583 research outputs found
Projector Light Control And Fuzzy Based Control For EDOC In Electric Vehicle For Two Wheelers
Projector light control mainly focus on the battery management in an e-vehicle. This provides a long time journey without any unnecessary wastage of the battery. This may be used in all sort of e-vehicle. The system can replace the hardware components of the Electric vehicles in Two wheelers and does not need extra equipment. The size and volume EDOC is reducedTo control electric drive onboard converter (EDOC) using Fuzzy in the DC (battery) side. To automate the projector light in an E-vehicle for two wheeler to reduce the battery consumptio
Quasi-infra-red fixed points and renormalisation group invariant trajectories for non-holomorphic soft supersymmetry breaking
In the MSSM the quasi-infra-red fixed point for the top-quark Yukawa coupling
gives rise to specific predictions for the soft-breaking parameters. We discuss
the extent to which these predictions are modified by the introduction of
additional ``non-holomorphic'' soft-breaking terms. We also show that in a
specific class of theories there exists an RG-invariant trajectory for the
``non-holomorphic'' terms, which can be understood using a holomorphic spurion
term.Comment: 24 pages, TeX, two figures. Uses Harvmac (big) and epsf. Minor errors
corrected, and the RG trajectory explained in terms of a holomorphic spurion
ter
Load Balanced Demand Distribution under Overload Penalties
Input to the Load Balanced Demand Distribution (LBDD) consists of the
following: (a) a set of public service centers (e.g., schools); (b) a set of
demand (people) units and; (c) a cost matrix containing the cost of assignment
for all demand unit-service center pairs. In addition, each service center is
also associated with a notion of capacity and a penalty which is incurred if it
gets overloaded. Given the input, the LBDD problem determines a mapping from
the set of demand units to the set of service centers. The objective is to
determine a mapping that minimizes the sum of the following two terms: (i) the
total assignment cost between demand units and their allotted service centers
and, (ii) total of penalties incurred. The problem of LBDD finds its
application in the domain of urban planning. An instance of the LBDD problem
can be reduced to an instance of the min-cost bi-partite matching problem.
However, this approach cannot scale up to the real world large problem
instances. The current state of the art related to LBDD makes simplifying
assumptions such as infinite capacity or total capacity being equal to the
total demand. This paper proposes a novel allotment subspace re-adjustment
based approach (ASRAL) for the LBDD problem. We analyze ASRAL theoretically and
present its asymptotic time complexity. We also evaluate ASRAL experimentally
on large problem instances and compare with alternative approaches. Our results
indicate that ASRAL is able to scale-up while maintaining significantly better
solution quality over the alternative approaches. In addition, we also extend
ASRAL to para-ASRAL which uses the GPU and CPU cores to speed-up the execution
while maintaining the same solution quality as ASRAL.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2009.0176
A Radial Flow Microfluidic Device for UltraâHighâThroughput AffinityâBased Isolation of Circulating Tumor Cells
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110045/1/smll201400719.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110045/2/smll201400719-sup-0001-S1.pd
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Optogenetic Delay of Status Epilepticus Onset in an In Vivo Rodent Epilepsy Model
Epilepsy is a devastating disease, currently treated with medications, surgery or electrical stimulation. None of these approaches is totally effective and our ability to control seizures remains limited and complicated by frequent side effects. The emerging revolutionary technique of optogenetics enables manipulation of the activity of specific neuronal populations in vivo with exquisite spatiotemporal resolution using light. We used optogenetic approaches to test the role of hippocampal excitatory neurons in the lithium-pilocarpine model of acute elicited seizures in awake behaving rats. Hippocampal pyramidal neurons were transduced in vivo with a virus carrying an enhanced halorhodopsin (eNpHR), a yellow light activated chloride pump, and acute seizure progression was then monitored behaviorally and electrophysiologically in the presence and absence of illumination delivered via an optical fiber. Inhibition of those neurons with illumination prior to seizure onset significantly delayed electrographic and behavioral initiation of status epilepticus, and altered the dynamics of ictal activity development. These results reveal an essential role of hippocampal excitatory neurons in this model of ictogenesis and illustrate the power of optogenetic approaches for elucidation of seizure mechanisms. This early success in controlling seizures also suggests future therapeutic avenues
The toll-like receptor 3 pathway in homeostasis, responses to injury and wound repair
In addition to their established roles in host defence, Toll-like Receptors (TLRs) have emerging roles in control of homeostasis, injury and wound repair. The dsRNA-sensing receptor, TLR3, has been particularly implicated in such processes in several different tissues including the skin, intestine and liver, as well as in the control of reparative mechanisms in the brain, heart and kidneys, following ischemia reperfusion injury. In this review, we provide an overview of TLR3 signalling and functions in inflammation, tissue damage and repair processes, as well as therapeutic opportunities that may arise in the future from knowledge of such pathways
Popular Culture, Radical Egalitarianism, and Formations of Muslim Selfhood in South Asia
In early twentieth century leftist politics on the geographical fringes of South Asia, Islam played a major role. Were activists in these movements leftist despite their understandings of Islam, or because of them? This essay introduces the project represented in the essays of this special section of South Asian History and Culture, as well as the essays that will appear in a complementary section in a subsequent issue this year. The editors of this project reconstruct a conversation on surprising resonances in subaltern sources in Pashto and Bengali of early twentieth-century grassroots indigenous traditions of radical Muslim egalitarianism. What should we make of these resonances? Building on Latin American decolonisation theory in the wake of Subaltern Studies, we introduce a series of articles that together illustrate what Ramon Grosfoguel calls a âpluriverseâ of perspectives on the ethical self: some rooted in the local lifeworlds of Bengal and some in the Afghan borderland; all interlinked through a series of âmiddle actorsâ. In so doing, we excavate some dense but hidden two-way traffic between subaltern worlds of Muslim piety and devotion on two distant ends of South Asia, and all-India, international or cosmopolitan politics. These together helped constitute a surprising amount of what we know as the South Asian left, from what are usually seen as its geographical, social, and especially intellectual peripheries
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