99,781 research outputs found
Unambiguous Acquisition and Tracking Technique for General BOC Signals
This article presents a new unambiguous acquisition and tracking technique for general Binary Offset Carrier (BOC) ranging signals, which will be used in modern GPS, European Galileo system and Chinese BeiDou system. The test criterion employed in this technique is based on a synthesized correlation function which completely removes positive side peaks while keeping the sharp main peak. Simulation results indicate that the proposed technique completely removes the ambiguity threat in the acquisition process while maintaining relatively higher acquisition performance for low order BOC signals. The potential false lock points in the tracking phase for any order BOC signals are avoided by using the proposed method. Impacts of thermal noise and multipath on the proposed technique are investigated; the simulation results show that the new method allows the removal of false lock points with slightly degraded tracking performance. In addition, this method is convenient to implement via logic circuits
Ambivalent effects of added layers on steady kinematic dynamos in cylindrical geometry: application to the VKS experiment
The intention of the ''von Karman sodium'' (VKS) experiment is to study the
hydromagnetic dynamo effect in a highly turbulent and unconstrained flow. Much
effort has been devoted to the optimization of the mean flow and the lateral
boundary conditions in order to minimize the critical magnetic Reynolds number
and hence the necessary motor power. The main focus of this paper lies on the
role of ''lid layers'', i.e. layers of liquid sodium between the impellers and
the end walls of the cylinder. First, we study an analytical test flow to show
that lid layers can have an ambivalent effect on the efficiency of the dynamo.
The critical magnetic Reynolds number shows a flat minimum for a small lid
layer thickness, but increases for thicker layers. For the actual VKS geometry
it is shown that static lid layers yield a moderate increase of the critical
magnetic Reynolds number by approximately 12 per cent. A more dramatic increase
by 100 until 150 per cent can occur when some rotational flow is taken into
account in those layers. Possible solutions of this problem are discussed for
the real dynamo facility.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, minor changes, to appear in European Journal of
Mechanics B/Fluid
Spin squeezing: transforming one-axis-twisting into two-axis-twisting
Squeezed spin states possess unique quantum correlation or entanglement that
are of significant promises for advancing quantum information processing and
quantum metrology. In recent back to back publications [C. Gross \textit{et al,
Nature} \textbf{464}, 1165 (2010) and Max F. Riedel \textit{et al, Nature}
\textbf{464}, 1170 (2010)], reduced spin fluctuations are observed leading to
spin squeezing at -8.2dB and -2.5dB respectively in two-component atomic
condensates exhibiting one-axis-twisting interactions (OAT). The noise
reduction limit for the OAT interaction scales as , which
for a condensate with atoms, is about 100 times below standard
quantum limit. We present a scheme using repeated Rabi pulses capable of
transforming the OAT spin squeezing into the two-axis-twisting type, leading to
Heisenberg limited noise reduction , or an extra 10-fold
improvement for .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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