Characterization of a next generation step-and-scan system
Timothy J. Wiltshire, Joseph P. Kirk, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 1998
The string replacement (SR) method was recently proposed as a method for exponentiation ae in a group G. The canonical k-SR method operates by replacing a run of i ones in a binary exponent, O < i ≤ k, with i - 1 zeroes followed by the single digit b = 2i - 1. After recoding, it was shown in [5] that the expected weight of e tends to n/4 for n-bit exponents. In this paper we show that the canonical k-SR recoding process can be described as a regular language and then use generating functions to derive the exact probability distribution of recoded exponent weights. We also show that the canonical 2-SR recoding produces weight distributions very similar to (optimal) signed-digit recodings, but no group inversions are required.
Timothy J. Wiltshire, Joseph P. Kirk, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 1998
F.M. Schellenberg, M. Levenson, et al.
BACUS Symposium on Photomask Technology and Management 1991
Charles A Micchelli
Journal of Approximation Theory
Shashanka Ubaru, Lior Horesh, et al.
Journal of Biomedical Informatics