3 resultados para Random Pulse Width Modulation, Random Band Hysteresis Current Control, AC Motor Drives

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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The mathematical underpinning of the pulse width modulation (PWM) technique lies in the attempt to represent “accurately” harmonic waveforms using only square forms of a fixed height. The accuracy can be measured using many norms, but the quality of the approximation of the analog signal (a harmonic form) by a digital one (simple pulses of a fixed high voltage level) requires the elimination of high order harmonics in the error term. The most important practical problem is in “accurate” reproduction of sine-wave using the same number of pulses as the number of high harmonics eliminated. We describe in this paper a complete solution of the PWM problem using Padé approximations, orthogonal polynomials, and solitons. The main result of the paper is the characterization of discrete pulses answering the general PWM problem in terms of the manifold of all rational solutions to Korteweg-de Vries equations.

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The biochemistry of visual excitation is kinetically explored by measuring the activity of the cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) at light levels that activate only a few tens of rhodopsin molecules per rod. At 23 degrees C and in the presence of ATP, the pulse of PDE activity lasts 4 s (full width at half maximum). Complementing the rod outer segments (ROS) with rhodopsin kinase (RK) and arrestin or its splice variant p44 does not significantly shorten the pulse. But when the ROS are washed, the duration of the signal doubles. Adding either arrestin or p44 back to washed ROS approximately restores the pulse width to its initial value, with p44 being 10 times more efficient than arrestin. This supports the idea that, in vivo, capping of phosphorylated R* is mostly done by p44. When myristoylated (14:0) recoverin is added to unwashed ROS, the pulse duration and amplitude increase by about 50% if the free calcium is 500 nM. This effect increases further if the calcium is raised to 1 microM. Whenever R* deactivation is changed--when RK is exogenously enriched or when ATP is omitted from the buffer--there is no impact on the rising slope of the PDE pulse but only on its amplitude and duration. We explain this effect as due to the unequal competition between transducin and RK for R*. The kinetic model issued from this idea fits the data well, and its prediction that enrichment with transducin should lengthen the PDE pulse is successfully validated.

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Divalent cations are thought essential for motile function of leukocytes in general, and for the function of critical adhesion molecules in particular. In the current study, under direct microscopic observation with concomitant time-lapse video recording, we examined the effects of 10 mM EDTA on locomotion of human blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). In very thin slide preparations, EDTA did not impair either random locomotion or chemotaxis; motile behavior appeared to benefit from the close approximation of slide and coverslip (“chimneying”). In preparations twice as thick, PMN in EDTA first exhibited active deformability with little or no displacement, then rounded up and became motionless. However, on creation of a chemotactic gradient, the same cells were able to orient and make their way to the target, often, however, losing momentarily their purchase on the substrate. In either of these preparations without EDTA, specific antibodies to β2 integrins did not prevent random locomotion or chemotaxis, even when we added antibodies to β1 and αvβ3 integrins and to integrin-associated protein, and none of these antibodies added anything to the effects of EDTA. In the more turbulent environment of even more media, effects of anti-β2 integrins became evident: PMN still could locomote but adhered to substrate largely by their uropods and by uropod-associated filaments. We relate these findings to the reported independence from integrins of PMN in certain experimental and disease states. Moreover, we suggest that PMN locomotion in close quarters is not only integrin-independent, but independent of external divalent cations as well.