3 resultados para nonlinear optics in fibers

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Il lavoro di tesi si propone di analizzare l'evoluzione dinamica di una faglia caratterizzata da due asperità complanari contraddistinte da diverso attrito (modello asimmetrico) e da accoppiamento viscoelastico. Il modello reologico assunto per la crosta terrestre è di tipo Maxwelliano: lo sforzo trasferito da un'asperità all'altra in occasione degli scorrimenti delle asperità stesse subisce parziale rilassamento durante il periodo intersismico, con conseguente anticipo o ritardo degli eventi sismici successivi. Lo studio del sistema viene condotto tramite un modello di faglia discreto, in cui lo stato della faglia è determinato da tre variabili che rappresentano i deficit di scorrimento delle asperità e il loro accoppiamento viscoelastico. Scopo principale della tesi è quello di caratterizzare i differenti modi dinamici del sistema, determinando equazioni del moto e orbite nello spazio delle fasi e confrontando i risultati ottenuti con i modelli precedentemente sviluppati, con particolare riferimento al caso simmetrico (asperità caratterizzate dallo stesso attrito) studiato in [Amendola e Dragoni (2013)] e al caso di accoppiamento puramente elastico analizzato in [Dragoni e Santini (2012)]. Segue l'applicazione del modello all'evento sismico verificatosi in Alaska nel 1964, generato dallo scorrimento delle asperità di Kodiak Island e Prince William Sound: lo studio verte in particolare sulla valutazione dello stato di sforzo sulla faglia prima e dopo il terremoto, la determinazione della funzione sorgente (moment rate) a esso associata e la caratterizzazione della possibile evoluzione futura del sistema. Riferimenti bibliografici Amendola, A. & Dragoni, M., “Dynamics of a two-fault system with viscoelastic coupling”. Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, 20, 1–10, 2013. Dragoni, M. & Santini, S., “Long-term dynamics of a fault with two asperities of different strengths”. Geophysical Journal International, 191, 1457–1467, 2012.

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The main objective of this project is to experimentally demonstrate geometrical nonlinear phenomena due to large displacements during resonant vibration of composite materials and to explain the problem associated with fatigue prediction at resonant conditions. Three different composite blades to be tested were designed and manufactured, being their difference in the composite layup (i.e. unidirectional, cross-ply, and angle-ply layups). Manual envelope bagging technique is explained as applied to the actual manufacturing of the components; problems encountered and their solutions are detailed. Forced response tests of the first flexural, first torsional, and second flexural modes were performed by means of a uniquely contactless excitation system which induced vibration by using a pulsed airflow. Vibration intensity was acquired by means of Polytec LDV system. The first flexural mode is found to be completely linear irrespective of the vibration amplitude. The first torsional mode exhibits a general nonlinear softening behaviour which is interestingly coupled with a hardening behaviour for the unidirectional layup. The second flexural mode has a hardening nonlinear behaviour for either the unidirectional and angle-ply blade, whereas it is slightly softening for the cross-ply layup. By using the same equipment as that used for forced response analyses, free decay tests were performed at different airflow intensities. Discrete Fourier Trasform over the entire decay and Sliding DFT were computed so as to visualise the presence of nonlinear superharmonics in the decay signal and when they were damped out from the vibration over the decay time. Linear modes exhibit an exponential decay, while nonlinearities are associated with a dry-friction damping phenomenon which tends to increase with increasing amplitude. Damping ratio is derived from logarithmic decrement for the exponential branch of the decay.

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The development of next generation microwave technology for backhauling systems is driven by an increasing capacity demand. In order to provide higher data rates and throughputs over a point-to-point link, a cost-effective performance improvement is enabled by an enhanced energy-efficiency of the transmit power amplification stage, whereas a combination of spectrally efficient modulation formats and wider bandwidths is supported by amplifiers that fulfil strict constraints in terms of linearity. An optimal trade-off between these conflicting requirements can be achieved by resorting to flexible digital signal processing techniques at baseband. In such a scenario, the adaptive digital pre-distortion is a well-known linearization method, that comes up to be a potentially widely-used solution since it can be easily integrated into base stations. Its operation can effectively compensate for the inter-modulation distortion introduced by the power amplifier, keeping up with the frequency-dependent time-varying behaviour of the relative nonlinear characteristic. In particular, the impact of the memory effects become more relevant and their equalisation become more challenging as the input discrete signal feature a wider bandwidth and a faster envelope to pre-distort. This thesis project involves the research, design and simulation a pre-distorter implementation at RTL based on a novel polyphase architecture, which makes it capable of operating over very wideband signals at a sampling rate that complies with the actual available clock speed of current digital devices. The motivation behind this structure is to carry out a feasible pre-distortion for the multi-band spectrally efficient complex signals carrying multiple channels that are going to be transmitted in near future high capacity and reliability microwave backhaul links.