51,271 research outputs found
Building real-time embedded applications on QduinoMC: a web-connected 3D printer case study
Single Board Computers (SBCs) are now emerging
with multiple cores, ADCs, GPIOs, PWM channels, integrated
graphics, and several serial bus interfaces. The low power
consumption, small form factor and I/O interface capabilities of
SBCs with sensors and actuators makes them ideal in embedded
and real-time applications. However, most SBCs run non-realtime
operating systems based on Linux and Windows, and do
not provide a user-friendly API for application development. This
paper presents QduinoMC, a multicore extension to the popular
Arduino programming environment, which runs on the Quest
real-time operating system. QduinoMC is an extension of our earlier
single-core, real-time, multithreaded Qduino API. We show
the utility of QduinoMC by applying it to a specific application: a
web-connected 3D printer. This differs from existing 3D printers,
which run relatively simple firmware and lack operating system
support to spool multiple jobs, or interoperate with other devices
(e.g., in a print farm). We show how QduinoMC empowers devices with the capabilities to run new services without impacting their timing guarantees. While it is possible to modify existing operating systems to provide suitable timing guarantees, the effort to do so is cumbersome and does not provide the ease of programming afforded by QduinoMC.http://www.cs.bu.edu/fac/richwest/papers/rtas_2017.pdfAccepted manuscrip
Transition to turbulence in Taylor-Couette ferrofluidic flow
Y.D. was supported by Basic Science Research Program of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology under Grant No. NRF-2013R1A1A2010067. Y.C.L. was supported by AFOSR under Grant No. FA9550-12-1-0095.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A robust relativistic quantum two-level system with edge-dependent currents and spin polarization
This work was supported by AFOSR under Grant No. FA9550-15-1-0151. LH was supported by NSFC under Grant No. 11422541.Peer reviewedPostprin
Emergence, evolution, and control of multistability in a hybrid topological quantum/classical system
We present a novel class of nonlinear dynamical systems - a hybrid of
relativistic quantum and classical systems, and demonstrate that multistability
is ubiquitous. A representative setting is coupled systems of a topological
insulator and an insulating ferromagnet, where the former possesses an
insulating bulk with topologically protected, dissipationless, and conducting
surface electronic states governed by the relativistic quantum Dirac
Hamiltonian and latter is described by the nonlinear classical evolution of its
magnetization vector. The interactions between the two are essentially the spin
transfer torque from the topological insulator to the ferromagnet and the local
proximity induced exchange coupling in the opposite direction. The hybrid
system exhibits a rich variety of nonlinear dynamical phenomena besides
multistability such as bifurcations, chaos, and phase synchronization. The
degree of multistability can be controlled by an external voltage. In the case
of two coexisting states, the system is effectively binary, opening a door to
exploitation for developing spintronic memory devices. Because of the
dissipationless and spin-momentum locking nature of the surface currents of the
topological insulator, little power is needed for generating a significant
current, making the system appealing for potential applications in next
generation of low power memory devices.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
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