43,712 research outputs found
Predicting real-time roadside CO and NO2 concentrations using neural networks
The main aim of this paper is to develop a model based on neural network (NN) theory to estimate real-time roadside CO and concentrations using traffic and meteorological condition data. The location of the study site is at a road intersection in Melton Mowbray, which is a town in Leicestershire, U.K. Several NNs, which can be classified into three types, namely, the multilayer perceptron, the radial basis function, and the modular network, were developed to model the nonlinear relationships that exist in the pollutant concentrations. Their performances are analyzed and compared. The transferability of the developed models is studied using data collected from a road intersection in another city. It was concluded that all NNs provide reliable estimates of pollutant concentrations using limited information and noisy data
Predicting real-time roadside CO and NO2 concentrations using neural networks
The main aim of this paper is to develop a model based on neural network (NN) theory to estimate real-time roadside CO and concentrations using traffic and meteorological condition data. The location of the study site is at a road intersection in Melton Mowbray, which is a town in Leicestershire, U.K. Several NNs, which can be classified into three types, namely, the multilayer perceptron, the radial basis function, and the modular network, were developed to model the nonlinear relationships that exist in the pollutant concentrations. Their performances are analyzed and compared. The transferability of the developed models is studied using data collected from a road intersection in another city. It was concluded that all NNs provide reliable estimates of pollutant concentrations using limited information and noisy data
Thermodynamics of self-gravitating systems
Self-gravitating systems are expected to reach a statistical equilibrium
state either through collisional relaxation or violent collisionless
relaxation. However, a maximum entropy state does not always exist and the
system may undergo a ``gravothermal catastrophe'': it can achieve ever
increasing values of entropy by developing a dense and hot ``core'' surrounded
by a low density ``halo''. In this paper, we study the phase transition between
``equilibrium'' states and ``collapsed'' states with the aid of a simple
relaxation equation [Chavanis, Sommeria and Robert, Astrophys. J. 471, 385
(1996)] constructed so as to increase entropy with an optimal rate while
conserving mass and energy. With this numerical algorithm, we can cover the
whole bifurcation diagram in parameter space and check, by an independent
method, the stability limits of Katz [Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc. 183, 765 (1978)]
and Padmanabhan [Astrophys. J. Supp. 71, 651 (1989)]. When no equilibrium state
exists, our relaxation equation develops a self-similar collapse leading to a
finite time singularity.Comment: 54 pages. 25 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Disentanglement by Dissipative Open System Dynamics
This paper investigates disentanglement as a result of evolution according to
a class of master equations which include dissipation and interparticle
interactions. Generalizing an earlier result of Di\'{o}si, the time taken for
complete disentanglement is calculated (i.e. for disentanglement from any other
system). The dynamics of two harmonically coupled oscillators is solved in
order to study the competing effects of environmental noise and interparticle
coupling on disentanglement. An argument based on separability conditions for
gaussian states is used to arrive at a set of conditions on the couplings
sufficient for all initial states to disentangle for good after a finite time.Comment: Paper in conjunction with and following on from P.J. Dodd and J.J.
Halliwell: quant-ph/031206
Implementation of the 64-meter-diameter Antennas at the Deep Space Stations in Australia and Spain
The management and construction aspects of the Overseas 64-m Antenna Project in which two 64-m antennas were constructed at the Tidbinbilla Deep Space Communications Complex in Australia, and at the Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex in Spain are described. With the completion of these antennas the Deep Space Network is equipped with three 64-m antennas spaced around the world to maintain continuous coverage of spacecraft operations. These antennas provide approximately a 7-db gain over the capabilities of the existing 26-m antenna nets. The report outlines the project organization and management, resource utilization, fabrication, quality assurance, and construction methods by which the project was successfully completed. Major problems and their solutions are described as well as recommendations for future projects
A note on heat and mass transfer from a sphere in Stokes\ud flow at low Péclet number
We consider the low Péclet number, Pe ≪ 1, asymptotic solution for steady-state heat and mass transfer from a sphere immersed in Stokes flow with a Robin boundary condition on its surface, representing Newton cooling or a first-order chemical reaction. The application of van Dyke’s rule up to terms of O(Pe3) shows that the O(Pe3 log Pe) terms in the expression for the average Nusselt/Sherwood number are double those previously derived in the literature. Inclusion of the O(Pe3) terms is shown to increase significantly the range of validity of the expansion
Anomalous diffusion and collapse of self-gravitating Langevin particles in D dimensions
We address the generalized thermodynamics and the collapse of a system of
self-gravitating Langevin particles exhibiting anomalous diffusion in a space
of dimension D. The equilibrium states correspond to polytropic distributions.
The index n of the polytrope is related to the exponent of anomalous diffusion.
We consider a high-friction limit and reduce the problem to the study of the
nonlinear Smoluchowski-Poisson system. We show that the associated Lyapunov
functional is the Tsallis free energy. We discuss in detail the equilibrium
phase diagram of self-gravitating polytropes as a function of D and n and
determine their stability by using turning points arguments and analytical
methods. When no equilibrium state exists, we investigate self-similar
solutions describing the collapse. These results can be relevant for
astrophysical systems, two-dimensional vortices and for the chemotaxis of
bacterial populations. Above all, this model constitutes a prototypical
dynamical model of systems with long-range interactions which possesses a rich
structure and which can be studied in great detail.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Why Quantum Theory is Possibly Wrong
Quantum theory is a tremendously successful physical theory, but nevertheless
suffers from two serious problems: the measurement problem and the problem of
interpretational underdetermination. The latter, however, is largely overlooked
as a genuine problem of its own. Both problems concern the doctrine of realism,
but pull, quite curiously, into opposite directions. The measurement problem
can be captured such that due to scientific realism about quantum theory common
sense anti-realism follows, while theory underdetermination usually counts as
an argument against scientific realism. I will also consider the more refined
distinctions of ontic and epistemic realism and demonstrate that quantum theory
in its most viable interpretations conflicts with at least one of the various
realism claims. A way out of the conundrum is to come to the bold conclusion
that quantum theory is, possibly, wrong (in the realist sense)
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