52,941 research outputs found

    Opportunistic Relaying in Time Division Broadcast Protocol with Incremental Relaying

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we investigate the performance of time division broadcast protocol (TDBC) with incremental relaying (IR) when there are multiple available relays. Opportunistic relaying (OR), i.e., the “best” relay is select for transmission to minimize the system’s outage probability, is proposed. Two OR schemes are presented. The first scheme, termed TDBC-OIR-I, selects the “best” relay from the set of relays that can decode both flows of signal from the two sources successfully. The second one, termed TDBC-OIR-II, selects two “best” relays from two respective sets of relays that can decode successfully each flow of signal. The performance, in terms of outage probability, expected rate (ER), and diversity-multiplexing tradeoff (DMT), of the two schemes are analyzed and compared with two TDBC schemes that have no IR but OR (termed TDBC-OR-I and TDBC-OR-II accordingly) and two other benchmark OR schemes that have no direct link transmission between the two sources

    On the equilibrium of the magnetopause current layer

    Get PDF
    Magnetopause current layer equilibriu

    Pre-flare coronal dimmings

    Full text link
    In this paper, we focus on the pre-flare coronal dimmings. We report our multiwavelength observations of the GOES X1.6 solar flare and the accompanying halo CME produced by the eruption of a sigmoidal magnetic flux rope (MFR) in NOAA active region (AR) 12158 on 2014 September 10. The eruption was observed by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) aboard the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO). The photospheric line-of-sight magnetograms were observed by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) aboard SDO. The soft X-ray (SXR) fluxes were recorded by the GOES spacecraft. The halo CME was observed by the white light coronagraphs of the Large Angle Spectroscopic Coronagraph (LASCO) aboard SOHO.} {About 96 minutes before the onset of flare/CME, narrow pre-flare coronal dimmings appeared at the two ends of the twisted MFR. They extended very slowly with their intensities decreasing with time, while their apparent widths (8-9 Mm) nearly kept constant. During the impulsive and decay phases of flare, typical fanlike twin dimmings appeared and expanded with much larger extent and lower intensities than the pre-flare dimmings. The percentage of 171 {\AA} intensity decrease reaches 40\%. The pre-flare dimmings are most striking in 171, 193, and 211 {\AA} with formation temperatures of 0.6-2.5 MK. The northern part of the pre-flare dimmings could also be recognized in 131 and 335 {\AA}.} To our knowledge, this is the first detailed study of pre-flare coronal dimmings, which can be explained by the density depletion as a result of the gradual expansion of the coronal loop system surrounding the MFR during the slow rise of the MFR.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, to be accepted for publication by A&

    Simple Lie Color Algebras of Weyl Type

    Full text link
    For an (ϵ,G)(\epsilon,G)-color-commutative associative algebra AA with an identity element over a field FF of characteristic not 2, and for a color-commutative subalgebra DD of color-derivations of AA, denote by A[D]A[D] the associative subalgebra of End(A){\rm End}(A) generated by AA (regarding as operators on AA via left multiplication) and DD. It is easily proved that, as an associative algebra, A[D]A[D] is GG-graded simple if and only if AA is \G-graded DD-simple. Suppose AA is \G-graded DD-simple. Then, (a) A[D]A[D] is a free left AA-module; (b) as a Lie color algebra, the subquotient [A[D],A[D]]/Z(A[D])[A[D],A[D]][A[D],A[D]]/Z(A[D])\cap[A[D],A[D]] is simple (except one minor case), where Z(A[D])Z(A[D]) is the color center of A[D]A[D]. The structure of this subquotient is explicitly described.Comment: 10 pages, latex; to appear in Israel J. Mat
    corecore