76 research outputs found
A Behavior-Based Approach To Securing Email Systems
The Malicious Email Tracking (MET) system, reported in a prior publication, is a behavior-based security system for email services. The Email Mining Toolkit (EMT) presented in this paper is an offline email archive data mining analysis system that is designed to assist computing models of malicious email behavior for deployment in an online MET system. EMT includes a variety of behavior models for email attachments, user accounts and groups of accounts. Each model computed is used to detect anomalous and errant email behaviors. We report on the set of features implemented in the current version of EMT, and describe tests of the system and our plans for extensions to the set of models
Nucleon Polarizibilities for Virtual Photons
We generalize the sum rules for the nucleon electric plus magnetic
polarizability and for the nucleon spin-polarizability
, to virtual photons with . The dominant low energy cross
sections are represented in our calculation by one-pion-loop graphs of
relativistic baryon chiral perturbation theory and the -resonance
excitation. For the proton we find good agreement of the calculated
with empirical values obtained from integrating up
electroproduction data for . The proton spin-polarizability
switches sign around and it joins smoothly the
"partonic" curve, extracted from polarized deep-inelastic scattering, around
. For the neutron our predictions of and
agree reasonably well at with existing determinations.
Upcoming (polarized) electroproduction experiments will be able to test the
generalized polarizability sum rules investigated here.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submittes to Nuclear Physics
The Second Cambridge Pulsar Survey at 81.5 MHz
We have searched the northern sky for pulsars at the low radio frequency of
81.5 MHz, using the 3.6-hectare array at Cambridge, England. The survey covered
most of the sky north of declination -20 deg and provided sensitivities of
order 200 mJy for pulsars not too close to the galactic plane. A total of 20
pulsars were detected, all of them previously known. The effective
post-detection sampling rate was 1.3 kHz, and the sensitivity to low-dispersion
millisecond pulsars was sufficient to allow the detection of objects similar to
PSR J0437-4715 (period 5.7 ms, dispersion measure 2.6 cm^-3 pc, mean flux
density 1 Jy). No such pulsars were found.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Fixed-t subtracted dispersion relations for Compton scattering off the nucleon
We present fixed- subtracted dispersion relations for Compton scattering
off the nucleon at energies 500 MeV, as a formalism to extract
the nucleon polarizabilities with a minimum of model dependence. The subtracted
dispersion integrals are mainly saturated by intermediate states in the
-channel and intermediate states
in the -channel . For the subprocess
, we construct a unitarized amplitude and find a
good description of the available data. We show results for Compton scattering
using the subtracted dispersion relations and display the sensitivity on the
scalar polarizability difference and the backward spin
polarizability , which enter directly as fit parameters in the
present formalism
Measurement of the Electric and Magnetic Polarizabilities of the Proton
The Compton scattering cross section on the proton has been measured at
laboratory angles of 90 and 135 using tagged photons in the
energy range 70--100 MeV and simultaneously using untagged photons in the range
100--148~MeV. With the aid of dispersion relations, these cross sections were
used to extract the electric and magnetic polarizabilities, and
respectively, of the proton. We find
in agreement with a model-independent dispersion sum rule, and
where the errors shown are statistical, systematic, and model-dependent,
respectively. A comparison with previous experiments is given and global values
for the polarizabilities are extracted.Comment: 35 pages, 11 PostScript figures, uses RevTex 3.
Unusual Subpulse Modulation in PSR B0320+39
We report on an analysis of the drifting subpulses of PSR B0320+39 that
indicates a sudden step of ~180 degrees in subpulse phase near the centre of
the pulse profile. The phase step, in combination with the attenuation of the
periodic subpulse modulation at pulse longitudes near the step, suggests that
the patterns arise from the addition of two superposed components of nearly
opposite drift phase and differing longitudinal dependence. We argue that since
there cannot be physical overlap of spark patterns on the polar cap, the drift
components must be associated with a kind of ``multiple imaging'' of a single
polar cap ``carousel'' spark pattern. One possibility is that the two
components correspond to refracted rays originating from opposite sides of the
polar cap. A second option associates the components with emission from two
altitudes in the magnetosphere.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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