1,070 research outputs found
Microwave Surveillance based on Ghost Imaging and Distributed Antennas
In this letter, we proposed a ghost imaging (GI) and distributed antennas
based microwave surveillance scheme. By analyzing its imaging resolution and
sampling requirement, the potential of employing microwave GI to achieve
high-quality surveillance performance with low system complexity has been
demonstrated. The theoretical analysis and effectiveness of the proposed
microwave surveillance method are also validated via simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 11 figures, submitted for possible journal publicatio
U(1) U(1) / Z Kosterlitz-Thouless transition of the Larkin-Ovchinnikov phase in an anisotropic two-dimensional system
We study Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) transitions of the Larkin-Ovchinnikov (LO)
phase for a two-dimensional system composed of coupled one-dimensional tubes of
fermions. The LO phase here is characterized by a stripe structure (periodic in
only one direction) in the order parameter. The low energy excitations involve
the oscillation of the stripe and the fluctuation of the phase, which can be
described by an effective theory composed of two anisotropic XY models. We
compute from a microscopic model the coefficients of the XY models from which
the KT transition temperatures are determined. We found the for small intertube tunneling . As increases
the system undergoes a first-order transition to the normal phase at zero
temperature. Our method can be used to determine the Goldstone excitations of
any stripe order involving charge or spin degrees of freedom.Comment: one-column, 5+ pages, 4 figure
The determinants of farm investment and residential construction in post-reform China
The objective of this paper is to clarify, on the basis of detailed farm level data derived from recent surveys,the importance of factors related to tenure security, farm size and credit availability in constraining farmers'agricultural investment. In particular, a direct measure of farmers'perceptions regarding tenure security will be utilized, as well as information on transactions in the credit market. The next section provides a description of the study areas. It is followed by a discussion of factors affecting farm investment and a description of investment patterns in the study areas. A formal model of farmers'consumption and investment decisions, and an econometric analysis are then presented and results are interpreted. The last section summarizes the paper.Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Banks&Banking Reform,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Agricultural Knowledge&Information Systems
Credit's effect on productivity in Chinese agriculture : a microeconomic model of disequilibrium
Many government programs want to provide more credit to the farm sector to increase agricultural productivity. If the marginal effect on productivity is small, those resources might be put to better use elsewhere. The authors conducted an econometric analysis of the effect of credit on output supply which recognizies that credit markets are not necessarily at equilibrium - so that credit rationing and nonborrowing are both possible. Only about 37 percent of the farmers in the study area were constrained by inadequate formal credit. Informal credit sources provided funds for specific non-agricultural activities that were not fungible. The results indicate that one additional yuan of liquidity yielded 0.235 yuan of additional gross value of output. These results suggest that for the area of China covered in the study, a good part of the short-term credit may actually be used for consumption and investment. Two conclusions are suggested for evaluating the probable effect of expanding agricultural credit. First, not all farmers, and sometimes only a minority, are constrained in their farming operations by inadequate credit. And second, greater supplies of formal credit will be diverted in part to consumption, so the likely effect on output will be smaller than what one might expect if all funds are assumed to be used productively.Banks&Banking Reform,Financial Intermediation,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Economic Theory&Research,Environmental Economics&Policies
FRNET: Flattened Residual Network for Infant MRI Skull Stripping
Skull stripping for brain MR images is a basic segmentation task. Although
many methods have been proposed, most of them focused mainly on the adult MR
images. Skull stripping for infant MR images is more challenging due to the
small size and dynamic intensity changes of brain tissues during the early
ages. In this paper, we propose a novel CNN based framework to robustly extract
brain region from infant MR image without any human assistance. Specifically,
we propose a simplified but more robust flattened residual network architecture
(FRnet). We also introduce a new boundary loss function to highlight ambiguous
and low contrast regions between brain and non-brain regions. To make the whole
framework more robust to MR images with different imaging quality, we further
introduce an artifact simulator for data augmentation. We have trained and
tested our proposed framework on a large dataset (N=343), covering newborns to
48-month-olds, and obtained performance better than the state-of-the-art
methods in all age groups.Comment: 2019 IEEE 16th International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI
Bose-Einstein supersolid phase for a novel type of momentum dependent interaction
A novel class of non-local interactions between bosons is found to favor a
crystalline Bose-Einstein condensation ground state. By using both low energy
effective field theory and variational wavefunction method, we compare this
state not only with the homogeneous superfluid, as has been done previously,
but also with the normal (non-superfluid) crystalline phase and obtain the
phase diagram. The key characters are: the interaction potential displays a
negative minimum at finite momentum which determines the wavevector of this
supersolid phase; and the wavelength corresponding to the momentum minimum
needs to be greater than the mean inter-boson distance.Comment: 4 pages 3 figures, fig 1 and fig 2 update
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