Iris recognition using partial sum of second order Taylor series expansion

Author(s):  
B H Shekar ◽  
Sharada S Bhat

This paper describes a theoretical contribution to the statistical thermodynamics of mixtures of spherical molecules. The second-order perturbation free energy of a conformal solution is obtained by a rigorous Taylor-series expansion of the configuration integral in powers of the differences between intermolecular energy and size parameters, about an ideal unperturbed reference solution. Unlike the first-order terms, those of the second order contain statistical functions of the reference solution which cannot, in general, be related to its thermodynamic properties. All but one of these functions are concerned with departures from a random molecular distribution, and have been called molecular fluctuation integrals ; the remaining function can be related exactly to thermodynamic properties for the Lennard-Jones form of the intermolecular potential. The expressions for the molecular fluctuation integrals implied by the full random mixing approximation and by the semi-random mixing approximation of the cell theory, are derived and compared with the correct expressions given by the cell theory. The role of the Taylor series expansion as a critique of solution theories is discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaowang Li ◽  
Zhongmin Deng

A new method based on the second-order Taylor-series expansion is presented to identify the structural dynamic loads in the time domain. This algorithm expresses the response vectors as Taylor-series approximation and then a series of formulas are deduced. As a result, an explicit discrete equation which associates system response, system characteristic, and input excitation together is set up. In a multi-input-multi-output (MIMO) numerical simulation study, sinusoidal excitation and white noise excitation are applied on a cantilever beam, respectively, to illustrate the effectiveness of this algorithm. One also makes a comparison between the new method and conventional state space method. The results show that the proposed method can obtain a more accurate identified force time history whether the responses are polluted by noise or not.


2000 ◽  
Vol 14 (05) ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. PAAR ◽  
N. PAVIN

For a map on the annulus, it is tested numerically that, within errors of the calculation of 0.4%, the inverse of the mean lifetime of chaotic transient is equal to the product of the uncertainty exponent and the Lyapunov exponent. The second-order term in the Taylor series expansion for inverse lifetime has no effect within the precision of the calculation.


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