5,863 research outputs found
Large System Analysis of Game-Theoretic Power Control in UWB Wireless Networks with Rake Receivers
This paper studies the performance of partial-Rake (PRake) receivers in
impulse-radio ultrawideband wireless networks when an energy-efficient power
control scheme is adopted. Due to the large bandwidth of the system, the
multipath channel is assumed to be frequency-selective. By using noncooperative
game-theoretic models and large system analysis, explicit expressions are
derived in terms of network parameters to measure the effects of self- and
multiple-access interference at a receiving access point. Performance of the
PRake is compared in terms of achieved utilities and loss to that of the
all-Rake receiver.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 8th IEEE International Workshop
on Signal Processing Advances in Wireless Communications (SPAWC), Helsinki,
Finland, June 17-20, 200
Two Fundamental Concepts in Skeletal Parallel Programming
We define the concepts of nesting mode and interaction mode as they arise in the description of skeletal parallel programming systems. We sugegs
Magnetic Raman Scattering of Insulating Cuprates
We study the and Raman profiles of MCu (with
M= La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd), BiSrCaYCuO%,
YBaCuO and PrBaCuAlO insulating
cuprates within the Loudon-Fleury theory, in the framework of an extended
Hubbard model for moderate on-site Coulomb interaction . We calculate the
non-resonant contribution to these Raman profiles by using exact
diagonalization techniques and analyze two types of contributing mechanisms to
the line shapes: 4-spin cyclic exchange and spin-phonon interactions. Although
these interactions contribute to different parts of the spectra, together, they
account for the enhanced linewidth and asymmetry of the mode, as well
as the non-negligible intensity of the Raman line observed in these
materials.Comment: 8 pages, 2 eps figures. To be published in PR
Study of RPC gas mixtures for the ARGO-YBJ experiment
The ARGO-YBJ experiment consists of a RPC carpet to be operated at the
Yangbajing laboratory (Tibet, P.R. China), 4300 m a.s.l., and devoted to the
detection of showers initiated by photon primaries in the energy range 100 GeV
- 20 TeV. The measurement technique, namely the timing on the shower front with
a few tens of particles, requires RPC operation with 1 ns time resolution, low
strip multiplicity, high efficiency and low single counting rate. We have
tested RPCs with many gas mixtures, at sea level, in order to optimize these
parameters. The results of this study are reported.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Nucl. Instr. Meth. A, talk
given at the "5th International Workshop on RPCs and Related Detectors", Bari
(Italy) 199
Energy-Efficient Power Control in Impulse Radio UWB Wireless Networks
In this paper, a game-theoretic model for studying power control for wireless
data networks in frequency-selective multipath environments is analyzed. The
uplink of an impulse-radio ultrawideband system is considered. The effects of
self-interference and multiple-access interference on the performance of
generic Rake receivers are investigated for synchronous systems. Focusing on
energy efficiency, a noncooperative game is proposed in which users in the
network are allowed to choose their transmit powers to maximize their own
utilities, and the Nash equilibrium for the proposed game is derived. It is
shown that, due to the frequency selective multipath, the noncooperative
solution is achieved at different signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratios,
depending on the channel realization and the type of Rake receiver employed. A
large-system analysis is performed to derive explicit expressions for the
achieved utilities. The Pareto-optimal (cooperative) solution is also discussed
and compared with the noncooperative approach.Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Journal on Selected Topics in Signal Processing
- Special issue on Performance Limits of Ultra-Wideband System
Pulse-Shape Discrimination of CaF2(Eu)
We measured the decay time of the scintillation pulses produced by electron
and nuclear recoils in CaF2(Eu) by a new fitting method. In the recoil energy
region 5-30 keVee, we found differences of the decay time between electron and
nuclear recoil events. In the recoil energy region above 20 keVee, we found
that the decay time is independent of the recoil energy.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
First Results from Dark Matter Search Experiment in the Nokogiriyama Underground Cell
An experiment to search for hypothetical particle dark matter using cryogenic
thermal detector, or bolometer is ongoing. The bolometer consists of eight
pieces of 21 g LiF absorbers and sensitive NTD germanium thermistors attached
to them and is installed in the Nokogiriyama underground cell which is a
shallow depth site ( m w.e.). We report on the results from the first
running for about ten days using this arrayed bolometer system together with
appropriate shieldings and muon veto counters. From the obtained energy spectra
the exclusion limits for the cross section of the elastic neutralino-proton
scattering are derived under commonly accepted astrophysical assumptions. The
sensitivity for the light neutralino with a mass below 5 GeV is improved by
this work.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex, 4 figure
A collimation system for ELI-NP Gamma Beam System - design and simulation of performance
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance and refine the design of the collimation system for the gamma radiation source (GBS) currently being realised at ELI-NP facility. The gamma beam, produced by inverse Compton scattering, will provide a tunable average energy in the range between 0.2 and 20 MeV, an energy bandwidth 0.5% and a flux of about 108 photons/s. As a result of the inverse Compton interaction, the energy of the emitted radiation is related to the emission angle, it is maximum in the backscattering direction and decreases as the angle increase [1,2]. Therefore, the required energy bandwidth can be obtained only by developing a specific collimation system of the gamma beam, i.e. filtering out the radiation emitted at larger angles. The angular acceptance of the collimation for ELI-NP-GBS must be continuously adjustable in a range from about 700 to 60 μrad, to obtain the required parameters in the entire energy range. The solution identified is a stack of adjustable slits, arranged with a relative rotation around the beam axis to obtain an hole with an approximately circular shape. In this contribution, the final collimation design and its performance evaluated by carrying out a series of detailed Geant4 simulations both of the high-energy and the low-energy beamline are presented
BigraphER: rewriting and analysis engine for bigraphs
BigraphER is a suite of open-source tools providing an effi-
cient implementation of rewriting, simulation, and visualisation for bigraphs,
a universal formalism for modelling interacting systems that
evolve in time and space and first introduced by Milner. BigraphER consists
of an OCaml library that provides programming interfaces for the
manipulation of bigraphs, their constituents and reaction rules, and a
command-line tool capable of simulating Bigraphical Reactive Systems
(BRSs) and computing their transition systems. Other features are native
support for both bigraphs and bigraphs with sharing, stochastic reaction
rules, rule priorities, instantiation maps, parameterised controls, predicate
checking, graphical output and integration with the probabilistic
model checker PRISM
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