scholarly journals The Silicon Tracking System of the CBM experiment at FAIR

2018 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 21003
Author(s):  
Maksym Teklishyn

The Silicon Tracking System (STS) is the central detector in the Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at FAIR. Operating in the 1Tm dipole magnetic field, the STS will enable pile-up free detection and momentum measurement of the charged particles originating from beam-target nuclear interactions at rates up to 10 MHz. The STS consists of 8 tracking stations based on double-sided silicon micro-strip sensors equipped with fast, self-triggering read-out electronics. With about two million read-out channels, the STS will deliver a high-rate stream of time-stamped data that is transferred to a computing farm for on-line event determination and analysis. The functional building block is a detector module consisting of a sensor, micro-cables and two front-end electronics boards. In this contribution, the development status of the STS components and the system integration is discussed and an outlook on the detector construction is given.

2014 ◽  
Vol 1070-1072 ◽  
pp. 24-29
Author(s):  
Xiao Di Qin ◽  
Rong Rong Zhou ◽  
Lie Xia ◽  
Liang Hui Xu

Based on practical project and application, the design scheme of small capacity of integrated PV and storage grid-connected generation system is presented in this paper. For demonstrative and experimental purpose in this project, it includes several typical PV modules, tracking system and grid-connected inverters. Entire design scheme covers system integration, grid-connected solution, PV array and bracket, monitoring system, energy storage system, and etc. Configuration and application prospect of energy storage system in grid-connected PV system are mainly introduced. The characteristics of lithium battery and vanadium redox flow battery, as well as their application in the field of distributed power generation are researched.


Author(s):  
Qazi Mudassar Ilyas

Semantic Web was proposed to make the content machine-understandable by developing ontologies to capture domain knowledge and annotating content with this domain knowledge. Although, the original idea of semantic web was to make content on the World Wide Web machine-understandable, with recent advancements and awareness about these technologies, researchers have applied ontologies in many interesting domains. Many phases in software engineering are dependent on availability of knowledge, and the use of ontologies to capture and process this knowledge is a natural choice. This chapter discusses how ontologies can be used in various stages of the system development life cycle. Ontologies can be used to support requirements engineering phase in identifying and fixing inconsistent, incomplete, and ambiguous requirement. They can also be used to model the requirements and assist in requirements management and validation. During software design and development stages, ontologies can help software engineers in finding suitable components, managing documentation of APIs, and coding support. Ontologies can help in system integration and evolution process by aligning various databases with the help of ontologies capturing knowledge about database schema and aligning them with concepts in ontology. Ontologies can also be used in software maintenance by developing a bug tracking system based upon ontological knowledge of software artifacts and roles of developers involved in software maintenance task.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. C10010-C10010 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Pizzimento ◽  
R. Cardarelli ◽  
G. Aielli ◽  
E. Alunno Camelia ◽  
S. Bruno ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Valeri Goriatchev ◽  
Mikhail Balachov ◽  
Dmitri Rykov

Abstract This paper presents results of developing the Informational and Computational System for CFD Researchers. It is the second generation of SELIGER: System of Embedded-Linked Information and Graphics for Engineers and Researchers. The main goal of the system is a support of CFD and related sciences working in the net environment. Modification of the network prototype is connected with server’s database modernization to provide stable working and fast accessing to server. Java-based applets provide an effective front-end interface to the remote CFD solvers. The network programs support an on-line analysis of complex distributed data set via Internet and are used to derive latent relations between depended values after simulation.


1993 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 1038-1046
Author(s):  
William E. Crouse ◽  
J. Lindsay Cook ◽  
James D. Gerard ◽  
Denise A. Paschal

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