525 research outputs found
GroundLink: A Dataset Unifying Human Body Movement and Ground Reaction Dynamics
The physical plausibility of human motions is vital to various applications
in fields including but not limited to graphics, animation, robotics, vision,
biomechanics, and sports science. While fully simulating human motions with
physics is an extreme challenge, we hypothesize that we can treat this
complexity as a black box in a data-driven manner if we focus on the ground
contact, and have sufficient observations of physics and human activities in
the real world. To prove our hypothesis, we present GroundLink, a unified
dataset comprised of captured ground reaction force (GRF) and center of
pressure (CoP) synchronized to standard kinematic motion captures. GRF and CoP
of GroundLink are not simulated but captured at high temporal resolution using
force platforms embedded in the ground for uncompromising measurement accuracy.
This dataset contains 368 processed motion trials (~1.59M recorded frames) with
19 different movements including locomotion and weight-shifting actions such as
tennis swings to signify the importance of capturing physics paired with
kinematics. GroundLinkNet, our benchmark neural network model trained with
GroundLink, supports our hypothesis by predicting GRFs and CoPs accurately and
plausibly on unseen motions from various sources. The dataset, code, and
benchmark models are made public for further research on various downstream
tasks leveraging the rich physics information at
https://csr.bu.edu/groundlink/
Casimir Forces and Graphene Sheets
The Casimir force between two infinitely thin parallel sheets in a setting of
such sheets is found. The finite two-dimensional conductivities, which
describe the dispersive and absorptive properties of each sheet, are taken into
account, whereupon the theory is applied to interacting graphenes. By exploring
similarities with in-plane optical spectra for graphite, the conductivity of
graphene is modeled as a combination of Lorentz type oscillators. We find that
the graphene transparency and the existence of a universal constant
conductivity result in graphene/graphene Casimir interaction at
large separations to have the same distance dependence as the one for perfect
conductors but with much smaller magnitude
Improving the Prospects for Detecting Extrasolar Planets in Gravitational Microlensing in 2002
Gravitational microlensing events of high magnification have been shown to be
promising targets for detecting extrasolar planets. However, only a few events
of high magnification have been found using conventional survey techniques.
Here we demonstrate that high magnification events can be readily found in
microlensing surveys using a strategy that combines high frequency sampling of
target fields with online difference imaging analysis. We present 10
microlensing events with peak magnifications greater than 40 that were detected
in real-time towards the Galactic Bulge during 2001 by MOA. We show that Earth
mass planets can be detected in future events such as these through intensive
follow-up observations around the event peaks. We report this result with
urgency as a similar number of such events are expected in 2002.Comment: 11 pages, 3 embedded ps figures including 2 colour, revised version
accepted by MNRA
Microlensing optical depth towards the Galactic bulge from MOA observations during 2000 with Difference Image Analysis
We analyze the data of the gravitational microlensing survey carried out by
by the MOA group during 2000 towards the Galactic Bulge (GB). Our observations
are designed to detect efficiently high magnification events with faint source
stars and short timescale events, by increasing the the sampling rate up to 6
times per night and using Difference Image Analysis (DIA). We detect 28
microlensing candidates in 12 GB fields corresponding to 16 deg^2. We use Monte
Carlo simulations to estimate our microlensing event detection efficiency,
where we construct the I-band extinction map of our GB fields in order to find
dereddened magnitudes. We find a systematic bias and large uncertainty in the
measured value of the timescale in our simulations. They are
associated with blending and unresolved sources, and are allowed for in our
measurements. We compute an optical depth tau = 2.59_{-0.64}^{+0.84} \times
10^{-6} towards the GB for events with timescales 0.3<t_E<200 days. We consider
disk-disk lensing, and obtain an optical depth tau_{bulge} =
3.36_{-0.81}^{+1.11} \times 10^{-6}[0.77/(1-f_{disk})] for the bulge component
assuming a 23% stellar contribution from disk stars. These observed optical
depths are consistent with previous measurements by the MACHO and OGLE groups,
and still higher than those predicted by existing Galactic models. We present
the timescale distribution of the observed events, and find there are no
significant short events of a few days, in spite of our high detection
efficiency for short timescale events down to t_E = 0.3 days. We find that half
of all our detected events have high magnification (>10). These events are
useful for studies of extra-solar planets.Comment: 65 pages and 30 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. A
systematic bias and uncertainty in the optical depth measurement has been
quantified by simulation
- âŠ