317 research outputs found

    Compressibility effects for the AGARD-B model

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    A numerical study of the flow topologies over the 60° delta wing of the AGARD-B model at Mach 0.80 has revealed that vortex bursting occurs between 13°-15° angle of attack, while vortex separation occurs above 18°. These aerodynamic features have been identified as additional comparison criteria which need to be replicated for facilities using the model for calibration or inter-tunnel comparison purposes. The numerical simulations were performed using ANSYS Fluent V13, a structured mesh with near wall treatment and the Spalart-Allmaras and κ-ω SST turbulence models, and validated experimentally in a 5’x5’ transonic facility. Other aspects not previously identified or studied are firstly a recovery shock between the primary and secondary vortex that exists only when vortex bursting occurs, and secondly the lack of a shock between the wing and vortex when the flow topology corresponds to the centreline shock region as observed in other studies

    Bulk and micropatterned conjugation of extracellular matrix proteins to characterized polyacrylamide substrates for cell mechanotransduction assays

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    Increasing numbers of cell mechanotransduction studies are currently utilizing elastic substrates fabricated from polyacrylamide in the form of thin gels. Their versatility depends on the ability to ensure the appropriate gel stiffness and control the uniformity and geometry of extracellular matrix protein coating of the gel. Beginning with a brief quantitative emphasis on the elastic properties of polyacrylamide gels, we present an inexpensive and highly reproducible method for uniform coating with a wide variety of extracellular matrix proteins. We used a reducing agent, hydrazine hydrate, to modify nonreactive amide groups in polyacrylamide to highly reactive hydrazide groups that can form covalent bonds with aldehyde or ketone groups in oxidized proteins. This simple conjugation method overcomes the limitations of previously used photoactivatable cross-linkers: nonuniform coating due to nonuniformity of irradiation and technically challenging procedures for micropatterning. As demonstrated in our study of cell polarity during constrained migration, this conjugation method is especially effective in gel micropatterning by manual microcontact printing of protein patterns as small as 5 microm and enables numerous studies of constrained cell attachment and migration that were previously unfeasible due to high cost or difficulty in controlling the protein coating

    An Enhanced Evolutionary Technique for the Generation of Compact Reconfigurable Scan-Network Tests

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    Nowadays many Integrated Systems embed auxiliary on-chip instruments whose function is to perform test, debug, calibration, configuration, etc. The growing complexity and the increasing number of these instruments have led to new solutions for their access and control, such as the IEEE 1687 standard. The standard introduces an infrastructure composed of scan chains incorporating configurable elements for accessing the instruments in a flexible manner. Such an infrastructure is known as Reconfigurable Scan Network or RSN. Since permanent faults affecting the circuitry can cause malfunction, i.e., inappropriate behaviour, detecting them is of utmost importance. This paper addresses the issue of generating effective sequences for testing the reconfigurable elements within RSNs using evolutionary computation. Test configurations are extracted with automatic test pattern generation (ATPG) and used to guide the evolution. Postprocessing techniques are proposed to improve the evolutionary fittest solution. Results on a standard set of benchmark networks show up to 27% reduced test time with respect to test generation based on RSN exploratio

    A Semi-Formal Technique to Generate Effective Test Sequences for Reconfigurable Scan Networks

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    The broad need to efficiently access all the instrumentation embedded within a semiconductor device called for a standardization, and the reconfigurable scan networks proposed in IEEE 1687 have been demonstrated effective in handling complex infrastructures. At the same time, different techniques have been proposed to test the new circuitry required; however, most of the automatic approaches are either too computationally demanding to be applied in complex cases, or too approximate to yield high-quality tests. This paper models the state of a reconfigurable scan network with a finite state automaton, using the length of the active path as the output alphabet and the configurations as input symbols. Permanent faults are represented as incorrect transitions, and a greedy algorithm is used to generate a functional test sequence able to detect all these multiple state-transition faults. The automaton’s state set and the input alphabet are small subsets of the possible ones, and are carefully chosen. Experimental results on ITC’16 benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed approach is broadly applicable; the test sequences are more efficient than the ones previously generated by search heuristics

    A New Technique to Generate Test Sequences for Reconfigurable Scan Networks

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    Nowadays, industries require reliable methods for accessing the instrumentations embedded within semiconductor devices. The situation led to the definition of standards, such as the IEEE 1687, for designing the required infrastructures, and the proposal of techniques to test them. So far, most of the test-generation approaches are either too computationally demanding to be applied in complex cases, or too approximate to yield high-quality tests. This paper exploits a recent idea: the state of a generic reconfigurable scan chain is modeled as a finite state automaton and a low-level fault, as an incorrect transition; it then proposes a new algorithm for generating a functional test sequence able to detect all incorrect transitions far more efficiently than previous ones. Such an algorithm is based on a greedy search, and it is able to postpone costly operations and eventually minimize their number. Experimental results on ITC’16 benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed approach is broadly applicable; has limited computational requirements; and the test sequences are order of magnitudes shorter than the ones previously generated by approximate methodologies

    Multi-band optical variability of three TeV Blazars on Diverse Timescales

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    We present our optical photometric observations of three TeV blazars, PKS 1510-089, PG 1553+113 and Mrk 501 taken using two telescopes in India, one in Bulgaria, one in Greece and one in Serbia during 2012 - 2014. These observations covered a total of 95 nights with a total of 202 B filter frames, 247 images in V band, 817 in R band while 229 images were taken in the I filter. This work is focused on multi-band flux and colour variability studies of these blazars on diverse timescales which are useful in understanding the emission mechanisms. We studied the variability characteristics of above three blazars and found all to be active over our entire observational campaigns. We also searched for any correlation between the brightness of the sources and their colour indices. During the times of variability, no significant evidence for the sources to display spectral changes correlated with magnitude was found on timescales of a few months. We briefly discuss the possible physical mechanisms most likely responsible for the observed flux variability.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 9 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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