991 resultados para Local laws
Resumo:
Based on the two-dimensional coupled-wave theory, the wavefront conversion between cylindrical and plane waves by local volume holograms recorded at 632.8 nm and reconstructed at 800 nm is investigated. The proposed model can realize the 90 degrees holographic readout at a different readout wavelength. The analytical integral solutions for the amplitudes of the space harmonics of the field inside the transmission geometry are presented. The values of the off-Bragg parameter at the reconstructed process and the diffracted beam's amplitude distribution are analysed. In addition, the dependences of diffraction efficiency on the focal length of the recording cylindrical wave and on the geometrical dimensions of the grating are discussed. Furthermore, the focusing properties of this photorefractive holographic cylindrical lens are analysed.
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As a simplified approach for estimating theoretically the influence of local subsoils upon the ground motion during an earthquake, the problem of an idealized layered system subjected to vertically incident plane body waves was studied. Both the technique of steady-state analysis and the technique of transient analysis have been used to analyze the problem.
In the steady-state analysis, a recursion formula has been derived for obtaining the response of a layered system to sinusoidally steady-state input. Several conclusions are drawn concerning the nature of the amplification spectrum of a nonviscous layered system having its layer stiffnesses increasing with depth. Numerical examples are given to demonstrate the effect of layer parameters on the amplification spectrum of a layered system.
In the transient analysis, two modified shear beam models have been established for obtaining approximately the response of a layered system to earthquake-like excitation. The method of continuous modal analysis was adopted for approximate analysis of the models, with energy dissipation in the layers, if any, taken into account. Numerical examples are given to demonstrate the accuracy of the models and the effect of a layered system in modifying the input motion.
Conditions are established, under which the theory is applicable to predict the influence of local subsoils on the ground motion during an earthquake. To demonstrate the applicability of the models to actual cases, three examples of actually recorded earthquake events are examined. It is concluded that significant modification of the incoming seismic waves, as predicted by the theory, is likely to occur in well defined soft subsoils during an earthquake, provided that certain conditions concerning the nature of the incoming seismic waves are satisfied.
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If R is a ring with identity, let N(R) denote the Jacobson radical of R. R is local if R/N(R) is an artinian simple ring and ∩N(R)i = 0. It is known that if R is complete in the N(R)-adic topology then R is equal to (B)n, the full n by n matrix ring over B where E/N(E) is a division ring. The main results of the thesis deal with the structure of such rings B. In fact we have the following.
If B is a complete local algebra over F where B/N(B) is a finite dimensional normal extension of F and N(B) is finitely generated as a left ideal by k elements, then there exist automorphisms gi,...,gk of B/N(B) over F such that B is a homomorphic image of B/N[[x1,…,xk;g1,…,gk]] the power series ring over B/N(B) in noncommuting indeterminates xi, where xib = gi(b)xi for all b ϵ B/N.
Another theorem generalizes this result to complete local rings which have suitable commutative subrings. As a corollary of this we have the following. Let B be a complete local ring with B/N(B) a finite field. If N(B) is finitely generated as a left ideal by k elements then there exist automorphisms g1,…,gk of a v-ring V such that B is a homomorphic image of V [[x1,…,xk;g1,…,gk]].
In both these results it is essential to know the structure of N(B) as a two sided module over a suitable subring of B.
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Mergers and interacting galaxies are pivotal to the evolution of galaxies in the universe. They are the sites of prodigious star formation and key to understanding the starburst processes: the physical and chemical properties and the dynamics of the molecular gas. ULIRGs or Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies are a result of many of these mergers. They host extreme starbursts, AGNs, and mergers. They are the perfect laboratory to probe the connection between starbursts, black hole accretion and mergers and to further our understanding of star formation and merging.
NGC 6240 and Arp 220 can be considered the founding members of this very active class of objects. They are in different stages of merging and hence are excellent case studies to further our understanding about the merging process. We have imaged the dense star-forming regions of these galaxies at sub-arcsec resolution with CARMA C and B Configurations (2" and 0.5 - 0.8"). Multi-band imaging allows excitation analysis of HCN, HCO+, HNC, and CS along with CO transitions to constrain the properties of the gas. Our dataset is unique in that we have observed these lines at similar resolutions and high sensitivity which can be used to derive line ratios of faint high excitation lines.
Arp 220 has not had confirmed X-ray AGN detections for either nuclei. However, our observations indicate HCN/HNC ratios consistent with the chemistry of X-ray Dominated Regions (XDRs) -- a likely symptom of AGN. We calculated the molecular Hydrogen densities using each of the molecular species and conclude that assuming abundances of HNC and HCO+ similar to those in galactic sources are incorrect in the case of ULIRGs. The physical conditions in the dense molecular gas in ULIRGs alter these abundances. The derived H2 volume densities are ~ 5 x 104 cm-3 in both Arp 220 nuclei and ~ 104 cm-3 in NGC 6240.
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Con el presente trabajo se da continuación a la línea de investigación iniciada en 2010, con el convenio entre el Departamento de Interior del Gobierno Vasco / Eusko Jaurlaritzaren Herrizaingo Saila y el Instituto Vasco de Criminología / Kriminologiaren Euskal Institutua (programa de investigación sobre percepción de inseguridad y mapas de criminalidad). Esa línea de investigación ha dado lugar a dos publicaciones (Varona 2011; 2012), básicamente centradas en las posibilidades de los diagnósticos o auditorías locales de seguridad, como herramientas de análisis criminológico, siguiendo los modelos establecidos por instituciones y organismos internacionales. La investigación que introducimos sobre el municipio de Irún se basa en las conclusiones de dichas publicaciones. Conviene advertir, sin embargo, que no se trata de una mera réplica del estudio de Barakaldo desarrollado en 2011. Atendiendo a las recomendaciones internacionales sobre la flexibilidad de las auditorías locales de seguridad, hemos tratado de aprender de las potencialidades y límites del trabajo anterior para presentar otro distinto en contenido y estructura -manteniendo pero depurando objetivos-, que resulte interesante y útil a los posibles y variados destinatarios de estas páginas. Cada uno de ellos puede, por tanto, acudir directamente y de forma independiente, a los capítulos más relevantes en cada caso y a sus correspondientes anexos que, aunque hacen más voluminoso el trabajo, permiten fundamentarlo correctamente y facilitar al lector la búsqueda de documentos en los que desee profundizar, incluyendo aquí también los recursos bibliográficos más recientes.
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The centralized paradigm of a single controller and a single plant upon which modern control theory is built is no longer applicable to modern cyber-physical systems of interest, such as the power-grid, software defined networks or automated highways systems, as these are all large-scale and spatially distributed. Both the scale and the distributed nature of these systems has motivated the decentralization of control schemes into local sub-controllers that measure, exchange and act on locally available subsets of the globally available system information. This decentralization of control logic leads to different decision makers acting on asymmetric information sets, introduces the need for coordination between them, and perhaps not surprisingly makes the resulting optimal control problem much harder to solve. In fact, shortly after such questions were posed, it was realized that seemingly simple decentralized optimal control problems are computationally intractable to solve, with the Wistenhausen counterexample being a famous instance of this phenomenon. Spurred on by this perhaps discouraging result, a concerted 40 year effort to identify tractable classes of distributed optimal control problems culminated in the notion of quadratic invariance, which loosely states that if sub-controllers can exchange information with each other at least as quickly as the effect of their control actions propagates through the plant, then the resulting distributed optimal control problem admits a convex formulation.
The identification of quadratic invariance as an appropriate means of "convexifying" distributed optimal control problems led to a renewed enthusiasm in the controller synthesis community, resulting in a rich set of results over the past decade. The contributions of this thesis can be seen as being a part of this broader family of results, with a particular focus on closing the gap between theory and practice by relaxing or removing assumptions made in the traditional distributed optimal control framework. Our contributions are to the foundational theory of distributed optimal control, and fall under three broad categories, namely controller synthesis, architecture design and system identification.
We begin by providing two novel controller synthesis algorithms. The first is a solution to the distributed H-infinity optimal control problem subject to delay constraints, and provides the only known exact characterization of delay-constrained distributed controllers satisfying an H-infinity norm bound. The second is an explicit dynamic programming solution to a two player LQR state-feedback problem with varying delays. Accommodating varying delays represents an important first step in combining distributed optimal control theory with the area of Networked Control Systems that considers lossy channels in the feedback loop. Our next set of results are concerned with controller architecture design. When designing controllers for large-scale systems, the architectural aspects of the controller such as the placement of actuators, sensors, and the communication links between them can no longer be taken as given -- indeed the task of designing this architecture is now as important as the design of the control laws themselves. To address this task, we formulate the Regularization for Design (RFD) framework, which is a unifying computationally tractable approach, based on the model matching framework and atomic norm regularization, for the simultaneous co-design of a structured optimal controller and the architecture needed to implement it. Our final result is a contribution to distributed system identification. Traditional system identification techniques such as subspace identification are not computationally scalable, and destroy rather than leverage any a priori information about the system's interconnection structure. We argue that in the context of system identification, an essential building block of any scalable algorithm is the ability to estimate local dynamics within a large interconnected system. To that end we propose a promising heuristic for identifying the dynamics of a subsystem that is still connected to a large system. We exploit the fact that the transfer function of the local dynamics is low-order, but full-rank, while the transfer function of the global dynamics is high-order, but low-rank, to formulate this separation task as a nuclear norm minimization problem. Finally, we conclude with a brief discussion of future research directions, with a particular emphasis on how to incorporate the results of this thesis, and those of optimal control theory in general, into a broader theory of dynamics, control and optimization in layered architectures.
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The 9th International Test Commission Conference (ITC) took place at the Miramar Palace in San Sebastian, Spain, between the 2nd and 5th of July, 2014. The Conference was titled, “Global and Local Challenges for Best Practices in Assessment.” The International Test Commission, ITC (www.intestcom.org), is an association of national psychological associations, test commissions, publishers, and other organizations, as well as individuals who are committed to the promotion of effective testing and assessment policies and to the proper development, evaluation, and uses of educational and psychological instruments. The ITC facilitates the exchange of information among members and stimulates their cooperation on problems related to the construction, distribution, and uses of psychological and educational tests and other psychodiagnostic tools. This volume contains the abstracts of the contributions presented at the 9th International Test Commission Conference. The four themes of the Conference were closely linked to the goals of the ITC: - Challenges and Opportunities in International Assessment. - Application of New Technoloogies and New Psychometric Models in Testing. - Standards and Guidelines for Best Testing Practices. - Testing in Multilingual and Multicultural Contexts.
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Our study of a novel technique for adaptive image sequence coding is reported. The number of reference frames and the intervals between them are adjusted to improve the temporal compensability of the input video. The bits are distributed more efficiently on different frame types according to temporal and spatial complexity of the image scene. Experimental results show that this dynamic group-of-picture (GOP) structure coding scheme is not only feasible but also better than the conventional fixed GOP method in terms of perceptual quality and SNR. (C) 1996 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.
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A Ilha Grande situa-se na chamada Costa Verde do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, tem a totalidade de seu território protegido legalmente e vem sendo alvo de especuladores e investidores cujos interesses são, principalmente, explorar o potencial natural do bioma de Mata Atlântica. Observa-se um processo de transformação local em diversos aspectos que englobam o meio ambiente e a sociedade, como a degradação ambiental e o deslocamento da comunidade tradicional. O Poder Público manteve-se distante ou mesmo ausente por décadas, o que possibilitou a instalação de problemas ambientais e a configuração de conflitos na esfera do planejamento e gestão. Considerando-se a relevância socioambiental deste território insular e, em especial, com a implantação do Centro de Estudos Ambientais e Desenvolvimento Sustentável (CEADS) da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ) na Enseada de Dois Rios, o presente estudo tem como objetivo identificar a dinâmica ambiental estabelecida na ilha. Os aspectos relacionados ao uso e ocupação do solo e à fragilidade ambiental são fundamentais para a análise integrada, para a compreensão da configuração atual do território e para a formulação de diretrizes de desenvolvimento adequadas à complexa realidade da Ilha Grande, cuja atividade econômica está pautada no turismo. Identificou-se como as principais causas dos problemas ambientais e dos conflitos de gestão: o caótico ordenamento do território, a falta de infraestrutura de serviços, a dificuldade de mobilização social, a falta de integração entre as políticas públicas e competências administrativas, a precariedade da fiscalização, a impunidade aos que não cumpriram a normatização em vigor e, a não observância da fragilidade ambiental do geossistema Ilha Grande.