Search results for "Time domain"
showing 10 items of 161 documents
Structural damage detection using auto correlation functions of vibration response under sinusoidal excitation
2015
Structural damage detection using time domain vibration responses has attracted more and more researchers in recent years because of its simplicity in calculation and no requirement of a finite element model. This paper proposes a new approach to locate the damage using the auto correlation function of vibration response signals under sinusoidal excitation from different measurement points of the structure, based on which a vector named Auto Correlation Function at Maximum Point Value Vector (AMV) is formulated. A sensitivity analysis of the normalized AMV with respect to the local stiffness shows that under several specific frequency excitations, the normalized AMV has a sharp change aroun…
Signature of quantum interferences in above-threshold detachment of negative ions by a short infrared pulse
2008
Numerical calculations of photodetachment of ${\mathrm{F}}^{\ensuremath{-}}$ irradiated by a linearly polarized strong short infrared pulse have been performed by evaluating the photoelectron ejection probability in the framework of a Keldysh-type approach modified to account for the temporal behavior of the pulse. The results of the calculations are in good agreement with measurements of energy spectra recently appearing in literature, and show features that may be explained in terms of quantum interferences in time domain.
Measurement of the Sensitivity Function in a Time-Domain Atomic Interferometer
2008
We present here an analysis of the sensitivity of a time-domain atomic interferometer to the phase noise of the lasers used to manipulate the atomic wave packets. The sensitivity function is calculated in the case of a three-pulse Mach-Zehnder interferometer, which is the configuration of the two inertial sensors we are building at the Laboratoire National de Metrologie et d'Essais-Systeme de References Temps-Espace. We successfully compare this calculation to experimental measurements. The sensitivity of the interferometer is limited by the phase noise of the lasers as well as by residual vibrations. We evaluate the performance that could be obtained with state-of-the-art quartz oscillator…
The analysis of dielectric relaxation phenomena with the inverse Fourier transformation
1993
Abstract A method to determine the distribution of relaxation times directly from dielectric loss spectra is presented. The method is based upon a deconvolution procedure: the Fourier transform of the loss factor is divided by sech( π 2 f ) and then, via an inverse Fourier transformation, transformed into the time domain. Limitations and possible improvements of the method are discussed. It is shown that the present method is able to reveal local relaxation processes not perceptible in the loss factor spectrum. With stimulated noise-free data, the resolution of the method is one third of a decade on a logarithmic relaxation timescale.
A digital approach for real time high-rate high-resolution radiation measurements
2014
Abstract Modern spectrometers are currently developed by using digital pulse processing (DPP) systems, showing several advantages over traditional analog electronics. The aim of this work is to present digital strategies, in a time domain, for the development of real time high-rate high-resolution spectrometers. We propose a digital method, based on the single delay line (SDL) shaping technique, able to perform multi-parameter analysis with high performance even at high photon counting rates. A robust pulse shape and height analysis (PSHA), applied on single isolated time windows of the detector output waveforms, is presented. The potentialities of the proposed strategy are highlighted thro…
Fracture processes studied in CRESST
2005
In the early stages of running of the CRESST dark matter search with sapphire crystals as detectors, an unexpectedly high rate of signal pulses appeared. Their origin was finally traced to fracture events in the sapphire due to the very tight clamping of the detectors. During extensive runs the energy and time of each event was recorded, providing large data sets for such phenomena. We believe this is the first time that the energy release in fracture has been accurately measured on a microscopic event-by-event basis. The energy distributions appear to follow a power law, dN/dE proportional to E-beta, similar to the Gutenberg-Richter power law for earthquake magnitudes, and after appropriat…
Random angular coding for superresolved imaging.
2010
In this paper, we present a new approach capable of working under coherent and incoherent illumination for achieving superresolution by random coding of the object's angular information. By placing two static random masks in optically conjugate planes inside an aperture-limited imaging setup, one may obtain a transmitted image containing spatial resolution higher than the one obtained without the masks. As the most noticeable fact, the superresolution effect is obtained without imposing any restrictions either in the time domain or in the field-of-view domain but rather only in the dynamic range of the camera device. Experimental verifications for the proposed technique with incoherent illu…
Photodetachment of F− by short laser pulses. Comparison between experiments and numerical results
2009
Recently, angle-resolved photoelectron spectra have been measured by exposing negative F− ions to linearly or circularly polarized infrared femtosecond laser fields. We compare the experimental results with numerical calculations carried out in the framework of a Keldysh-type theory modified to account for both the time shape and the spatial inhomogeneity of the pulse. In order to account for the finite duration of the laser pulse, our results have been obtained through calculations of photodetachment probabilities. By using the saddle-point method it is possible to show that the transition amplitude may be written as a coherent sum of terms giving rise to interferences. This circumstance s…
A 3D Meshless Approach for Transient Electromagnetic PDEs
2012
A full wave three dimensional meshless approach for electromagnetic transient simulations is presented. The smoothed particle hydrodynamic (SPH) method is used by considering the particles as interpolation points, arbitrarily placed in the computational domain. Maxwell’s equations in time domain with the assigned boundary and initial conditions are numerically solved by means of the proposed method. The computational tool is assessed and, for the first time, a 3D test problem is simulated in order to validate the proposed approach.
Finite Frequency Vibration Control for Polytopic Active Suspensions via Dynamic Output Feedback
2013
This paper presents a disturbance attenuation strategy for active suspension systems with frequency band constraints, where dynamic output feedback control is employed in consideration that not all the state variables can be measured on-line. In view of the fact that human are sensitive to the virbation between 4–8 Hz in vertical direction, the control based on generalized Kalman-Yakubovich-Popov (KYP) lemma is developed in this specific frequency, in order to achieve the targeted disturbance attenuation. Moreover, practical constraints required in active suspension design are guaranteed in the whole time domain. At the end of the paper, the outstanding performance of the system using finit…