scholarly journals Optimasi Kinerja Primitive Root Diffuser (PRD) dengan Teknik Sisipan Resonator Jamak (Halaman 25 s.d. 29)

2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (52) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fahrudin Ahmad ◽  
Harjana ◽  
Suparmi ◽  
Iwan Yahya

Telah  dilakukan kajian untuk meningkatkan kinerja primitive roots diffuser (PRD) dengan model standar berbentuk Skyline dengan jumlah elemen 5x8. Teknik modifikasi yang telah diterapkan adalah penyisipan rangkaian resonator seperempat panjang gelombang dengan kedalaman yang bersesuaian dengan masing-masing elemen PRD. Pengujian dilaksanakan dengan metode interrupted noise mengacu kepada prosedur standar ISO 3382 untuk mendapatkan nilai waktu dengung T30 dan T20. Adapun respon spasial dari PRD yang dikembangkan disimulasikan dengan perangkat lunak AFMG Reflex. Hasil pengujian menunjukkan bahwa penambahan rangkaian resonator jamak berhasil mengurangi nilai waktu dengung rerata sebesar 0,78 dan 1,83 sekon berturut-turut untuk T30 dan T20 pada bentang frekuensi rendah. Di samping itu pemakaian resonator memperbaiki respon spasial omnidireksional PRD. 

2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (1&2) ◽  
pp. 147-180
Author(s):  
P. Wocjan ◽  
J. Yard

We analyze relationships between quantum computation and a family of generalizations of the Jones polynomial. Extending recent work by Aharonov et al., we give efficient quantum circuits for implementing the unitary Jones-Wenzl representations of the braid group. We use these to provide new quantum algorithms for approximately evaluating a family of specializations of the HOMFLYPT two-variable polynomial of trace closures of braids. We also give algorithms for approximating the Jones polynomial of a general class of closures of braids at roots of unity. Next we provide a self-contained proof of a result of Freedman et al.\ that any quantum computation can be replaced by an additive approximation of the Jones polynomial, evaluated at almost any primitive root of unity. Our proof encodes two-qubit unitaries into the rectangular representation of the eight-strand braid group. We then give QCMA-complete and PSPACE-complete problems which are based on braids. We conclude with direct proofs that evaluating the Jones polynomial of the plat closure at most primitive roots of unity is a \#P-hard problem, while learning its most significant bit is PP-hard, circumventing the usual route through the Tutte polynomial and graph coloring.


Author(s):  
Bo Chen

In this paper, we give an explicit upper bound on [Formula: see text], the least primitive root modulo [Formula: see text]. Since a primitive root modulo [Formula: see text] is not primitive modulo [Formula: see text] if and only if it belongs to the set of integers less than [Formula: see text] which are [Formula: see text]th power residues modulo [Formula: see text], we seek the bounds for [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] to find [Formula: see text] which satisfies [Formula: see text], where, [Formula: see text] denotes the number of primitive roots modulo [Formula: see text] not exceeding [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text] denotes the number of [Formula: see text]th powers modulo [Formula: see text] not exceeding [Formula: see text]. The method we mainly use is to estimate the character sums contained in the expressions of the [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] above. Finally, we show that [Formula: see text] for all primes [Formula: see text]. This improves the recent result of Kerr et al.


1995 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 465-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Pappalardi

AbstractA conjecture of Brown and Zassenhaus (see [2]) states that the first log/? primes generate a primitive root (mod p) for almost all primes p. As a consequence of a Theorem of Burgess and Elliott (see [3]) it is easy to see that the first log2p log log4+∊p primes generate a primitive root (mod p) for almost all primes p. We improve this showing that the first log2p/ log log p primes generate a primitive root (mod p) for almost all primes p.


The present work consists of two. parts, with an appendix to the second. Part I. deals with real numbers, Part II. with complex. In the simple cases when the modulus is a real number, which is an odd prime, a power of an odd prime, or double the power of an odd prime, we know that there exist primitive roots of the modulus ; that is, that there are numbers whose successive powers have for their residues the complete set of numbers less than and prime to the modulus. A primitive root may be said to generate by its successive powers the complete set of residues. It is also known that, in general, when the modulus is any composite number, though primitive roots do not exist, there may be laid down a set of numbers which will here be called g, the products of powers of which give the complete set of residues prime to the modulus.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
N. A. Carella

Asymptotic formulas for the number of integers with the primitive root 2, and the generalized Artin conjecture for subsets of composite integers with fixed admissible primitive roots \(u\neq \pm 1,v^2\), are presented here.


2022 ◽  
Vol Volume 44 - Special... ◽  
Author(s):  
Sankar Sitaraman

E. Artin conjectured that any integer $a > 1$ which is not a perfect square is a primitive root modulo $p$ for infinitely many primes $ p.$ Let $f_a(p)$ be the multiplicative order of the non-square integer $a$ modulo the prime $p.$ M. R. Murty and S. Srinivasan \cite{Murty-Srinivasan} showed that if $\displaystyle \sum_{p < x} \frac 1 {f_a(p)} = O(x^{1/4})$ then Artin's conjecture is true for $a.$ We relate the Murty-Srinivasan condition to sums involving the cyclotomic periods from the subfields of $\mathbb Q(e^{2\pi i /p})$ corresponding to the subgroups $<a> \subseteq \mathbb F_p^*.$


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (04) ◽  
pp. 1013-1021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Munsch ◽  
Tim Trudgian

We use character sum estimates to give some bounds on the least square-full primitive root modulo a prime. In particular, we show that there is a square-full primitive root mod [Formula: see text] less than [Formula: see text].


2006 ◽  
Vol 02 (01) ◽  
pp. 7-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOSEPH COHEN

We consider an analogue of Artin's primitive root conjecture for units in real quadratic fields. Given such a nontrivial unit, for a rational prime p which is inert in the field the maximal order of the unit modulo p is p + 1. An extension of Artin's conjecture is that there are infinitely many such inert primes for which this order is maximal. This is known at present only under the Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Unconditionally, we show that for any choice of 7 units in different real quadratic fields satisfying a certain simple restriction, there is at least one of the units which satisfies the above version of Artin's conjecture.


1969 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 822-841 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. D. T. A. Elliott

Notation,p and q are generic symbols for prime numbers. N(H, p) denotes the number of primes q, not exceeding Hy which are primitive roots (mod p).g(p) denotes the least positive primitive root (mod p).g*(p) is the least prime primitive root (mod p).v(m) denotes the number of distinct prime divisors of the integer m.τk(m) is the number of ways of representing the integer m as the product of k integers, order being important.π(x, k, r) is the number of primes p, not exceeding x, which satisfy p ≡ r(mod k); while π(x) denotes the total number of p ≦ x.logm x denotes the mth iterated logarithmic function which is defined, when possible, by


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