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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
411

ADVANCED GPR SYSTEM FOR HIGH-PERFORMANCE TOMOGRAPHIC SUBSURFACE IMAGING

Ono, Sashi, Lee, Hua 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 20-23, 2003 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / In this paper, the research prototype of a high-performance GPR imaging system is presented. The system is equipped with the capability of synthetic-aperture scan, stepfrequency FMCW illumination, and high-resolution tomographic image reconstruction.
412

ROCKET MOTOR PLUME EFFECTS ON TM SIGNALS - MODEL CORROBORATION

Johnston, Jerry W., LaPoint, Steve 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 28-31, 1996 / Town and Country Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California / This paper presents the interim results of an effort to corroborate analytic model predictions of the effects of rocket motor plume on telemetry signal RF propagation. When space is available, telemetry receiving stations are purposely positioned to be outside the region of a rocket motor's plume interaction with the RF path; therefore, little historical data has been available to corroborate model predictions for specific rocket motor types and altitudes. RF signal strength data was collected during the flight of HERA target missile by White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) using a transportable telemetry receiving site specifically positioned to be within the rocket plume region of influence at intermediate altitudes. The collected data was analyzed and compared to an RF plume attenuation model developed for pre-mission predictions. This work was directed by the US Army Kwajalein Atoll (USAKA)/ Kwajalein Missile Range (KMR) Safety Division.
413

Aspects of honeybush tea (Cyclopia species) propagation

Mbangcolo, Mongezi Morrison 12 1900
Thesis (MScAgric (Agronomy)--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / Honeybush (Cyclopia spp. Fabaceae) is indigenous to the fynbos botanical biome of the Eastern and Western Cape of South Africa. The increase in the international demand for honeybush tea for health benefits, concern over exploitation of wild populations and the lack of published agronomic information necessitated this study to evaluate different aspects of honeybush propagation. The main objectives of this study were to evaluate the effect of species and cutting position on rooting of cuttings of Cyclopia species using different rooting hormones, to evaluate the effect of an organic plant fertilizer and cutting position on growth and establishment of rooted cuttings and to study the influence of different seed pre-treatments on germination of Cyclopia species. Terminal and sub-terminal cuttings of C. intermedia and C. genistoides treated with different rooting hormones were rooted under day/night temperature controlled glasshouse conditions. Intermittent mist was used as means of moisture supply to the cuttings for 45-60 seconds daily every 30 minutes. C. genistoides rooted significantly better compared to C. intermedia as measured by rooting percentage, number of roots per cutting, length of longest root and mean root length during the summer season. The cutting position had a significant effect on rooting of the cuttings in summer compared to winter and spring season. The interactive effect of species, treatment and cutting position resulted into 86% of rooting in summer from the terminal cuttings of C. genistoides, while only 4% was recorded as the highest rooting percentage in both winter and spring seasons. The highest number of roots and the greatest root length per cutting were obtained with 2 and 4 g L-1 IBA from terminal cuttings of C. genistoides and these hormone concentrations were not significantly different to each other. To evaluate the effect of an organic plant fertilizer and cutting position on plant growth and establishment, rooted cuttings of two Cyclopia species (C. intermedia and C. genistoides) from two cutting positions (terminal and sub-terminal) were transferred to pots (576 cm3) and treated with Nitrosol fertilizer at application rates of 3.33 ml.L-1, 1.67 ml.L-1 and 0 ml.L-1 (control). Cyclopia plantlets were uniformly inoculated once with a symbiotic Rhizobium bacteria to improve the formation of nodules. Nitrosol® at 3.33 ml.L-1 significantly affected fresh and dry plant weight, fresh and dry root weight, number of shoots and nodules per plant compared to either 1.67 ml.L-1 or the control. Relative to species, C. genistoides performed better in terms of fresh and dry plant weight, fresh and dry root weight, and number of shoots and nodules per plant compared to C. intermedia. The origin of the cutting position did not significantly affect the above mentioned parameters. Plant mineral analysis revealed that most of the essential elements increased with increasing Nitrosol® application rates, with C. genistoides having higher levels of mineral elements than C. intermedia. This could be an indication of the differences between the two species in terms of nutrient uptake, utilization and distribution within the plant tissues. In the germination studies, seeds obtained from different seed sources of Cyclopia species were subjected to different pre-sowing treatments. Seed treatments were sulphuric acid (95%), hot water (100°C), water with smoke paper disk, and demineralised water (control). The study revealed that all the treatments had a significant effect on germination with the exception of eight year old seeds obtained from C. subternata (seed source two). Although hot water treatment improved germination compared to smoked paper disk and the control, seeds treated with hot water degenerated rapidly. The highest overall germination (77.33%) was found with one year old seeds compared to other seed sources older than one year. Although smoked paper disks generally did not improve germination compared to the control, in one year old seeds from seed source one, this treatment greatly influenced germination, suggesting that seed age might have influenced germination of these seeds. In terms of germination rate, germination generally started after four days in most treatments.
414

Multipath Mitigation on an Operational Telemetry Link

Guéguen, Arnaud, Auvray, David 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2011 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Seventh Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 24-27, 2011 / Bally's Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada / Transmitter mobility and multipath propagation make the telemetry channel both time and frequency selective, which results in telemetry link errors, sometimes in crucial flight phases. Only part of these impairments are compensated by various diversity techniques, but a fast converging adaptive channel equalization is probably the best suited and most cost effective solution. This paper first presents an analysis of mobile multipath propagation in telemetry based on recorded operational signals, both at the transmitter and at the receiver sides. Then it provides performance evaluation of a novel blind equalizer, assessed by offline processing of the recorded signals. The paper focuses on typical environments at a flight test centre, which exhibit critical multipath channel characteristics, namely during parking, taxiway and flight. The channel analysis exploits the recorded signals as well as the time frequency response of the novel equalizer filter. Performance evaluation shows that the equalizer outperforms state of the art Constant Modulus Algorithm (CMA). In particular, it is shown to significantly increase the telemetry link availability even in severe conditions, sometimes from nearly 0% to almost 100%, whereas the CMA fails to improve the signal quality as soon as the channel varies in time.
415

Wideband Multipath Propagation for Helicopter-to-Ground Telemetry Links

Rice, Michael, Jensen, Michael 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2011 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Seventh Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 24-27, 2011 / Bally's Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada / This paper reports the analysis of L-band channel sounding experiments conducted along the flight line at Cairns Army Airfield, Ft. Rucker, Alabama. Propagation data from multiple antennas on a helicopter to multiple receiving antennas on the ground are used to compute power delay profiles. Analysis of the results reveals delay spreads of the multipath channels between 200 ns and 400 ns, with the longer delay spreads resulting when using a receive antenna with lower gain and higher sidelobe levels. The data also shows that on average, diversity signaling from three aircraft-mounted antennas can lead to gains in signal-to-noise ratio of approximately 13 dB, with the gain dependent on the multipath characteristics observed by the ground antenna.
416

A study of radiowave propagation at 900 MHz in the highly urbanised areas

Ngai, Hing-on., 魏慶安. January 1996 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Electrical and Electronic Engineering / Master / Master of Philosophy
417

Three-dimensional computation of light scattering by multiple biological cells

Starosta, Matthew Samuel, 1981- 01 October 2010 (has links)
This work presents an investigation into the optical scattering of heterogeneous cells with an application to two-photon imaging, optical scattering measurements and STED imaging. Using the finite difference time-domain (FDTD) method, the full-wave scattering by many cells containing multiple organelles with varying indices of refraction is computed. These simulations were previously limited to single cells for reasons of computational cost. A superposition approximation that uses the coherent linear superposition of FDTD-determined farfield scattering patterns of small numbers of cells to estimate the scattering from a larger tissue was developed and investigated. It was found that for the approximation to be accurate, the scattering sub-problems must at minimum extend along the incident field propagation axis for the full depth of the tissue, preserving the scattering that takes place in the direction of propagation. The FDTD method was used to study the scattering effects of multiple inhomogeneous cells on the propagation of a focused Gaussian beam with an application to two-photon imaging. It was found that scattering is mostly responsible for the reduction in two-photon fluorescence signal as depth is increased. It was also determined that for the chosen beam parameters and the cell and organelle configurations used, the nuclei are the dominant scatterers. FDTD was also utilized in an investigation of cellular scattering effects on the propagation of a common depletion beam used in STED microscopy and how scattering impacts the image obtained with a STED microscope. An axial doughnut beam was formulated and implemented in FDTD simulations, along with a corresponding focused Gaussian beam to simulate a fluorescence excitation beam. It was determined that the depletion beam will maintain a well-defined axial null in spite of scattering, although scattering will reduce the resulting fluorescence signal with focal depth. / text
418

非平穩性時間數列預測 / Forecasting for nonstationary time series a neural networks approach

于健, YU, JIAN Unknown Date (has links)
Conventional time series analysis depends heavily on the twin assumptions of linearity and stationarity. However; there are certain cases where sampled data tend to violate the assumptions. In this paper, we use neural networks technology to explore the situation when the assumptions of linearity and stationarity are failed. At the end of the paper, we discuss an illustrative example about the annual expenditures of government and science-education-culture of R.O.C.
419

Sécurisation des infrastructures critiques : modélisation des interdépendances, étude des pannes en cascade et recherche d'une méthodologie de détection des propagations des défaillances

Diallo, Alpha-Amadou 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Afin de profiter des progrès des technologies de l'information et de la communication, les infrastructures critiques se reposent de plus en plus sur des systèmes d'information complexes et se sont largement connectées à des réseaux publics, dont l'Internet. Ces interconnexions rendent les infrastructures interdépendantes et les exposent à l'ensemble des vulnérabilités des systèmes informatiques. Dans le cadre de cette thèse, nous proposons un ensemble d'outils de génération de topologies, de simulation des propagations des défaillances et de détection des pannes pour améliorer la compréhension de ces interdépendances et lutter contre les phénomènes de propagation des défaillances résultants. Le générateur de topologies proposé définit un algorithme de génération de graphes topologiques réalistes et adaptées aux études des interdépendances en générant plusieurs modèles d'infrastructure à partir d'une base commune, facilitant ainsi l'interconnexion des différents réseaux. Le simulateur des propagations des défaillances utilise les modèles épidémiologiques. Ces modèles ont été adaptés afin de prendre en compte les principaux facteurs qui influent les propagations des défaillances dans les réseaux de télécommunications comme les différents temporisateurs des protocoles de routage et la taille des tables de routage. Enfin, notre dernière contribution est la mise en œuvre d'un logiciel permettant de détecter des pannes dans un environnement hétérogène et distribué en réutilisant les outils de supervision existants. Cet outil offre des moyens pour assurer le contrôle d'accès aux informations lorsque l'environnement est constitué de plusieurs réseaux
420

ROOT DEVELOPMENT OF STEM CUTTINGS IN SELECTED PLANT SPECIES AS INFLUENCED BY BORON, CALCIUM, AND 1H-INDOLE-BUTANOIC ACID (IBA).

Livingston, Margaret. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.

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