717 research outputs found
Phase-tunable Josephson thermal router
Since the the first studies of thermodynamics, heat transport has been a
crucial element for the understanding of any thermal system. Quantum mechanics
has introduced new appealing ingredients for the manipulation of heat currents,
such as the long-range coherence of the superconducting condensate. The latter
has been exploited by phase-coherent caloritronics, a young field of
nanoscience, to realize Josephson heat interferometers, which can control
electronic thermal currents as a function of the external magnetic flux. So
far, only one output temperature has been modulated, while multi-terminal
devices that allow to distribute the heat flux among different reservoirs are
still missing. Here, we report the experimental realization of a phase-tunable
thermal router able to control the heat transferred between two terminals
residing at different temperatures. Thanks to the Josephson effect, our
structure allows to regulate the thermal gradient between the output electrodes
until reaching its inversion. Together with interferometers, heat diodes and
thermal memories, the thermal router represents a fundamental step towards the
thermal conversion of non-linear electronic devices, and the realization of
caloritronic logic components.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Some examples of non-central moderate deviations for sequences of real random variables
The term \emph{moderate deviations} is often used in the literature to mean a
class of large deviation principles that, in some sense, fill the gap between a
convergence in probability to zero (governed by a large deviation principle)
and a weak convergence to a centered Normal distribution. In this paper we
present some examples of classes of large deviation principles of this kind,
but the involved random variables converge weakly to Gumbel, exponential and
Laplace distributions.Comment: 25 page
Co design processes for cleaning and facilities services system.
The abstract illustrates a co-design research project performed with different stakeholders who represent a cleaning system consortium for the cleaning contract market sector, with the scope of social inclusion and creation of a sample
Asymptotic results for sums and extremes
The term moderate deviations is often used in the literature to mean a class
of large deviation principles that, in some sense, fills the gap between a
convergence in probability of some random variables to a constant and a weak
convergence to a centered Gaussian distribution (when such random variables are
properly centered and rescaled). We talk about noncentral moderate deviations
when the weak convergence is towards a non-Gaussian distribution. In this
paper, we prove a noncentral moderate deviation result for the bivariate
sequence of sums and maxima of i.i.d. random variables bounded from above. We
also prove a result where the random variables are not bounded from above, and
the maxima are suitably normalized. Finally, we prove a moderate deviation
result for sums of partial minima of i.i.d. exponential random variables.Comment: 1
In vitro Removal of Therapeutic Drugs with a Novel Adsorbent System
Background/Aim: Substances in the middle molecular weight range have been shown to play a significant pathogenetic role in as diverse disorders as end-stage renal disease and multiple organ failure. To overcome the limitations in the amount removed by hemofilters, new sorbents with a high biocompatibility are actively being developed. Furthermore, biocompatible sorbents by their nonspecific adsorptive behavior could have great impact on detoxification treatment in exogenous intoxications. We performed an in vitro evaluation of a newly developed highly biocompatible sorbent cartridge (Betasorb(R)), examining its adsorptive capacity concerning therapeutic drugs. Methods: Uremic blood spiked with a range of therapeutic drugs was recirculated for 2 h in an in vitro hemoperfusion circuit containing a Betasorb device for hemoperfusion. The drug concentrations before and after the passage of the cartridge were measured, and the total amount removed was calculated. Results: The sorbent showed effective removal of glycopeptide antibiotics, digoxin, theophylline, phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine, and valproic acid. Moderate removal could be demonstrated for tacrolimus and cyclosporine A; aminoglycosides were removed to a small extent only. Conclusions: Betasorb hemoperfusion shows a potent adsorptive capacity concerning therapeutic drugs (except aminoglycosides) and could be of major value in the treatment of intoxications. On the other hand, drug monitoring and possible adjustments are necessary during Betasorb hemoperfusion to maintain the therapeutic ranges of the drugs in blood. Copyright (C) 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel
Ethics of Robotic Aesthetics
This article explores the relationship between expressivity morphology and acceptance, defining the conditions that make service robots desirable by man. In the attempt to define “an ethic for robotic aesthetics”, it is discussed the evolution happened in robot design and how they where perceived by people, both in scientific community and in pop culture. The conception of robots begin with an approach strongly oriented to a biological imitation, especially anthropomorphic, conversely, nowadays, the scenario is various and robots assume a multitude of synthetic aesthetic languages and, moreover, are characterized on the base of the context. In the final part of this article, it is described, through a series of examples, the contemporary scenario in which to the multitude of languages is added also the contamination of the digital world, outlining new morphological types. One of the examples is Virgil, a service robot for Cultutal Heritage enhancement, designed by the research team JOLCRAB Telecom Italia/Politecnico di Torino
On Type-Aware Entity Retrieval
Today, the practice of returning entities from a knowledge base in response
to search queries has become widespread. One of the distinctive characteristics
of entities is that they are typed, i.e., assigned to some hierarchically
organized type system (type taxonomy). The primary objective of this paper is
to gain a better understanding of how entity type information can be utilized
in entity retrieval. We perform this investigation in an idealized "oracle"
setting, assuming that we know the distribution of target types of the relevant
entities for a given query. We perform a thorough analysis of three main
aspects: (i) the choice of type taxonomy, (ii) the representation of
hierarchical type information, and (iii) the combination of type-based and
term-based similarity in the retrieval model. Using a standard entity search
test collection based on DBpedia, we find that type information proves most
useful when using large type taxonomies that provide very specific types. We
provide further insights on the extensional coverage of entities and on the
utility of target types.Comment: Proceedings of the 3rd ACM International Conference on the Theory of
Information Retrieval (ICTIR '17), 201
Virgil Robot at Racconigi’s Castle: a Design Challenge.
This paper discusses the role of Design Research (DR) as a mediator between robotics and cultural heritage. This issue has been addressed in the project Virgil, a telepresence robot for visiting inaccessible areas of Racconigi Castle in Piedmont, Italy. A project developed applying an iterative design process that combines the traditional activities of design practice, such as product and service design, to a more theoretical and conceptual activities of DR aimed to generate a meaningful solution. Both the museum context and the state of the art of museum robotic applications have been analysed to define the ethical requirements for the development of the service. The analytical phase is followed by the design stage in which a service concept has been defined, through a process of continuous debate and co-design with various stakeholders. The process has led to the prototyping of a dedicated robot tested in the real environment with random visitors
Interaction design for cultural heritage. A robotics cultural game to visit the museum’s inaccessible areas
Nowadays many museum areas are not accessible to visitors because of issues related to security or architectural barriers. Make explorable these areas is one of the sensible topics in the cultural debate about the enhancing of the visiting experience. The paper describes the design of a roboethics activity conceived in codesign with museum stakeholders (Museum Guides, Museum Curators, Telecommunication Experts, Designers and Final Users) with the purpose to face this problem. After a first stage, in which a telepresence robot piloted by the Museum Guide it has been used a to show the inaccessible areas of the museum; it is going to be performed a second stage of the project with the scope of building a more interactive visiting experience. To satisfy this need an interactive game, it has been developed. The game is based both on the robot ability to be driven by the visitors and also on the capacity of the robot to been used as a platform for the digital storytelling.
The whole experience it has been designed and tested with the support of high school students
Rosetta: a container-centric science platform for resource-intensive, interactive data analysis
Rosetta is a science platform for resource-intensive, interactive data analysis which runs user tasks as software containers. It is built on top of a novel architecture based on framing user tasks as microservices - independent and self-contained units - which allows to fully support custom and user-defined software packages, libraries and environments. These include complete remote desktop and GUI applications, besides common analysis environments as the Jupyter Notebooks. Rosetta relies on Open Container Initiative containers, which allow for safe, effective and reproducible code execution; can use a number of container engines and runtimes; and seamlessly supports several workload management systems, thus enabling containerized workloads on a wide range of computing resources. Although developed in the astronomy and astrophysics space, Rosetta can virtually support any science and technology domain where resource-intensive, interactive data analysis is required
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