis of the planet. The net
result is an evolution characterized by two phases: a first one with Kozai
cycles and a slowly shrinking semi-major axis, and a second one once the planet
gets out of the Kozai resonance characterized by a more rapid decrease. The
timescale of this process appears in most cases much longer than the standard
circularization time of the planet by a factor larger than 50. This model can
provide a solution to the eccentricity paradox of GJ 436b. Depending on the
various orbital configurations, it can take several Gyrs to GJ 436b to achieve
a full orbital decrease and circularization. According to this scenario, we
could be witnessing today the second phase of the scenario where the semi-major
axis is already reduced while the eccentricity is still significant. We then
explore the parameter space and derive in which conditions this model can be
realistic given the age of the system. This yields constraints on the
characteristics of the putative companion.Comment: 13 pages To appear in Astronomy \& Astrophysic
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