Institution
Leibniz University of Hanover
Education•Hanover, Niedersachsen, Germany•
About: Leibniz University of Hanover is a education organization based out in Hanover, Niedersachsen, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Finite element method & Population. The organization has 14283 authors who have published 29845 publications receiving 682152 citations.
Topics: Finite element method, Population, Laser, Gravitational wave, Membrane
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Three new techniques are introduced to enable the long-term application of squeezed light, capable of increasing the astrophysical reach of gravitational-wave detectors, and it is shown that the glitch rate of the detector did not increase from squeezing application.
Abstract: We report on the first long-term application of squeezed vacuum states of light to improve the shot-noise-limited sensitivity of a gravitational-wave observatory. In particular, squeezed vacuum was applied to the German-British detector GEO 600 during a period of three months from June to August 2011, when GEO 600 was performing an observational run together with the French-Italian Virgo detector. In a second period, the squeezing application continued for about 11 months from November 2011 to October 2012. During this time, squeezed vacuum was applied for 90.2% (205.2 days total) of the time that science-quality data were acquired with GEO 600. A sensitivity increase from squeezed vacuum application was observed broadband above 400 Hz. The time average of gain in sensitivity was 26% (2.0 dB), determined in the frequency band from 3.7 to 4.0 kHz. This corresponds to a factor of 2 increase in the observed volume of the Universe for sources in the kHz region (e.g., supernovae, magnetars). We introduce three new techniques to enable the long-term application of squeezed light, and show that the glitch rate of the detector did not increase from squeezing application. Squeezed vacuum states of light have arrived as a permanent application, capable of increasing the astrophysical reach of gravitational-wave detectors.
324 citations
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16 Jul 1990-Philosophical transactions - Royal Society. Mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
TL;DR: In this paper, two discrete and two continuous models of stick-slip systems have been investigated, which exhibit rich bifurcational and chaotic behaviour, and results from numerical simulations and experimental observations could be obtained.
Abstract: Stick-slip vibrations are self-sustained oscillations induced by dry friction. They occur in engineering systems as well as in our everyday life, e.g. the sound of bowed instruments results from stick—slip vibrations of the strings. Two discrete and two continuous models of stick-slip systems have been investigated in this paper, which exhibit rich bifurcational and chaotic behaviour. Results from numerical simulations and experimental observations could be obtained. In the latter case, chaos has to be distinguished from noise in the measurements. This requires special analysis methods like the reconstruction of a pseudo-state space from a time series and the calculation of the so-called correlation integral.
321 citations
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TL;DR: The data recorded by these instruments during their first and second observing runs are described, including the gravitational-wave strain arrays, released as time series sampled at 16384 Hz.
320 citations
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TL;DR: A novel unified approach which reasons jointly about 3D scene flow as well as the pose, shape and motion of vehicles in the scene is proposed and the results provide a prove of concept and demonstrate the usefulness of the method.
Abstract: . driving. While much progress has been made in recent years, imaging conditions in natural outdoor environments are still very challenging for current reconstruction and recognition methods. In this paper, we propose a novel unified approach which reasons jointly about 3D scene flow as well as the pose, shape and motion of vehicles in the scene. Towards this goal, we incorporate a deformable CAD model into a slanted-plane conditional random field for scene flow estimation and enforce shape consistency between the rendered 3D models and the parameters of all superpixels in the image. The association of superpixels to objects is established by an index variable which implicitly enables model selection. We evaluate our approach on the challenging KITTI scene flow dataset in terms of object and scene flow estimation. Our results provide a prove of concept and demonstrate the usefulness of our method.
315 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the analytic techniques for monitoring the fate of charge carriers at each elementary photocatalytic step, including charge carrier generation, trapping and recombination inside the photocatalyst, as well as the interfacial charge transfer.
315 citations
Authors
Showing all 14621 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
Peter Zoller | 134 | 734 | 76093 |
J. R. Smith | 134 | 1335 | 107641 |
Chao Zhang | 127 | 3119 | 84711 |
Benjamin William Allen | 124 | 807 | 87750 |
J. F. J. van den Brand | 123 | 777 | 93070 |
J. H. Hough | 117 | 904 | 89697 |
Hans-Peter Seidel | 112 | 1213 | 51080 |
Karsten Danzmann | 112 | 754 | 80032 |
Bruce D. Hammock | 111 | 1409 | 57401 |
Benno Willke | 109 | 508 | 74673 |
Roman Schnabel | 108 | 589 | 71938 |
Jan Harms | 108 | 447 | 76132 |
Hartmut Grote | 108 | 434 | 72781 |
Ik Siong Heng | 107 | 423 | 71830 |