79 research outputs found

    BlockAMC: Scalable In-Memory Analog Matrix Computing for Solving Linear Systems

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    Recently, in-memory analog matrix computing (AMC) with nonvolatile resistive memory has been developed for solving matrix problems in one step, e.g., matrix inversion of solving linear systems. However, the analog nature sets up a barrier to the scalability of AMC, due to the limits on the manufacturability and yield of resistive memory arrays, non-idealities of device and circuit, and cost of hardware implementations. Aiming to deliver a scalable AMC approach for solving linear systems, this work presents BlockAMC, which partitions a large original matrix into smaller ones on different memory arrays. A macro is designed to perform matrix inversion and matrix-vector multiplication with the block matrices, obtaining the partial solutions to recover the original solution. The size of block matrices can be exponentially reduced by performing multiple stages of divide-and-conquer, resulting in a two-stage solver design that enhances the scalability of this approach. BlockAMC is also advantageous in alleviating the accuracy issue of AMC, especially in the presence of device and circuit non-idealities, such as conductance variations and interconnect resistances. Compared to a single AMC circuit solving the same problem, BlockAMC improves the area and energy efficiency by 48.83% and 40%, respectively.Comment: This paper has been accepted to the conference DATE 202

    Correlation Analysis of 3D Printability and Rheological Properties of Sodium Alginate Hydrogels

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    In this study, Ca2+-induced sodium alginate hydrogel was used as a model. The rheological properties were measured via steady-state shear, oscillation strain sweep, and yield stress. The network of sodium alginate hydrogels was analyzed using water distribution and rheological parameters. After a comprehensive analysis of the morphology and Micro-CT structure of 3D printing products, the mathematical relationship between rheological parameters and 3D printing effect was established using the Spearman's correlation analysis. The results showed that the highest score of 3D printing product was prepared at the mass ratio of SA to Ca2+ at 24:1 and the concentration of SA at 4.5%. At the same time, the filament structure of 3D printing product was fine and the porosity was 12.21%. Rheological parameters of K, η1, G', G", τ0 and τy were 255.1 Pa·sn, 2740 Pa·s, 3509 Pa, 673.2 Pa, 261.4 Pa, and 51.62 Pa, respectively. The capillary water (about 99.20%) was dominant in the gel network, showing strong water holding capacity of hydrogel. Results of correlation analysis showed that the viscosity properties (K, η1, and G") were negatively correlated with the extrudability, and the correlation coefficient was -0.577. The self-supporting capacity of the 3D printing product was positively correlated with the elastic modulus and stress (G', τ0, and τy) (P<0.05)

    A new method of improving height accuracy of airborne photogrammetry using a multi-camera system

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    Height accuracy is one of the most important requirements of stereo mapping. In order to improve the height accuracy of airborne photogrammetry, a new method using a multi-camera system was developed. This method collects multiple groups of stereo images with 60% overlap between adjacent stations, and with 90% overlap between simultaneous images. In this way, redundant stereo images are acquired to improve the height accuracy of ground points. This paper presents the principle of this method and a validation experiment conduced in the geometric test field in Hebei province, China The experimental results reveal that the height accuracy of a four-camera system is better than result of a single camera. Therefore, the proposed method provides a new way for improving the height accuracy of airborne photogrammetry.Engineering, Electrical &amp; ElectronicGeosciences, MultidisciplinaryRemote SensingEICPCI-S(ISTP)

    Normal Physics Model of Aerial Remote Sensing Platform and Systemic Accuracy Assessment Variable Baseline-height Ratio

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    Accuracy is a key factor in high-resolution remote sensing and photogrammetry.The factors that affect accuracy are imaging system errors and data processing errors.Because of the complexity of aerial camera system errors,this paper focuses on the design of digital aerial camera system,to reduce the system error and provide data procession fundamentally.There are many kinds of digital aerial camera system at present,but lacking a unified physical model,which causes the system to be built in multi-camera and multi-rigid model.Such system is complex,costly,and difficult to describe,and is easily affected by factors such as vibration and temperature,so the installed accuracy can only reach millimeter level.For this reason,this paper proposes the unified physical structure of digital aerial camera,which imitates the theory of out-of-field multi-CCD,in-field multi-CCD,and once-imaging and twice-imaging digital camera systems.Considering this,the spatial-temporal representation of the variable baseline-height ratio is established.From the variable baseline-height ratio,we can link the opto-mechanical spatial parameters with the elevation accuracy,so that to achieve connection between the surface elevation with opto-mechanical structural parameter; further designing the twice-imaging digital camera prototype system and the wideband limb imaging spectrometer,which provides prototype for transformation from the current multi-rigid,one-time imaging aerial camera to single rigid structure.Our research has laid a theoretical foundation and prototype references for the construction and industrialization of digital aerial system

    Multiplicity dependence of charged-particle intra-jet properties in pp collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceThe first measurement of the multiplicity dependence of intra-jet properties of leading charged-particle jets in proton-proton (pp) collisions is reported. The mean charged-particle multiplicity and jet fragmentation distributions are measured in minimum-bias and high-multiplicity pp collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV using the ALICE detector. Jets are reconstructed from charged particles produced in the midrapidity region (η<0.9|\eta| < 0.9) using the sequential recombination anti-kTk_{\rm T} algorithm with jet resolution parameters RR = 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4 for the transverse momentum (pTp_{\rm T}) interval 5-110 GeV/cc. High-multiplicity events are selected by the forward V0 scintillator detectors. The mean charged-particle multiplicity inside the leading jet cone rises monotonically with increasing jet pTp_{\rm T} in qualitative agreement with previous measurements at lower energies. The distributions of jet fragmentation functions zchz^{\rm ch} and ξch\xi^{\rm ch} are measured for different jet-pTp_{\rm T} intervals. Jet-pTp_{\rm T} independent fragmentation of leading jets is observed for wider jets except at high- and low-zchz^{\rm ch}. The observed "hump-backed plateau" structure in the ξch\xi^{\rm ch} distribution indicates suppression of low-pTp_{\rm T} particles. In high-multiplicity events, an enhancement of the fragmentation probability of low-zchz^{\rm ch} particles accompanied by a suppression of high-zchz^{\rm ch} particles is observed compared to minimum-bias events. This behavior becomes more prominent for low-pTp_{\rm T} jets with larger jet radius. The results are compared with predictions of QCD-inspired event generators, PYTHIA 8 with Monash 2013 tune and EPOS LHC. It is found that PYTHIA 8 qualitatively reproduces the jet modification in high-multiplicity events except at high jet pTp_{\rm T}. These measurements provide important constraints to models of jet fragmentation

    Measurement of (anti)alpha production in central Pb-Pb collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 5.02 TeV

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    International audienceIn this letter, measurements of (anti)alpha production in central (0-10%) Pb-Pb collisions at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon-nucleon pair of sNN\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 5.02 TeV are presented, including the first measurement of an antialpha transverse-momentum spectrum. Owing to its large mass, (anti)alpha production yields and transverse-momentum spectra are of particular interest because they provide a stringent test of particle production models. The averaged antialpha and alpha spectrum is included into a common blast-wave fit with lighter particles, indicating that the (anti)alpha also participates in the collective expansion of the medium created in the collision. A blast-wave fit including only protons, (anti)alpha, and other light nuclei results in a similar flow velocity as the fit that includes all particles. A similar flow velocity, but a significantly larger kinetic freeze-out temperature is obtained when only protons and light nuclei are included in the fit. The coalescence parameter B4B_4 is well described by calculations from a statistical hadronization model but significantly underestimated by calculations assuming nucleus formation via coalescence of nucleons. Similarly, the (anti)alpha-to-proton ratio is well described by the statistical hadronization model. On the other hand, coalescence calculations including approaches with different implementations of the (anti)alpha substructure tend to underestimate the data

    Measurement of beauty-quark production in pp collisions at s=13\sqrt{s}=13 TeV via non-prompt D mesons

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    International audienceThe pTp_{\rm T}-differential production cross sections of non-prompt D0{\rm D^0}, D+{\rm D^+}, and Ds+{\rm D_s^+} mesons originating from beauty-hadron decays are measured in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy s\sqrt{s} of 13 TeV. The measurements are performed at midrapidity, y<0.5|y| < 0.5, with the data sample collected by ALICE from 2016 to 2018. The results are in agreement with predictions from several perturbative QCD calculations. The fragmentation fraction of beauty quarks to strange mesons divided by the one to non-strange mesons, fs/(fu+fd)f_{\rm{s}}/(f_{\rm{u}} + f_{\rm{d}}), is found to be 0.114±0.016 (stat.)±0.006 (syst.)±0.003 (BR)±0.003 (extrap.)0.114 \pm 0.016~{\rm (stat.)} \pm 0.006~{\rm (syst.)} \pm 0.003~{\rm (BR)} \pm 0.003~{\rm (extrap.)}. This value is compatible with previous measurements at lower centre-of-mass energies and in different collision systems in agreement with the assumption of universality of fragmentation functions. In addition, the dependence of the non-prompt D meson production on the centre-of-mass energy is investigated by comparing the results obtained at s=5.02\sqrt{s} = 5.02 and 13 TeV, showing a hardening of the non-prompt D-meson pTp_{\rm T}-differential production cross section at higher s\sqrt{s}. Finally, the bb{\rm b\overline{b}} production cross section per unit of rapidity at midrapidity is calculated from the non-prompt D0{\rm D^0}, D+{\rm D^+}, Ds+{\rm D_s^+}, and Λc+\Lambda_{\rm c}^+ hadron measurements, obtaining ${\rm d}\sigma/{\rm d}y = 75.2\pm 3.2~(\mathrm{stat.}) \pm 5.2~(\mathrm{syst.})^{+12.3}_{-3.2} ~(\mathrm{extrap.})\text{ } \rm \mu b \;.

    Common femtoscopic hadron-emission source in pp collisions at the LHC

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    International audienceThe femtoscopic study of pairs of identical pions is particularly suited to investigate the effective source function of particle emission, due to the resulting Bose-Einstein correlation signal. In small collision systems at the LHC, pp in particular, the majority of the pions are produced in resonance decays, which significantly affect the profile and size of the source. In this work, we explicitly model this effect in order to extract the primordial source in pp collisions at s=13\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV from charged π\pi-π\pi correlations measured by ALICE. We demonstrate that the assumption of a Gaussian primordial source is compatible with the data and that the effective source, resulting from modifications due to resonances, is approximately exponential, as found in previous measurements at the LHC. The universality of hadron emission in pp collisions is further investigated by applying the same methodology to characterize the primordial source of K-p pairs. The size of the primordial source is evaluated as a function of the transverse mass (mTm_{\rm T}) of the pairs, leading to the observation of a common scaling for both π\pi-π\pi and K-p, suggesting a collective effect. Further, the present results are compatible with the mTm_{\rm T} scaling of the p-p and pΛ-\Lambda primordial source measured by ALICE in high multiplicity pp collisions, providing compelling evidence for the presence of a common emission source for all hadrons in small collision systems at the LHC. This will allow the determination of the source function for any hadron--hadron pairs with high precision, granting access to the properties of the possible final-state interaction among pairs of less abundantly produced hadrons, such as strange or charmed particles
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