Computer Operating Systems:Lectures

Advanced Operating Systems

Lectures in ppt format:

OSIntroHistoryLecture01  5.0MB  uploaded on 12/12/2011
AOSMemoryManagement-I 1.0 MB      uploaded on 12/12/2011
AOSMemoryManagement-II 1.5 MB     uploaded on 12/12/2011
AOSFileSystems-I  3.3MB uploaded on 06/01/2012
AOSFileSystems-II 3.0MB uploaded on 06/01/2012
AOSScheduling 2.4MB uploaded on 06/01/2012
AOSDeadlocks 3.0MB uploaded on 06/01/2012
AOSSecurity  3.9MB uploaded on 13/01/2012
AOSIOSystems  (PDF4.5 MB uploaded on 01/03/2012
AOSIOSystems(PPT) 6.3 MB uploaded on 01/03/2012
AOSDistributedOSCommunication (PDF) 1.8 MB uploaded on 16/02/2012
AOSDistributedOSCommunication  (PPT) 4.3 MB uploaded on 16/02/2012
AOSDistributedOSIntro  (PPT) 3.4 MB uploaded on 01/03/2012
AOSDistributedOSIntro  (PDF) 2.5 MB uploaded on 01/03/2012
 
Reference:
Book01

Digital Image Processing: Matlab Lectures and Files

DIP in Matlab: Lectures, Files and Reference

For Lectures outlines Click Here              
Matlab Files:
1)  DIPMatlabProjects  7MB zipped
 
 
 
Reference:  Courtesy by Mathworks.com
1)  DigitalmageProcessingToolBox    17.6 MB
2)  ComputerVisionToolBox                   7.8 MB
 
 
 
 
 

Hint of Elusive Higgs Boson: Large Hadron Collider

The ‘GOD’ Particle within the reach of LHC Scientists

The CMS detector at the LHC

ScienceDaily (Aug. 15, 2011) — The physics world was abuzz with some tantalizing news a couple of weeks ago. At a meeting of the European Physical Society in Grenoble, France, physicists — including some from Caltech — announced that the latest data from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) might hint at the existence of the ever-elusive Higgs boson. ……..

For Complete Story Click,  ScienceDaily

CERN experiment weighs antimatter with unprecedented accuracy:Physics

CERN, Geneva, 28 July 2011.

In a paper published today in the journal Nature, the Japanese-European ASACUSA experiment at CERN1 reported a new measurement of the antiproton’s mass accurate to about one part in a billion. Precision measurements of the antiproton mass provide an important way to investigate nature’s apparent preference for matter over antimatter. …. 

…….Any difference between the mass of protons and antiprotons would be a signal for new physics, indicating that the laws of nature could be different for matter and antimatter. ……

For Complete article Click here

25 Tesla, ‘split magnet’ :Physics

July 13, 2011
” A custom-built, $2.5 million “split magnet” system with the potential to revolutionize scientific research in a variety of fields has made its debut at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Florida State University.”

” … The world-record magnet is operating at 25 tesla, easily besting the 17.5 tesla French record set in 1991 for this type of magnet. …………..  In addition to being 43 percent more powerful than the previous world best, the new magnet also has 1,500 times as much space at its center, allowing room for more flexible, varied experiments.

To offer some perspective on the strength of the new magnet, consider this: Twenty-five tesla is equal to a whopping 500,000 times the Earth’s magnetic field. Imagine that much power focused on a very small space and you have some idea what the split magnet is capable of — and why both engineers and scientists at the magnet lab are so excited. ……. ”

For complete article Click : 25 Tesla Magnet

LHC achieves 2011 data milestone:Physics

“…Geneva, 17 June 2011. Today at around 10:50 CEST, the amount of data accumulated by LHC experiments ATLAS and CMS clicked over from 0.999 to 1 inverse femtobarn, signalling an important milestone in the experiments’ quest for new physics. The number signifies a quantity physicists call integrated luminosity, which is a measure of the total number of collisions produced. One inverse femtobarn equates to around 70 million million1 collisions, and in 2010 it was the target set for the 2011 run. That it has been achieved just three months after the first beams of 2011 is testimony to how well the LHC is running. ……..”.

For complete story visit: CERN Press Release

Dark Energy Confirmed: Science News

BBC News Science and Environment, 19 May 2011

By Paul Rincon Science reporter, BBC News

First results from a major astronomical survey using a cutting-edge technique appear to have confirmed the existence of mysterious dark energy.

Dark energy makes up some 74% of the Universe and its existence would explain why the Universe appears to be expanding at an accelerating rate.

The finding was based on studies of more than 200,000 galaxies.

…….. For complete article visit : BBC Science News

LHC: Higgs Boson, God Particle discovered ?

Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle

Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider are rumoured to have found the elusive so-called “God Particle”.

By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent of The Telegraph. 8:10AM BST 24 Apr 2011

A leaked internal memo contains unconfirmed reports that one of the detectors at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, near Geneva, had picked up signals that could be the long sought after particle, called the Higgs boson.

One of the main scientific goals of the huge £6 billion atom smasher was to prove the existence of the Higgs boson, a theoretical particle believed to give everything in the universe mass.

The particle is a key part of the standard model used in physics to describe how particles and atoms are made up.

Rumours that scientists working on the LHC had found evidence of the Higgs boson began to circulate after an supposed internal memo was posted on the internet.

But physicists were quick to urge caution over the claims as many candidates for the particle that appear in collision experiments at the LHC are subsequently dismissed on further examination.

Courtesy by: Telegraph.co.uk

New Physics at LHC

Exotic antimatter particle produced by LHC

by James Lloyd,  Cosmos Online,   Tuesday, 29 March 2011 SHROPSHIRE: Using data from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment, a team of scientists has observed new behaviour of an exotic ‘B meson’ particle. The discovery of this new particle decay mode could help to shed light on one of the most puzzling unknowns in physics. When the universe was formed from the Big Bang 14 billion years ago, matter and antimatter were created in equal quantities. Today, however, we find ourselves in a universe composed almost entirely of matter. The apparent disappearance of antimatter could be explained if scientists discover differences in the way matter and antimatter decay.

Click for Complete article

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