1,364 research outputs found

    SARA: A Students Space Initiative

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    SARA is a scientific small satellite initiated designed and assembled by students or just graduated post-students be project lasted 3 years in an aerospace club ESIEESPACE; a club created in an engineers school ESIEE ( Ecole Superieure d’Ingenieurs en Electronique et Electrotenique) near Paris. The purpose of SARA is to provide a long term survey of the decametric Surrounding radiations above ionosphere. Datas will be used by radioastronomers for a better understanding of the jovian atmosphere. SARA has been launched on July 16 1991 thanks to ARlANE at Kourou. It weight 26Kg, looks like a 35cm cube with three ten meter antennas. This project is an opportunity for a french space association to develop new ways to deal with space. SARA is also a new step in Microsat designing for educational activities which can lead to valuable experience to improve bigger projects

    VLT/SPHERE robust astrometry of the HR8799 planets at milliarcsecond-level accuracy Orbital architecture analysis with PyAstrOFit

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    HR8799 is orbited by at least four giant planets, making it a prime target for the recently commissioned Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (VLT/SPHERE). As such, it was observed on five consecutive nights during the SPHERE science verification in December 2014. We aim to take full advantage of the SPHERE capabilities to derive accurate astrometric measurements based on H-band images acquired with the Infra-Red Dual-band Imaging and Spectroscopy (IRDIS) subsystem, and to explore the ultimate astrometric performance of SPHERE in this observing mode. We also aim to present a detailed analysis of the orbital parameters for the four planets. We report the astrometric positions for epoch 2014.93 with an accuracy down to 2.0 mas, mainly limited by the astrometric calibration of IRDIS. For each planet, we derive the posterior probability density functions for the six Keplerian elements and identify sets of highly probable orbits. For planet d, there is clear evidence for nonzero eccentricity (e0.35e \simeq 0.35), without completely excluding solutions with smaller eccentricities. The three other planets are consistent with circular orbits, although their probability distributions spread beyond e=0.2e = 0.2, and show a peak at e0.1e \simeq 0.1 for planet e. The four planets have consistent inclinations of about 30deg30\deg with respect to the sky plane, but the confidence intervals for the longitude of ascending node are disjoint for planets b and c, and we find tentative evidence for non-coplanarity between planets b and c at the 2σ2 \sigma level.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figure

    Using Buckingham's π\pi Theorem for Multi-System Learning Transfer: a Case-study with 3 Vehicles Sharing a Database

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    Learning schemes for planning and control are limited by the difficulty of collecting large amounts of experimental data or having to rely on high-fidelity simulations. This paper explores the potential of a proposed learning scheme that leverages dimensionless numbers based on Buckingham's π\pi theorem to improve data efficiency and facilitate knowledge sharing between similar systems. A case study using car-like robots compares traditional and dimensionless learning models on simulated and experimental data to validate the benefits of the new dimensionless learning approach. Preliminary results show that this new dimensionless approach could accelerate the learning rate and improve the accuracy of the model and should be investigated further

    ALTITUDE AND FOOTBALL: WHAT ARE NEW METHODS AND OPPORTUNITIES TO MAXIMIZE PLAYERS' FITNESS?

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    International audiencePlaying football competition at terrestrial altitude is not an isolated phenomenon. For instance, eight of the last 19 football FIFA World Cup tournaments were hosted by countries located at low-to-moderate altitude. While football-required fitness and technical qualities are affected by the development of neuromuscular fatigue at sea level, hypoxia-induced decrease in convective oxygen transport further hinders the aerobic capacity but also the ability to perform consecutive sprints, eventually impacting the outcome of a game. This results from the decrease in partial pressure of oxygen which reduces maximal aerobic power. The later, in turn, increases the relative intensity of any given absolute level of work, potentially delaying recovery of high-energy phosphates between high-intensity intermittent efforts. Despite reduction in air resistance (caused by the decrease in air density) could facilitate high-velocity running, it can also alter drag and lift, thereby impairing sensorimotor skills. Conversely, altitude/hypoxic training could help footballers preparing for competition at altitude, but also at sea level. Traditional altitude training camps involve chronic exposure to low-to-moderate terrestrial or simulated altitudes (14%) for improving oxygen-carrying capacity. While "live high-train high" or "live high-train low" paradigms are actually implemented by many elite club or national team football squads, the benefits they may have on (repeated-) sprint performance are still debated. The development of hypoxic technologies has led to the emergence of "live low-train high" methods, in isolation (i.e., the "repeated-sprint training in hypoxia" and "resistance training in hypoxia") or in combination with hypoxic/altitude residence (i.e., "live high-train low and high"). Today, the panorama of altitude/hypoxic training methods is wider than ever and includes also practices such as "blood flow restriction" or "ischemic preconditioning", which demonstrate encouraging preliminary results. The aims of this chapter are twofold: First, to summarize the effects of acute altitude/hypoxia exposure on football-specific qualities measured in the laboratory and/or during games at terrestrial altitude. Second, to discuss the potential benefits of each altitude/hypoxic training method in respect to sport-specific physiological and fitness development and/or in-game performance

    Numerical Computation of Lyapunov Function for Hyperbolic PDE using LMI Formulation and Polytopic Embeddings

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    International audienceWe consider the problem of stability analysis and control synthesis for first-order hyperbolic linear PDEs over a bounded interval with spatially varying coefficients. We propose LMI-based conditions for the stability and for the design of boundary and distributed control for this class of systems. These LMI-based conditions involve an infinite number of LMI. Hence, we show how to overapproximate these constraints using polytopic embeddings to reduce the problem to a finite number of LMI. We show the effectiveness of the overapproximation with several examples

    An optimisation approach for stability analysis and controller synthesis of linear hyperbolic systems

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    International audienceIn this paper, we consider the problems of stability analysis and control synthesis for first-order hyperbolic linear Partial Differential Equations (PDEs) over a bounded interval with spatially varying coefficients. We propose Linear Matrix Inequalities (LMI) conditions for the stability and for the design of boundary and distributed control for the system. These conditions involve an infinite number of LMI to solve. Hence, we show how to overapproximate these constraints using polytopic embeddings to reduce the problem to a finite number of LMI. We show the effectiveness of the overapproximation with several examples and with the Saint-Venant equations with friction

    Lyapunov techniques for stabilization of switched linear systems of conservation laws

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    http://cdc2013.units.it/International audienceIn this paper, the exponential stability in L2 - norm is investigated for a class of switched linear systems of conservation laws. The state equations and the boundary conditions are both subject to switching. We consider the problem of synthesizing stabilizing switching controllers. By means of Lyapunov techniques, three control strategies are developed based on steepest descent selection, possibly combined with a hysteresis and a low-pass filter. Some numerical examples are considered to illustrate our approach and to show the merits of the proposed strategies
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