2,374 research outputs found
A stochastical model for periodic domain structuring in ferroelectric crystals
A stochastical description is applied in order to understand how
ferroelectric structures can be formed. The predictions are compared with
experimental data of the so-called electrical fixing: Domains are patterned in
photorefractive lithium niobate crystals by the combination of light-induced
space-charge fields with externally applied electrical fields. In terms of our
stochastical model the probability for domain nucleation is modulated according
to the sum of external and internal fields. The model describes the shape of
the domain pattern as well as the effective degree of modulation
Role of cerium in lithium niobate for holographic recording
Cerium-doped lithium niobate crystals are tested for holographic recording. A photochromic effect is observed in crystals doped with cerium and manganese. But two-center recording in the sample is not as effective as in iron and manganese doubly doped crystals. Photocurrent measurements in cerium and iron singly doped crystals indicate that the photovoltaic constant in the cerium-doped crystal is only one third of that of the iron-doped one. This is the main reason accounting for the low sensitivity of cerium-doped lithium niobate crystals. However, in the diffusion dominated case, i.e., for reflection geometry, cerium-doped lithium niobate may give a strong effect
Trapping of dielectric particles with light-induced space-charge fields
Light-induced space-charge fields in lithium niobate crystals are used to trap and manipulate dielectric particles on the surface of such crystals. Without any external voltage source, strong field gradients are present in the proximity of the crystal surface. These are used to trap particles with diameters in the range between 100 nm and some tens of micrometers
The Making of Cloud Applications An Empirical Study on Software Development for the Cloud
Cloud computing is gaining more and more traction as a deployment and
provisioning model for software. While a large body of research already covers
how to optimally operate a cloud system, we still lack insights into how
professional software engineers actually use clouds, and how the cloud impacts
development practices. This paper reports on the first systematic study on how
software developers build applications in the cloud. We conducted a
mixed-method study, consisting of qualitative interviews of 25 professional
developers and a quantitative survey with 294 responses. Our results show that
adopting the cloud has a profound impact throughout the software development
process, as well as on how developers utilize tools and data in their daily
work. Among other things, we found that (1) developers need better means to
anticipate runtime problems and rigorously define metrics for improved fault
localization and (2) the cloud offers an abundance of operational data,
however, developers still often rely on their experience and intuition rather
than utilizing metrics. From our findings, we extracted a set of guidelines for
cloud development and identified challenges for researchers and tool vendors
FLARE: Fingerprinting Deep Reinforcement Learning Agents using Universal Adversarial Masks
We propose FLARE, the first fingerprinting mechanism to verify whether a
suspected Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) policy is an illegitimate copy of
another (victim) policy. We first show that it is possible to find
non-transferable, universal adversarial masks, i.e., perturbations, to generate
adversarial examples that can successfully transfer from a victim policy to its
modified versions but not to independently trained policies. FLARE employs
these masks as fingerprints to verify the true ownership of stolen DRL policies
by measuring an action agreement value over states perturbed via such masks.
Our empirical evaluations show that FLARE is effective (100% action agreement
on stolen copies) and does not falsely accuse independent policies (no false
positives). FLARE is also robust to model modification attacks and cannot be
easily evaded by more informed adversaries without negatively impacting agent
performance. We also show that not all universal adversarial masks are suitable
candidates for fingerprints due to the inherent characteristics of DRL
policies. The spatio-temporal dynamics of DRL problems and sequential
decision-making process make characterizing the decision boundary of DRL
policies more difficult, as well as searching for universal masks that capture
the geometry of it.Comment: Will appear in the proceedings of ACSAC 2023; 13 pages, 5 figures, 7
table
Advancing the Right to Health Through Global Organizations: The Potential Role of a Framework Convention on Global Health
Organizations, partnerships, and alliances form the building blocks of global governance. Global health organizations thus have the potential to play a formative role in determining the extent to which people are able to realize their right to health.
This article examines how major global health organizations, such as WHO, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, UNAIDS, and GAVI approach human rights concerns, including equality, accountability, and inclusive participation. We argue that organizational support for the right to health must transition from ad hoc and partial to permanent and comprehensive.
Drawing on the literature and our knowledge of global health organizations, we offer good practices that point to ways in which such agencies can advance the right to health, covering nine areas: 1) participation and representation in governance processes; 2) leadership and organizational ethos; 3) internal policies; 4) norm-setting and promotion; 5) organizational leadership through advocacy and communication; 6) monitoring and accountability; 7) capacity building; 8) funding policies; and 9) partnerships and engagement. In each of these areas, we offer elements of a proposed Framework Convention on Global Health (FCGH), which would commit state parties to support these standards through their board membership and other interactions with these agencies. We also explain how the FCGH could incorporate these organizations into its overall financing framework, initiate a new forum where they collaborate with each other, as well as organizations in other regimes, to advance the right to health, and ensure sufficient funding for right to health capacity building.
We urge major global health organizations to follow the leadership of the UN Secretary-General and UNAIDS to champion the FCGH. It is only through a rights-based approach, enshrined in a new Convention, that we can expect to achieve health for all in our lifetimes
Connections between the stability of a Poincare map and boundedness of certain associate sequences
Let and be two natural numbers and let be the -periodic discrete evolution family of matrices, having complex scalars as entries, generated by -valued, -periodic sequence of matrices We prove that the solution of the following discrete problem is bounded for each and each -vector if the Poincare map is stable. The converse statement is also true if we add a new assumption to the boundedness condition. This new assumption refers to the invertibility for each of the matrix By an example it is shown that the assumption on invertibility cannot be removed. Finally, a strong variant of Barbashin's type theorem is proved
Poling effect on distribution of quenched random fields in a uniaxial relaxor ferroelectric
The frequency dependence of the dielectric permitivity's maximum has been
studied for poled and unpoled doped relaxor strontium barium niobate
(SBN-61:Cr). In both cases the maximum
found is broad and the frequency dispersion is strong. The present view of
random fields compensation in the unpoled sample is not suitable for explaining
this experimental result. We propose a new mechanism where the dispersion of
quenched random electric fields, affecting the nanodomains, is minimized after
poling. We test our proposal by numerical simulations on a random field Ising
model. Results obtained are in agreement with the polarization's measurements
presented by Granzow et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett {\bf 92}, 065701 (2004)].Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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