Patterning of highly conducting polyaniline films
T. Graham, A. Afzali, et al.
Microlithography 2000
We study the Submass Finding Problem: given a string s over a weighted alphabet, i.e., an alphabet Σ with a weight function μ : Σ → N, we refer to a mass M ∈ N as a submass of s if s has a substring whose weights sum up to M. Now, for a set of input masses { M1, ..., Mk }, we want to find those Mi which are submasses of s, and return one or all occurrences of substrings with mass Mi. We present efficient algorithms for both the decision and the search problem. Furthermore, our approach allows us to compute efficiently the number of different submasses of s. The main idea of our algorithms is to define appropriate polynomials such that we can determine the solution for the Submass Finding Problem from the coefficients of the product of these polynomials. We obtain very efficient running times by using Fast Fourier Transform to compute this product. Our main algorithm for the decision problem runs in time O (μs log μs), where μs is the total mass of string s. Employing methods for compressing sparse polynomials, this runtime can be viewed as O (σ (s) log2 σ (s)), where σ (s) denotes the number of different submasses of s. In this case, the runtime is independent of the size of the individual masses of characters. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
T. Graham, A. Afzali, et al.
Microlithography 2000
Donald Samuels, Ian Stobert
SPIE Photomask Technology + EUV Lithography 2007
David L. Shealy, John A. Hoffnagle
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2007
I.K. Pour, D.J. Krajnovich, et al.
SPIE Optical Materials for High Average Power Lasers 1992