718 research outputs found
Next Generation Middleware Technology for Mobile Computing
Current advances in portable devices, wireless technologies, and distributed systems have created a mobile computing environment that is characterized by a large scale of dynamism. Diversities in network connectivity, platform capability, and resource availability can significantly affect the application performance. Traditional middleware systems are not prepared to offer proper support for addressing the dynamic aspects of mobile systems. Modern distributed applications need a middleware that is capable of adapting to environment changes and that supports the required level of quality of service. This paper represents the experience of several research projects related to next generation middleware systems. We first indicate the major challenges in mobile computing systems and try to identify the main requirements for mobile middleware systems. The different categories of mobile middleware technologies are reviewed and their strength and weakness are analyzed
Tailoring the carrier mobility of semiconducting nanowires by remote dielectrics
The dielectric environment of thin semiconductor nanowires can affect the
charge transport properties inside the wire. In this work, it is shown that
Coulomb impurity scattering inside thin nanowires can be damped strongly by
coating the wire with a high-k dielectric. This will lead to an increase in the
mobility of free charges inside the wire.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Invisible charginos and neutralinos from gauge boson fusion: a way to explore anomaly mediation ?
We point out that vector boson fusion (VBF) at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can lead to useful signals for charginos and neutralinos in supersymmetric scenarios where these particles are almost invisible. The proposed signals are just two forward jets with missing transverse energy. It is shown that in this way one can probe a large region of the parameter space of a theory with anomaly mediated supersymmtery breaking (AMSB) at the LHC. In addition, scenarios where the lightest neutralinos and charginos are Higgsino-like can give copious signals of the above type
Effects of aging on face identification and holistic face processing
AbstractSeveral studies have shown that face identification accuracy is lower in older than younger adults. This effect of aging might be due to age differences in holistic processing, which is thought to be an important component of human face processing. Currently, however, there is conflicting evidence as to whether holistic face processing is impaired in older adults. The current study therefore re-examined this issue by measuring response accuracy in a 1-of-4 face identification task and the composite face effect (CFE), a common index of holistic processing, in older adults. Consistent with previous reports, we found that face identification accuracy was lower in older adults than in younger adults tested in the same task. We also found a significant CFE in older adults that was similar in magnitude to the CFE measured in younger subjects with the same task. Finally, we found that there was a significant positive correlation between the CFE and face identification accuracy. This last result differs from the results obtained in a previous study that used the same tasks and which found no evidence of an association between the CFE and face identification accuracy in younger adults. Furthermore, the age difference was found with subtraction-, regression-, and ratio-based estimates of the CFE. The current findings are consistent with previous claims that older adults rely more heavily on holistic processing to identify objects in conditions of limited processing resources
Constrains on parameters of magnetic field decay for accreting isolated neutron stars
The influence of exponential magnetic field decay (MFD) on the spin evolution
of isolated neutron stars is studied. The ROSAT observations of several X-ray
sources, which can be accreting old isolated neutron stars, are used to
constrain the exponential and power-law decay parameters. We show that for the
exponential decay the ranges of minimum value of magnetic moment, , and
the characteristic decay time, , , are excluded assuming the
standard initial magnetic moment, . For these
parameters, neutron stars would never reach the stage of accretion from the
interstellar medium even for a low space velocity of the stars and a high
density of the ambient plasma. The range of excluded parameters increases for
lower values of .
We also show, that, contrary to exponential MFD, no significant restrictions
can be made for the parameters of power-law decay from the statistics of
isolated neutron star candidates in ROSAT observations.
Isolated neutron stars with constant magnetic fields and initial values of
them less than never come to the stage
of accretion.
We briefly discuss the fate of old magnetars with and without MFD, and
describe parameters of old accreting magnetars.Comment: 18 pages, 6 PostScript figures, to be published in the Proceedings of
the XXVIII ITEP Winter Schoo
Anisotropic charge transport in non-polar GaN QW: polarization induced charge and interface roughness scattering
Charge transport in GaN quantum well (QW) devices grown in non-polar
direction has been theoretically investigated . Emergence of anisotropic line
charge scattering mechanism originating as a result of anisotropic rough
surface morphology in conjunction with in-plane built-in polarization has been
proposed. It has shown that in-plane growth anisotropy leads to large
anisotropic carrier transport at low temperatures. At high temperatures, this
anisotropy in charge transport is partially washed out by strong isotropic
optical phonon scattering in GaN QW.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Friction force on slow charges moving over supported graphene
We provide a theoretical model that describes the dielectric coupling of a 2D
layer of graphene, represented by a polarization function in the Random Phase
Approximation, and a semi-infinite 3D substrate, represented by a surface
response function in a non-local formulation. We concentrate on the role of the
dynamic response of the substrate for low-frequency excitations of the combined
graphene-substrate system, which give rise to the stopping force on slowly
moving charges above graphene. A comparison of the dielectric loss function
with experimental HREELS data for graphene on a SiC substrate is used to
estimate the damping rate in graphene and to reveal the importance of phonon
excitations in an insulating substrate. A signature of the hybridization
between graphene's pi plasmon and the substrate's phonon is found in the
stopping force. A friction coefficient that is calculated for slow charges
moving above graphene on a metallic substrate shows an interplay between the
low-energy single-particle excitations in both systems.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Nanotechnology for a special issue
related to the NGC 2009 conference (http://asdn.net/ngc2009/index.shtml
Sqrt{shat}_{min} resurrected
We discuss the use of the variable sqrt{shat}_{min}, which has been proposed
in order to measure the hard scale of a multi parton final state event using
inclusive quantities only, on a SUSY data sample for a 14 TeV LHC. In its
original version, where this variable was proposed on calorimeter level, the
direct correlation to the hard scattering scale does not survive when effects
from soft physics are taken into account. We here show that when using
reconstructed objects instead of calorimeter energy and momenta as input, we
manage to actually recover this correlation for the parameter point considered
here. We furthermore discuss the effect of including W + jets and t tbar+jets
background in our analysis and the use of sqrt{shat}_{min} for the suppression
of SM induced background in new physics searches.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures; v2: 1 figure, several subsections and references
as well as new author affiliation added. Corresponds to published versio
Radio Spectra of Giant Radio Galaxies from RATAN-600 Data
Measurements of the flux densities of the extended components of seven giant
radio galaxies obtained using the RATAN-600 radio telescope at wavelengths of
6.25 and 13 cm ar e presented. The spectra of components of these radio
galaxies are constructed using these new RA TAN-600 data together with data
from the WENSS, NVSS, and GB6 surveys. The spectral indices in the stu died
frequency range are calculated, and the need for detailed estimates of the
integrated contributi on of such objects to the background emission is
demonstrated.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 5 table
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