7,196 research outputs found
MIRAI Architecture for Heterogeneous Network
One of the keywords that describe next-generation wireless communications is "seamless." As part of the e-Japan Plan promoted by the Japanese Government, the Multimedia Integrated Network by Radio Access Innovation project has as its goal the development of new technologies to enable seamless integration of various wireless access systems for practical use by 2005. This article describes a heterogeneous network architecture including a common tool, a common platform, and a common access. In particular, software-defined radio technologies are used to develop a multiservice user terminal to access different wireless networks. The common platform for various wireless networks is based on a wireless-supporting IPv6 network. A basic access network, separated from other wireless access networks, is used as a means for wireless system discovery, signaling, and paging. A proof-of-concept experimental demonstration system is available
Quasi-local Energy for Spherically Symmetric Spacetimes
We present two complementary approaches for determining the reference for the
covariant Hamiltonian boundary term quasi-local energy and test them on
spherically symmetric spacetimes. On the one hand, we isometrically match the
2-surface and extremize the energy. This can be done in two ways, which we call
programs I (without constraint) and II (with additional constraints). On the
other hand, we match the orthonormal 4-frames of the dynamic and the reference
spacetimes. Then, if we further specify the observer by requiring the reference
displacement to be the timelike Killing vector of the reference, the result is
the same as program I, and the energy can be positive, zero, or even negative.
If, instead, we require that the Lie derivatives of the two-area along the
displacement vector in both the dynamic and reference spacetimes to be the
same, the result is the same as program II, and it satisfies the usual
criteria: the energies are non-negative and vanish only for Minkowski (or
anti-de Sitter) spacetime.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
Bound states in two spatial dimensions in the non-central case
We derive a bound on the total number of negative energy bound states in a
potential in two spatial dimensions by using an adaptation of the Schwinger
method to derive the Birman-Schwinger bound in three dimensions. Specifically,
counting the number of bound states in a potential gV for g=1 is replaced by
counting the number of g_i's for which zero energy bound states exist, and then
the kernel of the integral equation for the zero-energy wave functon is
symmetrized. One of the keys of the solution is the replacement of an
inhomogeneous integral equation by a homogeneous integral equation.Comment: Work supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy under Grant
No. DE-FG02-84-ER4015
A quasi-one-dimensional theory for anisotropic propagation of excitation in cardiac muscle
It has been shown that propagation of excitation in cardiac muscle is anisotropic. Compared to propagation at right angles to the long axes of the fibers, propagation along the long axis is faster, the extracellular action potential (AP) is larger in amplitude, and the intracellular AP has a lower maximum rate of depolarization, a larger time constant of the foot, and a lower peak amplitude. These observations are contrary to the predictions of classical one-dimensional (1-D) cable theory and, thus far, no satisfactory theory for them has been reported. As an alternative description of propagation in cardiac muscle, this study provides a quasi-1-D theory that includes a simplified description of the effects of action currents in extracellular space as well as resistive coupling between surface and deeper fibers in cardiac muscle. In terms of classical 1-D theory, this quasi-1-D theory reveals that the anisotropies in the wave form of the AP arise from modifications in the effective membrane ionic current and capacitance. The theory also shows that it is propagation in the longitudinal, not in the transverse direction that deviates from classical 1-D cable theory
CP Violation
Three possibilities for the origin of CP violation are discussed: (1) the
Standard Model in which all CP violation is due to one parameter in the CKM
matrix, (2) the superweak model in which all CP violation is due to new physics
and (3) the Standard Model plus new physics. A major goal of B physics is to
distinguish these possibilities. CP violation implies time reversal violation
(TRV) but direct evidence for TRV is difficult to obtain.Comment: 13 pages, to be published in Lecture Notes of TASI-2000, edited by
Jonathan L. Rosner, World Scientific, 200
AdS/QCD Phenomenological Models from a Back-Reacted Geometry
We construct a fully back-reacted holographic dual of a four-dimensional
field theory which exhibits chiral symmetry breaking. Two possible models are
considered by studying the effects of a five-dimensional field, dual to the
operator. One model has smooth geometry at all radii and the other
dynamically generates a cutoff at finite radius. Both of these models satisfy
Einstein's field equations. The second model has only three free parameters, as
in QCD, and we show that this gives phenomenologically consistent results. We
also discuss the possibility that in order to obtain linear confinement from a
back-reacted model it may be necessary to consider the condensate of a
dimension two operator.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, Replaced with minor correction
Implementation of an On-Demand Routing Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks
We present our experiences in implementing and validating the on-demand EYES Source Routing protocol (ESR) in a real wireless sensor network (WSN) environment. ESR has a fast recovery mechanism relying on MAC layer feedback to overcome frequent network topology changes resulting from node mobility and unreliability. A geographically restricted directional flooding scheme reduces energy consumption in the route re-establishment. ESR is implemented in our WSN environment consisting of EYES sensor node prototypes using the Lightweight Medium Access Control protocol (LMAC) on top of the AmbientRT operating system. We describe the key design and implementation features of our protocol and report experiment results of ESR and Ad hoc On-demand Distance Vector protocol (AODV), a conventional routing protocol for ad hoc networks
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