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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.
91

An Infrastructure Based Worm Spreading Countermeasure for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks

Zhang, Qi January 2017 (has links)
VANETs are the essential component of the intelligent transport system, which attract research and industrial interests increasingly. As the multifunctional mobile nodes integrating transporting, sensing, information processing, and wireless communication capabilities, vehicular nodes are facing remarkable security issues and more vulnerable to malware attack than conventional communication nodes. In this thesis, the behavior and the security issues of the worm spreading on VANETs are studied. The approaches of the worm spreading on VANETs are discussed and an infrastructure based worm containment strategy is proposed. The infrastructure based worm containment problem is modeled as minimum contamination problem by introducing the expected contamination degree. Then the existing greedy method is applied to solve the proposed problem in VANETs scenario. After that, the Grid-shrinking Greedy Method and the Simplified Greedy Method are proposed which incorporate the characteristics of road networks and VANETs respectively. Simulation results show the two proposed methods outperform the existing greedy method and the comparison method from both complexity and solution quality aspects.
92

Antenna reduction techniques in MIMO systems and ad-hoc networks

Spyridakis, Georgios George January 2013 (has links)
In this thesis, an antenna reduction technique in Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) systems, which is called Code Shift Keying (CSK) Modulation, is introduced. With the use of Walsh Hadamard orthogonal spreading codes, we overcome the biggest drawback of conventional Spatial Modulation (SM) which is the antenna index estimation errors due to channel correlation. Also SM fails to perform in non normalised channel conditions. The combination of orthogonal spreading codes and antenna devices, as a means to convey information at the receiver, results in a remarkable performance improvement at the receiver.Moreover, an improved scheme that uses half the amount of spreading codes so as to represent the total number of information bits has been introduced leading to an important reduction in bandwidth usage. By maintaining the net spreading levels of the system we attain remarkable performance improvements.A technique called Polarisation Assisted Space Shift Keying Modulation (PASSK) has also been proposed which manages to exploit the polarisation domain and it is able to outperform the conventional SM technique as well as the Maximal Ratio Receiver Combine (MRRC) and Vertical-Bell Laboratories Layered Space-Time (V-BLAST) schemes. A new precoding scheme that manages to either eliminate or exploit the cross polarisation effects has also been proposed as a complementary study of the PASSK scheme.As modern and future communications show a rising demand for higher data transmission rates, network coding is increasingly incorporated in wireless communication standards. In harmonisation with this trend, this thesis discusses the main state-of-art network coding schemes. The contribution here includes a number of innovative schemes that are able to further increase throughput. Finally, the employment of network coding is discussed in conjunction with CSK Modulation resulting to further improvement in terms of throughput as well as Bit Error Rate (BER) performance at the cost of increased bandwidth usage.
93

Regulation of CGRP gene expression and effects on light aversive behavior

Raddant, Ann Christine 01 December 2013 (has links)
Migraine is a debilitating neurological disorder, which affects over 10% of the general population. In addition to headache, migraine includes a host of associated symptoms, such as nausea and hypersensitivity to light, noise, and touch. While great strides have been made in migraine treatment in recent decades, the basic biological and pathophysiological mechanisms underlying migraine are still not well understood. Pain signals travel via a polysynaptic pathway from the periphery to the cortex, where conscious perception of pain occurs. This multi-neuron pathway produces a message that can be modified at any step of its transit. One peptide that may modify this pathway is calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP). CGRP is a potent vasodilator and neuromodulator, and mounting evidence suggests CGRP may play a causative role in migraine. CGRP levels are increased during migraine, but can be reduced upon successful treatment with drugs in the triptan class. Importantly, injection of CGRP into migraine patients can elicit a delayed, migraine-like headache. Finally, CGRP receptor antagonists are clinically effective in providing relief to migraine patients. In addition to CGRP, the CGRP gene (CALCA) expresses another peptide that may also be relevant to migraine. Procalcitonin (proCT) is a recognized biomarker for sepsis, but emerging evidence suggests it may have actions similar to CGRP in migraine. First, proCT has biological activity at the CGRP receptor. Second, proCT is reported to be increased during migraine. We hypothesized that regulation of CGRP and proCT may be altered in migraineurs, and that migraineurs may also be sensitized to the effects of these peptides. To study the role of these peptides in migraine pathways, a number of methods have been employed. Studies exploring regulation of gene expression were performed in cultured trigeminal ganglia, as well as primary cultures of trigeminal and cortical glia. These studies show that the Calca gene can be regulated by a number of stimuli, including hypoxia and reactive oxygen species. These insults have the ability to induce CALCA gene and peptide expression to varying degrees on different cell types. In addition to in vitro experiments on Calca gene regulation, the in vivo effects of CGRP on mouse behavior were also investigated. Animals were genetically sensitized to CGRP via overexpression of the rate-limiting CGRP receptor subunit. In these animals, injection of CGRP is sufficient to induce light aversion, which is used to model photophobia. Physiological and biochemical triggers of migraine were tested using this behavioral paradigm. While stress and mast cell degranulation are sufficient to induce light aversion, the role of CGRP in these events remains unclear, as both CGRP sensitized and control animals displayed a light aversion phenotype. Together, these studies show the dynamic regulation of the Calca gene in migraine pathways as well as highlight some of the challenges of modeling a complex disease in an animal model.
94

Structure and Evolution of the Oceanic Lithosphere-Asthenosphere System from High-Resolution Surface-Wave Imaging

Russell, Joshua Berryman January 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, I investigate the seismic structure of oceanic lithosphere and asthenosphere with a particular focus on seismic anisotropy, using high-resolution surface waves recorded on ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The NoMelt (~70 Ma) and Young OBS Research into Convecting Asthenosphere (ORCA) (~43 Ma) OBS experiments located in the central and south Pacific, respectively, provide a detailed picture of ``typical'' oceanic lithosphere and asthenosphere and offer an unprecedented opportunity to investigate the age dependence of oceanic upper mantle structure. The Eastern North American Margin Community Seismic Experiment (ENAM-CSE) OBS array located just offshore the Eastern U.S. captures the transition from continental rifting during Pangea to normal seafloor spreading, representing significantly slower spreading rates. Collectively, this work represents a diverse set of observations that improve our understanding of seafloor spreading, present-day mantle dynamics, and ocean basin evolution. At NoMelt, which represents pristine relatively unaltered oceanic mantle, we observe strong azimuthal anisotropy in the lithosphere that correlates with corner-flow induced shear during seafloor spreading. We observe perhaps the first clear Love-wave azimuthal anisotropy that, in addition to co-located Rayleigh-wave and active source Pn constraints, provides a novel in-situ estimate of the complete elastic tensor of the oceanic lithosphere. Comparing this observed anisotropy to a database of laboratory and naturally deformed olivine samples from the literature leads us to infer an alternative ``D-type'' fabric associated with grain-size sensitive deformation, rather than the commonly assumed A-type fabric. This has vast implications for our understanding of grain-scale deformation active at mid-ocean ridges and subsequent thermo-rheological evolution of the lithosphere. At both NoMelt and YoungORCA we observe radial anisotropy in the lithosphere with Vsh > Vsv indicating subhorizontal fabric, in contrast to some recent global models. We also observe azimuthal anisotropy in the lithosphere that parallels the fossil-spreading direction. Estimates of radial anisotropy in the crust at both locations are the first of their kind and suggest horizontal layering and/or shearing associated with the crustal accretion process. Both experiments show asthenospheric anisotropy that is significantly rotated from current-day absolute plate motion as well as rotated from one another, at odds with the typical expectation of plate-induced shearing. This observation is consistent with small-scale density- or pressure-driven convection beneath the Pacific basin that varies in orientation over a length scale of at most ~2000 km and likely shorter. By directly comparing shear velocities at YoungORCA and NoMelt, we show that the half-space cooling model can account for most (~75%) of the sublithospheric velocity difference between the two location when anelastic effects are accounted for. The unaccounted for ~25% velocity reduction at YoungORCA is consistent with lithospheric reheating, perhaps related to upwelling of hot mantle from small-scale convection or its proximity to the Marquesas hotspot. While lithospheric anisotropy is parallel to the fossil-seafloor-spreading direction at both fast-spreading Pacific locations, it is perpendicular to spreading at the ENAM-CSE in the northwest Atlantic where spreading was ultra-slow to slow. Instead, anisotropy correlates with paleo absolute plate motion at the time of Pangea rifting ~180–195 Ma. We propose that ultra-slow-spreading environments, such as the early Atlantic, primarily record plate-motion modified fabric in the lithosphere rather than typical seafloor spreading fabric. Furthermore, slow shear velocities in the lithosphere may indicate that normal seafloor spreading did not initiate until ~170 Ma, 10–25 Myr after the initiation of continental rifting, revising previous estimates. Alternatively, it may shed new light on melt extraction at ultra-slow spreading environments.
95

Miocene intra-arc rifting in SW Japan: Tectonostratigraphy of the Hokutan Group and the paleostress analyses of dike orientations / 西南日本の中新世弧内リフティング:北但層群の地質構造発達史と岩脈の応力解析

Haji, Toshiki 23 March 2020 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(理学) / 甲第22265号 / 理博第4579号 / 新制||理||1657(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院理学研究科地球惑星科学専攻 / (主査)教授 山路 敦, 教授 田上 高広, 教授 生形 貴男 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Science / Kyoto University / DGAM
96

Návrh konstrukce rozmetadla tuhých statkových hnojiv / Design of the manure spreader

Pacher, Ján January 2021 (has links)
The diploma thesis deals with the structural design of a solid manure spreader and the subsequent strength control of self-supporting construction. The introduction of the work consists of a research analysis of current design solutions of spreaders on the market with similar parameters as in the assignment. Subsequent chapters deal with the conceptual design of the spreader, preparation of the calculation model, suitable replacement of the components and evaluation of the strength analysis itself. The diploma thesis is accompanied by partial drawing documentation. The work was created in cooperation with ZDT Nové Veselí.
97

Metody mnohonásobného přístupu pro pozemní rádiové sítě / Methods of multiple access for terrestrial radio networks

Žák, Josef January 2008 (has links)
The content of this work is focused on the methods of multiple access for terrestrial radio network. These methods are exploited by the systems second and third generation of mobile networks. Specification the basic characteristics these methods is responsible part for inquest the correspondent specificities. Reason is that, that the wireless mobile communication it is possible split by three generation. First is NMT, with analog frequency modulation, which dont make use already, because has considerable disavantages . Analysis second generation mobile systems GSM leads to determination to many advanta- ges hereof system, who be based on methods FDMA, TDMA, CDMA. Description these methods is specialized on their spreading properties. Third generation of mobile systems UMTS is characterized wideband technology WCDMA, making use two duplex methods (FDD, TDD). Both methods provide higher efficiency of recovery frequency spectrum . All the theoretical approaches are examined in the last part of this work.it´s then possible after complete analysis these methods, make a design and a realization. In this event was used the computer programme Matlab–Simulink for simula- tion of duplex method WCDMA-FDD. Evaluation of this technology provides confrontation with second generation GSM .
98

Nonreciprocal and Non-Spreading Transmission of Acoustic Beams through Periodic Dissipative Structures

Zubov, Yurii 05 1900 (has links)
Propagation of a Gaussian beam in a layered periodic structure is studied analytically, numerically, and experimentally. It is demonstrated that for a special set of parameters the acoustic beam propagates without diffraction spreading. This propagation is also accompanied by negative refraction of the direction of phase velocity of the Bloch wave. In the study of two-dimensional viscous phononic crystals with asymmetrical solid inclusions, it was discovered that acoustic transmission is nonreciprocal. The effect of nonreciprocity in a static viscous environment is due to broken PT symmetry of the system as a whole. The difference in transmission is caused by the asymmetrical transmission and dissipation. The asymmetrical transmission is caused solely by broken mirror symmetry and could appear even in a lossless system. Asymmetrical dissipation of sound is a time-irreversible phenomenon that arises only if both energy dissipation and broken parity symmetry are present in the system. The numerical results for both types of phononic crystals were verified experimentally. Proposed devices could be exploited as collimation, rectification, and isolation acoustic devices.
99

Concurrency-induced transitions in epidemic dynamics on temporal networks / テンポラルネットワーク上の感染症ダイナミクスにおけるコンカレンシーがもたらす転移

Onaga, Tomokatsu 26 March 2018 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(理学) / 甲第20893号 / 理博第4345号 / 新制||理||1624(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院理学研究科物理学・宇宙物理学専攻 / (主査)准教授 篠本 滋, 教授 佐々 真一, 教授 川上 則雄 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
100

Oscillating Heat Spreaders for High Heat Flux Thermal Management

Mahony, Colin Philip 09 December 2016 (has links)
Multiple oscillating heat spreaders (OHS) were fabricated for the purpose of effectively transporting heat fluxes from vehicular electronics. The OHSs possessed modified evaporators for enhanced thermal spreading capabilities; one OHS was designed for pressure shorting, i.e. the ‘Slots OHS’, and the other for thermal shorting, i.e. the ‘Perforated Evaporator OHS’. These OHSs were tested in the axial heating configuration with the evaporator length-wise opposite the condenser, as well as in a centralized heating configuration implemented with the condenser thick-wise opposite the heat source to characterize thermal spreading effectiveness. The condensing location and heat input were varied in the central heating and axial configuration to determine thermal spreading effectiveness dependency to condenser location, heat removal, and heat input. Both OHSs were experimentally compared to an OHS of similar dimensions with no modified evaporator, and the results indicate the modified evaporators improve OHS thermal spreading ability for high heat flux thermal management.

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