150,162 research outputs found
The design and development of a constant-speed solar array drive
The design and development of a constant-speed solar array drive system for use in high power communications satellites is described. The relationship between continuity of motion in the solar array drive and spacecraft attitude disturbance is investigated. The selection of the system design based on the design requirements including spacecraft disturbance is discussed. The system comprises two main parts: the drive mechanism including small angle stepper motor and reduction gearing and the control electronics including ministepping drive circuits, such that a very small output step size is achieved. Factors contributing to discontinuities in motion are identified and discussed. Test methods for measurement of very small amplitudes of discontinuity at low rotational rates are described to assist in the testing of similar mechanisms
An Anthropological Perspective on Magistrate Jelderks’ Kennewick Man Decision
The “Kennewick Man” controversy is an extremely important case in the history of American anthropology. As anthropologists with backgrounds in American Indian studies and American archaeology, we have a particular interest in this case. In this paper we present our perspective on the Kennewick Man case as anthropologists with expertise in archaeology, Pacific Northwest precontact history, Plateau ethnology, and cultural resource law. In general we find that the August 30, 2000, decision of Magistrate John Jelderks of the United States District Court for the district of Oregon to be incorrect and without anthropological foundation. Based on an analysis of the evidence reviewed by the Department of the Interior and Magistrate Jelderks we conclude that the Department of the
Interior made a reasonable decision in determining that a preponderance of the evidence supports repatriation of
the Kennewick Man to the defendants
High Gradient Superconducting Cavity with Low Surface EM Fields and Well-Suppressed HOMS for the ILC
We present an optimized geometry for a 1.3 GHz superconducting cavity in
which the surface electromagnetic fields have been minimized and the bandwidth
of the fundamental mode has been maximized. We refer to this design as the New
Low Surface Field (NLSF) cavity. Earlier work focused on properties of the
fundamental mode. Here we additionally study higher order modes (HOMs), means
of damping them, and short range wake fields. A two-band circuit model is
employed in order to facilitate rapid characterization of cavity HOMs.Comment: Presented at First International Particle Accelerator Conference,
IPAC'10, Kyoto, Japan, from 23 to 28 May 201
Fisher Hartwig determinants, conformal field theory and universality in generalised XX models
We discuss certain quadratic models of spinless fermions on a 1D lattice, and
their corresponding spin chains. These were studied by Keating and Mezzadri in
the context of their relation to the Haar measures of the classical compact
groups. We show how these models correspond to translation invariant models on
an infinite or semi-infinite chain, which in the simplest case reduce to the
familiar XX model. We give physical context to mathematical results for the
entanglement entropy, and calculate the spin-spin correlation functions using
the Fisher-Hartwig conjecture. These calculations rigorously demonstrate
universality in classes of these models. We show that these are in agreement
with field theoretic and renormalization group arguments that we provide
Stability and Performance Verification of Optimization-based Controllers
This paper presents a method to verify closed-loop properties of
optimization-based controllers for deterministic and stochastic constrained
polynomial discrete-time dynamical systems. The closed-loop properties amenable
to the proposed technique include global and local stability, performance with
respect to a given cost function (both in a deterministic and stochastic
setting) and the gain. The method applies to a wide range of
practical control problems: For instance, a dynamical controller (e.g., a PID)
plus input saturation, model predictive control with state estimation, inexact
model and soft constraints, or a general optimization-based controller where
the underlying problem is solved with a fixed number of iterations of a
first-order method are all amenable to the proposed approach.
The approach is based on the observation that the control input generated by
an optimization-based controller satisfies the associated Karush-Kuhn-Tucker
(KKT) conditions which, provided all data is polynomial, are a system of
polynomial equalities and inequalities. The closed-loop properties can then be
analyzed using sum-of-squares (SOS) programming
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