16,026 research outputs found
8x8 Reconfigurable quantum photonic processor based on silicon nitride waveguides
The development of large-scale optical quantum information processing
circuits ground on the stability and reconfigurability enabled by integrated
photonics. We demonstrate a reconfigurable 8x8 integrated linear optical
network based on silicon nitride waveguides for quantum information processing.
Our processor implements a novel optical architecture enabling any arbitrary
linear transformation and constitutes the largest programmable circuit reported
so far on this platform. We validate a variety of photonic quantum information
processing primitives, in the form of Hong-Ou-Mandel interference, bosonic
coalescence/anticoalescence and high-dimensional single-photon quantum gates.
We achieve fidelities that clearly demonstrate the promising future for
large-scale photonic quantum information processing using low-loss silicon
nitride.Comment: Added supplementary materials, extended introduction, new figures,
results unchange
Security of GPS/INS based On-road Location Tracking Systems
Location information is critical to a wide-variety of navigation and tracking
applications. Today, GPS is the de-facto outdoor localization system but has
been shown to be vulnerable to signal spoofing attacks. Inertial Navigation
Systems (INS) are emerging as a popular complementary system, especially in
road transportation systems as they enable improved navigation and tracking as
well as offer resilience to wireless signals spoofing, and jamming attacks. In
this paper, we evaluate the security guarantees of INS-aided GPS tracking and
navigation for road transportation systems. We consider an adversary required
to travel from a source location to a destination, and monitored by a INS-aided
GPS system. The goal of the adversary is to travel to alternate locations
without being detected. We developed and evaluated algorithms that achieve such
goal, providing the adversary significant latitude. Our algorithms build a
graph model for a given road network and enable us to derive potential
destinations an attacker can reach without raising alarms even with the
INS-aided GPS tracking and navigation system. The algorithms render the
gyroscope and accelerometer sensors useless as they generate road trajectories
indistinguishable from plausible paths (both in terms of turn angles and roads
curvature). We also designed, built, and demonstrated that the magnetometer can
be actively spoofed using a combination of carefully controlled coils. We
implemented and evaluated the impact of the attack using both real-world and
simulated driving traces in more than 10 cities located around the world. Our
evaluations show that it is possible for an attacker to reach destinations that
are as far as 30 km away from the true destination without being detected. We
also show that it is possible for the adversary to reach almost 60-80% of
possible points within the target region in some cities
Single integrated device for optical CDMA code processing in dual-code environment
We report on the design, fabrication and performance of a matching integrated optical CDMA encoder-decoder pair based on holographic Bragg reflector technology. Simultaneous encoding/decoding operation of two multiple wavelength-hopping time-spreading codes was successfully demonstrated and shown to support two error-free OCDMA links at OC-24. A double-pass scheme was employed in the devices to enable the use of longer code length
Fluids mobilization in Arabia Terra, Mars: depth of pressurized reservoir from mounds self-similar clustering
Arabia Terra is a region of Mars where signs of past-water occurrence are
recorded in several landforms. Broad and local scale geomorphological,
compositional and hydrological analyses point towards pervasive fluid
circulation through time. In this work we focus on mound fields located in the
interior of three casters larger than 40 km (Firsoff, Kotido and unnamed crater
20 km to the east) and showing strong morphological and textural resemblance to
terrestrial mud volcanoes and spring-related features. We infer that these
landforms likely testify the presence of a pressurized fluid reservoir at depth
and past fluid upwelling. We have performed morphometric analyses to
characterize the mound morphologies and consequently retrieve an accurate
automated mapping of the mounds within the craters for spatial distribution and
fractal clustering analysis. The outcome of the fractal clustering yields
information about the possible extent of the percolating fracture network at
depth below the craters. We have been able to constrain the depth of the
pressurized fluid reservoir between ~2.5 and 3.2 km of depth and hence, we
propose that mounds and mounds alignments are most likely associated to the
presence of fissure ridges and fluid outflow. Their process of formation is
genetically linked to the formation of large intra-crater bulges previously
interpreted as large scale spring deposits. The overburden removal caused by
the impact crater formation is the inferred triggering mechanism for fluid
pressurization and upwelling, that through time led to the formation of the
intra-crater bulges and, after compaction and sealing, to the widespread mound
fields in their surroundings
On angled bounce-off impact of a drop impinging on a flowing soap film
Small drops impinging angularly on thin flowing soap films frequently
demonstrate the rare emergence of bulk elastic effects working in-tandem with
the more common-place hydrodynamic interactions. Three collision regimes are
observable: (a) drop piercing through the film, (b) it coalescing with the
flow, and (c) it bouncing off the film surface. During impact, the drop deforms
along with a bulk elastic deformation of the film. For impacts that are
close-to-tangential, the bounce-off regime predominates. We outline a reduced
order analytical framework assuming a deformable drop and a deformable
three-dimensional film, and the idealization invokes a phase-based parametric
study. Angular inclination of the film and the ratio of post and pre impact
drop sizes entail the phase parameters. We also perform experiments with
vertically descending droplets impacting against an inclined soap film, flowing
under constant pressure head. Model predicted phase domain for bounce-off
compares well to our experimental findings. Additionally, the experiments
exhibit momentum transfer to the film in the form of shed vortex dipole, along
with propagation of free surface waves. On consulting prior published work, we
note that for locomotion of water-walking insects using an impulsive action,
the momentum distribution to the shed vortices and waves are both significant,
taking up respectively 2/3-rd and 1/3-rd of the imparted streamwise momentum.
In view of the potentially similar impulse actions, this theory is applied to
the bounce-off examples in our experiments, and the resultant shed vortex
dipole momenta are compared to the momenta computed from particle imaging
velocimetry data. The magnitudes reveal identical order ( Ns),
suggesting that the bounce-off regime can be tapped as a simple analogue for
interfacial bio-locomotion relying on impulse reactions
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