7 resultados para DOMINANT OPTIC ATROPHY

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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Fiber optic sensors have some advantages in subjects related with electrical current and magnetic field measurement. In spite of the optical fiber utilization advantages we have to take into account undesirable effects, which are present in real non-ideal optical fibers. In telecommunication and sensor application fields the presence of inherent and induced birefringence is crucial. The presence of birefringence may cause an undesirable change in the polarization state. In order to compensate the linear birefringence a promising method has been chosen. This method employs orthogonal polarization conjugation in the back propagation direction of the light wave in the fiber. A study and a simulation of an experimental setup are realized with the advantage of a significant sensitivity improvement.

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Through the use of the Distributed Fiber Optic Temperature Measurement (DFOT) method, it is possible to measure the temperature in small intervals (on the order of centimeters) for long distances (on the order of kilometers) with a high temporal frequency and great accuracy. The heat pulse method consists of applying a known amount of heat to the soil and monitoring the temperature evolution, which is primarily dependent on the soil moisture content. The use of both methods, which is called the active heat pulse method with fiber optic temperature sensing (AHFO), allows accurate soil moisture content measurements. In order to experimentally study the wetting patterns, i.e. shape, size, and the water distribution, from a drip irrigation emitter, a soil column of 0.5 m of diameter and 0.6 m high was built. Inside the column, a fiber optic cable with a stainless steel sheath was placed forming three concentric helixes of diameters 0.2 m, 0.4 m and 0.6 m, leading to a 148 measurement point network. Before, during, and after the irrigation event, heat pulses were performed supplying electrical power of 20 W/m to the steel. The soil moisture content was measured with a capacitive sensor in one location at depths of 0.1 m, 0.2 m, 0.3 m and 0.4 m during the irrigation. It was also determined by the gravimetric method in several locations and depths before and right after the irrigation. The emitter bulb dimensions and shape evolution was satisfactorily measured during infiltration. Furthermore, some bulb's characteristics difficult to predict (e.g. preferential flow) were detected. The results point out that the AHFO is a useful tool to estimate the wetting pattern of drip irrigation emitters in soil columns and show a high potential for its use in the field.

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The main problem of pedestrian dead-reckoning (PDR) using only a body-attached inertial measurement unit is the accumulation of heading errors. The heading provided by magnetometers in indoor buildings is in general not reliable and therefore it is commonly not used. Recently, a new method was proposed called heuristic drift elimination (HDE) that minimises the heading error when navigating in buildings. It assumes that the majority of buildings have their corridors parallel to each other, or they intersect at right angles, and consequently most of the time the person walks along a straight path with a heading constrained to one of the four possible directions. In this article we study the performance of HDE-based methods in complex buildings, i.e. with pathways also oriented at 45°, long curved corridors, and wide areas where non-oriented motion is possible. We explain how the performance of the original HDE method can be deteriorated in complex buildings, and also, how severe errors can appear in the case of false matches with the building's dominant directions. Although magnetic compassing indoors has a chaotic behaviour, in this article we analyse large data-sets in order to study the potential use that magnetic compassing has to estimate the absolute yaw angle of a walking person. Apart from these analysis, this article also proposes an improved HDE method called Magnetically-aided Improved Heuristic Drift Elimination (MiHDE), that is implemented over a PDR framework that uses foot-mounted inertial navigation with an extended Kalman filter (EKF). The EKF is fed with the MiHDE-estimated orientation error, gyro bias corrections, as well as the confidence over that corrections. We experimentally evaluated the performance of the proposed MiHDE-based PDR method, comparing it with the original HDE implementation. Results show that both methods perform very well in ideal orthogonal narrow-corridor buildings, and MiHDE outperforms HDE for non-ideal trajectories (e.g. curved paths) and also makes it robust against potential false dominant direction matchings.

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A new method of light modulation is reported. This method is based on the electro-optical properties of nematic materials and on the use of a new wedge structure. The advantages of this structure are the possibility of modulating nonpolarized light and the improved signal-to-noise ratio. The highest modulating frequency obtained is 25 kHz.

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Since the beginning of the smartphones in the 80s, the mobile device market has grown and evolved towards devices connected everywhere, with hardware more and more close to computers and laptops than a classic mobile telephone. Nowadays, this market seems to be crowded and some companies seem not to know exactly which step is next. In this manner, a concept appears in the market as a solution or a difficulty to overcome: the dominant design. The thesis aims to establish an analysis and definition of what a dominant design is and how we should understand this concept: which are the costumers’ demands and needs? How can we relate this information with the dominant design? What is the strategy of the firm before designing a device? Do they use a concept similar to a dominant design?. The research base its analysis in a theoretical framework based in innovation and marketing literature, to then compare the model studied with data collected from surveys made to customers, interviews made to workers of the mobile device market, and different new projects on the market. The research finishes with a discussion about the theoretical and the empirical frameworks, and concludes replying the research questions, and defining a dominant design and its current situation in the market. RESUMEN. Desde la aparición de los Smartphones en los años 80, el mercado de los dispositivos móviles ha crecido y evolucionado hacia dispositivos cada vez más conectados, con hardware cada vez más cercano a los ordenadores de sobremesa y portátiles que al clásico teléfono móvil. A día de hoy, el mercado está saturado y algunas compañías parecen dubitativas ante el próximo paso a seguir. De esta manera, el concepto del diseño dominante aparece en el mercado como una solución a esta dificultad. El primer capítulo de este estudio se centra en establecer, a modo de introducción, los antecedentes al caso a estudiar, el objetivo de la tesis con sus limitaciones y delimitaciones, así como la metodología utilizada. También se plantean las preguntas principales (Research Questions) sobre el objetivo de la tesis, las cuales darán respuesta en la conclusión final al caso de estudio. Este proyecto tiene como objetivo establecer un análisis y definición sobre que es un diseño dominante y qué deberíamos entender como tal: ¿cuáles son las necesidades y las exigencias de los clientes? ¿Cómo se puede relacionar esta información con el diseño dominante en el sector tecnológico? ¿Cuáles son las estrategias de las empresas antes de diseñar un nuevo dispositivo? ¿Usan un concepto o modelos similares a un diseño dominante? Posteriormente, el segundo capítulo expone la bibliografía utilizada, y el enfoque analítico que se llevará a cabo con las 3 principales fuentes de datos. La investigación enfoca su análisis en un marco teórico, basado en publicaciones y bibliografía relacionadas con la innovación y el marketing, para luego comparar el modelo estudiado con un marco empírico: datos obtenidos de encuestas a consumidores, entrevistas a profesionales del sector de los dispositivos móviles, y diferentes prototipos y nuevos proyectos en este mercado. Entre esta literatura se encuentran manuales de marketing como “22 Immutable laws of Marketing” (de Al Ries & Jack Trout), publicaciones sobre el sector industrial de la tecnología y negocios: “Crossing the Chasm” de Geoffrey A. Moore y modelos de innovación entre otros como “Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation” de James M. Utterback. El tercer capítulo corresponde al estudio del marco teórico de la tesis, donde se analizará principalmente el modelo de innovación utilizado (el modelo cíclico de Utterback) y varios principios de marketing aplicados a este sector. Se plantean las bases de este modelo, la definición que el propio Utterback ofrece sobre el diseño dominante, y las 3 fases del proceso del mismo (Fluid Phase, Transitional Phase y Specific Phase), donde las empresas cambian de estrategia según las circunstancias evolutivas del dispositivo, su posición respecto el líder del mercado, o los procesos de estandarización y de costes. Por último se plantea la base para el desarrollo del diseño dominante en un ciclo evolutivo constante en el tiempo. Respecto a la parte más analítica de la tesis, el cuarto capítulo se desarrolla a partir de los datos obtenidos de las fuentes de información en el marco empírico de estudio. Se obtienen conclusiones sobre los datos realizados en ambas encuestas (en Español e Inglés) y sobre la relevancia de esta información; se estudian uno por uno hasta cuatro casos de nuevos dispositivos a corto-medio plazo en el mercado y se obtienen unas conclusiones globales sobre las entrevistas realizadas a los profesionales del sector y la relevancia de todas estas informaciones. En el quinto capítulo de la tesis se desarrolla la discusión en torno a los marcos teórico y empírico utilizados, para concluir respondiendo a las “Research Questions”, definiendo de esta manera el concepto de diseño dominante y comparando esta definición con la situación real del mercado. Se contrastan las bases del modelo de Utterback con los datos obtenidos en el capítulo cuarto, enfatizando la comparación entre las fases de este modelo con la realidad obtenida a través del estudio. Las encuestas realizadas a los consumidores se enmarcan en la segunda y tercera fase del ciclo, donde el desarrollo del diseño dominante ya está establecido y más desarrollado, mientras que las entrevistas unifican varios puntos clave a tener en cuenta en la primera y segunda fases, orientándose a las capas previas del proceso. Después se comparan uno a uno los 4 dispositivos analizados, a fin de establecer su jerarquía dentro del mercado, como posibles nuevos diseños dominantes o evoluciones especializadas de otros que ya aparecieron en el mercado con anterioridad. Así mismo, en esta parte final del estudio se comparan entre sí los resultados similares entre las tres fuentes de datos, y se analiza la veracidad de todas las fuentes consultadas. Finalmente, se han registrado en un sexto capítulo todas las referencias utilizadas en este proyecto, tanto publicaciones bibliográficas, entrevistas, citas de personajes relevantes del sector y enlaces en la red sobre noticias relevantes. En el apartado de apéndices se adjuntan tres anexos, donde se adjunta información utilizada en el caso de estudio, y la cual se ha obviado del texto principal con el objetivo de agilizar la lectura y la comprensión del mismo. Estos tres apéndices corresponden a las dos encuestas realizadas en ambos idiomas y la entrevista realizada a los profesionales del sector de los dispositivos móviles.

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The first feasibility study of using dual-probe heated fiber optics with distributed temperature sensing to measure soil volumetric heat capacity and soil water content is presented. Although results using different combinations of cables demonstrate feasibility, further work is needed to gain accuracy, including a model to account for the finite dimension and the thermal influence of the probes. Implementation of the dual-probe heat-pulse (DPHP) approach for measurement of volumetric heat capacity (C) and water content (θ) with distributed temperature sensing heated fiber optic (FO) systems presents an unprecedented opportunity for environmental monitoring (e.g., simultaneous measurement at thousands of points). We applied uniform heat pulses along a FO cable and monitored the thermal response at adjacent cables. We tested the DPHP method in the laboratory using multiple FO cables at a range of spacings. The amplitude and phase shift in the heat signal with distance was found to be a function of the soil volumetric heat capacity. Estimations of C at a range of moisture contents (θ = 0.09– 0.34 m3 m−3) suggest the feasibility of measurement via responsiveness to the changes in θ, although we observed error with decreasing soil water contents (up to 26% at θ = 0.09 m3 m−3). Optimization will require further models to account for the finite radius and thermal influence of the FO cables. Although the results indicate that the method shows great promise, further study is needed to quantify the effects of soil type, cable spacing, and jacket configurations on accuracy.

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The Actively Heated Fiber Optic (AHFO) method is shown to be capable of measuring soil water content several times per hour at 0.25 m spacing along cables of multiple kilometers in length. AHFO is based on distributed temperature sensing (DTS) observation of the heating and cooling of a buried fiber-optic cable resulting from an electrical impulse of energy delivered from the steel cable jacket. The results presented were collected from 750 m of cable buried in three 240 m colocated transects at 30, 60, and 90 cm depths in an agricultural field under center pivot irrigation. The calibration curve relating soil water content to the thermal response of the soil to a heat pulse of 10 W m−1 for 1 min duration was developed in the lab. This calibration was found applicable to the 30 and 60 cm depth cables, while the 90 cm depth cable illustrated the challenges presented by soil heterogeneity for this technique. This method was used to map with high resolution the variability of soil water content and fluxes induced by the nonuniformity of water application at the surface.