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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.
371

Decomposição celular e torção de Reidemeister para formas espaciais esféricas tetraedrais / Cellular decomposition and Reidemeister torsion for tetrahedral spherical space forms

Galves, Ana Paula Tremura 14 February 2013 (has links)
Dada uma ação isométrica livre do grupo binário tetraedral G sobre esferas de dimensão ímpar, obtemos uma decomposição celular finita explícita para as formas espaciais esféricas tetraedrais, fazendo uso do conceito de região (ou domínio) fundamental. A estrutura celular deixa explícita uma descrição do complexo de cadeias sobre o grupo G. Como aplicações, utilizamos o complexo de cadeias e a interpretação geométrica do produto cup para calcular o anel de cohomologia da forma espacial esférica tetraedral em dimensão três, e também calculamos a torção de Reidemeister destes espaços para uma determinada representação de G / Given a free isometric action of a binary tetrahedral group G on odd dimensional spheres, we obtain an explicit finite cellular decomposition of the tetrahedral spherical space forms, using the concept of fundamental domain. The cellular structure gives an explicit description of the associated cellular chain complex over the group G. As applications we use the chain complex and the geometric interpretation of the cup product to calculate the cohomology ring of the tetrahedral spherical space form in three dimension, and also compute the Reidemeister torsion of these spaces for a determined representation of G
372

Advanced methods for diffusion MRI data analysis and their application to the healthy ageing brain

Neto Henriques, Rafael January 2018 (has links)
Diffusion of water molecules in biological tissues depends on several microstructural properties. Therefore, diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) is a useful tool to infer and study microstructural brain changes in the context of human development, ageing and neuropathology. In this thesis, the state-of-the-art of advanced dMRI techniques is explored and strategies to overcome or reduce its pitfalls are developed and validated. Firstly, it is shown that PCA denoising and Gibbs artefact suppression algorithms provide an optimal compromise between increased precision of diffusion measures and the loss of tissue's diffusion non-Gaussian information. Secondly, the spatial information provided by the diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) technique is explored and used to resolve crossing fibres and generalize diffusion measures to cases not limited to well-aligned white matter fibres. Thirdly, as an alternative to diffusion microstructural modelling techniques such as the neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI), it is shown that spherical deconvolution techniques can be used to characterize fibre crossing and dispersion simultaneously. Fourthly, free water volume fraction estimates provided by the free water diffusion tensor imaging (fwDTI) are shown to be useful to detect and remove voxels corrupted by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) partial volume effects. Finally, dMRI techniques are applied to the diffusion data from the large collaborative Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (CamCAN) study. From these data, the inference provided by diffusion anisotropy measures on maturation and degeneration processes is shown to be biased by age-related changes of fibre organization. Inconsistencies of previous NODDI ageing studies are also revealed to be associated with the different age ranges covered. The CamCAN data is also processed using a novel non-Gaussian diffusion characterization technique which is invariant to different fibre configurations. Results show that this technique can provide indices specific to axonal water fraction which can be linked to age-related fibre density changes.
373

Diferentes noções de diferenciabilidade para funções definidas na esfera / Different notions of differentiability for functions defined on the sphere

Castro, Mario Henrique de 01 March 2007 (has links)
Neste trabalho estudamos diferentes noções de diferenciabilidade para funções definidas na esfera unitária S^n-1 de R^n, n>=2. Em relação à derivada usual, encontramos condições necessárias e/ou suficientes para que uma função seja diferenciável até uma ordem fixada. Para as outras duas, a derivada forte de Laplace-Beltrami e a derivada fraca, apresentamos algumas propriedades básicas e procuramos condições que garantam a equivalência destas com a diferenciabilidade usual. / In this work we study different notions of differentiability for functions defined on the unit sphere S^n-1 of R^n, n>=2. With respect to the usual derivative, we find necessary and/or sufficient conditions in order that a function be differentiable up to a fixed order. As for the other two, the strong Laplace-Beltrami derivative and the weak derivative, we present some basic properties about them and search for conditions that guarantee the equivalence of them with the previous one.
374

Capteur acoustique sphérique autonome : étude du dispositif de récupération d'énergie vibratoire / Autonomous spherical acoustic sensor : study of the vibratory energy harvesting device

Diab, Daher 07 December 2017 (has links)
Un nouveau capteur acoustique sphérique autonome est proposé. Il est destiné à être immergé dans un milieu liquide ou pâteux pour mesurer certaines propriétés physiques du milieu et récupérer l'énergie vibratoire ambiante pour assurer son autonomie. Le capteur est composé de deux coquilles hémisphériques en plexiglas et d'une bague piézoélectrique en PZ26 fixée entre les deux coquilles. Cette structure peut être utilisée aussi bien en excitateur que capteur. Un modèle de simulation de la récupération d'énergie vibratoire a été développé en considérant seulement deux modes de vibration: mode épaisseur et mode radial. Pour chaque mode, le comportement de l’anneau est décrit par un circuit électromécanique équivalent reliant les ports mécaniques (forces et vitesses) au port électrique (tension et courant). Ce choix est guidé par la possibilité de combiner la partie électromécanique avec l'électronique qui traite l'énergie directement dans un simulateur basé sur Spice. Pour valider cette approche, une simulation par éléments finis a été réalisée et comparée aux résultats produits par le circuit électromécanique. Les fréquences de résonance ont également été vérifiées expérimentalement avec un analyseur d'impédance. Toutes ces vérifications donnent des résultats en très bon accord avec le modèle électromécanique proposé en termes de fréquences de résonance, de tension et de puissance collectées. Enfin, plusieurs validations expérimentales sont présentées avec un prototype de capteur sphérique. Ces validations montrent l’adéquation des prédictions avec les résultats expérimentaux. Finalement, un test du circuit de récupération est effectué en situation réelle. / A new spherical autonomous acoustic sensor is proposed. It is intended to be immersed in a liquid or pasty medium to measure some physical properties of the medium and should harvest ambient energy to ensure its autonomy. The sensor is composed of two Plexiglas half-spherical shells and a PZ26 piezoelectric ring clamped between the two shells. This structure can be used as well as in exciter or sensor. A simulation model of vibrational energy harvesting has been developed considering only two modes of vibration: thickness and radial modes. For each mode, the ring behavior is described by an equivalent electromechanical circuit connecting the mechanical ports (forces and velocities) to the electrical port (voltage and current). This choice is guided by the possibility to combine the electromechanical part with the electronics that process the energy directly in a Spice based simulator. To validate this approach, a finite elements simulation was realized and compared to the electromechanical circuit results. Resonance frequencies were also verified experimentally with an impedance analyzer. All these verifications give results in very good agreement with the proposed electromechanical model, as well as in terms of resonant frequencies, harvested voltage and power. Finally several experimental investigations are presented with a prototype of spherical sensor. These validations show the adequacy of the predictions with the experimental results. Finally, a test of the harvesting circuit is done in real situation.
375

Mechanical Behaviour of Gas Turbine Coatings

Eskner, Mats January 2004 (has links)
Coatings are frequently applied on gas turbine components inorder to restrict surface degradation such as corrosion andoxidation of the structural material or to thermally insulatethe structural material against the hot environment, therebyincreasing the efficiency of the turbine. However, in order toobtain accurate lifetime expectancies and performance of thecoatings system it is necessary to have a reliableunderstanding of the mechanical properties and failuremechanisms of the coatings. In this thesis, mechanical and fracture behaviour have beenstudied for a NiAl coating applied by a pack cementationprocess, an air-plasma sprayed NiCoCrAlY bondcoat, a vacuumplasma-sprayed NiCrAlY bondcoat and an air plasma-sprayed ZrO2+ 6-8 % Y2O3topcoat. The mechanical tests were carried out ata temperature interval between room temperature and 860oC.Small punch tests and spherical indentation were the testmethods applied for this purpose, in which existing bending andindentation theory were adopted for interpretation of the testresults. Efforts were made to validate the test methods toensure their relevance for coating property measurements. Itwas found that the combination of these two methods givescapability to predict the temperature dependence of severalrelevant mechanical properties of gas turbine coatings, forexample the hardness, elastic modulus, yield strength, fracturestrength, flow stress-strain behaviour and ductility.Furthermore, the plasma-sprayed coatings were tested in bothas-coated and heat-treated condition, which revealedsignificant difference in properties. Microstructuralexamination of the bondcoats showed that oxidation with loss ofaluminium plays an important role in the coating degradationand for the property changes in the coatings. Keywords:small punch test, miniaturised disc bendingtests, spherical indentation, coatings, NiAl, APS-NiCoCrAlY,VPS-NiCrAlY, mechanical properties
376

Diagnostics for advanced fusion plasma scenarios

Kuldkepp, Mattias January 2006 (has links)
Over the past decade, fusion research has showed the potential of being a main candidate for energy production for future generations. Further advances in improved fusion performance are therefore vital. This thesis focuses on advanced fusion plasma scenarios and their diagnostic requirements. In particular the design of a motional Stark effect (MSE) diagnostic at the MAST spherical tokamak and the analysis of magneto-hydrodynamic mode feedback control and pulsed poloidal current drive (PPCD) at the reversed field pinch (RFP) experiment EXTRAP T2R are discussed. The MSE diagnostic is important for the determination of the plasma current profile, information that is necessary for studies in advanced confinement scenarios like reversed shear profiles or current holes. The MAST MSE system has two channels and selects the spectral components using 1Å FWHM interference filters. The diagnostic has been commissioned during the fall of 2006 and the results show the feasibility of the technique with rms-noise ~0.5° using a time resolution of 1 ms. Investigations of mirror labyrinths for the future ITER MSE diagnostic highlight the need for careful calibration considerations. Feedback control and PPCD are techniques for improved confinement. Feedback control dramatically decreases impurity influx at the end of discharges while transport in the bulk plasma is largely unaffected. During PPCD the transport is seen to decrease and it is demonstrated that PPCD and feedback control can be employed simultaneously. New and innovative techniques for fusion spectroscopy are furthermore described. This includes the use of correlations in line integrated signals to determine ion emission profiles in poloidally symmetric environments. Good agreement with other diagnostic methods is obtained. The assessment of electron temperature profiles using measured differences between Thomson scattering and vacuum ultra-violet spectroscopy is also shown. / QC 20100907
377

Spatially Regularized Spherical Reconstruction: A Cross-Domain Filtering Approach for HARDI Signals

Salgado Patarroyo, Ivan Camilo 29 August 2013 (has links)
Despite the immense advances of science and medicine in recent years, several aspects regarding the physiology and the anatomy of the human brain are yet to be discovered and understood. A particularly challenging area in the study of human brain anatomy is that of brain connectivity, which describes the intricate means by which different regions of the brain interact with each other. The study of brain connectivity is deeply dependent on understanding the organization of white matter. The latter is predominantly comprised of bundles of myelinated axons, which serve as connecting pathways between approximately 10¹¹ neurons in the brain. Consequently, the delineation of fine anatomical details of white matter represents a highly challenging objective, and it is still an active area of research in the fields of neuroimaging and neuroscience, in general. Recent advances in medical imaging have resulted in a quantum leap in our understanding of brain anatomy and functionality. In particular, the advent of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) has provided researchers with a non-invasive means to infer information about the connectivity of the human brain. In a nutshell, dMRI is a set of imaging tools which aim at quantifying the process of water diffusion within the human brain to delineate the complex structural configurations of the white matter. Among the existing tools of dMRI high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) offers a desirable trade-off between its reconstruction accuracy and practical feasibility. In particular, HARDI excels in its ability to delineate complex directional patterns of the neural pathways throughout the brain, while remaining feasible for many clinical applications. Unfortunately, HARDI presents a fundamental trade-off between its ability to discriminate crossings of neural fiber tracts (i.e., its angular resolution) and the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of its associated images. Consequently, given that the angular resolution is of fundamental importance in the context of dMRI reconstruction, there is a need for effective algorithms for de-noising HARDI data. In this regard, the most effective de-noising approaches have been observed to be those which exploit both the angular and the spatial-domain regularity of HARDI signals. Accordingly, in this thesis, we propose a formulation of the problem of reconstruction of HARDI signals which incorporates regularization assumptions on both their angular and their spatial domains, while leading to a particularly simple numerical implementation. Experimental evidence suggests that the resulting cross-domain regularization procedure outperforms many other state of the art HARDI de-noising methods. Moreover, the proposed implementation of the algorithm supersedes the original reconstruction problem by a sequence of efficient filters which can be executed in parallel, suggesting its computational advantages over alternative implementations.
378

Desarrollo de un Simulador Visual de Óptica Adaptativa para el Diseño Interactivo de Componentes Oftálmicos

Manzanera Román, Silvestre 04 December 2006 (has links)
En este trabajo se describe un simulador visual de óptica adaptativa (SVOA) empleado con dos objetivos: primero, el testeo y diseño de perfiles de fase progresivos para extender la profundidad de foco y segundo el estudio del efecto de la aberración cromática longitudinal y su acoplamiento con la aberración esférica en el ojo humano.Diversos perfiles de fase progresivos fueron analizados en el SVOA, resultando un excelente acuerdo con las simulaciones teóricas. Algunos de estos perfiles fueron implementados físicamente en lentes de contacto y evaluados visualmente. La buena concordancia que se encontró entre esta evaluación y la obtenida simulando el perfil con el SVOA validan todo el procedimiento y el sistema.También se llevaron a cabo medidas de la capacidad visual combinando la corrección de las aberraciones cromática y esférica. Los resultados indican que la mejor calidad de visión se produce al eliminar al mismo tiempo ambas aberraciones. / An adaptive optics visual simulator (AOVS) is described in this work. It was used to test and design progressive phase profiles to extend depth of focus, and to study the combined effect of both, the longitudinal chromatic aberration and the spherical aberration in the human eye.A set of progressive phase profiles were tested using the AOVS, obtaining an excellent agreement with the theoretical simulations. Some of these phase profiles were implemented on contact lenses and visually tested. Again the results agreed with the evaluation carried out through the AOVS, validating the instrument.Visual performance was also tested correcting either chromatic aberration or spherical aberration or both, resulting the best performance when both aberrations are simultaneously corrected.
379

Scale-based decomposable shape representations for medical image segmentation and shape analysis

Nain, Delphine 29 November 2006 (has links)
In this thesis, we propose and evaluate two novel scale-based decomposable representations of shape for the segmentation and morphometric analysis of anatomical structures in medical imaging. We propose two representations that are adapted to a particular class of anatomical structures and allow for a richer shape description and a more fine-grained control over the deformation of models based on these representations, when compared to previous techniques. In the first part of this thesis, we introduce the concept of a scale-space shape filter for implicit shape representations that measures the deviation from a tubular shape in a local neighborhood of points, given a particular scale of analysis. We use these filters for the segmentation of blood vessels, and introduce the notion of segmentation with a soft shape prior, where the segmented model is not globally constrained to a predefined shape space, but is penalized locally if it deviates strongly from a tubular structure. Using this filter, we derive a region-based active contour segmentation algorithm for tubular structures that penalizes leakages. We present results on synthetic and real 2D and 3D datasets. In the second part of this thesis, we present a novel multi-scale parametric shape representation using spherical wavelets. Our proposed shape representation encodes shape variations in a population at various scales to be used as prior in a probabilistic segmentation framework. We derive a probabilistic active surface segmentation algorithm using the multi-scale prior coefficients as parameters for our optimization procedure. One nice benefit of this algorithm is that the optimization method can be applied in a coarse-to-fine manner. We present results on 3D sub-cortical brain structures. We also present a novel method of statistical surface-based morphometry based on the use of non-parametric permutation tests and the spherical wavelet shape representation. As an application, we analyze two sub-cortical brain structures, the caudate nucleus and hippocampus.
380

Static characteristics and rotordynamic coefficients of a four-pad tilting-pad journal bearing with ball-in-socket pivots in load-between-pad configuration

Harris, Joel Mark 15 May 2009 (has links)
Static characteristics and rotordynamic coefficients were experimentally determined for a four-pad tilting-pad journal bearing with ball-in-socket pivots in loadbetween- pad configuration. A frequency-independent [M]-[C]-[K] model fit the measurements reasonably well, except for the cross-coupled damping coefficients. Test conditions included speeds from 4,000 to 12,000 rpm and unit loads from 0 to 1896 kPa (0 to 275 psi). The test bearing was manufactured by Rotating Machinery Technology (RMT), Inc. Though it has a nominal diameter of 101.78 mm (4.0070 in.), measurements indicated significant bearing crush with radial bearing clearances of 99.6 μm (3.92 mils) and 54.6 μm (2.15 mils) in the axes 45º counterclockwise and 45º clockwise from the loaded axis, respectively. The pad length is 101.6 mm (4.00 in.), giving L/D = 1.00. The pad arc angle is 73º, and the pivot offset ratio is 65%. The preloads of the loaded and unloaded pads are 0.37 and 0.58, respectively. A bulk-flow Navier-Stokes model was used for predictions, using adiabatic conditions for the bearing fluid. Because the model assumes constant nominal clearances at all pads, the average of the measured clearances was used as an estimate. Eccentricities and attitude angles were markedly under predicted while power loss was under predicted at low speeds and very well predicted at high speeds. The maximum detected pad temperature was 71ºC (160ºF) and the rise from inlet to maximum bearing temperature was over predicted by 10-40%. Multiple-frequency force inputs were used to excite the bearing. Direct stiffness and damping coefficients were significantly over predicted, but addition of a simple stiffness-in-series model substantially improved the agreement between theory and experiment. Direct added masses were zero or negative at low speeds and increased with speed up to a maximum of about 50 kg; they were normally greater in the unloaded direction. Although significant cross-coupled stiffness terms were present, they always had the same sign. The bearing had zero whirl frequency ratio netting unconditional stability over all test conditions. Static stiffness in the y direction (obtained from steadystate loading) matched the rotordynamic stiffness Kyy (obtained from multiple-frequency excitation) reasonably at low loads but poorly at the maximum test load.

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