433 research outputs found
Bounds on the Sum Capacity of Synchronous Binary CDMA Channels
In this paper, we obtain a family of lower bounds for the sum capacity of
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) channels assuming binary inputs and binary
signature codes in the presence of additive noise with an arbitrary
distribution. The envelope of this family gives a relatively tight lower bound
in terms of the number of users, spreading gain and the noise distribution. The
derivation methods for the noiseless and the noisy channels are different but
when the noise variance goes to zero, the noisy channel bound approaches the
noiseless case. The behavior of the lower bound shows that for small noise
power, the number of users can be much more than the spreading gain without any
significant loss of information (overloaded CDMA). A conjectured upper bound is
also derived under the usual assumption that the users send out equally likely
binary bits in the presence of additive noise with an arbitrary distribution.
As the noise level increases, and/or, the ratio of the number of users and the
spreading gain increases, the conjectured upper bound approaches the lower
bound. We have also derived asymptotic limits of our bounds that can be
compared to a formula that Tanaka obtained using techniques from statistical
physics; his bound is close to that of our conjectured upper bound for large
scale systems.Comment: to be published in IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
Digital control strategy for SPWM MPPT of PV system with three-phase NPC three-level converter
This paper is aimed at investigating MPPT of PV system controlled by SPWM which is generated by comparing sinusoidal wave with variable frequency sawtooth wave. Perturb and Observe (P&O) method is used for MPPT control of PV system. NPC three-phase three-level converter with LCL filter is designed to produce output voltage with minimum Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) and high efficiency. The simple and fast method to get MPP of PV system with variable irradiation is digital control where the maximum power point is obtained from look-up table for the values of optimum voltage that achieve the maximum power for each irradiance value is used for digital control signal in microcontroller. The output voltage harmonic of multi-level three-phase inverter is controlled using SPWM control. THD of output voltage of multi-level three-phase inverter is 22% of stand-alone and grid-connected PV system. Small rate LCL filter is used to limit voltage harmonics within medium and low voltage limits (5%). THD output voltage of LCL filter is 4.9% and 3.51% of stand-alone and grid-connected PV system respectively. Copyright © 2020 Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science. All rights reserved
Propagating phonons coupled to an artificial atom
Quantum information can be stored in micromechanical resonators, encoded as
quanta of vibration known as phonons. The vibrational motion is then restricted
to the stationary eigenmodes of the resonator, which thus serves as local
storage for phonons. In contrast, we couple propagating phonons to an
artificial atom in the quantum regime, and reproduce findings from quantum
optics with sound taking over the role of light. Our results highlight the
similarities between phonons and photons, but also point to new opportunities
arising from the unique features of quantum mechanical sound. The low
propagation speed of phonons should enable new dynamic schemes for processing
quantum information, and the short wavelength allows regimes of atomic physics
to be explored which cannot be reached in photonic systems.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Measuring Topological Chaos
The orbits of fluid particles in two dimensions effectively act as
topological obstacles to material lines. A spacetime plot of the orbits of such
particles can be regarded as a braid whose properties reflect the underlying
dynamics. For a chaotic flow, the braid generated by the motion of three or
more fluid particles is computed. A ``braiding exponent'' is then defined to
characterize the complexity of the braid. This exponent is proportional to the
usual Lyapunov exponent of the flow, associated with separation of nearby
trajectories. Measuring chaos in this manner has several advantages, especially
from the experimental viewpoint, since neither nearby trajectories nor
derivatives of the velocity field are needed.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures. RevTeX 4 with PSFrag macro
Quantitative analysis of quantum phase slips in superconducting MoGe nanowires revealed by switching-current statistics
We measure quantum and thermal phase-slip rates using the standard deviation
of the switching current in superconducting nanowires at high bias current. Our
rigorous quantitative analysis provides firm evidence for the presence of
quantum phase slips (QPS) in homogeneous nanowires. We observe that as
temperature is lowered, thermal fluctuations freeze at a characteristic
crossover temperature Tq, below which the dispersion of the switching current
saturates to a constant value, indicating the presence of QPS. The scaling of
the crossover temperature Tq with the critical temperature Tc is linear, which
is consistent with the theory of macroscopic quantum tunneling. We can convert
the wires from the initial amorphous phase to a single crystal phase, in situ,
by applying calibrated voltage pulses. This technique allows us to probe
directly the effects of the wire resistance, critical temperature and
morphology on thermal and quantum phase slips.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Optical Fiber Communication Systems Based on End-to-End Deep Learning: (Invited Paper)
We investigate end-to-end optimized optical transmission systems based on feedforward or bidirectional recurrent
neural networks (BRNN) and deep learning. In particular, we report the first experimental demonstration of a BRNN auto-encoder,
highlighting the performance improvement achieved with recurrent processing for communication over dispersive nonlinear channels
Echoes in classical dynamical systems
Echoes arise when external manipulations to a system induce a reversal of its
time evolution that leads to a more or less perfect recovery of the initial
state. We discuss the accuracy with which a cloud of trajectories returns to
the initial state in classical dynamical systems that are exposed to additive
noise and small differences in the equations of motion for forward and backward
evolution. The cases of integrable and chaotic motion and small or large noise
are studied in some detail and many different dynamical laws are identified.
Experimental tests in 2-d flows that show chaotic advection are proposed.Comment: to be published in J. Phys.
Point vortices on the sphere: a case with opposite vorticities
We study systems formed of 2N point vortices on a sphere with N vortices of
strength +1 and N vortices of strength -1. In this case, the Hamiltonian is
conserved by the symmetry which exchanges the positive vortices with the
negative vortices. We prove the existence of some fixed and relative
equilibria, and then study their stability with the ``Energy Momentum Method''.
Most of the results obtained are nonlinear stability results. To end, some
bifurcations are described.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figure
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