30 resultados para Non-Archimedean Real Closed Fields
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
In this thesis, a tube-based Distributed Economic Predictive Control (DEPC) scheme is presented for a group of dynamically coupled linear subsystems. These subsystems are components of a large scale system and control inputs are computed based on optimizing a local economic objective. Each subsystem is interacting with its neighbors by sending its future reference trajectory, at each sampling time. It solves a local optimization problem in parallel, based on the received future reference trajectories of the other subsystems. To ensure recursive feasibility and a performance bound, each subsystem is constrained to not deviate too much from its communicated reference trajectory. This difference between the plan trajectory and the communicated one is interpreted as a disturbance on the local level. Then, to ensure the satisfaction of both state and input constraints, they are tightened by considering explicitly the effect of these local disturbances. The proposed approach averages over all possible disturbances, handles tightened state and input constraints, while satisfies the compatibility constraints to guarantee that the actual trajectory lies within a certain bound in the neighborhood of the reference one. Each subsystem is optimizing a local arbitrary economic objective function in parallel while considering a local terminal constraint to guarantee recursive feasibility. In this framework, economic performance guarantees for a tube-based distributed predictive control (DPC) scheme are developed rigorously. It is presented that the closed-loop nominal subsystem has a robust average performance bound locally which is no worse than that of a local robust steady state. Since a robust algorithm is applying on the states of the real (with disturbances) subsystems, this bound can be interpreted as an average performance result for the real closed-loop system. To this end, we present our outcomes on local and global performance, illustrated by a numerical example.
Resumo:
We give a brief review of the Functional Renormalization method in quantum field theory, which is intrinsically non perturbative, in terms of both the Polchinski equation for the Wilsonian action and the Wetterich equation for the generator of the proper verteces. For the latter case we show a simple application for a theory with one real scalar field within the LPA and LPA' approximations. For the first case, instead, we give a covariant "Hamiltonian" version of the Polchinski equation which consists in doing a Legendre transform of the flow for the corresponding effective Lagrangian replacing arbitrary high order derivative of fields with momenta fields. This approach is suitable for studying new truncations in the derivative expansion. We apply this formulation for a theory with one real scalar field and, as a novel result, derive the flow equations for a theory with N real scalar fields with the O(N) internal symmetry. Within this new approach we analyze numerically the scaling solutions for N=1 in d=3 (critical Ising model), at the leading order in the derivative expansion with an infinite number of couplings, encoded in two functions V(phi) and Z(phi), obtaining an estimate for the quantum anomalous dimension with a 10% accuracy (confronting with Monte Carlo results).
Resumo:
The recent years have witnessed increased development of small, autonomous fixed-wing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). In order to unlock widespread applicability of these platforms, they need to be capable of operating under a variety of environmental conditions. Due to their small size, low weight, and low speeds, they require the capability of coping with wind speeds that are approaching or even faster than the nominal airspeed. In this thesis, a nonlinear-geometric guidance strategy is presented, addressing this problem. More broadly, a methodology is proposed for the high-level control of non-holonomic unicycle-like vehicles in the presence of strong flowfields (e.g. winds, underwater currents) which may outreach the maximum vehicle speed. The proposed strategy guarantees convergence to a safe and stable vehicle configuration with respect to the flowfield, while preserving some tracking performance with respect to the target path. As an alternative approach, an algorithm based on Model Predictive Control (MPC) is developed, and a comparison between advantages and disadvantages of both approaches is drawn. Evaluations in simulations and a challenging real-world flight experiment in very windy conditions confirm the feasibility of the proposed guidance approach.
Resumo:
In this thesis work a nonlinear model for Interdigitated Capacitors (IDCs) based on ferroelectric materials, is proposed. Through the properties of materials such as Hafnium-Zirconium Oxide (HfZrO2), it is possible to realize tunable radiofrequency (RF) circuits. In particular, the model proposed in this thesis describes the use of an IDC, realized on a High-Resistivity silicon substrate, as a phase shifter for beam-steering applications. The model is obtained starting from already present experimental measurements, through which it is possible to identify a circuit model. The model is tested for both low power values and other power values using Harmonic Balance simulations, which show an excellent convergence of the model up to 40 dBm of input power. Furthermore, an array composed by two patches operating both at 2.55 GHz, which exploits the tunable properties of the HfZrO-based IDC is proposed. At 0dBm the model shows a 47° phase shift with polarization -1 V and 1 V which leads to a 11° steering of the main lobe of the array.
Resumo:
Depth estimation from images has long been regarded as a preferable alternative compared to expensive and intrusive active sensors, such as LiDAR and ToF. The topic has attracted the attention of an increasingly wide audience thanks to the great amount of application domains, such as autonomous driving, robotic navigation and 3D reconstruction. Among the various techniques employed for depth estimation, stereo matching is one of the most widespread, owing to its robustness, speed and simplicity in setup. Recent developments has been aided by the abundance of annotated stereo images, which granted to deep learning the opportunity to thrive in a research area where deep networks can reach state-of-the-art sub-pixel precision in most cases. Despite the recent findings, stereo matching still begets many open challenges, two among them being finding pixel correspondences in presence of objects that exhibits a non-Lambertian behaviour and processing high-resolution images. Recently, a novel dataset named Booster, which contains high-resolution stereo pairs featuring a large collection of labeled non-Lambertian objects, has been released. The work shown that training state-of-the-art deep neural network on such data improves the generalization capabilities of these networks also in presence of non-Lambertian surfaces. Regardless being a further step to tackle the aforementioned challenge, Booster includes a rather small number of annotated images, and thus cannot satisfy the intensive training requirements of deep learning. This thesis work aims to investigate novel view synthesis techniques to augment the Booster dataset, with ultimate goal of improving stereo matching reliability in presence of high-resolution images that displays non-Lambertian surfaces.
Resumo:
Neural scene representation and neural rendering are new computer vision techniques that enable the reconstruction and implicit representation of real 3D scenes from a set of 2D captured images, by fitting a deep neural network. The trained network can then be used to render novel views of the scene. A recent work in this field, Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF), presented a state-of-the-art approach, which uses a simple Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) to generate photo-realistic RGB images of a scene from arbitrary viewpoints. However, NeRF does not model any light interaction with the fitted scene; therefore, despite producing compelling results for the view synthesis task, it does not provide a solution for relighting. In this work, we propose a new architecture to enable relighting capabilities in NeRF-based representations and we introduce a new real-world dataset to train and evaluate such a model. Our method demonstrates the ability to perform realistic rendering of novel views under arbitrary lighting conditions.
Resumo:
Lo sviluppo dei dispositivi mobili negli ultimi anni ha permesso la creazione di pedometri efficienti. Uno dei problemi principali nella realizzazione dei contapassi `e l’accuratezza e la precisione nei risultati. Il seguente elaborato fornisce un’analisi dettagliata dei vari studi presenti in rete a riguardo. La ricerca ha avuto scopo di riassumere le diverse scelte implementative, confrontandole tra di loro e di risaltare i punti in comune fornendo un’analisi sull’effettiva efficacia di ognuna di esse. Il focus di questo studio si concentrer`a sull’analisi di algoritmi per la rilevazione di passi calcolati non in tempo reale. L’elaborato `e stato diviso in quattro differenti fasi. Durante la prima fase vengono esposti i principali studi e le principali metodologie relative all’argomento appena descritto. Nella seconda fase viene presentata la Tassonomia, cio`e una classificazione ordinata di concetti secondo determinati criteri. Nella terza fase `e stata quindi sviluppata una applicazione Android in cui vengono implementanti gli algoritmi descritti nelle fasi precedenti. Nell’ultima fase viene testata l’applicazione attraverso l’uso di specifici test confrontando tra loro i diversi algoritmi proposti.
Resumo:
The subject of this work is the diffusion of turbulence in a non-turbulent flow. Such phenomenon can be found in almost every practical case of turbulent flow: all types of shear flows (wakes, jet, boundary layers) present some boundary between turbulence and the non-turbulent surround; all transients from a laminar flow to turbulence must account for turbulent diffusion; mixing of flows often involve the injection of a turbulent solution in a non-turbulent fluid. The mechanism of what Phillips defined as “the erosion by turbulence of the underlying non-turbulent flow”, is called entrainment. It is usually considered to operate on two scales with different mechanics. The small scale nibbling, which is the entrainment of fluid by viscous diffusion of turbulence, and the large scale engulfment, which entraps large volume of flow to be “digested” subsequently by viscous diffusion. The exact role of each of them in the overall entrainment rate is still not well understood, as it is the interplay between these two mechanics of diffusion. It is anyway accepted that the entrainment rate scales with large properties of the flow, while is not understood how the large scale inertial behavior can affect an intrinsically viscous phenomenon as diffusion of vorticity. In the present work we will address then the problem of turbulent diffusion through pseudo-spectral DNS simulations of the interface between a volume of decaying turbulence and quiescent flow. Such simulations will give us first hand measures of velocity, vorticity and strains fields at the interface; moreover the framework of unforced decaying turbulence will permit to study both spatial and temporal evolution of such fields. The analysis will evidence that for this kind of flows the overall production of enstrophy , i.e. the square of vorticity omega^2 , is dominated near the interface by the local inertial transport of “fresh vorticity” coming from the turbulent flow. Viscous diffusion instead plays a major role in enstrophy production in the outbound of the interface, where the nibbling process is dominant. The data from our simulation seems to confirm the theory of an inertially stirred viscous phenomenon proposed by others authors before and provides new data about the inertial diffusion of turbulence across the interface.
Resumo:
In questo lavoro ci si propone di studiare la quantizzazione del campo vettoriale, massivo e non massivo, in uno spazio-tempo di Rindler, considerando in particolare i gauge di Feynman e assiale. Le equazioni del moto vengono risolte esplicitamente in entrambi i casi; sotto opportune condizioni, è stato inoltre possibile trovare una base completa e ortonormale di soluzioni delle equazioni di campo in termini di modi normali di Fulling. Si è poi analizzata la quantizzazione dei campi vettoriali espressi in questa base.
Resumo:
The seismic behaviour of one-storey asymmetric structures has been studied since 1970s by a number of researches studies which identified the coupled nature of the translational-to-torsional response of those class of systems leading to severe displacement magnifications at the perimeter frames and therefore to significant increase of local peak seismic demand to the structural elements with respect to those of equivalent not-eccentric systems (Kan and Chopra 1987). These studies identified the fundamental parameters (such as the fundamental period TL normalized eccentricity e and the torsional-to-lateral frequency ratio Ωϑ) governing the torsional behavior of in-plan asymmetric structures and trends of behavior. It has been clearly recognized that asymmetric structures characterized by Ωϑ >1, referred to as torsionally-stiff systems, behave quite different form structures with Ωϑ <1, referred to as torsionally-flexible systems. Previous research works by some of the authors proposed a simple closed-form estimation of the maximum torsional response of one-storey elastic systems (Trombetti et al. 2005 and Palermo et al. 2010) leading to the so called “Alpha-method” for the evaluation of the displacement magnification factors at the corner sides. The present paper provides an upgrade of the “Alpha Method” removing the assumption of linear elastic response of the system. The main objective is to evaluate how the excursion of the structural elements in the inelastic field (due to the reaching of yield strength) affects the displacement demand of one-storey in-plan asymmetric structures. The system proposed by Chopra and Goel in 2007, which is claimed to be able to capture the main features of the non-linear response of in-plan asymmetric system, is used to perform a large parametric analysis varying all the fundamental parameters of the system, including the inelastic demand by varying the force reduction factor from 2 to 5. Magnification factors for different force reduction factor are proposed and comparisons with the results obtained from linear analysis are provided.
Resumo:
In questa tesi si è studiato un metodo per modellare e virtualizzare tramite algoritmi in Matlab le distorsioni armoniche di un dispositivo audio non lineare, ovvero uno “strumento” che, sollecitato da un segnale audio, lo modifichi, introducendovi delle componenti non presenti in precedenza. Il dispositivo che si è scelto per questo studio il pedale BOSS SD-1 Super OverDrive per chitarra elettrica e lo “strumento matematico” che ne fornisce il modello è lo sviluppo in serie di Volterra. Lo sviluppo in serie di Volterra viene diffusamente usato nello studio di sistemi fisici non lineari, nel caso in cui si abbia interesse a modellare un sistema che si presenti come una “black box”. Il metodo della Nonlinear Convolution progettato dall'Ing. Angelo Farina ha applicato con successo tale sviluppo anche all'ambito dell'acustica musicale: servendosi di una tecnica di misurazione facilmente realizzabile e del modello fornito dalla serie di Volterra Diagonale, il metodo permette di caratterizzare un dispositivo audio non lineare mediante le risposte all'impulso non lineari che il dispositivo fornisce a fronte di un opportuno segnale di test (denominato Exponential Sine Sweep). Le risposte all'impulso del dispositivo vengono utilizzate per ricavare i kernel di Volterra della serie. L'utilizzo di tale metodo ha permesso all'Università di Bologna di ottenere un brevetto per un software che virtualizzasse in post-processing le non linearità di un sistema audio. In questa tesi si è ripreso il lavoro che ha portato al conseguimento del brevetto, apportandovi due innovazioni: si è modificata la scelta del segnale utilizzato per testare il dispositivo (si è fatto uso del Synchronized Sine Sweep, in luogo dell'Exponential Sine Sweep); si è messo in atto un primo tentativo di orientare la virtualizzazione verso l'elaborazione in real-time, implementando un procedimento (in post-processing) di creazione dei kernel in dipendenza dal volume dato in input al dispositivo non lineare.
Resumo:
Capire come modellare l'attività del cervello a riposo, resting state, è il primo passo necessario per avvicinarsi a una reale comprensione della dinamica cerebrale. Sperimentalmente si osserva che, quando il cervello non è soggetto a stimoli esterni, particolari reti di regioni cerebrali presentano un'attività neuronale superiore alla media. Nonostante gli sforzi dei ricercatori, non è ancora chiara la relazione che sussiste tra le connessioni strutturali e le connessioni funzionali del sistema cerebrale a riposo, organizzate nella matrice di connettività funzionale. Recenti studi sperimentali mostrano la natura non stazionaria della connettività funzionale in disaccordo con i modelli in letteratura. Il modello implementato nella presente tesi per simulare l'evoluzione temporale del network permette di riprodurre il comportamento dinamico della connettività funzionale. Per la prima volta in questa tesi, secondo i lavori a noi noti, un modello di resting state è implementato nel cervello di un topo. Poco è noto, infatti, riguardo all'architettura funzionale su larga scala del cervello dei topi, nonostante il largo utilizzo di tale sistema nella modellizzazione dei disturbi neurologici. Le connessioni strutturali utilizzate per definire la topologia della rete neurale sono quelle ottenute dall'Allen Institute for Brain Science. Tale strumento fornisce una straordinaria opportunità per riprodurre simulazioni realistiche, poiché, come affermato nell'articolo che presenta tale lavoro, questo connettoma è il più esauriente disponibile, ad oggi, in ogni specie vertebrata. I parametri liberi del modello sono stati scelti in modo da inizializzare il sistema nel range dinamico ottimale per riprodurre il comportamento dinamico della connettività funzionale. Diverse considerazioni e misure sono state effettuate sul segnale BOLD simulato per meglio comprenderne la natura. L'accordo soddisfacente fra i centri funzionali calcolati nel network cerebrale simulato e quelli ottenuti tramite l'indagine sperimentale di Mechling et al., 2014 comprovano la bontà del modello e dei metodi utilizzati per analizzare il segnale simulato.
Resumo:
La diffusione dei servizi cloud ha spinto anche il mondo degli IDE verso questa direzione. Recentemente si sta assistendo allo spostamento degli IDE da ambienti desktop ad ambienti Web. Questo è determinante per quanto riguarda gli aspetti legati alla collaborazione perchè permette di sfruttare tutti i vantaggi del cloud per dotare questi sistemi di chat, integrazione con i social network, strumenti di editing condiviso e molte altre funzionalità collaborative. Questi IDE sono detti browser-based in quanto i servizi che mettono a disposizione sono accessibili via Web tramite un browser. Ne esistono di diversi tipi e con caratteristiche molto diverse tra di loro. Alcuni sono semplici piattaforme sulle quali è possibile effettuare test di codice o utilizzare tutorial forniti per imparare nuovi linguaggi di programmazione; altri invece sono ambienti di sviluppo completi dotati delle più comuni funzionalità presenti in un IDE desktop, oltre a quelle specifiche legate al Web. Dallo studio di questi ambienti di sviluppo di nuova generazione è emerso che sono pochi quelli che dispongono di un sistema di collaborazione completo e che non tutti sfruttano le nuove tecnologie che il Web mette a disposizione. Per esempio, alcuni sono dotati di editor collaborativi, ma non offrono un servizio di chat ai collaboratori; altri mettono a disposizione una chat e il supporto per la scrittura simultanea di codice, ma non sono dotati di sistemi per la condivisione del display. Dopo l'analisi dei pregi e dei difetti della collaborazione fornita dagli strumenti presi in considerazione ho deciso di realizzare delle funzionalità collaborative inserendomi nel contesto di un IDE browser-based chiamato InDe RT sviluppato dall'azienda Pro Gamma SpA.
Resumo:
The first chapter of this work has the aim to provide a brief overview of the history of our Universe, in the context of string theory and considering inflation as its possible application to cosmological problems. We then discuss type IIB string compactifications, introducing the study of the inflaton, a scalar field candidated to describe the inflation theory. The Large Volume Scenario (LVS) is studied in the second chapter paying particular attention to the stabilisation of the Kähler moduli which are four-dimensional gravitationally coupled scalar fields which parameterise the size of the extra dimensions. Moduli stabilisation is the process through which these particles acquire a mass and can become promising inflaton candidates. The third chapter is devoted to the study of Fibre Inflation which is an interesting inflationary model derived within the context of LVS compactifications. The fourth chapter tries to extend the zone of slow-roll of the scalar potential by taking larger values of the field φ. Everything is done with the purpose of studying in detail deviations of the cosmological observables, which can better reproduce current experimental data. Finally, we present a slight modification of Fibre Inflation based on a different compactification manifold. This new model produces larger tensor modes with a spectral index in good agreement with the date released in February 2015 by the Planck satellite.
Resumo:
In this master thesis I evaluated the performance of a Ultra-Wide Bandwidth (UWB) radar system for indoor environments mapping. In particular, I used a statistical Bayesian approach which is able to combine all the measurements collected by the radar, including system non-idealities such as the error on the estimated antenna pointing direction or on the estimated radar position. First I verified through simulations that the system was able to provide a sufficiently accurate reconstruction of the surrounding environment despite the limitations imposed by the UWB technology. In fact, the emission of UWB pulses is limited in terms of transmitted power by international regulations. Motivated by the promising results obtained through simulations, I successively carried out a measurement campaign in a real indoor environment using a UWB commercial device. The obtained results showed that the UWB radar system is capable of providing an accurate reconstruction of indoor environments also adopting not directional antennas.