5,198 research outputs found
Mobility as a first class function
Seamless host mobility has been a desirable feature for a long time, but was not part of the original design of the Internet architecture or protocols. Current approaches to network-layer mobility typically require additional network-layer entities for mobility management, which add complexity to the current engineering landscape of the Internet. We present a host-based, end-to-end architecture for host mobility using the Identifier-Locator Network Protocol (ILNP). ILNP provides mobility support as a first class function, since mobility management is controlled and managed by the end-systems, and does not require additional network-layer entities. We demonstrate an instance of ILNP that is a superset of IPv6 – called ILNPv6 – that is implemented by extending the current IPv6 code in the Linux kernel. We make a direct comparison of performance of ILNPv6 and Mobile IPv6, showing the improved performance of ILNPv6.Postprin
Image Subtraction Reduction of Open Clusters M35 & NGC 2158 In The K2 Campaign-0 Super-Stamp
Observations were made of the open clusters M35 and NGC 2158 during the
initial K2 campaign (C0). Reducing these data to high-precision photometric
time-series is challenging due to the wide point spread function (PSF) and the
blending of stellar light in such dense regions. We developed an
image-subtraction-based K2 reduction pipeline that is applicable to both
crowded and sparse stellar fields. We applied our pipeline to the data-rich C0
K2 super-stamp, containing the two open clusters, as well as to the neighboring
postage stamps. In this paper, we present our image subtraction reduction
pipeline and demonstrate that this technique achieves ultra-high photometric
precision for sources in the C0 super-stamp. We extract the raw light curves of
3960 stars taken from the UCAC4 and EPIC catalogs and de-trend them for
systematic effects. We compare our photometric results with the prior
reductions published in the literature. For detrended, TFA-corrected sources in
the 12--12.25 magnitude range, we achieve a best 6.5 hour window
running rms of 35 ppm falling to 100 ppm for fainter stars in the 14--14.25 magnitude range. For stars with , our detrended and
6.5 hour binned light curves achieve the highest photometric precision.
Moreover, all our TFA-corrected sources have higher precision on all time
scales investigated. This work represents the first published image subtraction
analysis of a K2 super-stamp. This method will be particularly useful for
analyzing the Galactic bulge observations carried out during K2 campaign 9. The
raw light curves and the final results of our detrending processes are publicly
available at \url{http://k2.hatsurveys.org/archive/}.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP. 14 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables.
Light curves available from http://k2.hatsurveys.org/archive
IP without IP addresses
D. Phoomikiattisak was funded by the Thai Government. B. Simpson was funded by Cisco Systems under a University Research Programme (URP) grant award.We discuss a key engineering challenge in implementing the Identifier- Locator Network Protocol (ILNP), as described in IRTF Experimental RFCs 6740-6748: enabling legacy applications that use the C sockets API. We have built the first two OS kernel implementations of ILNPv6 (ILNP as a superset of IPv6), in both the Linux OS kernel and the FreeBSD OS kernel. Our evaluation is in comparison with IPv6, in the context of a topical and challenging scenario: host mobility implemented as a purely end-to-end function. Our experiments show that ILNPv6 has excellent potential for deployment using existing IPv6 infrastructure, whilst offering the new properties and functionality of ILNP.Postprin
High Precision Photometry for K2 Campaign 1
The two reaction wheel K2 mission promises and has delivered new discoveries
in the stellar and exoplanet fields. However, due to the loss of accurate
pointing, it also brings new challenges for the data reduction processes. In
this paper, we describe a new reduction pipeline for extracting high precision
photometry from the K2 dataset, and present public light curves for the K2
Campaign 1 target pixel dataset. Key to our reduction is the derivation of
global astrometric solutions from the target stamps, from which accurate
centroids are passed on for high precision photometry extraction. We extract
target light curves for sources from a combined UCAC4 and EPIC catalogue --
this includes not only primary targets of the K2 campaign 1, but also any other
stars that happen to fall on the pixel stamps. We provide the raw light curves,
and the products of various detrending processes aimed at removing different
types of systematics. Our astrometric solutions achieve a median residual of ~
0.13". For bright stars, our best 6.5 hour precision for raw light curves is
~20 parts per million (ppm). For our detrended light curves, the best 6.5 hour
precisions achieved is ~15 ppm. We show that our detrended light curves have
fewer systematic effects (or trends, or red-noise) than light curves produced
by other groups from the same observations. Example light curves of transiting
planets and a Cepheid variable candidate, are also presented. We make all light
curves public, including the raw and de-trended photometry, at
http://k2.hatsurveys.org.Comment: submitted to MNRA
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