4,222 research outputs found
High-power test results of a 3 GHz single-cell cavity
Compact, reliable and little consuming accelerators are required for the
treatment of tumours with ions. TERA proposes the "cyclinac", composed of a
high-frequency, fast-cycling linac which boosts the energy of the particles
previously accelerated in a cyclotron. The dimensions of the linac can be
reduced if high gradients are used. TERA initiated a high-gradient test program
to understand the operational limit of such structures. The program foresees
the design, prototyping and high-power test of several high-gradient structures
operating at 3 and 5.7 GHz. The high-power tests of the 3 GHz single-cell
cavity were completed in Winter 2012. The maximum BDR threshold measured for
Emax of 170 MV/m and RF pulses of 2.5 \mu s was 3 x 10-6 bpp/m
TrustShadow: Secure Execution of Unmodified Applications with ARM TrustZone
The rapid evolution of Internet-of-Things (IoT) technologies has led to an
emerging need to make it smarter. A variety of applications now run
simultaneously on an ARM-based processor. For example, devices on the edge of
the Internet are provided with higher horsepower to be entrusted with storing,
processing and analyzing data collected from IoT devices. This significantly
improves efficiency and reduces the amount of data that needs to be transported
to the cloud for data processing, analysis and storage. However, commodity OSes
are prone to compromise. Once they are exploited, attackers can access the data
on these devices. Since the data stored and processed on the devices can be
sensitive, left untackled, this is particularly disconcerting.
In this paper, we propose a new system, TrustShadow that shields legacy
applications from untrusted OSes. TrustShadow takes advantage of ARM TrustZone
technology and partitions resources into the secure and normal worlds. In the
secure world, TrustShadow constructs a trusted execution environment for
security-critical applications. This trusted environment is maintained by a
lightweight runtime system that coordinates the communication between
applications and the ordinary OS running in the normal world. The runtime
system does not provide system services itself. Rather, it forwards requests
for system services to the ordinary OS, and verifies the correctness of the
responses. To demonstrate the efficiency of this design, we prototyped
TrustShadow on a real chip board with ARM TrustZone support, and evaluated its
performance using both microbenchmarks and real-world applications. We showed
TrustShadow introduces only negligible overhead to real-world applications.Comment: MobiSys 201
Limits on the low energy antinucleon-nucleus annihilations from the Heisenberg principle
We show that the quantum uncertainty principle puts some limits on the
effectiveness of the antinucleon-nucleus annihilation at very low energies.
This is caused by the fact that the realization a very effective short-distance
reaction process implies information on the relative distance of the reacting
particles. Some quantitative predictions are possible on this ground, including
the approximate A-independence of antinucleon-nucleus annihilation rates.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Propagation of gravity waves and spread F in the low-latitude ionosphere over Tucumán, Argentina, by continuous Doppler sounding: first results
Results of systematic analysis of propagation directions and horizontal velocities of gravity waves (GWs) and spread F structures in low-latitude ionosphere (magnetic inclination ~27°) in Tucumán region, Argentina, are presented. Measurements were carried out by multipoint continuous Doppler system during 1 year from December 2012 to November 2013. It was found that meridian propagation of GWs dominated and that southward propagation prevailed in the local summer. Oblique spread structures observed in Doppler shift spectrograms and associated with spread F propagated roughly eastward at velocities from ~70 to ~180 m/s and were observed at night from ~ September to ~ March. The velocities were computed for 182 events and the azimuths for 64 events. Continuous Doppler sounding makes it possible to analyze more events compared to optical observations often used for propagation studies since the measurements do not depend on weather.Fil: Chum, J.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Miranda Bonomi, Fernando Alberto. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Electricidad, Electrónica y Computación. Laboratorio de Telecomunicaciones; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Fišer, J.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Cabrera, M. A.. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Electricidad, Electrónica y Computación. Laboratorio de Telecomunicaciones; Argentina. Universidad Tecnológica Nacional. Facultad Regional Tucuman; ArgentinaFil: Ezquer, Rodolfo Gerardo. Universidad Tecnológica Nacional. Facultad Regional Tucuman; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Física. Laboratorio de Ionosfera; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Burešová, D.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Laštovička, J.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Baše, J.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Hruška, F.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República ChecaFil: Molina, Maria Graciela. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Ciencias de la Computación; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Ise, Juan Eduardo. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Electricidad, Electrónica y Computación. Laboratorio de Telecomunicaciones; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Cangemi, José Ignacio. Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Tecnología. Departamento de Electricidad, Electrónica y Computación. Laboratorio de Telecomunicaciones; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Šindelářová, T.. Institute of Atmospheric Physics; República Chec
Hot and repulsive traffic flow
We study a message passing model, applicable also to traffic problems. The
model is implemented in a discrete lattice, where particles move towards their
destination, with fluctuations around the minimal distance path. A repulsive
interaction between particles is introduced in order to avoid the appearance of
traffic jam. We have studied the parameter space finding regions of fluid
traffic, and saturated ones, being separated by abrupt changes. The improvement
of the system performance is also explored, by the introduction of a
non-constant potential acting on the particles. Finally, we deal with the
behavior of the system when temporary failures in the transmission occurs.Comment: 22 pages, uuencoded gzipped postscript file. 11 figures include
Three Dimensional Annihilation Imaging of Antiprotons in a Penning Trap
We demonstrate three-dimensional annihilation imaging of antiprotons trapped
in a Penning trap. Exploiting unusual feature of antiparticles, we investigate
a previously unexplored regime in particle transport; the proximity of the trap
wall. Particle loss on the wall, the final step of radial transport, is
observed to be highly non-uniform, both radially and azimuthally. These
observations have considerable implications for the production and detection of
antihydrogen atoms.Comment: Invited Talk at NNP03, Workshop on Non-Neutral Plasmas, 200
Evidence For The Production Of Slow Antiprotonic Hydrogen In Vacuum
We present evidence showing how antiprotonic hydrogen, the quasistable
antiproton-proton (pbar-p) bound system, has been synthesized following the
interaction of antiprotons with the hydrogen molecular ion (H2+) in a nested
Penning trap environment. From a careful analysis of the spatial distributions
of antiproton annihilation events, evidence is presented for antiprotonic
hydrogen production with sub-eV kinetic energies in states around n=70, and
with low angular momenta. The slow antiprotonic hydrogen may be studied using
laser spectroscopic techniques.Comment: 5 pages with 4 figures. Published as Phys. Rev. Letters 97, 153401
(2006), in slightly different for
Cold-Antimatter Physics
The CPT theorem and the Weak Equivalence Principle are foundational
principles on which the standard description of the fundamental interactions is
based. The validity of such basic principles should be tested using the largest
possible sample of physical systems. Cold neutral antimatter (low-energy
antihydrogen atoms) could be a tool for testing the CPT symmetry with high
precision and for a direct measurement of the gravitational acceleration of
antimatter. After several years of experimental efforts, the production of
low-energy antihydrogen through the recombination of antiprotons and positrons
is a well-established experimental reality. An overview of the ATHENA
experiment at CERN will be given and the main experimental results on
antihydrogen formation will be reviewed.Comment: Proceedings of the XLIII International Meeting on Nuclear Physics,
Bormio (Italy), March 13-20 (2005). 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
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