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Traffic Management Advisor (TMA) -- weather integration

Published in:
14th Conf. on Aviaton, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology, ARAM, 16-21 January 2010.

Summary

Time-based flow metering (TBFM) of traffic to capacity-constrained areas such as airport runways and arrival fixes is considered a key element of the Next Generation (NextGEN) Air Transportation System operational concept for managing high density air traffic. The principal operational TBFM system today is the Traffic Management Advisor (TMA). TMA is used to optimize the flow of aircraft through various control points (e.g., arrival fixes, final approach fixes, and runway thresholds) so as to maximize airspace capacity without compromising safety. TMA makes continuous predictions of aircraft Estimated Time of Arrivals (ETAs) at various metering points along the flight's trajectory. Scheduling algorithms use the ETAs to compute Scheduled Times of Arrival (STAs) for each aircraft to specific scheduling points. The desired change in aircraft arrival time to the meter fix is provided to en route controllers who then accomplish speed and/or trajectory changes such that the plane passes over the arrival fix at the desired time. The required arrival fix time adjustment is continually updated as the plane proceeds to the arrival fix to provide closed loop control. During non-convective weather, TMA usage has resulted in increased capacity, reduced aircraft fuel burn, and decreased delay. If significant convective weather is present, the TMA software currently still assumes that an aircraft will fly the normal fair weather trajectory to a metering fix. However, if an aircraft deviates around a storm, the flying time to a metering point will generally be different from the fair weather flight time. Therefore, the TMA ETAs will be in error. Currently, the TMA usage is often halted during convective weather events because the arrival time adjustments provided to the controllers may be unmanageable or in error. A study is underway to determine the potential benefits derived from various approaches to integrating weather information from the Corridor Integrated Weather System (CIWS) with TMA. Our focus is on near term weather-TMA integration capabilities that would provide enhanced decision support for the operational community that is successfully utilizing TMA in non-severe weather and/or seeking to increase its operational utility in severe weather. As part of this study, and in conjunction with case study analyses of TMA actions and air traffic operations during convective weather, Subject Matter Experts (SME) from the National TMA Workgroup and select FAA facilities were interviewed to determine TMA fair-weather practices and to identify current TMA capabilities and limitations during weather impact events. The SMEs were also asked to prioritize TMA weather integration needs and to discuss specific weather integration options for the TMA displays. Real-time observations of TMA operations during convective weather were also conducted at Atlanta (ZTL), Boston (ZBW), and Chicago (ZAU) Air Route Traffic Control Centers (ARTCC) to examine (a) the common TMA control actions executed to meter flows during adverse weather, (b) when and why the TBFM becomes unusable during convective weather, and (c) which approaches to providing integrated weather-TMA information would most effectively extend the current TMA capabilities and increase ATM efficiency. The paper will describe initial results of the study including specific options for TMA-CIWS integration and the anticipated operational benefits for these options.
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Summary

Time-based flow metering (TBFM) of traffic to capacity-constrained areas such as airport runways and arrival fixes is considered a key element of the Next Generation (NextGEN) Air Transportation System operational concept for managing high density air traffic. The principal operational TBFM system today is the Traffic Management Advisor (TMA). TMA...

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Metastable superconducting qubit

Published in:
Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 104, No.2, 11 January 2010, 027002.

Summary

We propose a superconducting qubit design, based on a tunable rf SQUID and nanowire kinetic inductors, which has a dramatically reduced transverse electromagnetic coupling to its environment, so that its excited state should be metastable. If electromagnetic interactions are in fact responsible for the current excited-state decay rates of superconducting qubits, this design should result in a qubit lifetime orders of magnitude longer than currently possible. Furthermore, since accurate manipulation and readout of superconducting qubits is currently limited by spontaneous decay, much higher fidelities may be realizable with this design.
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Summary

We propose a superconducting qubit design, based on a tunable rf SQUID and nanowire kinetic inductors, which has a dramatically reduced transverse electromagnetic coupling to its environment, so that its excited state should be metastable. If electromagnetic interactions are in fact responsible for the current excited-state decay rates of superconducting...

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30 to 50 ns liquid-crystal optical switches

Published in:
Optics Express, Vol. 18, No. 18, 30 August 2010, pp. 1886-18893.

Summary

The optical switching time of twisted-nematic liquid-crystal cells using the liquid crystals, 5CB (C,H,,-Ph-Ph-CN), 50CB(C,Hw O-Ph-Ph-CN) and PCH5 (C,H,,-Cy-Ph-CN) have been characterized as a function of temperature, prebias voltage and switching voltage, V. The transition time from 90 % to 10 % transmission scales as V-1.9 and is limited to 30 to 50 ns by the liquid-crystal breakdown electric field, - 100 V I'm-I The time fi-om the initial switching voltage step to 90 % transmission, delay time, decreases with increasing prebias and switching voltage. For 5CB and 50CS the delay time approaches a constant value at higher electric fields, >10 V ~1Il,-1. Both the transition and delay times decrease with increasing temperature. The minimum transition time at temperatures a few degrees below the nematicisotropic temperature are 32, 32, and 44 ns and delay times are 44, 25 and 8 ns for 5CB, 50CB, and PCH5 respectively.
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Summary

The optical switching time of twisted-nematic liquid-crystal cells using the liquid crystals, 5CB (C,H,,-Ph-Ph-CN), 50CB(C,Hw O-Ph-Ph-CN) and PCH5 (C,H,,-Cy-Ph-CN) have been characterized as a function of temperature, prebias voltage and switching voltage, V. The transition time from 90 % to 10 % transmission scales as V-1.9 and is limited to...

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Operation and optimization of silicon-diode-based optical modulators

Published in:
IEEE J. Sel. Top. in Quantum Electron., Vol. 16, No. 1, January/February 2010, pp. 165-172.

Summary

An optical modulator in silicon based on a diode structure has been operated in both forward and reverse bias. This modulator achieves near state-of-the-art performance in both modes, thereby making this device idea for comparing the two modes of operation. In reverse bias, the device has a V[pi]L of 4.9 V-cm and a bandwidth of 26GHz. In forward bias, the device is very sensitive, a V[pi]L a slow as 0.0025 V-cm has been achieved, but the bandwidth is only 100 MHz. A ndw geometyr for a reverse-bias device is proposed, and it is predicted to achieve a V[pi]L of 0.5V.cm.
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Summary

An optical modulator in silicon based on a diode structure has been operated in both forward and reverse bias. This modulator achieves near state-of-the-art performance in both modes, thereby making this device idea for comparing the two modes of operation. In reverse bias, the device has a V[pi]L of 4.9...

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Comment on "Reinterpreting aircraft measurement in anisotropic scaling turbulence" by Lovejoy et al. (2009)

Published in:
Atmos. Chem. Phys., Vol. 10, No. 3, 2010, pp. 1401-1402.

Summary

Recently, Lovejoy et al. (2009) argued that the steep ~k-3 atmospheric kinetic energy spectrum at synoptic scales (>~1000km) observed by aircraft is a spurious artefact of aircraft following isobars instead of isoheights. Without taking into account the earth's rotation they hypothesize that the horizontal atmospheric energy spectrum should scale as k?5/3 at all scales. We point out that the approximate k?3- spectrum at synoptic scales has been observed by a number of non-aircraft means since the 1960s and that general circulation models and other current models have successfully produced this spectrum. We also argue that the vertical movements of the aircraft are far too small to cause any strong effect on the measured spectrum at synoptic scales.
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Summary

Recently, Lovejoy et al. (2009) argued that the steep ~k-3 atmospheric kinetic energy spectrum at synoptic scales (>~1000km) observed by aircraft is a spurious artefact of aircraft following isobars instead of isoheights. Without taking into account the earth's rotation they hypothesize that the horizontal atmospheric energy spectrum should scale as...

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High-pitch formant estimation by exploiting temporal change of pitch

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Trans. on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, Vol. 18, No. 1, January 2010, pp. 171-186.

Summary

This paper considers the problem of obtaining an accurate spectral representation of speech formant structure when the voicing source exhibits a high fundamental frequency. Our work is inspired by auditory perception and physiological studies implicating the use of pitch dynamics in speech by humans. We develop and assess signal processing schemes aimed at exploiting temporal change of pitch to address the high-pitch formant frequency estimation problem. Specifically, we propose a 2-D analysis framework using 2-D transformations of the time-frequency space. In one approach, we project changing spectral harmonics over time to a 1-D function of frequency. In a second approach, we draw upon previous work of Quatieri and Ezzat et al. [1], [2], with similarities to the auditory modeling efforts of Chi et al. [3], where localized 2-D Fourier transforms of the time-frequency space provide improved source-filter separation when pitch is changing. Our methods show quantitative improvements for synthesized vowels with stationary formant structure in comparison to traditional and homomorphic linear prediction. We also demonstrate the feasibility of applying our methods on stationary vowel regions of natural speech spoken by high-pitch females of the TIMIT corpus. Finally, we show improvements afforded by the proposed analysis framework in formant tracking on examples of stationary and time-varying formant structure.
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Summary

This paper considers the problem of obtaining an accurate spectral representation of speech formant structure when the voicing source exhibits a high fundamental frequency. Our work is inspired by auditory perception and physiological studies implicating the use of pitch dynamics in speech by humans. We develop and assess signal processing...

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3-d graph processor

Summary

Graph algorithms are used for numerous database applications such as analysis of financial transactions, social networking patterns, and internet data. While graph algorithms can work well with moderate size databases, processors often have difficulty providing sufficient throughput when the databases are large. This is because the processor architectures are poorly matched to the graph computational flow. For example, most modern processors utilize cache based memory in order to take advantage of highly localized memory access patterns. However, memory access patterns associated with graph processing are often random in nature and can result in high cache miss rates. In addition, graph algorithms require significant overhead computation for dealing with indices of vertices and edges.
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Summary

Graph algorithms are used for numerous database applications such as analysis of financial transactions, social networking patterns, and internet data. While graph algorithms can work well with moderate size databases, processors often have difficulty providing sufficient throughput when the databases are large. This is because the processor architectures are poorly...

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Classification of primary radar tracks using Gaussian mixture models

Published in:
IET Radar, Sonar Navig., Vol. 3, No. 6, December 2009.

Summary

Classification of primary surveillance radar tracks as either aircraft or non-aircraft is critical to a number of emerging applications, including airspace situational awareness and collision avoidance. Substantial research has focused on target classification of pre-processed radar surveillance data. Unfortunately, many non-aircraft tracks still pass through the clutter-reduction processing built into the aviation surveillance radars used by the Federal Aviation Administration. This paper demonstrates an approach to radar track classification that uses only post-processed position reports and does not require features that are typically only available during the pre-processing stage. Gaussian mixture models learned from recorded data are shown to perform well without the use of features that have been traditionally used for target classification, such as radar crosssection measurements.
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Summary

Classification of primary surveillance radar tracks as either aircraft or non-aircraft is critical to a number of emerging applications, including airspace situational awareness and collision avoidance. Substantial research has focused on target classification of pre-processed radar surveillance data. Unfortunately, many non-aircraft tracks still pass through the clutter-reduction processing built into...

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Query-by-example spoken term detection using phonetic posteriorgram templates

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Workshop on Automatic Speech Recognition & Understanding, ASRU, 13-17 December 2009, pp. 421-426.

Summary

This paper examines a query-by-example approach to spoken term detection in audio files. The approach is designed for low-resource situations in which limited or no in-domain training material is available and accurate word-based speech recognition capability is unavailable. Instead of using word or phone strings as search terms, the user presents the system with audio snippets of desired search terms to act as the queries. Query and test materials are represented using phonetic posteriorgrams obtained from a phonetic recognition system. Query matches in the test data are located using a modified dynamic time warping search between query templates and test utterances. Experiments using this approach are presented using data from the Fisher corpus.
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Summary

This paper examines a query-by-example approach to spoken term detection in audio files. The approach is designed for low-resource situations in which limited or no in-domain training material is available and accurate word-based speech recognition capability is unavailable. Instead of using word or phone strings as search terms, the user...

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ASE: authenticated statement exchange

Published in:
2010 9th IEEE Int. Symp. on Network Computing and Applications, 7 December 2009, pp. 155-161.

Summary

Applications often re-transmit the same data, such as digital certificates, during repeated communication instances. Avoiding such superfluous transmissions with caching, while complicated, may be necessary in order to operate in low-bandwidth, high-latency wireless networks or in order to reduce communication load in shared, mobile networks. This paper presents a general framework and an accompanying software library, called "Authenticated Statement Exchange" (ASE), for helping applications implement persistent caching of application specific data. ASE supports secure caching of a number of predefined data types common to secure communication protocols and allows applications to define new data types to be handled by ASE. ASE is applicable to many applications. The paper describes the use of ASE in one such application, secure group chat. In a recent real-use deployment, ASE was instrumental in allowing secure group chat to operate over low-bandwidth satellite links.
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Summary

Applications often re-transmit the same data, such as digital certificates, during repeated communication instances. Avoiding such superfluous transmissions with caching, while complicated, may be necessary in order to operate in low-bandwidth, high-latency wireless networks or in order to reduce communication load in shared, mobile networks. This paper presents a general...

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