578 research outputs found
Generalized constraints on quantum amplification
We derive quantum constraints on the minimal amount of noise added in linear
amplification involving input or output signals whose component operators do
not necessarily have c-number commutators, as is the case for fermion currents.
This is a generalization of constraints derived for the amplification of
bosonic fields whose components posses c-number commutators.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Physical Review Letter
DEEP: a provenance-aware executable document system
The concept of executable documents is attracting growing interest from both academics and publishers since it is a promising technology for the dissemination of scientific results. Provenance is a kind of metadata that provides a rich description of the derivation history of data products starting from their original sources. It has been used in many different e-Science domains and has shown great potential in enabling reproducibility of scientific results. However, while both executable documents and provenance are aimed at enhancing the dissemination of scientific results, little has been done to explore the integration of both techniques. In this paper, we introduce the design and development of DEEP, an executable document environment that generates scientific results dynamically and interactively, and also records the provenance for these results in the document. In this system, provenance is exposed to users via an interface that provides them with an alternative way of navigating the executable document. In addition, we make use of the provenance to offer a document rollback facility to users and help to manage the system's dynamic resources
Detecting and characterizing lateral phishing at scale
We present the first large-scale characterization of lateral phishing attacks, based on a dataset of 113 million employee-sent emails from 92 enterprise organizations. In a lateral phishing attack, adversaries leverage a compromised enterprise account to send phishing emails to other users, benefit-ting from both the implicit trust and the information in the hijacked user's account. We develop a classifier that finds hundreds of real-world lateral phishing emails, while generating under four false positives per every one-million employee-sent emails. Drawing on the attacks we detect, as well as a corpus of user-reported incidents, we quantify the scale of lateral phishing, identify several thematic content and recipient targeting strategies that attackers follow, illuminate two types of sophisticated behaviors that attackers exhibit, and estimate the success rate of these attacks. Collectively, these results expand our mental models of the 'enterprise attacker' and shed light on the current state of enterprise phishing attacks
Output spectrum of a measuring device at arbitrary voltage and temperature
We calculate the noise spectrum of the electrical current in a quantum point
contact which is used for continuous measurements of a two-level system
(qubit). We generalize the previous results obtained for the regime of high
transport voltages (when is much larger than the qubit's energy level
splitting (we put )) to the case of arbitrary voltages and
temperatures. When the background output spectrum is essentially
asymmetric in frequency, i.e., it is no longer classical. Yet, the spectrum of
the amplified signal, i.e., the two coherent peaks at is still
symmetric. In the emission (negative frequency) part of the spectrum the
coherent peak can be 8 times higher than the background pedestal.
Alternatively, this ratio can be seen in the directly measureable {\it excess}
noise. For and T=0 the coherent peaks do not appear at all. We relate
these results to the properties of linear amplifiers.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, the results generalized for arbitrary angle
between the magnetic field and the observed component of the spin, minor
corrections and typo
Electron injection in a nanotube with leads: finite frequency noise-correlations and anomalous charges
The non-equilibrium transport properties of a carbon nanotube which is
connected to Fermi liquid leads, where electrons are injected in the bulk, are
computed. A previous work which considered an infinite nanotube showed that the
zero frequency noise correlations, measured at opposite ends of the nanotube,
could be used to extract the anomalous charges of the chiral excitations which
propagate in the nanotube. Here, the presence of the leads have the effect that
such-noise cross-correlations vanish at zero frequency. Nevertheless,
information concerning the anomalous charges can be recovered when considering
the spectral density of noise correlations at finite frequencies, which is
computed perturbatively in the tunneling amplitude. The spectrum of the noise
cross-correlations is shown to depend crucially on the ratio of the time of
flight of quasiparticles traveling in the nanotube to the ``voltage'' time
which defines the width of the quasiparticle wave-packets injected when an
electron tunnels. Potential applications toward the measurement of such
anomalous charges in non-chiral Luttinger liquids (nanotubes or semiconductor
quantum wires) are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Taking stock of nature: Essential biodiversity variables explained
In 2013, the Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON) developed the framework of Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs), inspired by the Essential Climate Variables (ECVs). The EBV framework was developed to distill the complexity of biodiversity into a manageable list of priorities and to bring a more coordinated approach to observing biodiversity on a global scale. However, efforts to address the scientific challenges associated with this task have been hindered by diverse interpretations of the definition of an EBV. Here, the authors define an EBV as a critical biological variable that characterizes an aspect of biodiversity, functioning as the interface between raw data and indicators. This relationship is clarified through a multi-faceted stock market analogy, drawing from relevant examples of biodiversity indicators that use EBVs, such as the Living Planet Index and the UK Spring Index. Through this analogy, the authors seek to make the EBV concept accessible to a wider audience, especially to non-specialists and those in the policy sector, and to more clearly define the roles of EBVs and their relationship with biodiversity indicators. From this we expect to support advancement towards globally coordinated measurements of biodiversity
Spin effects in Bose-Glass phases
We study the mechanism of formation of Bose glass (BG) phases in the spin-1
Bose Hubbard model when diagonal disorder is introduced. To this aim, we
analyze first the phase diagram in the zero-hopping limit, there disorder
induces superposition between Mott insulator (MI) phases with different filling
numbers. Then BG appears as a compressible but still insulating phase. The
phase diagram for finite hopping is also calculated with the Gutzwiller
approximation. The bosons' spin degree of freedom introduces another scattering
channel in the two-body interaction modifying the stability of MI regions with
respect to the action of disorder. This leads to some peculiar phenomena such
as the creation of BG of singlets, for very strong spin correlation, or the
disappearance of BG phase in some particular cases where fluctuations are not
able to mix different MI regions
Decoherence in Disordered Conductors at Low Temperatures, the effect of Soft Local Excitations
The conduction electrons' dephasing rate, , is expected to
vanish with the temperature. A very intriguing apparent saturation of this
dephasing rate in several systems was recently reported at very low
temperatures. The suggestion that this represents dephasing by zero-point
fluctuations has generated both theoretical and experimental controversies. We
start by proving that the dephasing rate must vanish at the limit,
unless a large ground state degeneracy exists. This thermodynamic proof
includes most systems of relevance and it is valid for any determination of
from {\em linear} transport measurements. In fact, our
experiments demonstrate unequivocally that indeed when strictly linear
transport is used, the apparent low-temperature saturation of is
eliminated. However, the conditions to be in the linear transport regime are
more strict than hitherto expected. Another novel result of the experiments is
that introducing heavy nonmagnetic impurities (gold) in our samples produces,
even in linear transport, a shoulder in the dephasing rate at very low
temperatures. We then show theoretically that low-lying local defects may
produce a relatively large dephasing rate at low temperatures. However, as
expected, this rate in fact vanishes when , in agreement with our
experimental observations.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the Euresco Conference on Fundamental
Problems of Mesoscopic Physics, Granada, September 2003, Kluwe
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