On the Implementation of a Limited Frequency Band Integrator and Application to Energetic Material Ignition Prediction

Author(s):  
Jocelyn Sabatier ◽  
Mathieu Merveillaut ◽  
Alain Oustaloup ◽  
Cyril Gruau ◽  
Hervé Trumel
2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 887-893
Author(s):  
V P Gubin ◽  
N I Starostin ◽  
Ya V Przhiyalkovsky ◽  
S K Morshnev ◽  
A I Sazonov

Author(s):  
Vladimir Zakharchenko ◽  
◽  
Sergey Zakharchenko ◽  

This study is concerned with the problem of increasing the accuracy of a low-altitude altimeter employing the frequency modulation principle. A way to suppress the “discrete error” of the altimeter by employing additional frequency modulation of the carrier wave and averaging the resulting counts is considered. The benefit of such approach is simplicity of technical implementation manifesting in minimal changes in the microwave path and the recording device, which needsto run in averaging count mode. This work presents a genetic algorithm for computing the array of additional modulation frequencies which can be used to reduce the mean square of the discrete error given a limited frequency band. Results of error calculations presented are obtained via mathematical modeling of the altimeter’s operation. It is shown that using additional modulation frequencies obtained by the genetic algorithm allows to reduce the average measurement error two times relatively to the linear modulation form without expanding the occupied frequency band.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yann Capdeville ◽  
Chao Lyu ◽  
David Al-Attar ◽  
Liang Zhao

<p>In the context of seismic imaging, the full waveform inversion (FWI) is more and more popular. Because of its lower numerical cost, the acoustic approximation is often used, especially at the exploration geophysics scale, both for tests and for real data. Moreover, some research domains such as helioseismology face true acoustic medium for which FWI can be useful. In this work, we show that the general acoustic inverse problem based on limited frequency band data is intrinsically non-unique, making any general acoustic FWI impossible. Our work is based on two tools: particle relabelling and homogenization. On the one hand, the particle relabelling method shows it is possible to deform a true medium based on a smooth mapping into a new one without changing the signal recorded at seismic stations. This is a potentially strong source of non-uniqueness for an inverse problem based a seismic data. Nevertheless, in the elastic case, the deformed medium loses the elastic tensor minor symmetries and, in the acoustic case, it implies density anisotropy. It is therefore not a source of non-uniqueness for elastic or isotropic acoustic inverse problems, but it is for the anisotropic acoustic case. On the other hand, the homogenization method shows that any fine-scale medium can be up-scaled into an effective medium without changing the waveforms in a limited frequency band. The effective media are in general anisotropic, both in the elastic and acoustic cases, even if the true media are isotropic at a fine scale. It implies that anisotropy is in general present and needs to be inverted. Therefore, acoustic anisotropy can not be avoided in general. We conclude, based on a particle relabelling and homogenization arguments, that the acoustic FWI solution is in general non-unique. We show, in 2-D numerical FWI examples based on the Gauss-Newton iterative scheme, the effects of this non-uniqueness in the local optimization context. We numerically confirm that the acoustic FWI is in general non-unique and that finding a physical solution is not possible.</p>


Author(s):  
Pan Sun ◽  
Yimin Shao ◽  
Xiaoxi Ding ◽  
Minggang Du

Due to its special modulation mechanism with multiple units (eg. shafts, gears, etc.) under various conditions, the related fault information of gear fault would distribute in a broad frequency band. In this manner, it is not easy about accurately detecting the early-stage gear fault by detecting the fault frequency in a limited frequency band. In this paper, a new spectral analysis, called multiscale sparse spectrum (MSS), is proposed to achieve fault frequency detection in a sound way. The overall frequency information about the raw signal is firstly sensed by a series of frequency-window function, which can be reached by short-frequency Fourier transform. Then, according to orthogonal matching pursuit, harmonic atoms are further employed to sparsely mine the modulation components from these multiscale pseudo mono-components. Finally, MSS is proposed to synthesize the existing harmonic-related components. Furthermore, a synthesized sparse spectrum (SSS) is obtained by searching the frequency-frequency ridge from MSS. Compared with EMD and fast-kurtogram analysis, the results show the effectiveness of the proposed method of gear fault detection.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. SJ67-SJ76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Voisin ◽  
Stéphane Garambois ◽  
Chris Massey ◽  
Romain Brossier

Daily correlations of ambient seismic noise on a large landslide at Utiku, New Zealand, reveal seismic velocity changes up to [Formula: see text] that follow a summer/winter cycle consistent with the pore-water pressures monitored at the basal slip surface in the landslide. The annual pattern of velocity changes is borne by a limited frequency band (6–8 Hz typically) that suggests a localized change in the medium. The Rayleigh waves that form the seismic signal within this frequency band have a maximum sensitivity at a depth of 2–3 m below the ground surface, consistent with the water table level. Fluid saturation changes in the landslide modeled using the Biot-Gassmann theory explain the limited frequency band and the amplitude of the seismic velocity change. This set of arguments suggests that seismic noise correlations are sensitive to water table oscillations through saturation changes and could be used as a nondestructive hydrologic monitoring tool.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document