450 research outputs found
LiDAR-HMR: 3D Human Mesh Recovery from LiDAR
In recent years, point cloud perception tasks have been garnering increasing
attention. This paper presents the first attempt to estimate 3D human body mesh
from sparse LiDAR point clouds. We found that the major challenge in estimating
human pose and mesh from point clouds lies in the sparsity, noise, and
incompletion of LiDAR point clouds. Facing these challenges, we propose an
effective sparse-to-dense reconstruction scheme to reconstruct 3D human mesh.
This involves estimating a sparse representation of a human (3D human pose) and
gradually reconstructing the body mesh. To better leverage the 3D structural
information of point clouds, we employ a cascaded graph transformer
(graphormer) to introduce point cloud features during sparse-to-dense
reconstruction. Experimental results on three publicly available databases
demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach. Code:
https://github.com/soullessrobot/LiDAR-HMR/Comment: Code is available at: https://github.com/soullessrobot/LiDAR-HMR
Fund performance-flow relationship and the role of institutional reform
Extant literature shows the positive impact of institutional development on investor rationality and market efficiency. The authors extend this evidence by investigating the performance-flow relationship in the Chinese mutual fund market before and after the enforcement of the revised Law of the Peopleâs Republic of China on Securities Investment Fund. Empirical evidence reveals that Chinese investors irrationally chase past star performers before institutional reform, but gradually become rational and less obsessed with star-chasing behaviors after reform. Moving one percentile upward in the relative performance among the star funds is associated with money inflows by 0.532% after reform, much lower than 1.433% before reform. The findings confirm the positive influence of institutional development on investor rationality and market efficiency. The successful experience can be borrowed by other emerging markets with less developed institutions
Spectral engineering of optical microresonators in anisotropic lithium niobate crystal
On-chip optical microresonators are essential building blocks in integrated
optics. The ability to arbitrarily engineer their resonant frequencies is
crucial for exploring novel physics in synthetic frequency dimensions and
practical applications like nonlinear optical parametric processes and
dispersion-engineered frequency comb generation. Photonic crystal ring (PhCR)
resonators are a versatile tool for such arbitrary frequency engineering, by
controllably creating mode splitting at selected resonances. To date, these
PhCRs have mostly been demonstrated in isotropic photonic materials, while such
engineering could be significantly more complicated in anisotropic platforms
that often offer more fruitful optical properties. Here, we realize the
spectral engineering of chip-scale optical microresonators in the anisotropic
lithium niobate (LN) crystal by a gradient design that precisely compensates
for variations in both refractive index and perturbation strength. We
experimentally demonstrate controllable frequency splitting at single and
multiple selected resonances in LN PhCR resonators with different sizes, while
maintaining high Q-factors up to 1 million. Moreover, we experimentally
construct a sharp boundary in the synthetic frequency dimension based on an
actively modulated x-cut LN gradient-PhCR, opening up new paths toward the
arbitrary control of electro-optic comb spectral shapes and exploration of
novel physics in the frequency degree of freedom.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Ultra-high-linearity integrated lithium niobate electro-optic modulators
Integrated lithium niobate (LN) photonics is a promising platform for future
chip-scale microwave photonics systems owing to its unique electro-optic
properties, low optical loss and excellent scalability. A key enabler for such
systems is a highly linear electro-optic modulator that could faithfully covert
analog electrical signals into optical signals. In this work, we demonstrate a
monolithic integrated LN modulator with an ultrahigh spurious-free dynamic
range (SFDR) of 120.04 dB Hz4/5 at 1 GHz, using a ring-assisted Mach-Zehnder
interferometer configuration. The excellent synergy between the intrinsically
linear electro-optic response of LN and an optimized linearization strategy
allows us to fully suppress the cubic terms of third-order intermodulation
distortions (IMD3) without active feedback controls, leading to ~ 20 dB
improvement over previous results in the thin-film LN platform. Our
ultra-high-linearity LN modulators could become a core building block for
future large-scale functional microwave photonic integrated circuits, by
further integration with other high-performance components like low-loss delay
lines, tunable filters and phase shifters available on the LN platform
A power-efficient integrated lithium niobate electro-optic comb generator
Integrated electro-optic (EO) frequency combs are essential components for
future applications in optical communications, light detection and ranging,
optical computation, sensing and spectroscopy. To date, broadband on-chip EO
combs are typically generated in high-quality-factor micro-resonators, while
the more straightforward and flexible non-resonant method, usually using single
or cascaded EO phase modulators, often requires high driving power to realize a
reasonably strong modulation index. Here, we show that the phase modulation
efficiency of an integrated lithium niobate modulator could be dramatically
enhanced by passing optical signals through the modulation electrodes for a
total of 4 round trips, via multiple low-loss TE0/TE1 mode multiplexers and
waveguide crossings, reducing electrical power consumption by more than one
order of magnitude. Using devices fabricated from a wafer-scale stepper
lithography process, we demonstrate a broadband optical frequency comb
featuring 47 comb lines at a 25-GHz repetition rate, using a moderate RF
driving power of 28 dBm (0.63 W). Leveraging the excellent tunability in
repetition rate and operation wavelength, our power-efficient EO comb generator
could serve as a compact low-cost solution for future high-speed data
transmission, sensing and spectroscopy, as well as classical and quantum
optical computation systems.Comment: 9 pages, 4 fingure
Integrated lithium niobate microwave photonic processing engine
Integrated microwave photonics is an intriguing field that leverages
integrated photonic technologies for the generation, transmission, and
manipulation of microwave signals in chip-scale optical systems. In particular,
ultrafast processing and computation of analog electronic signals in the
optical domain with high fidelity and low latency could enable a variety of
applications such as MWP filters, microwave signal processing, and image
recognition. An ideal photonic platform for achieving these integrated MWP
processing tasks shall simultaneously offer an efficient, linear and high-speed
electro-optic modulation block to faithfully perform microwave-optic conversion
at low power, and a low-loss functional photonic network that can be configured
for a variety of signal processing tasks, as well as large-scale, low-cost
manufacturability to monolithically integrate the two building blocks on the
same chip. In this work, we demonstrate such an integrated MWP processing
engine based on a thin-film lithium niobate platform capable of performing
multi-purpose processing and computation tasks of analog signals up to 92 giga
samples per second at CMOS-compatible voltages. We demonstrate high-speed
analog computation, i.e., first- and second-order temporal integration and
differentiation with computing accuracies up to 98.1 %, and deploy these
functions to showcase three proof-of-concept applications, namely, ordinary
differential equation solving, ultra-wideband signal generation and high-speed
edge detection of images. We further leverage the image edge detector to enable
a photonic-assisted image segmentation model that could effectively outline the
boundaries of melanoma lesion in medical diagnostic images, achieving orders of
magnitude faster processing speed and lower power consumption than conventional
electronic processors
Engineering medium-range order and polyamorphism in a nanostructured amorphous alloy
Like crystalline materials, the properties of amorphous materials can be tailored by tuning the local atomic-to-nanoscale structural configurations. Polyamorphism is evident by the coexistence of kinetically stabilized amorphous structures with tailorable short-to-medium-range orders, providing a viable means to engineer the degree of local order and heterogeneity. Here, we report experimental evidence of the coexistence of liquid-like and solid-like amorphous phases in a NiP amorphous alloy with enhanced thermal stability and plasticity prepared by pulsed electrodeposition. The two amorphous phases, of comparable volume fraction of ~50% each, have similar short-range order but are distinguished by packing at the medium-range length scale (>6 Ă
). Upon heating, a structure crossover at ~450 K was observed, where the liquid-like structure transforms to the solid-like structure, as evidenced by the enthalpy release and an anomalous contraction of atomic structure over the medium-range length scale, due to the metastable nature of the liquid-like structure
- âŠ