19,399 research outputs found
Gait parameter changes during 10000 metre treadmill running
The purpose of this study was to measure the effects of fatigue on gait parameters during running. Research has shown that changes due to fatigue include those of step length, cadence, flight time, and joint angles. Thirteen male distance runners ran 10000 m at a pace equivalent to 103% of their personal best time. Kinetic data was collected using a Gaitway treadmill (1000 Hz), and kinematic data using two RedLake MotionPro high-speed cameras (250 Hz). Data was collected at five points. Repeated measures ANOVA showed that there were significant differences in maximum force, impulse, and contact time (p < .01). Dependent t-tests showed a significant difference for the knee angle at take-off (p < .01). The kinetic and temporal changes occurred as early as 3000 m. Athletes are recommended to race at a constant pace to reduce the effects of fatigue
Blind nonnegative source separation using biological neural networks
Blind source separation, i.e. extraction of independent sources from a
mixture, is an important problem for both artificial and natural signal
processing. Here, we address a special case of this problem when sources (but
not the mixing matrix) are known to be nonnegative, for example, due to the
physical nature of the sources. We search for the solution to this problem that
can be implemented using biologically plausible neural networks. Specifically,
we consider the online setting where the dataset is streamed to a neural
network. The novelty of our approach is that we formulate blind nonnegative
source separation as a similarity matching problem and derive neural networks
from the similarity matching objective. Importantly, synaptic weights in our
networks are updated according to biologically plausible local learning rules.Comment: Accepted for publication in Neural Computatio
Probing the spin-parity of the Higgs boson via jet kinematics in vector boson fusion
Determining the spin and the parity quantum numbers of the recently
discovered Higgs-like boson at the LHC is a matter of great importance. In this
paper, we consider the possibility of using the kinematics of the tagging jets
in Higgs production via the vector boson fusion (VBF) process to test the
tensor structure of the Higgs-vector boson () interaction and to determine
the spin and CP properties of the observed resonance. We show that an anomalous
vertex, in particular its explicit momentum dependence, drastically
affects the rapidity between the two scattered quarks and their transverse
momenta and, hence, the acceptance of the kinematical cuts that allow to select
the VBF topology. The sensitivity of these observables to different spin-parity
assignments, including the dependence on the LHC center of mass energy, are
evaluated. In addition, we show that in associated Higgs production with a
vector boson some kinematical variables, such as the invariant mass of the
system and the transverse momenta of the two bosons and their separation in
rapidity, are also sensitive to the spin--parity assignments of the Higgs--like
boson.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Stability of Bloch Oscillations in two coupled Bose-Einstein condensates
We investigate analytically, the stability of Bloch waves at the boundary of
the first Brillouin zone in two coupled Bose-Einstein condensates confined in
an optical lattice. Contrary to the single component case, we find here two
critical density regimes which determine the stability of the Bloch waves.
Breakdown of Bloch oscillations appear when n1/n2Nc2, here
Nc1 and Nc2 are some critical values of n1/n2. There is an intermediate regime
between Nc1 and Nc2 where the Bloch oscillations are stable and the condensates
behave like single particles
On Thermal-Pulse-Driven Plasma Flows in Coronal Funnels as Observed by Hinode/EUV Imaging Spectrometer (EIS)
Using one-arcsecond-slit scan observations from the Hinode/EUV Imaging
Spectrometer (EIS) on 05 February 2007, we find the plasma outflows in the open
and expanding coronal funnels at the eastern boundary of AR 10940. The Doppler
velocity map of Fe XII 195.120 A shows that the diffuse close-loop system to be
mostly red-shifted. The open arches (funnels) at the eastern boundary of AR
exhibit blue-shifts with a maximum speed of about 10-15 km/s. This implies
outflowing plasma through these magnetic structures. In support of these
observations, we perform a 2D numerical simulation of the expanding coronal
funnels by solving the set of ideal MHD equations in appropriate VAL-III C
initial temperature conditions using the FLASH code. We implement a rarefied
and hotter region at the footpoint of the model funnel, which results in the
evolution of slow plasma perturbations propagating outward in the form of
plasma flows. We conclude that the heating, which may result from magnetic
reconnection, can trigger the observed plasma outflows in such coronal funnels.
This can transport mass into the higher corona, giving rise to the formation of
the nascent solar wind.Comment: 17 Pages; 7 Figure
A Novel Side-Channel in Real-Time Schedulers
We demonstrate the presence of a novel scheduler side-channel in preemptive,
fixed-priority real-time systems (RTS); examples of such systems can be found
in automotive systems, avionic systems, power plants and industrial control
systems among others. This side-channel can leak important timing information
such as the future arrival times of real-time tasks.This information can then
be used to launch devastating attacks, two of which are demonstrated here (on
real hardware platforms). Note that it is not easy to capture this timing
information due to runtime variations in the schedules, the presence of
multiple other tasks in the system and the typical constraints (e.g.,
deadlines) in the design of RTS. Our ScheduLeak algorithms demonstrate how to
effectively exploit this side-channel. A complete implementation is presented
on real operating systems (in Real-time Linux and FreeRTOS). Timing information
leaked by ScheduLeak can significantly aid other, more advanced, attacks in
better accomplishing their goals
Stroboscopic Generation of Topological Protection
Trapped neutral atoms offer a powerful route to robust simulation of complex
quantum systems. We present here a stroboscopic scheme for realization of a
Hamiltonian with -body interactions on a set of neutral atoms trapped in an
addressable optical lattice, using only 1- and 2-body physical operations
together with a dissipative mechanism that allows thermalization to finite
temperature or cooling to the ground state. We demonstrate this scheme with
application to the toric code Hamiltonian, ground states of which can be used
to robustly store quantum information when coupled to a low temperature
reservoir.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Published versio
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