1,612 research outputs found
Microscopic thickness determination of thin graphite films formed on SiC from quantized oscillation in reflectivity of low-energy electrons
Low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM) was used to measure the reflectivity of
low-energy electrons from graphitized SiC(0001). The reflectivity shows
distinct quantized oscillations as a function of the electron energy and
graphite thickness. Conduction bands in thin graphite films form discrete
energy levels whose wave vectors are normal to the surface. Resonance of the
incident electrons with these quantized conduction band states enhances
electrons to transmit through the film into the SiC substrate, resulting in
dips in the reflectivity. The dip positions are well explained using
tight-binding and first-principles calculations. The graphite thickness
distribution can be determined microscopically from LEEM reflectivity
measurements.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Acoustic Control of an Impinging Planar Jet upon a Wedge
Active control of an impinging jet upon a wedge has been attempted using a sinusoidal excitation of blowing and sucking at the jet exit. The excitation sufficiently enables 'phase-lock', which is synchronization between self-oscillating flow and the excitation, so that hot-wire measurements directly provide phase averaged flow fields and they illustrate appearance of the jet swing in front of the wedge and collision of the jet on one of side of the wedge. It was demonstrated that this control set up is practical not only for illustration of the phase averaged flow field but also for reduction of the edge tone due to the flow oscillation with inverse phase excitation in half of the jet.ArticleJournal of Fluid Science and Technology. 3(2):274-281 (2008)journal articl
Multiscale Kinetic Monte-Carlo for Simulating Epitaxial Growth
We present a fast Monte-Carlo algorithm for simulating epitaxial surface
growth, based on the continuous-time Monte-Carlo algorithm of Bortz, Kalos and
Lebowitz. When simulating realistic growth regimes, much computational time is
consumed by the relatively fast dynamics of the adatoms. Continuum and
continuum-discrete hybrid methods have been developed to approach this issue;
however in many situations, the density of adatoms is too low to efficiently
and accurately simulate as a continuum. To solve the problem of fast adatom
dynamics, we allow adatoms to take larger steps, effectively reducing the
number of transitions required. We achieve nearly a factor of ten speed up, for
growth at moderate temperatures and large D/F.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures; revised text, accepted by PR
Improved crystal-growth and emission gain-narrowing of thiophene/phenylene co-oligomers
ArticleADVANCED MATERIALS. 15(3): 213-217(2003)journal articl
OCT Volumetric Data Restoration with Latent Distribution of Refractive Index
Fujii G., Yoshida Y., Muramatsu S., et al. OCT Volumetric Data Restoration with Latent Distribution of Refractive Index. Proceedings - International Conference on Image Processing, ICIP 2019-September, 764 (2019); https://doi.org/10.1109/ICIP.2019.8803737.This work proposes a novel restoration model for optical coherence tomography (OCT) data. The authors have been developing a multi-frequency swept (MS) en-face OCT device that can help understand the mechanism of the sensory epithelium in the cochlear. Although the device has merit in acquiring moving tissues, the broadened light gives a weak response; thus, some signal restorations are demanded. This work proposes the introduction of a formulation for OCT data restoration as a convex optimization problem by assuming a latent refractive index distribution. An algorithm to solve the problem with the primal-dual splitting (PDS) framework is then derived. The PDS has an advantage of requiring no inverse matrix operation and being able to handle high-dimensional data. The significance of the proposed model is verified by simulations on artificial data, followed by an experiment with the actual observation of 256 256 2000 voxels
A comparison of CMB- and HLA-based approaches to type I interoperability reference model problems for COTS-based distributed simulation
Commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) simulation packages (CSPs) are software used by many simulation modellers to build and experiment with models of various systems in domains such as manufacturing, health, logistics and commerce. COTS distributed simulation deals with the interoperation of CSPs and their models. Such interoperability has been classified into six interoperability reference models. As part of an on-going standardisation effort, this paper introduces the COTS Simulation Package Emulator, a proposed benchmark that can be used to investigate Type I interoperability problems in COTS distributed simulation. To demonstrate its use, two approaches to this form of interoperability are discussed, an implementation of the CMB conservative algorithm, an example of a so-called “light” approach, and an implementation of the HLA TAR algorithm, an example of a so-called “heavy” approach. Results from experimentation over four federation topologies are presented and it is shown the HLA approach out performs the CMB approach in almost all cases. The paper concludes that the CSPE benchmark is a valid basis from which the most efficient approach to Type I interoperability problems for COTS distributed simulation can be discovered
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