12 research outputs found

    The CatWISE Preliminary Catalog: Motions from WISE and NEOWISE Data

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    CatWISE is a program to catalog sources selected from combined WISE and NEOWISE all-sky survey data at 3.4 and 4.6 μm (W1 and W2). The CatWISE Preliminary Catalog consists of 900,849,014 sources measured in data collected from 2010 to 2016. This data set represents four times as many exposures and spans over 10 times as large a time baseline as that used for the AllWISE Catalog. CatWISE adapts AllWISE software to measure the sources in coadded images created from six-month subsets of these data, each representing one coverage of the inertial sky, or epoch. The catalog includes the measured motion of sources in eight epochs over the 6.5 yr span of the data. From comparison to Spitzer, signal-to-noise ratio = 5 limits in magnitudes in the Vega system are W1 = 17.67 and W2 = 16.47, compared to W1 = 16.96 and W2 = 16.02 for AllWISE. From comparison to Gaia, CatWISE positions have typical accuracies of 50 mas for stars at W1 = 10 mag and 275 mas for stars at W1 = 15.5 mag. Proper motions have typical accuracies of 10 mas yr⁻¹ and 30 mas yr⁻¹ for stars with these brightnesses, an order of magnitude better than from AllWISE. The catalog is available in the WISE/NEOWISE Enhanced and Contributed Products area of the NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive

    Graph-Based Comparison Of Iot And Android Malware

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    The growth in the number of android and Internet of Things (IoT) devices has witnessed a parallel increase in the number of malicious software (malware) that can run on both, affecting their ecosystems. Thus, it is essential to understand those malware towards their detection. In this work, we look into a comparative study of android and IoT malware through the lenses of graph measures: we construct abstract structures, using the control flow graph (CFG) to represent malware binaries. Using those structures, we conduct an in-depth analysis of malicious graphs extracted from the android and IoT malware. By reversing 2,874 and 201 malware binaries corresponding to the IoT and android platforms, respectively, extract their CFGs, and analyze them across both general characteristics, such as the number of nodes and edges, as well as graph algorithmic constructs, such as average shortest path, betweenness, closeness, density, etc. Using the CFG as an abstract structure, we emphasize various interesting findings, such as the prevalence of unreachable code in android malware, noted by the multiple components in their CFGs, the high density, strong closeness and betweenness, and larger number of nodes in the android malware, compared to the IoT malware, highlighting its higher order of complexity. We note that the number of edges in android malware is larger than that in IoT malware, highlighting a richer flow structure of those malware samples, despite their structural simplicity (number of nodes). We note that most of those graph-based properties can be used as discriminative features for classification

    The Gaia Ultra-Cool Dwarf Sample - III: Seven new multiple systems containing at least one Gaia DR2 ultracool dwarf.

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    We present 10 new ultracool dwarfs in seven wide binary systems discovered using Gaia second data release data, identified as part of our Gaia Ultra-Cool Dwarf Sample project. The seven systems presented here include an L1 companion to the G5 IV star HD 164507, an L1: Companion to the V478 Lyr AB system, an L2 companion to the metal-poor K5 V star CD-28 8692, an M9 V companion to the young variable K0 V star LT UMa, and three low-mass binaries consisting of late Ms and early Ls. The HD 164507, CD-28 8692, V478 Lyr, and LT UMa systems are particularly important benchmarks, because the primaries are well characterized and offer excellent constraints on the atmospheric parameters and ages of the companions. We find that the M8 V star 2MASS J23253550+4608163 is ∼2.5 mag overluminous compared to M dwarfs of similar spectral type, but at the same time it does not exhibit obvious peculiarities in its near-infrared spectrum. Its overluminosity cannot be explained by unresolved binarity alone. Finally, we present an L1+L2 system with a projected physical separation of 959 au, making this the widest L + L binary currently known.With funding from the Spanish government through the "María de Maeztu Unit of Excellence" accreditation (MDM-2017-0737

    The Enigmatic Brown Dwarf WISEA J153429.75-104303.3 (a.k.a. "The Accident")

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    Continued follow-up of WISEA J153429.75−104303.3, announced in Meisner et al., has proven it to have an unusual set of properties. New imaging data from Keck/MOSFIRE and HST/WFC3 shows that this object is one of the few faint proper motion sources known with J − ch2 >8 mag, indicating a very cold temperature consistent with the latest known Y dwarfs. Despite this, it has W1−W2 and ch1−ch2 colors ~1.6 mag bluer than a typical Y dwarf. A new trigonometric parallax measurement from a combination of WISE, Spitzer, and HST astrometry confirms a nearby distance of 16.31.2+1.4{16.3}_{-1.2}^{+1.4} pc and a large transverse velocity of 207.4 ± 15.9 km s−1. The absolute J, W2, and ch2 magnitudes are in line with the coldest known Y dwarfs, despite the highly discrepant W1−W2 and ch1−ch2 colors. We explore possible reasons for the unique traits of this object and conclude that it is most likely an old, metal-poor brown dwarf and possibly the first Y subdwarf. Given that the object has an HST F110W magnitude of 24.7 mag, broadband spectroscopy and photometry from JWST are the best options for testing this hypothesis
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