277,245 research outputs found
ICANN—Now and Then: ICANN’s Reform and Its Problems
This paper sheds some light upon the major problem arising from the current normative infrastructure of the DNS and provides a possible solution to the current physical problem of the DNS. The paper\u27s main focus is the single-entity control of the A Root. The paper uses as a starting point the Blueprint prepared by the Committee on ICANN Evolution and Reform and raises the question: Has this reform done anything to resolve the single-entity control of the A Root? The paper argues that the reform has done nothing to solve the problem because the international privatization of the DNS merely substitutes the administration of the DNS function without making changes to the normative infrastructure of the DNS. In light of the above, the paper argues that there is a need to declare independence from a one-entity controlled DNS. The suggested approach is to share authority over the root by acknowledging that countries that are accountable to their populations are the authorities for their own ccTLDs. Once technical and political independence has been achieved, the technical and, to some degree, political management of the DNS should be exercised through an international body. In order to initiate a discussion for a truly international body this paper offers nine principles that a new international ccTLD cooperation organization should observe when working on its own creation
Hierarchies and semistability of relatively hyperbolic groups
A finitely presented group is semistable if all proper rays in the Cayley
2-complex are properly homotopic. A long standing open question asks whether
all finitely presented groups are semistable. In this article, we prove
semistability of groups that are hyperbolic relative to polycyclic subgroups.
Key tools in the proof are a result of Mihalik-Swenson on semistability of
`atomic' relatively hyperbolic groups, a combination theorem of
Mihalik-Tschantz, and a hierarchical accessibility theorem of Louder-Touikan.
We analyze an example that illustrates why an understanding of hierarchies is
necessary for the proof of semistability in this context.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Dithering Strategies and Point-Source Photometry
The accuracy in the photometry of a point source depends on the point-spread
function (PSF), detector pixelization, and observing strategy. The PSF and
pixel response describe the spatial blurring of the source, the pixel scale
describes the spatial sampling of a single exposure, and the observing strategy
determines the set of dithered exposures with pointing offsets from which the
source flux is inferred. In a wide-field imaging survey, sources of interest
are randomly distributed within the field of view and hence are centered
randomly within a pixel. A given hardware configuration and observing strategy
therefore have a distribution of photometric uncertainty for sources of fixed
flux that fall in the field. In this article we explore the ensemble behavior
of photometric and position accuracies for different PSFs, pixel scales, and
dithering patterns. We find that the average uncertainty in the flux
determination depends slightly on dither strategy, whereas the position
determination can be strongly dependent on the dithering. For cases with pixels
much larger than the PSF, the uncertainty distributions can be non-Gaussian,
with rms values that are particularly sensitive to the dither strategy. We also
find that for these configurations with large pixels, pointings dithered by a
fractional pixel amount do not always give minimal average uncertainties; this
is in contrast to image reconstruction for which fractional dithers are
optimal. When fractional pixel dithering is favored, a pointing accuracy of
better than pixel width is required to maintain half the advantage
over random dithers
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