5,301 research outputs found
A novel topology for a HEMT negative current mirror
A new solution for the implementation of a HEMT negative current source is presented. The topology can be also profitably employed as a current mirror and as an active load in high-gain MMICs voltage amplifiers. A small-signal model of the proposed circuit is developed which allows to find accurate expressions for the required transfer functions (i.e., the output impedance of the current source, and the current gain of the circuit when operated as a current mirror). Design examples using Philips PML ED02AH GaAs PHEMT process are provided. Spice simulations show that a 10- kW output impedance for the current source and a 35dB voltage gain for a differential pair loaded with the proposed current mirror are easily achieved
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome in the pediatric age: the role of the dentist
Sleep disordered breathing in children designates a wide spectrum of respiratory disorders characterized by partial or complete obstruction of the upper airways. It ranges from primary snoring, its mildest clinical manifestation, to obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS): complete obstruction of the upper airways with cessation of airflow. The aim of this paper is to highlight the roles of the pediatric dentist and the orthodontist in the therapeutic approach to pediatric OSAS as a "sentinel" who can detect early signs of the disease for immediate referral to the otolaryngologist and as an active participant in therapy
Non-extensive entropy from incomplete knowledge of Shannon entropy?
In this paper we give an interpretation of Tsallis' nonextensive statistical
mechanics based upon the information-theoretic point of view of Luzzi et al.
[cond-mat/0306217; cond-mat/0306247; cond-mat/0307325], suggesting Tsallis'
entropy to be not a fundamental concept but rather a derived one, stemming from
an incomplete knowledge of the system, not taking properly into account its
interaction with the environment. This interpretation seems to avoid some
problems occurring with the original interpretation of Tsallis statistics.Comment: v.4. 11 pages. Title changed. Content substantially changed: added
discussion of several points raised by various referees and readers; Also
reference made to work by Luzzi, Vasconcellos, Galvao Ramos. Physica Scripta,
to appea
Statistical Mesoscopic Hydro-Thermodynamics: The Description of Kinetics and Hydrodynamics of Nonequilibrium Processes in Single Liquids
Hydrodynamics, a term apparently introduced by Daniel Bernoulli (1700-1783)
to comprise hydrostatic and hydraulics, has a long history with several
theoretical approaches. Here, after a descriptive introduction, we present
so-called mesoscopic hydro-thermodynamics, which is also referred to as
higher-order generalized hydrodynamics, built within the framework of a
mechanical-statistical formalism. It consists of a description of the material
and heat motion of fluids in terms of the corresponding densities and their
associated fluxes of all orders. In this way, movements are characterized in
terms of intermediate to short wavelengths and intermediate to high
frequencies. The fluxes have associated Maxwell-like times, which play an
important role in determining the appropriate contraction of the description
(of the enormous set of fluxes of all orders) necessary to address the
characterization of the motion in each experimental setup. This study is an
extension of a preliminary article: Physical Review E \textbf{91}, 063011
(2015)
Method of comparison equations for cosmological perturbations
We apply the method of comparison equations to study cosmological
perturbations during inflation, obtaining the full power spectra of scalar and
tensor perturbations to first and to second order in the slow-roll parameters.
We compare our results with those derived by means of other methods, in
particular the Green's function method and the improved WKB approximation, and
find agreement for the slow-roll structure. The method of comparison equations,
just as the improved WKB approximation, can however be applied to more general
situations where the slow-roll approximation fails.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure
Questioning the validity of non-extensive thermodynamics for classical Hamiltonian systems
We examine the non-extensive approach to the statistical mechanics of
Hamiltonian systems with where is the classical kinetic energy. Our
analysis starts from the basics of the formalism by applying the standard
variational method for maximizing the entropy subject to the average energy and
normalization constraints. The analytical results show (i) that the
non-extensive thermodynamics formalism should be called into question to
explain experimental results described by extended exponential distributions
exhibiting long tails, i.e. -exponentials with , and (ii) that in the
thermodynamic limit the theory is only consistent in the range
where the distribution has finite support, thus implying that configurations
with e.g. energy above some limit have zero probability, which is at variance
with the physics of systems in contact with a heat reservoir. We also discuss
the (-dependent) thermodynamic temperature and the generalized specific
heat.Comment: To appear in EuroPhysics Letter
- …