38,223 research outputs found
Cryptography: Mathematical Advancements on Cyber Security
The origin of cryptography, the study of encoding and decoding messages, dates back to ancient times around 1900 BC. The ancient Egyptians enlisted the use of basic encryption techniques to conceal personal information. Eventually, the realm of cryptography grew to include the concealment of more important information, and cryptography quickly became the backbone of cyber security. Many companies today use encryption to protect online data, and the government even uses encryption to conceal confidential information. Mathematics played a huge role in advancing the methods of cryptography. By looking at the math behind the most basic methods to the newest methods of cryptography, one can learn how cryptography has advanced and will continue to advance
Life as an early career researcher: Ruth Bower
Ruth Bower talks to Francesca Lake, Managing Editor: Ruth is currently researching head and neck cancer chemoradiotherapy regimens utilizing microfluidic technology to maintain and interrogate biopsies. Tissue response is investigated using a variety of whole tissue and cellular analytical techniques with a view toward personalized medicine. She is currently pursuing her PhD within the head and neck cancer research group at Hull University (UK). Ruth obtained a first class (Hons) degree in Biological Sciences from Lancaster University (UK) during which time she spent a year at the University of Wollongong (Australia)
Husserl on Hallucination: A Conjunctive Reading
Several commentators have recently attributed conflicting accounts of the relation between veridical perceptual experience and hallucination to Husserl. Some say he is a proponent of the conjunctive view that the two kinds of experience are fundamentally the same. Others deny this and purport to find in Husserl distinct and non-overlapping accounts of their fundamental natures, thus committing him to a disjunctive view. My goal is to set the record straight. Having briefly laid out the problem under discussion and the terms of the debate, I then review the proposals that have been advanced, disposing of some and marking others for further consideration. A.D. Smith’s disjunctive reading is among the latter. I discuss it at length, arguing that Smith fails to show that Husserl’s views on perceptual experience entail a form of disjunctivism. Following that critical discussion, I present a case for a conjunctive reading of Husserl’s account of perceptual experience
System aspects of spacecraft charging
Satellites come in a variety of sizes and configurations including spinning satellites and three-axis stabilized satellites. All of these characteristics have a significant effect on spacecraft charging considerations. There are, however, certain fundamentals which can be considered which indicate the nature and extent of the problem. The global positioning system satellite serves to illustrate certain characteristics
Constraining the Rate of Relativistic Jets from Tidal Disruptions Using Radio Surveys
Tidal disruption of stars by massive black holes produce transient accretion
flows that flare at optical, UV, and X-ray wavelengths. At late times, these
accretion flows may launch relativistic jets that can be detected through the
interaction of the jet with the dense interstellar medium of the galaxy. We
present an upper limit for the flux density of a radio counterpart to a tidal
disruption event detected by GALEX that is a factor of 6 below theoretical
predictions. We also examine existing radio surveys for transients with a time
scale of 1 year and use these to set a upper limit on the rate of
tidal disruption events producing relativistic jets of ~14 x 10^-7 Mpc^-3 y^-1.
This rate is an order of magnitude lower than the highest values from
theoretical models and is consistent with detection rates from optical and
X-ray surveys.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
The Entropy-Driven X-ray Evolution of Galaxy Clusters
Observations of the evolution of the galaxy cluster X-ray luminosity function
suggest that the entropy of the intra-cluster medium plays a significant role
in determining the development of cluster X-ray properties. I present a
theoretical framework in which the evolution of the entropy of the central
intra-cluster gas is explicitly taken into account. The aim of this work is to
develop a theoretical context within which steadily improving measurements of
the X-ray luminosities and temperatures of distant galaxy clusters can be
interpreted. I discuss the possible range of entropy evolution parameters and
relate these to the physical processes heating and cooling the intra-cluster
medium. The practical application of this work is demonstrated by combining
currently available evolutionary constraints on the X-ray luminosity function
and the luminosity--temperature correlation to determine the best-fitting model
parameters.Comment: 9 pages Tex including 4 postscript figures. To be appear in MNRAS.
minor miss-quote correcte
Data from: A systematic review and meta-analysis of seroprevalence surveys of ebolavirus infection
The dataset contains findings and information from 51 seroprevelance studies performed from on samples collected from 1961 to 2016. These investigated 84 exposure-defined subgroups of subjects reported to have had no symptoms of EVD during the outbreak period, or to have come from populations with no known outbreaks. The data covers more than 44,000 people. The dataset records the sample locations, exposure type, numbers investigated, number/% considered positive and the cut-off used to define positivity. The data comes from a systematic review of published papers: DOI/PMCID?PMIDs are recorded. Information on antigens tested, any validation work and other notes are in the ReadMe file, as are explanations of the variable
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