3,964 research outputs found

    Amélioration de la gestion des périphériques d'un système embarqué

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    At CERN, experiments must gather huge amounts of data. The Data Acquisition System of the LHCb is therefore very large, and dedicated to this task. Hundreds of TELL1 boards provide the selection of relevant data and their transfer over a local area network in order to be saved. An embedded system, the Creditcard PC, allows physicists to monitor and program the TELL1 boards. This system runs a CERN release of the Linux operating system, and provides several libraries to handle the communication with the TELL1 board. Several users can work on the same TELL1 board simultaneously. This calls for process synchronization to control the access to the devices. Tests were made progressively, from some dedicated boards to a larger assembly, and then the solution has been distributed to the all TELL1 boards and to other boards using the Creditcard PC

    G-300: The first French Getaway Special microgravity measurements of fluid thermal conductivity

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    Thermal conductivity measurements on liquids are difficult to perform on Earth because of thermal motions due to convection. In microgravity, the convection due to buoyancy is evanescent, and a strong reduction of Rayleigh and Nusselt numbers can be expected. Three low viscosity liquids are selected to carry out the measurements; distilled water (standard) and two silicone oils. A modified hot plate method with a simplified guard ring is used; the reduction of convective motions permitted the use in the experimental cells of larger interplate distances and/or temperature differences than in Earth measurements, improving the accuracy. Comparisons between Earth and orbit results may help to understand the convection occurrence in the cells. Thermal, vibrational, and EMI tests have proved that the design satisfies the NASA requirements

    Robust seismic velocity change estimation using ambient noise recordings

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    We consider the problem of seismic velocity change estimation using ambient noise recordings. Motivated by [23] we study how the velocity change estimation is affected by seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources. More precisely, we consider a numerical model and introduce spatio-temporal seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources. We show that indeed, as pointed out in [23], the stretching method is affected by these fluctuations and produces misleading apparent velocity variations which reduce dramatically the signal to noise ratio of the method. We also show that these apparent velocity variations can be eliminated by an adequate normalization of the cross-correlation functions. Theoretically we expect our approach to work as long as the seasonal fluctuations in the noise sources are uniform, an assumption which holds for closely located seismic stations. We illustrate with numerical simulations and real measurements that the proposed normalization significantly improves the accuracy of the velocity change estimation

    Actes des 9èmes journées nationales de l'étude des sols

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    Recommended practices in Latent Class Analysis using the Open-Source R-Package tidySEM

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    Latent class analysis (LCA) refers to techniques for identifying groups in data based on a parametric model. Examples include mixture models, LCA with ordinal indicators, and latent class growth analysis. Despite its popularity, there is limited guidance with respect to decisions that must be made when conducting and reporting LCA. Moreover, there is a lack of user-friendly open-source implementations. Based on contemporary academic discourse, this paper introduces recommendations for LCA which are summarized in the SMART-LCA checklist: Standards for More Accuracy in Reporting of different Types of Latent Class Analysis. The free open-source R-package package tidySEM implements the practices recommended here. It is easy for beginners to adopt thanks to user-friendly wrapper functions, and yet remains relevant for expert users as its models are integrated within the OpenMx structural equation modeling framework and remain fully customizable. The Appendices and tidySEM package vignettes include tutorial examples of common applications of LCA

    Direct evidence for ferroelectric polar distortion in ultrathin lead titanate perovskite films

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    X-ray photoelectron diffraction is used to directly probe the intra-cell polar atomic distortion and tetragonality associated with ferroelectricity in ultrathin epitaxial PbTiO3 films. Our measurements, combined with ab-initio calculations, unambiguously demonstrate non-centro-symmetry in films a few unit cells thick, imply that films as thin as 3 unit cells still preserve a ferroelectric polar distortion, and also show that there is no thick paraelectric dead layer at the surface
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