1,012 research outputs found
Ensuring Secure Non-interference of Programs by Game Semantics
Non-interference is a security property which states that improper information leakages due to direct and indirect flows have not occurred through executing programs. In this paper we investigate a game semantics based formulation ofnon-interference that allows to perform a security analysis of closed and open procedural programs. We show that such formulation is amenable to automated verification techniques. The practicality of this method is illustrated by several examples, which also emphasize its advantage compared to known operational methods for reasoning about open programs.<br/
Assessment of Microbial Quality of Chlorinated Drinking Tap Water and Susceptibility of Gram-Negative Bacterial Isolates towards Chlorine
Sixty (56.1%) water samples crossed the permissible limit of WHO guideline value in heterotrophic plate count and total coliform count each. Ten different genera of gram-negative bacteria were recovered, among which E. coli was predominant followed by Citrobacter spp., Shigella spp., Enterobacter spp., Providencia spp., Klebsiella spp., Salmonella spp., Pseudomonas spp., Proteus spp., and Edwardsiella spp. Higher the temperature of water sample, higher the bacterial growth was obtained (p= 0.002), and similarly, a higher level of free residual chlorine in water reduced the bacterial growth (p= 0.037). However, increase or decrease of pH (p= 0.454), turbidity (p= 0.164), and conductivity (p= 0.969) didn't affect the microbial growth. A negative correlation (r= -0.162) between heterotrophic plate count and free residual chlorine was observed, but without statistical significance (p= 0.096). Similarly, a negative correlation (r= -0.383) between total coliform count and free residual chlorine was observed with statistical significance (p= 0.001). In the chlorine assay, all tested eight different genera of gram-negative bacteria were found to be chlorine resistant at 0.2 mg/L for a contact time of 30 minutes. The average time required for T99.9 (3-log) and T99.99 (4-log) reduction of viable isolates from the initial population of 2×106 cells/mL were found to be less than 30 minutes and greater than 60 minutes respectively. Log inactivation of various bacterial isolates with a chlorine concentration of 0.2 mg/L for a contact time of 30 minutes ranged from 3 to 3.5-log. The emergence of chlorine-resistant organisms in drinking water probably demands alternate disinfection or mitigation strategy
Amplitude to phase conversion of InGaAs pin photo-diodes for femtosecond lasers microwave signal generation
When a photo-diode is illuminated by a pulse train from a femtosecond laser,
it generates microwaves components at the harmonics of the repetition rate
within its bandwidth. The phase of these components (relative to the optical
pulse train) is known to be dependent on the optical energy per pulse. We
present an experimental study of this dependence in InGaAs pin photo-diodes
illuminated with ultra-short pulses generated by an Erbium-doped fiber based
femtosecond laser. The energy to phase dependence is measured over a large
range of impinging pulse energies near and above saturation for two typical
detectors, commonly used in optical frequency metrology with femtosecond laser
based optical frequency combs. When scanning the optical pulse energy, the
coefficient which relates phase variations to energy variations is found to
alternate between positive and negative values, with many (for high harmonics
of the repetition rate) vanishing points. By operating the system near one of
these vanishing points, the typical amplitude noise level of commercial-core
fiber-based femtosecond lasers is sufficiently low to generate state-of-the-art
ultra-low phase noise microwave signals, virtually immune to amplitude to phase
conversion related noise.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Applied Physics
Matching Spherical Dust Solutions to Construct Cosmological Models
Conditions for smooth cosmological models are set out and applied to
inhomogeneous spherically symmetric models constructed by matching together
different Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi solutions to the
Einstein field equations. As an illustration the methods are applied to a
collapsing dust sphere in a curved background. This describes a region which
expands and then collapses to form a black hole in an
Einstein de Sitter background. We show that in all such models if there is no
vacuum region then the singularity must go on accreting matter for an infinite
LTB time.Comment: 13 pages, Revtex; to appear Gen. Rel. Gra
Radial asymptotics of Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi dust models
We examine the radial asymptotic behavior of spherically symmetric
Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi dust models by looking at their covariant scalars along
radial rays, which are spacelike geodesics parametrized by proper length
, orthogonal to the 4-velocity and to the orbits of SO(3). By introducing
quasi-local scalars defined as integral functions along the rays, we obtain a
complete and covariant representation of the models, leading to an initial
value parametrization in which all scalars can be given by scaling laws
depending on two metric scale factors and two basic initial value functions.
Considering regular "open" LTB models whose space slices allow for a diverging
, we provide the conditions on the radial coordinate so that its
asymptotic limit corresponds to the limit as . The "asymptotic
state" is then defined as this limit, together with asymptotic series expansion
around it, evaluated for all metric functions, covariant scalars (local and
quasi-local) and their fluctuations. By looking at different sets of initial
conditions, we examine and classify the asymptotic states of parabolic,
hyperbolic and open elliptic models admitting a symmetry center. We show that
in the radial direction the models can be asymptotic to any one of the
following spacetimes: FLRW dust cosmologies with zero or negative spatial
curvature, sections of Minkowski flat space (including Milne's space), sections
of the Schwarzschild--Kruskal manifold or self--similar dust solutions.Comment: 44 pages (including a long appendix), 3 figures, IOP LaTeX style.
Typos corrected and an important reference added. Accepted for publication in
General Relativity and Gravitatio
Very-high energy gamma-ray astronomy: A 23-year success story in high-energy astroparticle physics
Very-high energy (VHE) gamma quanta contribute only a minuscule fraction -
below one per million - to the flux of cosmic rays. Nevertheless, being neutral
particles they are currently the best "messengers" of processes from the
relativistic/ultra-relativistic Universe because they can be extrapolated back
to their origin. The window of VHE gamma rays was opened only in 1989 by the
Whipple collaboration, reporting the observation of TeV gamma rays from the
Crab nebula. After a slow start, this new field of research is now rapidly
expanding with the discovery of more than 150 VHE gamma-ray emitting sources.
Progress is intimately related with the steady improvement of detectors and
rapidly increasing computing power. We give an overview of the early attempts
before and around 1989 and the progress after the pioneering work of the
Whipple collaboration. The main focus of this article is on the development of
experimental techniques for Earth-bound gamma-ray detectors; consequently, more
emphasis is given to those experiments that made an initial breakthrough rather
than to the successors which often had and have a similar (sometimes even
higher) scientific output as the pioneering experiments. The considered energy
threshold is about 30 GeV. At lower energies, observations can presently only
be performed with balloon or satellite-borne detectors. Irrespective of the
stormy experimental progress, the success story could not have been called a
success story without a broad scientific output. Therefore we conclude this
article with a summary of the scientific rationales and main results achieved
over the last two decades.Comment: 45 pages, 38 figures, review prepared for EPJ-H special issue "Cosmic
rays, gamma rays and neutrinos: A survey of 100 years of research
Study of Temperature and Concentration Dependence of Refractive Index of Liquids Using a Novel Technique
A simple and reliable method of measuring the refractive index of liquids is reported in the present paper. The technique was employed to study the temperature dependence of refractive index of water (at sodium D-line 589nm). By measuring the refractive index of water at different temperatures, the temperature coefficient of refractive index (dn/dT) was determined. In addition to this, refractive index of different solutions as a function of the concentration was studied. The results were compared with the results obtained from commercial refractometers and it was found that this technique is quite reliable and can be safely used in the study of the optical properties of any transparent liquids
Measurement of the photon-jet production differential cross section in collisions at \sqrt{s}=1.96~\TeV
We present measurements of the differential cross section dsigma/dpT_gamma
for the inclusive production of a photon in association with a b-quark jet for
photons with rapidities |y_gamma|< 1.0 and 30<pT_gamma <300 GeV, as well as for
photons with 1.5<|y_gamma|< 2.5 and 30< pT_gamma <200 GeV, where pT_gamma is
the photon transverse momentum. The b-quark jets are required to have pT>15 GeV
and rapidity |y_jet| < 1.5. The results are based on data corresponding to an
integrated luminosity of 8.7 fb^-1, recorded with the D0 detector at the
Fermilab Tevatron Collider at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV. The measured cross
sections are compared with next-to-leading order perturbative QCD calculations
using different sets of parton distribution functions as well as to predictions
based on the kT-factorization QCD approach, and those from the Sherpa and
Pythia Monte Carlo event generators.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Lett.
Search for direct production of charginos and neutralinos in events with three leptons and missing transverse momentum in √s = 7 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector
A search for the direct production of charginos and neutralinos in final states with three electrons or muons and missing transverse momentum is presented. The analysis is based on 4.7 fb−1 of proton–proton collision data delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded with the ATLAS detector. Observations are consistent with Standard Model expectations in three signal regions that are either depleted or enriched in Z-boson decays. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are set in R-parity conserving phenomenological minimal supersymmetric models and in simplified models, significantly extending previous results
Search for pair production of the scalar top quark in muon+tau final states
We present a search for the pair production of scalar top quarks
(), the lightest supersymmetric partners of the top quarks, in
collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 1.96 TeV, using data
corresponding to an integrated luminosity of {7.3 } collected with the
\dzero experiment at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. Each scalar top quark is
assumed to decay into a quark, a charged lepton, and a scalar neutrino
(). We investigate final states arising from and
. With no significant excess of events observed above the
background expected from the standard model, we set exclusion limits on this
production process in the (,) plane.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Lett.
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