67,874 research outputs found
Password Cracking and Countermeasures in Computer Security: A Survey
With the rapid development of internet technologies, social networks, and
other related areas, user authentication becomes more and more important to
protect the data of the users. Password authentication is one of the widely
used methods to achieve authentication for legal users and defense against
intruders. There have been many password cracking methods developed during the
past years, and people have been designing the countermeasures against password
cracking all the time. However, we find that the survey work on the password
cracking research has not been done very much. This paper is mainly to give a
brief review of the password cracking methods, import technologies of password
cracking, and the countermeasures against password cracking that are usually
designed at two stages including the password design stage (e.g. user
education, dynamic password, use of tokens, computer generations) and after the
design (e.g. reactive password checking, proactive password checking, password
encryption, access control). The main objective of this work is offering the
abecedarian IT security professionals and the common audiences with some
knowledge about the computer security and password cracking, and promoting the
development of this area.Comment: add copyright to the tables to the original authors, add
acknowledgement to helpe
Navigation in a small world with local information
It is commonly known that there exist short paths between vertices in a
network showing the small-world effect. Yet vertices, for example, the
individuals living in society, usually are not able to find the shortest paths,
due to the very serious limit of information. To theoretically study this
issue, here the navigation process of launching messages toward designated
targets is investigated on a variant of the one-dimensional small-world network
(SWN). In the network structure considered, the probability of a shortcut
falling between a pair of nodes is proportional to , where is
the lattice distance between the nodes. When , it reduces to the SWN
model with random shortcuts. The system shows the dynamic small-world (SW)
effect, which is different from the well-studied static SW effect. We study the
effective network diameter, the path length as a function of the lattice
distance, and the dynamics. They are controlled by multiple parameters, and we
use data collapse to show that the parameters are correlated. The central
finding is that, in the one-dimensional network studied, the dynamic SW effect
exists for . For each given value of in this
region, the point that the dynamic SW effect arises is ,
where is the number of useful shortcuts and is the average
reduced (effective) length of them.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Thermal and non-thermal emission in the Cygnus X region
Radio continuum observations detect non-thermal synchrotron and thermal
bremsstrahlung radiation. Separation of the two different emission components
is crucial to study the properties of diffuse interstellar medium. The Cygnus X
region is one of the most complex areas in the radio sky which contains a
number of massive stars and HII regions on the diffuse thermal and non-thermal
background. More supernova remnants are expected to be discovered. We aim to
develop a method which can properly separate the non-thermal and thermal radio
continuum emission and apply it to the Cygnus X region. The result can be used
to study the properties of different emission components and search for new
supernova remnants in the complex. Multi-frequency radio continuum data from
large-scale surveys are used to develop a new component separation method.
Spectral analysis is done pixel by pixel for the non-thermal synchrotron
emission with a realistic spectral index distribution and a fixed spectral
index of beta = -2.1 for the thermal bremsstrahlung emission. With the new
method, we separate the non-thermal and thermal components of the Cygnus X
region at an angular resolution of 9.5arcmin. The thermal emission component is
found to comprise 75% of the total continuum emission at 6cm. Thermal diffuse
emission, rather than the discrete HII regions, is found to be the major
contributor to the entire thermal budget. A smooth non-thermal emission
background of 100 mK Tb is found. We successfully make the large-extent known
supernova remnants and the HII regions embedded in the complex standing out,
but no new large SNRs brighter than Sigma_1GHz = 3.7 x 10^-21 W m^-2 Hz^-1
sr^-1 are found.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted by A&A. The quality of the figures is
reduced due to file size limit of the websit
Birthrates and delay times of Type Ia supernovae
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) play an important role in diverse areas of
astrophysics, from the chemical evolution of galaxies to observational
cosmology. However, the nature of the progenitors of SNe Ia is still unclear.
In this paper, according to a detailed binary population synthesis study, we
obtained SN Ia birthrates and delay times from different progenitor models, and
compared them with observations. We find that the Galactic SN Ia birthrate from
the double-degenerate (DD) model is close to those inferred from observations,
while the birthrate from the single-degenerate (SD) model accounts for only
about 1/2-2/3 of the observations. If a single starburst is assumed, the
distribution of the delay times of SNe Ia from the SD model is a weak
bimodality, where the WD + He channel contributes to the SNe Ia with delay
times shorter than 100Myr, and the WD + MS and WD + RG channels to those with
age longer than 1Gyr.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Science in China Series G (Dec.30,
2009
Dimensional trend in CePt2In7, Ce-115 compounds, and CeIn3
We present realistic Kondo-lattice simulation results for the
recently-discovered heavy-fermion antiferromagnet CePt2In7 comparing with its
three-dimensional counterpart CeIn3 and the less two-dimensional ones,
Ce-115's. We find that the distance to the magnetic quantum critical point is
the largest for CeIn3 and the smallest for Ce-115's, and CePt2In7 falls in
between. We argue that the trend in quasi-two-dimensional materials stems from
the frequency dependence of the hybridization between Cerium 4f-electrons and
the conduction bands.Comment: 4.8 pages, 5 figure
A Pseudo Random Numbers Generator Based on Chaotic Iterations. Application to Watermarking
In this paper, a new chaotic pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) is
proposed. It combines the well-known ISAAC and XORshift generators with chaotic
iterations. This PRNG possesses important properties of topological chaos and
can successfully pass NIST and TestU01 batteries of tests. This makes our
generator suitable for information security applications like cryptography. As
an illustrative example, an application in the field of watermarking is
presented.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, In WISM 2010, Int. Conf. on Web Information
Systems and Mining, volume 6318 of LNCS, Sanya, China, pages 202--211,
October 201
Two Coupled Harmonic Oscillators on Non-commutative Plane
We investigate a system of two coupled harmonic oscillators on the
non-commutative plane \RR^2_{\theta} by requiring that the spatial coordinates
do not commute. We show that the system can be diagonalized by a suitable
transformation, i.e. a rotation with a mixing angle \alpha. The obtained
eigenstates as well as the eigenvalues depend on the non-commutativity
parameter \theta. Focusing on the ground state wave function before the
transformation, we calculate the density matrix \rho_0(\theta) and find that
its traces {\rm Tr}(\rho_{0}(\theta)) and {\rm Tr}(\rho_0^2(\theta)) are not
affected by the non-commutativity. Evaluating the Wigner function on
\RR^2_{\theta} confirms this. The uncertainty relation is explicitly determined
and found to depend on \theta. For small values of \theta, the relation is
shifted by a \theta^2 term, which can be interpreted as a quantum correction.
The calculated entropy does not change with respect to the normal case. We
consider the limits \alpha=1 and \alpha={\pi\over 2}. In first case, by
identifying \theta to the squared magnetic length, one can recover basic
features of the Hall system.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
Stellar adiabatic mass loss model and applications
Roche-lobe overflow and common envelope evolution are very important in
binary evolution, which is believed to be the main evolutionary channel to hot
subdwarf stars. The details of these processes are difficult to model, but
adiabatic expansion provides an excellent approximation to the structure of a
donor star undergoing dynamical time scale mass transfer. We can use this model
to study the responses of stars of various masses and evolutionary stages as
potential donor stars, with the urgent goal of obtaining more accurate
stability criteria for dynamical mass transfer in binary population synthesis
studies. As examples, we describe here several models with the initial masses
equal to 1 Msun and 10 Msun, and identify potential limitations to the use of
our results for giant-branch stars.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures,Accepted for publication in AP&SS, Special issue
Hot Sub-dwarf Stars, in Han Z., Jeffery S., Podsiadlowski Ph. ed
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