728 research outputs found

    KLEIN: A New Family of Lightweight Block Ciphers

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    Resource-efficient cryptographic primitives become fundamental for realizing both security and efficiency in embedded systems like RFID tags and sensor nodes. Among those primitives, lightweight block cipher plays a major role as a building block for security protocols. In this paper, we describe a new family of lightweight block ciphers named KLEIN, which is designed for resource-constrained devices such as wireless sensors and RFID tags. Compared to the related proposals, KLEIN has advantage in the software performance on legacy sensor platforms, while in the same time its hardware implementation can also be compact

    Theory of Decoupling in the Mixed Phase of Extremely Type-II Layered Superconductors

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    The mixed phase of extremely type-II layered superconductors in perpendicular magnetic field is studied theoretically via the layered XY model with uniform frustration. A partial duality analysis is carried out in the weak-coupling limit. It consistently accounts for both intra-layer (pancake) and inter-layer (Josephson) vortex excitations. The main conclusion reached is that dislocations of the two-dimensional (2D) vortex lattices within layers drive a unique second-order melting transition at high perpendicular fields between a low-temperature superconducting phase that displays a Josephson effect and a high-temperature ``normal'' phase that displays no Josephson effect. The former state is best described by weakly coupled 2D vortex lattices, while the latter state is best characterized by a decoupled vortex liquid. It is further argued on the basis of the duality analysis that the second-order melting transition converts itself into a first-order one as the perpendicular field is lowered and approaches the dimensional cross-over scale. The resulting critical endpoint potentially accounts for the same phenomenon that is observed in the mixed phase of clean high-temperature superconductors.Comment: 39 pgs. of PLAIN TeX, 2 postscript figs., published versio

    Leukocyte Counts, Myeloperoxidase, and Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein A as Biomarkers for Cardiovascular Disease: Towards a Multi-Biomarker Approach

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    We evaluated leukocyte counts and levels of CRP, fibrinogen, MPO, and PAPP-A in patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris, acute myocardial infarction, and healthy controls. All biomarkers were analyzed again after 6 months. Leukocyte counts and concentrations of fibrinogen, CRP, MPO, and PAPP-A were significantly increased in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Leukocyte counts and concentrations of MPO were significantly increased in patients with unstable angina pectoris compared with controls. After 6 months, leukocyte counts and MPO concentrations were still increased in patients with acute myocardial infarction when compared to controls. Discriminant analysis showed that leukocyte counts, MPO, and PAPP-A concentrations classified study group designation for acute coronary events correctly in 83% of the cases. In conclusion, combined assessment of leukocyte counts, MPO, and PAPP-A was able to correctly classify acute coronary events, suggesting that this could be a promising panel for a multibiomarker approach to assess cardiovascular risk

    Columnar defects and vortex fluctuations in layered superconductors

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    We investigate fluctuations of Josephson-coupled pancake vortices in layered superconductors in the presence of columnar defects. We study the thermodynamics of a single pancake stack pinned by columnar defects and obtain the temperature dependence of localization length, pinning energy and critical current. We study the creep regime and compute the crossover current between line-like creep and pancake-like creep motion. We find that columnar defects effectively increase interlayer Josephson coupling by suppressing thermal fluctuations of pancakes. This leads to an upward shift in the decoupling line most pronounced around the matching field.Comment: 5 pages, REVTeX, no figure

    Josephson Plasma Resonance as a Structural Probe of Vortex Liquid

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    Recent developments of the Josephson plasma resonance and transport c-axis measurements in layered high Tc_{c} superconductors allow to probe Josephson coupling in a wide range of the vortex phase diagram. We derive a relation between the field dependent Josephson coupling energy and the density correlation function of the vortex liquid. This relation provides a unique opportunity to extract the density correlation function of pancake vortices from the dependence of the plasma resonance on the abab-component of the magnetic field at a fixed cc-axis component.Comment: 4 pages, 1 fugure, accepted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Local Electronic Structure of Defects in Superconductors

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    The electronic structure near defects (such as impurities) in superconductors is explored using a new, fully self-consistent technique. This technique exploits the short-range nature of the impurity potential and the induced change in the superconducting order parameter to calculate features in the electronic structure down to the atomic scale with unprecedented spectral resolution. Magnetic and non-magnetic static impurity potentials are considered, as well as local alterations in the pairing interaction. Extensions to strong-coupling superconductors and superconductors with anisotropic order parameters are formulated.Comment: RevTex source, 20 pages including 22 figures in text with eps

    Numerical solution of gas dynamics equations on the computational meshes with arbitrary number of cell faces using high order spatial accuracy schemes

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    In the present study methodology and algorithm of numerical solution of gas dynamics equations on the computational meshes with arbitrary number of cell faces using high order spatial accuracy schemes is presented. For realization of calculation algorithm, the system of data storage is offered, the system does not depend on mesh topology, and it allows to use the computational meshes with arbitrary number of cell faces

    Numerical studies of the phase diagram of layered type II superconductors in a magnetic field

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    We report on simulations of layered superconductors using the Lawrence-Doniach model in the framework of the lowest Landau level approximation. We find a first order phase transition with a B(T)B(T) dependence which agrees very well with the experimental ``melting'' line in YBaCuO. The transition is not associated with vortex lattice melting, but separates two vortex liquid states characterised by different degrees of short-range crystalline order and different length scales of correlations between vortices in different layers. The transition line ends at a critical end-point at low fields. We find the magnetization discontinuity and the location of the lower critical magnetic field to be in good agreement with experiments in YBaCuO. Length scales of order parameter correlations parallel and perpendicular to the magnetic field increase exponentially as 1/T at low temperatures. The dominant relaxation time scales grow roughly exponentially with these correlation lengths. We find that the first order phase transition persists in the presence of weak random point disorder but can be suppressed entirely by strong disorder. No vortex glass or Bragg glass state is found in the presence of disorder. The consistency of our numerical results with various experimental features in YBaCuO, including the dependence on anisotropy, and the temperature dependence of the structure factor at the Bragg peaks in neutron scattering experiments is demonstrated.Comment: 25 pages (revtex), 19 figures included, submitted to PR

    Flux-Line Lattice Structures in Untwinned YBa2Cu3O

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    A small angle neutron scattering study of the flux-line lattice in a large single crystal of untwinned YBa2Cu3O is presented. In fields parallel to the c-axis, diffraction spots are observed corresponding to four orientations of a hexagonal lattice, distorted by the a-b anisotropy. A value for the anisotropy, the penetration depth ratio, of 1.18(2) was obtained. The high quality of the data is such that second order diffraction is observed, indicating a well ordered FLL. With the field at 33 degrees to c a field dependent re-orientation of the lattice is observed around 3T.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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