16,671 research outputs found
Concepts for on-board satellite image registration. Volume 3: Impact of VLSI/VHSIC on satellite on-board signal processing
Anticipated major advances in integrated circuit technology in the near future are described as well as their impact on satellite onboard signal processing systems. Dramatic improvements in chip density, speed, power consumption, and system reliability are expected from very large scale integration. Improvements are expected from very large scale integration enable more intelligence to be placed on remote sensing platforms in space, meeting the goals of NASA's information adaptive system concept, a major component of the NASA End-to-End Data System program. A forecast of VLSI technological advances is presented, including a description of the Defense Department's very high speed integrated circuit program, a seven-year research and development effort
Concepts for on board satellite image registration. Volume 4: Impact of data set selection on satellite on board signal processing
The NASA NEEDS program goals present a requirement for on-board signal processing to achieve user-compatible, information-adaptive data acquisition. This volume addresses the impact of data set selection on data formatting required for efficient telemetering of the acquired satellite sensor data. More specifically, the FILE algorithm developed by Martin-Marietta provides a means for the determination of those pixels from the data stream effects an improvement in the achievable system throughput. It will be seen that based on the lack of statistical stationarity in cloud cover, spatial distribution periods exist where data acquisition rates exceed the throughput capability. The study therefore addresses various approaches to data compression and truncation as applicable to this sensor mission
Geometrical Optics of Beams with Vortices: Berry Phase and Orbital Angular Momentum Hall Effect
We consider propagation of a paraxial beam carrying the spin angular momentum
(polarization) and intrinsic orbital angular momentum (IOAM) in a smoothly
inhomogeneous isotropic medium. It is shown that the presence of IOAM can
dramatically enhance and rearrange the topological phenomena that previously
were considered solely in connection to the polarization of transverse waves.
In particular, the appearance of a new-type Berry phase that describes the
parallel transport of the beam structure along a curved ray is predicted. We
derive the ray equations demonstrating the splitting of beams with different
values of IOAM. This is the orbital angular momentum Hall effect, which
resembles Magnus effect for optical vortices. Unlike the recently discovered
spin Hall effect of photons, it can be much larger in magnitude and is inherent
to waves of any nature. Experimental means to detect the phenomena is
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Forced and self-excited oscillations of an optomechanical cavity
We experimentally study forced and self oscillations of an optomechanical
cavity which is formed between a fiber Bragg grating that serves as a static
mirror and between a freely suspended metallic mechanical resonator that serves
as a moving mirror. In the domain of small amplitude mechanical oscillations,
we find that the optomechanical coupling is manifested as changes in the
effective resonance frequency, damping rate and cubic nonlinearity of the
mechanical resonator. Moreover, self oscillations of the micromechanical mirror
are observed above a certain optical power threshold. A comparison between the
experimental results and a theoretical model that we have recently presented
yields a good agreement. The comparison also indicates that the dominant
optomechanical coupling mechanism is the heating of the metallic mirror due to
optical absorption.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Relation between confinement and higher symmetry restrictions for color particle motion
Quantum operators of coordinates and momentum components of a particle in the
Minkowski spacetime can belong to the generalized Snyder-Yang algebra and
produce a quantum phase space with three new constants in the general case.
With account for the O(2,6) invariance in the quantum phase space of a color
particle the equation of motion is obtained, which contains a oscillator rising
potential. The presence of the oscillator potential can simulate a confinement
of a color particle. A parameter of the oscillator potential is estimated and a
relationship between current and constituent quark masses is obtained.Comment: 3 pages, style and typos corrected, more general case considered,
main results unchange
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov Model and Simulation of Attractive and Repulsive Bose-Einstein Condensates
We describe a model of dynamic Bose-Einstein condensates near a Feshbach
resonance that is computationally feasible under assumptions of spherical or
cylindrical symmetry. Simulations in spherical symmetry approximate the
experimentally measured time to collapse of an unstably attractive condensate
only when the molecular binding energy in the model is correct, demonstrating
that the quantum fluctuations and atom-molecule pairing included in the model
are the dominant mechanisms during collapse. Simulations of condensates with
repulsive interactions find some quantitative disagreement, suggesting that
pairing and quantum fluctuations are not the only significant factors for
condensate loss or burst formation. Inclusion of three-body recombination was
found to be inconsequential in all of our simulations, though we do not
consider recent experiments [1] conducted at higher densities
Giant Enhancement of Surface Second Harmonic Generation in BaTiO_3 due to Photorefractive Surface Wave Excitation
We report observation of strongly enhanced surface SHG in BaTiO_3 due to
excitation of a photorefractive surface electromagnetic wave. Surface SH
intensity may reach 10^{-2} of the incident fundamental light intensity.
Angular, crystal orientation and polarization dependencies of this SHG are
presented. Possible applications of this effect in nonlinear surface
spectroscopy are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letters on the
3/29/199
Relaxations in Ba2BiSbO6 Double Complex Perovskite Ceramics
The electric properties of the complex double perovskite Ba2BiSbO6 have been investigated using impedance spectroscopy in the frequency range from 1 Hz up to 1 MHz and in the temperature range from room temperature up to 560 K. There are two contributions to the electrical properties due to the grain and grain boundary. The oxygen vacancies play an important role in the conductivity and strongly increase the dielectric constant at high temperatures. The analysis of the frequency dependence of the conductivity clearly shows the structural phase transition of this compound near 515 K
Helical vs. fundamental solitons in optical fibers
We consider solitons in a nonlinear optical fiber with a single polarization
in a region of parameters where it carries exactly two distinct modes, the
fundamental one and the first-order helical mode. From the viewpoint of
applications to dense-WDM communication systems, this opens way to double the
number of channels carried by the fiber. Aside from that, experimental
observation of helical (spinning) solitons and collisions between them and with
fundamental solitons are issues of fundamental interest. We introduce a system
of coupled nonlinear Schroedinger equations for fundamental and helical modes,
which have nonstandard values of the cross-phase-modulation coupling constants,
and investigate, analytically and numerically, results of "complete" and
"incomplete" collisions between solitons carried by the two modes. We conclude
that the collision-induced crosstalk is partly attenuated in comparison with
the usual WDM system, which sometimes may be crucially important, preventing
merger of the colliding solitons into a breather. The interaction between the
two modes is found to be additionally strongly suppressed in comparison with
that in the WDM system in the case when a dispersion-shifted or
dispersion-compensated fiber is used.Comment: a plain latex file with the text and two ps files with figures.
Physica Scripta, in pres
Differences in the Prevalence of Non-Communicable Disease between Slum Dwellers and the General Population in a Large Urban Area in Brazil.
Residents of urban slums are at greater risk for disease than their non-slum dwelling urban counterparts. We sought to contrast the prevalences of selected non-communicable diseases (NCDs) between Brazilian adults living in a slum and the general population of the same city, by comparing the age and sex-standardized prevalences of selected NCDs from a 2010 survey in Pau da Lima, Salvador Brazil, with a 2010 national population-based telephone survey. NCD prevalences in both populations were similar for hypertension (23.6% (95% CI 20.9⁻26.4) and 22.9% (21.2⁻24.6), respectively) and for dyslipidemia (22.7% (19.8⁻25.5) and 21.5% (19.7⁻23.4)). Slum residents had higher prevalences of diabetes mellitus (10.1% (7.9⁻12.3)) and of overweight/obesity (46.5% (43.1⁻49.9)), compared to 5.2% (4.2⁻6.1) and 40.6% (38.5⁻42.8) of the general population in Salvador. Fourteen percent (14.5% (12.1⁻17.0)) of slum residents smoked cigarettes compared to 8.3% (7.1⁻9.5) of the general population in Salvador. The national telephone survey underestimated the prevalence of diabetes mellitus, overweight/obesity, and smoking in the slum population, likely in part due to differential sampling inside and outside of slums. Further research and targeted policies are needed to mitigate these inequalities, which could have significant economic and social impacts on slum residents and their communities
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