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ALL-OPTICAL DELTA-SIGMA MODULATOR DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATIONTAFAZOLI MEHRJERDI, MOHAMAD 01 December 2015 (has links) (PDF)
In this research an approach to design and implement all-optical delta-sigma modulator (ODSM) has been expanded. The two main blocks of this modulator are “leaky integrator” and “bi-stable switch” designed and implemented by using active element like semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) and other passive elements like optical filter, isolator and coupler. All experiments are done on optical table and proper results achieved. Thus the new bi-stable switch is designed and implemented by using “inverted bistable switch” and “non-inverted bi-stable switch”. This switch is made by five ring lasers. Right wavelengths have chosen for each ring laser to achieve a novel characteristic called “Proteresis”. All control parameters of this switch was investigated The major impact of this research will be in the area communication system, which need high resolution and fast modulation speed with less noise in their systems.
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Massive ice in coarse-grained sediments, Western Canadian ArcticDe Pascale, Gregory P. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Unequal development, the Niger Delta : case study, 1900-1977Ododo, Jackson S. (Jackson Seiyefa) January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Levels of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) in marshy soils and sediments within Warri and its environs, NegeriaBayowa, Adejoke Victoria 11 1900 (has links)
Marshy soil and sediment samples were collected during dry and rainy seasons within Warri, and Agbarho, 20km away as control. Levels of 16 USEPA priority Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons PAHs were determined using GC-FID. Source prediction analysis was also done. The study was in Niger Delta region, Nigeria from January to March and June to August 2012 in dry and wet seasons. Benzo(a)pyrene had highest total concentration of 3.302mg/kg and mean value of 1.651mg/kg in dry season soil samples. However, sediment samples had highest levels for total concentration of PAHs of 19.362mg/kg and mean of 4.840mg/kg for both dry and rainy seasons within Warri. PAHs concentration was higher in dry than rainy seasons for soil and sediment samples. Source prediction analysis revealed that PAHs in sediments for dry season were pyrolytic while rainy seasons were petrogenic sources. For soils, the dry season was mixed sources while the rainy season was petrogenic. / Environmental Science / M. Sc. (Environmental Science)
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Design and Implementation of Sigma-Delta Converter : in Oversampling frequency / Design and Implementation of Sigma-Delta Converter in Oversampling frequencyPan, Yaobin, Li, Xizhuo January 2016 (has links)
Nowadays, Sigma-Delta analog-to-digital converters have been widely used in the technology of analog-to-digital conversion. It depends on the merits that the approach of Sigma-Delta has. The signal converted by oversampling is precise and well-suited in signal processing systems.This thesis mainly focuses on the principles and simulations of fundamental first-order Sigma-Delta converter, and some brief introductions about other Sigma-Delta converters.The main researches of this thesis are as follows: (1)This thesis shows not only the path about development of technology of different ADCs, but also the features and principles of these ADCs and their structures. (2)The thesis discusses how the technologies of oversampling and noise shaping are used in Sigma-Delta analog-to-digital conversion. (3)Illustrate different orders Sigma-Delta converters in different bits and their advantages and disadvantages, respectively. (4)The simulation is given in Matlab(Simulink). Typical first-order SigmaDelta converter is simulated with additional noise which will impact the input signal when implement. / Sigma-Delta Converter
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L'influence des oscillations en delta sur la sélection d'une actionHamel-Thibault, Audrey January 2016 (has links)
Résumé : La capacité de décider parmi plusieurs possibilités d'actions, grâce à l'information sensorielle disponible, est essentielle à un organisme interagissant avec un environnement complexe. Les modèles actuels de sélection d'une action soutiennent que le cerveau traite continuellement l'information sensorielle afin de planifier plusieurs possibilités d'action en parallèle. Dans cette perspective, ces représentations motrices, associées à chaque possibilité d'action, sont en constante compétition entre elles. Afin qu'une alternative puisse être sélectionnée pour le mouvement, une valeur de pondération, intégrant une multitude de facteurs, doit être associée à chacun des plans moteurs afin de venir moduler la compétition. Plusieurs études se sont intéressées aux différents facteurs modulant la sélection de l'action, tels que la disposition de l'environnement, le coût des actions, le niveau de récompense, etc. Par contre, il semble qu'aucune étude n'ait rapporté ce qu'il advient lorsque la valeur de pondération de chacune des actions possibles est identique. Dans ce contexte, quel est l'élément permettant de venir moduler la sélection de l'action? De ce fait, l'objectif principal de mon projet de maitrise est d'investiguer le facteur permettant au cerveau de sélectionner une action lorsque tous les facteurs rapportés dans la littérature sont contrôlés. De récentes données ont montré que les oscillations corticales lentes dans la bande delta peuvent servir d'instrument de sélection attentionnelle en modulant l'amplitude de la réponse neuronale. Ainsi, les stimuli arrivant dans le cortex pendant une phase en delta de forte excitabilité sont amplifiés, tandis que ceux arrivant lors d'une phase en delta de faible excitabilité sont atténués. Ceci dit, il est possible que la phase en delta dans laquelle se trouve le cerveau au moment d'effectuer la sélection d'une action puisse influencer la décision. Utilisant une tâche de sélection de main, cette étude teste l'hypothèse que la sélection de la main est associée à la phase en delta des ensembles neuronaux codant le mouvement de chacune des mains, lorsque tous les facteurs connus influençant la décision sont contrôlés. L'électroencéphalographie (EEG) fut utilisée afin d'enregistrer les signaux corticaux pendant que les participants effectuaient une tâche de sélection de main dans laquelle ils devaient, à chaque essai, atteindre une cible visuelle aussi rapidement que possible en utilisant la main de leur choix. La tâche fut conçue de façon à ce que les facteurs spatiaux et biomécaniques soient contrôlés. Ceci fut réalisé enidentifiant premièrement, sur une base individuelle, l'emplacement de la cible pour laquelle les mains droite et gauche avaient une probabilité équivalente d'être choisies (point d'égalité subjective, PSE). Ensuite, dans l'expérience principale, les participants effectuaient plusieurs mouvements d'atteinte vers des cibles positionnées près et loin du PSE, toujours avec la main de leur choix. L'utilisation de cinq cibles très près du PSE a permis de collecter de nombreux essais dans lesquels la main droite et la main gauche furent sélectionnées en réponse à un même stimulus visuel. Ceci a ainsi permis d'analyser les signaux des deux cortex dans des conditions d'utilisation de la main droite et gauche, tout en contrôlant pour les autres facteurs pouvant moduler la sélection de la main. Les résultats de cette recherche révèlent que l'hémisphère cortical se trouvant dans la phase la plus excitable en delta (près du pic négatif), lors de l'apparition du stimulus, est associé à la fois à la main qui sera sélectionnée ainsi qu'au temps de réaction. Ces résultats montrent que l'excitabilité corticale momentanée (phase du signal) pourrait agir comme un facteur modulant la sélection d'une action. Dans cette optique, ces données élargissent considérablement les modèles actuels en montrant que la sélection d'une action est en partie déterminée par l'état du cerveau au moment d'effectuer un choix, d'une manière qui est indépendante de toutes les variables de décision connues. / Abstract : Action selection is thought to be achieved by competitive interactions between simultaneously co-existing motor representations associated with each potential action. Critically, selection via competition requires biasing signals to enable only one of these alternatives to be selected. Here we use electroencephalography in a unique hand selection task in which all decision variables are controlled, and show that the cortical hemisphere that is in the most excitable phase of delta frequency band at target onset dictates the hand to be selected as well as reaction time. These results demonstrate that the momentary excitability of neuronal ensembles in which motor representations are encoded can bias action selection.
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WINTER LIMNOLOGY IN FLOODPLAIN LAKES OF THE SASKATCHEWAN RIVER DELTA, SK2016 February 1900 (has links)
Floodplains are among the most productive and biologically diverse freshwater ecosystems on earth. The exchange of nutrients and biota that occurs within these systems during seasonal inundation is essential in maintaining floodplain and river health. Anthropogenic structures, such as weirs, channels, and dams, have altered the natural flood hydrology of floodplain systems minimizing the frequency, strength and duration of flood events. This reduction ultimately leads to the isolation of important floodplain habitat, such as off-channel lakes, from the main channel, decreasing connectivity. Although some studies have examined the productivity of off-channel floodplain lakes in relation to connectivity, most are limited to tropical or highly degraded systems. Northern floodplains are not as well understood, with most of the research limited to the spring, summer, and fall seasons, when waterbodies are free of ice. With research limited to ice free seasons, there is not a full understanding of the year-round processes that occur within these off-channel lake habitats. This knowledge is crucial as the winter season is often when conditions within these habitats are at their most extreme. Such conditions prevent many fish species from permanent settlement; however, no research has been attempted to understand fish presence within these habitats during the winter season. In tropical systems, hypoxia-tolerant species and juveniles utilize these habitats as refuge from intolerant predators, so such habitat may be used similarly in more northern systems.
The purpose of this research was to understand the connectivity, limnology and suitability as fish habitat of off-channel floodplain lakes in the Saskatchewan River Delta (SRD), SK, during winter months. I determined the degree of connectivity to the main channel for 26 individual lakes within the SRD by two modern methods: remote sensing imagery, and stable isotopes (δ18O, δ2H). Both of these techniques proved effective at determining connectivity of individual lakes and showed good agreement, with lakes arranged into five connectivity categories using remote sensing imagery. Winter limnological conditions within these lakes were significantly influenced by their degree of connectivity, with lakes that were more connected having characteristics similar to that of the river, with higher levels of dissolved oxygen (DO), nitrates (NO3-NO2), pH, and lower levels of nutrients (TN,TP). Lakes that were less connected were characterized by low levels of DO and nutrients, and high levels of ammonia/ammonium (NH3-NH4), conditions that are not favourable for the survival of many fish species. Some of the more hypoxia-tolerant species found within the SRD appear, however, to use these habitats in the winter. This was supported by detection of fish presence using environmental DNA; five fish species were detected in many of the 26 lakes sampled, but only in lakes with NH3-NH4 levels below 1.77 mg/L and volumes greater than 178000 m3.
Together, these analyses suggest the influence of a spring/summer flood pulse on limnology is not limited to the months following a flood event, but rather extends well into the ice-cover season. This knowledge is critical as it points to controls on key processes (e.g. nutrient cycling, provision of fish habitat) during the period when lake conditions are most severe. As a result of human induced climate change, and from increased water demands for agriculture and hydropower, the natural flood pulse is expected to further decrease in size and frequency in large river-wetlands such as the SRD. This will reduce the connection between the floodplain and the main channel, with profound impacts on the SRD ecosystem as a whole. Lakes that currently experience frequent inundation will likely have conditions characteristic of infrequently flooded lakes, with low DO and nutrients and high NH3-NH4. Lakes which currently experience infrequent inundation will likely dry up completely due to decreased water renewal.
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Features of born global processing plants in global outsourcing industryZhao, Guang, 趙光 January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Transitions and new possibilities of sex work: Xiaojies' perception of work and way of life in the PearlRiver Delta丁瑜, Ding, Yu January 2008 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work and Social Administration / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Tourism development and the planning implication in the Pearl River Delta region林正忠, Lam, Ching-chung, Jose. January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Planning / Master / Master of Science in Urban Planning
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