395 research outputs found
Horologium II: a Second Ultra-faint Milky Way Satellite in the Horologium Constellation
We report the discovery of a new ultra-faint Milky Way satellite candidate,
Horologium II, detected in the Dark Energy Survey Y1A1 public data. Horologium
II features a half light radius of pc and a total luminosity of
that place it in the realm of ultra-faint dwarf
galaxies on the size-luminosity plane. The stellar population of the new
satellite is consistent with an old ( Gyr) and metal-poor
([Fe/H]) isochrone at a distance modulus of , or
a heliocentric distance of kpc, in the color-magnitude diagram.
Horologium II has a distance similar to the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy
( kpc) and the recently reported ultra-faint satellites Eridanus III
( kpc) and Horologium I ( kpc). All four satellites are well
aligned on the sky, which suggests a possible common origin. As Sculptor is
moving on a retrograde orbit within the Vast Polar Structure when compared to
the other classical MW satellite galaxies including the Magellanic Clouds, this
hypothesis can be tested once proper motion measurements become available.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJL.
(w.r.t. v1: figures updated; minor changes throughout the text
Human Motor Control and the Design and Control of Backdriveable Actuators for Human-Robot Interaction
The design of the control and hardware systems for a robot intended for interaction with a human user can profit from a critical analysis of the human neuromotor system and human biomechanics. The primary observation to be made about the human control and ``hardware’’ systems is that they work well together, perhaps because they were designed for each other. Despite the limited force production and elasticity of muscle, and despite slow information transmission, the sensorimotor system is adept at an impressive range of motor behaviors. In this thesis I present three explorations on the manners in which the human and hardware systems work together, hoping to inform the design of robots suitable for human-robot interaction.
First, I used the serial reaction time (SRT) task with cuing from lights and motorized keys to assess the relative contribution of visual and haptic stimuli to the formation of motor and perceptual memories. Motorized keys were used to deliver brief pulse-like displacements to the resting fingers, with the expectation that the proximity and similarity of these cues to the response motor actions (finger-activated key-presses) would strengthen the motor memory trace in particular. Error rate results demonstrate that haptic cues promote motor learning over perceptual learning.
The second exploration involves the design of an actuator specialized for human-robot interaction. Like muscle, it features series elasticity and thus displays good backdrivability. The elasticity arises from the use of a compressible fluid while hinged rigid plates are used to convert fluid power into mechanical power. I also propose impedance control with dynamics compensation to further reduce the driving-point impedance. The controller is robust to all kinds of uncertainties.
The third exploration involves human control in interaction with the environment. I propose a framework that accommodates delays and does not require an explicit model of the musculoskeletal system and environment. Instead, loads from the biomechanics and coupled environment are estimated using the relationship between the motor command and its responses. Delays inherent in sensory feedback are accommodated by taking the form of the Smith predictor. Agreements between simulation results and empirical movements suggests that the framework is viable.PhDMechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/120675/1/gloryn_1.pd
A hero's little horse: discovery of a dissolving star cluster in Pegasus
We report the discovery of an ultra-faint stellar system in the constellation of Pegasus. This concentration of stars
was detected by applying our overdensity detection algorithm to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 10
and confirmed with deeper photometry from the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) at the 4 m Blanco telescope. The
best-fitting model isochrone indicates that this stellar system, Kim 1, features an old (12 Gyr) and metal-poor
([Fe/H] ∼ −1.7) stellar population at a heliocentric distance of 19.8 ± 0.9 kpc. We measure a half-light radius of
6.9 ± 0.6 pc using a Plummer profile. The small physical size and the extremely low luminosity are comparable
to the faintest known star clusters Segue 3, Koposov 1 and 2, and Munoz 1. However, Kim 1 exhibits a lower ˜
star concentration and is lacking a well-defined center. It also has an unusually high ellipticity and irregular outer
isophotes, which suggests that we are seeing an intermediate mass star cluster being stripped by the Galactic
tidal field. An extended search for evidence of an associated stellar stream within the 3 deg2 DECam field remains
inconclusive. The finding of Kim 1 is consistent with current overdensity detection limits and supports the hypothesis
that there are still a substantial number of extreme low-luminosity star clusters undetected in the wider Milky
Way halo
Local object crop collision network for efficient simulation of non-convex objects in GPU-based simulators
Our goal is to develop an efficient contact detection algorithm for
large-scale GPU-based simulation of non-convex objects. Current GPU-based
simulators such as IsaacGym and Brax must trade-off speed with fidelity,
generality, or both when simulating non-convex objects. Their main issue lies
in contact detection (CD): existing CD algorithms, such as
Gilbert-Johnson-Keerthi (GJK), must trade off their computational speed with
accuracy which becomes expensive as the number of collisions among non-convex
objects increases. We propose a data-driven approach for CD, whose accuracy
depends only on the quality and quantity of offline dataset rather than online
computation time. Unlike GJK, our method inherently has a uniform computational
flow, which facilitates efficient GPU usage based on advanced compilers such as
XLA (Accelerated Linear Algebra). Further, we offer a data-efficient solution
by learning the patterns of colliding local crop object shapes, rather than
global object shapes which are harder to learn. We demonstrate our approach
improves the efficiency of existing CD methods by a factor of 5-10 for
non-convex objects with comparable accuracy. Using the previous work on contact
resolution for a neural-network-based contact detector, we integrate our CD
algorithm into the open-source GPU-based simulator, Brax, and show that we can
improve the efficiency over IsaacGym and generality over standard Brax. We
highly recommend the videos of our simulator included in the supplementary
materials.Comment: RSS 2023 https://sites.google.com/view/locc-rss2023/hom
Improving Cross-Modal Retrieval with Set of Diverse Embeddings
Cross-modal retrieval across image and text modalities is a challenging task
due to its inherent ambiguity: An image often exhibits various situations, and
a caption can be coupled with diverse images. Set-based embedding has been
studied as a solution to this problem. It seeks to encode a sample into a set
of different embedding vectors that capture different semantics of the sample.
In this paper, we present a novel set-based embedding method, which is distinct
from previous work in two aspects. First, we present a new similarity function
called smooth-Chamfer similarity, which is designed to alleviate the side
effects of existing similarity functions for set-based embedding. Second, we
propose a novel set prediction module to produce a set of embedding vectors
that effectively captures diverse semantics of input by the slot attention
mechanism. Our method is evaluated on the COCO and Flickr30K datasets across
different visual backbones, where it outperforms existing methods including
ones that demand substantially larger computation at inference.Comment: Accepted to CVPR 2023 (Highlight
A new butterfly-shaped chaotic attractor
AbstractIn this paper, a new chaotic system is proposed that consists of six terms including one multiplier and one quadratic term. The characteristics of this system are examined by theoretical and numerical analysis, such as equilibria, their stabilities, Lyapunov exponents and Lyapunov dimension, dissipativity, as well as, Poincaré maps, bifurcations, waveforms, power spectrums are performed. In addition, the forming mechanisms of compound structures of the new chaotic attractor are investigated
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