3,234 research outputs found
Zenithal bistability in a nematic liquid crystal device with a monostable surface condition
The ground-state director configurations in a grating-aligned, zenithally bistable nematic device are calculated in two dimensions using a Q tensor approach. The director profiles generated are well described by a one-dimensional variation of the director across the width of the device, with the distorted region near the grating replaced by an effective surface anchoring energy. This work shows that device bistability can in fact be achieved by using a monostable surface term in the one-dimensional model. This implies that is should be possible to construct a device showing zenithal bistability without the need for a micropatterned surface
Water-based peeling of thin hydrophobic films
Inks of permanent markers and water-proof cosmetics create elastic thin films
upon application on a surface. Such adhesive materials are deliberately
designed to exhibit water-repellent behavior. Therefore, patterns made up of
these inks become resistant to moisture and cannot be cleaned by water after
drying. However, we show that sufficiently slow dipping of such elastic films,
which are adhered to a substrate, into a bath of pure water allows complete
removal of the hydrophobic coatings. Upon dipping, the air-water interface in
the bath forms a contact line on the substrate, which exerts a
capillary-induced peeling force at the edge of the hydrophobic thin film. We
highlight that this capillary peeling process is more effective at lower
velocities of the air-liquid interface and lower viscosities. Capillary peeling
not only removes such thin films from the substrate but also transfers them
flawlessly onto the air-water interface
Exoplanets imaging with a Phase-Induced Amplitude Apodization Coronagraph - I. Principle
Using 2 aspheric mirrors, it is possible to apodize a telescope beam without
losing light or angular resolution: the output beam is produced by
``remapping'' the entrance beam to produce the desired light intensity
distribution in a new pupil. We present the Phase-Induced Amplitude Apodization
Coronagraph (PIAAC) concept, which uses this technique, and we show that it
allows efficient direct imaging of extrasolar terrestrial planets with a
small-size telescope in space. The suitability of the PIAAC for exoplanet
imaging is due to a unique combination of achromaticity, small inner working
angle (about 1.5 ), high throughput, high angular resolution and
large field of view. 3D geometrical raytracing is used to investigate the
off-axis aberrations of PIAAC configurations, and show that a field of view of
more than 100 in radius is available thanks to the correcting
optics of the PIAAC. Angular diameter of the star and tip-tilt errors can be
compensated for by slightly increasing the size of the occulting mask in the
focal plane, with minimal impact on the system performance. Earth-size planets
at 10 pc can be detected in less than 30s with a 4m telescope. Wavefront
quality requirements are similar to classical techniques.Comment: 35 pages, 16 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Efficient simulation of non-crossing fibers and chains in a hydrodynamic solvent
An efficient simulation method is presented for Brownian fiber suspensions,
which includes both uncrossability of the fibers and hydrodynamic interactions
between the fibers mediated by a mesoscopic solvent. To conserve hydrodynamics,
collisions between the fibers are treated such that momentum and energy are
conserved locally. The choice of simulation parameters is rationalised on the
basis of dimensionless numbers expressing the relative strength of different
physical processes. The method is applied to suspensions of semiflexible fibers
with a contour length equal to the persistence length, and a mesh size to
contour length ratio ranging from 0.055 to 0.32. For such fibers the effects of
hydrodynamic interactions are observable, but relatively small. The
non-crossing constraint, on the other hand, is very important and leads to
hindered displacements of the fibers, with an effective tube diameter in
agreement with recent theoretical predictions. The simulation technique opens
the way to study the effect of viscous effects and hydrodynamic interactions in
microrheology experiments where the response of an actively driven probe bead
in a fiber suspension is measured.Comment: 12 pages, 2 tables, 5 figure
Dynamics of elastocapillary rise
We present the results of a combined experimental and theoretical
investigation of the surface-tension-driven coalescence of flexible structures.
Specifically, we consider the dynamics of the rise of a wetting liquid between
flexible sheets that are clamped at their upper ends. As the elasticity of the
sheets is progressively increased, we observe a systematic deviation from the
classical diffusive-like behaviour: the time to reach equilibrium increases
dramatically and the departure from classical rise occurs sooner, trends that
we elucidate via scaling analyses. Three distinct temporal regimes are
identified and subsequently explored by developing a theoretical model based on
lubrication theory and the linear theory of plates. The resulting free-boundary
problem is solved numerically and good agreement is obtained with experiments
Current Induced Fingering Instability in Magnetic Domain Walls
The shape instability of magnetic domain walls under current is investigated
in a ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)(As,P) film with perpendicular anisotropy. Domain
wall motion is driven by the spin transfer torque mechanism. A current density
gradient is found either to stabilize domains with walls perpendicular to
current lines or to produce finger-like patterns, depending on the domain wall
motion direction. The instability mechanism is shown to result from the
non-adiabatic contribution of the spin transfer torque mechanism.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures + supplementary material
Coronagraphic Low Order Wave Front Sensor : post-processing sensitivity enhancer for high performance coronagraphs
Detection and characterization of exoplanets by direct imaging requires a
coronagraph designed to deliver high contrast at small angular separation. To
achieve this, an accurate control of low order aberrations, such as pointing
and focus errors, is essential to optimize coronagraphic rejection and avoid
the possible confusion between exoplanet light and coronagraphic leaks in the
science image. Simulations and laboratory prototyping have shown that a
Coronagraphic Low Order Wave-Front Sensor (CLOWFS), using a single defocused
image of a reflective focal plane ring, can be used to control tip-tilt to an
accuracy of 10^{-3} lambda/D. This paper demonstrates that the data acquired by
CLOWFS can also be used in post-processing to calibrate residual coronagraphic
leaks from the science image. Using both the CLOWFS camera and the science
camera in the system, we quantify the accuracy of the method and its ability to
successfully remove light due to low order errors from the science image. We
also report the implementation and performance of the CLOWFS on the Subaru
Coronagraphic Extreme AO (SCExAO) system and its expected on-sky performance.
In the laboratory, with a level of disturbance similar to what is encountered
in a post Adaptive Optics beam, CLOWFS post-processing has achieved speckle
calibration to 1/300 of the raw speckle level. This is about 40 times better
than could be done with an idealized PSF subtraction that does not rely on
CLOWFS.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Comparison of coronagraphs for high contrast imaging in the context of Extremely Large Telescopes
We compare coronagraph concepts and investigate their behavior and
suitability for planet finder projects with Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs,
30-42 meters class telescopes). For this task, we analyze the impact of major
error sources that occur in a coronagraphic telescope (central obscuration,
secondary support, low-order segment aberrations, segment reflectivity
variations, pointing errors) for phase, amplitude and interferometric type
coronagraphs. This analysis is performed at two different levels of the
detection process: under residual phase left uncorrected by an eXtreme Adaptive
Optics system (XAO) for a large range of Strehl ratio and after a general and
simple model of speckle calibration, assuming common phase aberrations between
the XAO and the coronagraph (static phase aberrations of the instrument) and
non-common phase aberrations downstream of the coronagraph (differential
aberrations provided by the calibration unit). We derive critical parameters
that each concept will have to cope with by order of importance. We evidence
three coronagraph categories as function of the accessible angular separation
and proposed optimal one in each case. Most of the time amplitude concepts
appear more favorable and specifically, the Apodized Pupil Lyot Coronagraph
gathers the adequate characteristics to be a baseline design for ELTs.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
UAV-GESTURE: A Dataset for UAV Control and Gesture Recognition
Current UAV-recorded datasets are mostly limited to action recognition and
object tracking, whereas the gesture signals datasets were mostly recorded in
indoor spaces. Currently, there is no outdoor recorded public video dataset for
UAV commanding signals. Gesture signals can be effectively used with UAVs by
leveraging the UAVs visual sensors and operational simplicity. To fill this gap
and enable research in wider application areas, we present a UAV gesture
signals dataset recorded in an outdoor setting. We selected 13 gestures
suitable for basic UAV navigation and command from general aircraft handling
and helicopter handling signals. We provide 119 high-definition video clips
consisting of 37151 frames. The overall baseline gesture recognition
performance computed using Pose-based Convolutional Neural Network (P-CNN) is
91.9 %. All the frames are annotated with body joints and gesture classes in
order to extend the dataset's applicability to a wider research area including
gesture recognition, action recognition, human pose recognition and situation
awareness.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, UAVision workshop, ECCV, 201
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