358 research outputs found

    Determination of cosmological parameters: an introduction for non-specialists

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    I start by defining the cosmological parameters H0,ΩmH_0, \Omega_m and ΩΛ\Omega_\Lambda. Then I show how the age of the universe depends on them, followed by the evolution of the scale parameter of the universe for various values of the density parameters. Then I define strategies for measuring them, and show the results for the recent determination of these parameters from measurements on supernovas of type 1a. Implications for particle physics is briefly discussed at the end.Comment: 12 pages, Latex with epsf.sty. Invited talk at the ``Discussion meeting on Recent Developments in Neutrino Physics'', held at the Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad, February 2--4, 199

    Reducing Communication Overhead of the Subset Difference Scheme

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    In Broadcast Encryption (BE) systems like Pay-TV, AACS, online content sharing and broadcasting, reducing the header length (communication overhead per session) is of practical interest. The Subset Difference (SD) scheme due to Naor-Naor-Lotspiech (NNL) is the most popularly used BE scheme. We introduce the (a, b, Îł) augmented binary tree subset difference ( (a, b, Îł) -ABTSD) scheme which is a generalization of the NNL-SD scheme. By varying the parameters (a, b, Îł) , it is possible to obtain O(n log n) different schemes. The average header length achieved by the new schemes is smaller than all known schemes having the same decryption time as that of the NNL-SD scheme and achieving non-trivial trade-offs between the user storage and the header size. The amount of key material that a user is required to store increases. For the earlier mentioned applications, reducing header size and achieving fast decryption is perhaps more of a concern than the user storage

    Concrete Analysis and Trade-Offs for the (Complete Tree) Layered Subset Difference Broadcast Encryption Scheme

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    Two key parameters of broadcast encryption (BE) schemes are the transmission size and the user storage. Naor-Naor-Lotspiech (2001) introduced the subset difference (SD) scheme achieving a good trade-off between these two parameters. Halevy-Shamir (2002) introduced the idea of layering to reduce user storage of the NNL scheme at the cost of increased transmission overhead. Here, we introduce several simple ideas to obtain new layering strategies with different trade-offs between user storage and transmission overhead. We define the notion of storage minimal layering and describe a dynamic programming algorithm to compute layering schemes for which the user storage is the minimum attainable using layerings. Further, the constrained minimization problem is considered. A method is described which yields BE schemes whose transmission overhead is not much more than the SD scheme but, whose user storage is still significantly lower. Finally, an O(r log2 n) algorithm is obtained to compute the average transmission overhead for any layering-based scheme where r out of n users are revoked. This algorithm works for any layering strategy and also for arbitrary number of users. The algorithm has been used here to generate all data for the average transmission overhead

    Quantum phase transition in few-layer NbSe2_2 probed through quantized conductance fluctuations

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    We present the first observation of dynamically modulated quantum phase transition (QPT) between two distinct charge density wave (CDW) phases in 2-dimensional 2H-NbSe2_2. There is recent spectroscopic evidence for the presence of these two quantum phases, but its evidence in bulk measurements remained elusive. We studied suspended, ultra-thin \nbse devices fabricated on piezoelectric substrates - with tunable flakes thickness, disorder level and strain. We find a surprising evolution of the conductance fluctuation spectra across the CDW temperature: the conductance fluctuates between two precise values, separated by a quantum of conductance. These quantized fluctuations disappear for disordered and on-substrate devices. With the help of mean-field calculations, these observations can be explained as to arise from dynamical phase transition between the two CDW states. To affirm this idea, we vary the lateral strain across the device via piezoelectric medium and map out the phase diagram near the quantum critical point (QCP). The results resolve a long-standing mystery of the anomalously large spectroscopic gap in NbSe2_2

    FROM “BOTTOMLESS BASKET” TO “BEAUTIFUL BANGLADESH”: TOURISM ADVERTISING AS PUBLIC DIPLOMACY TOOL

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    This study measures the attitude toward Bangladesh, its people and its government among a group of international respondents from 40 different countries before and after watching a television commercial. This commercial, titled “School of Life” and part of the “Beautiful Bangladesh” campaign, was produced for the Bangladesh Tourism Board to attract international tourists to Bangladesh. It was the first of its kind in Bangladesh and launched during a major sporting event hosted in the country in 2011. This pre-post quasi-experimental survey results show that respondents had a significantly more positive perception about the country, its government and its people after watching the commercial though it did not have a significant effect on their intention to travel to Bangladesh. The results of the study concur with similar previous studies related to the bleed-over effect of tourism advertising and contribute to the growing literature of public diplomacy and nation branding

    Public diplomacy in social media: an examination of Twitter use by foreign embassies in the U.S.

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    Digitalization has changed public diplomacy (PD). Literature suggests that the new PD is dialogic and collaborative. Additionally, the presence of embassies online indicates the adoption of new communication platforms. Using Cull’s Taxonomy of Public Diplomacy, this study analyzed tweets from January 2020 for 27 foreign embassies based in the U.S. It found that the embassies still predominantly use a traditional broadcast model of communication rather than a collaborative dialogic model. It therefore also found that these embassies do not fully utilize the benefits social media present to its users. Listening on social media was notably the least-used public diplomacy strategy, while international broadcasting was the most frequently used. Results also show that images are the most-used media and mentions are more frequently used than hashtags. The study also found that there is a correlation between engagement and Twitter content like hashtags and media used in tweets. In an exploratory qualitative analysis of the nature of conversation in the users’ replies to tweets, the study found mostly negative sentiment and emotions. This finding, though limited, suggests that embassies should aim to establish a more positive engagement with their audiences. Overall, this study suggests that there is a significant difference in what literature states the digital public diplomacy should be, the benefits this new way of engaging with audiences could present to public diplomacy efforts, and what it is in practice. The researcher recommends public diplomacy practitioners could implement several strategies to improve their success in conducting public diplomacy via Twitter

    The strong-CP question in SU(3)_c X SU(3)_L X U(1)_N models

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    We analyze two recent models based on the gauge group SU(3)cĂ—_c\timesSU(3)LĂ—_L\timesU(1)N_N where each generation is not anomaly-free, but anomaly cancels when three generations are taken into account. We show that the most general Yukawa couplings of these models admit of a Peccei-Quinn symmetry. This symmetry can be extended to the entire Lagrangian by using extra fields in a very elegant way so that the resulting axion can be made invisible.Comment: Latex, 8 pages, no figure

    Small-Scale Turkey Farming in Bangladesh: Farming Practices, Profitability and Supply Chain Mapping

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    The study was conducted to know the existing turkey production system, supply chain mapping, and identifying the prospects and problems of turkey rearing in some selected areas of Bangladesh during October 2019 to December 2019. A total of 100 turkey raisers were surveyed following convenience method of sampling technique. The primary data were collected, analyzed accordingly and tabular presentation method was applied with the help of simple descriptive statistical measures e.g. frequency distributions, percentage, sum and means to illustrating the results. Profitability analysis was done on the basis of variable cost, fixed cost, return by using arithmetic means and percentages. The study revealed that 87 male and 13 female respondents were surveyed, of them cent percent found educated. About 56% turkey keeper’s main occupation was business, 27% service and 12% in farming while 88.57% involved with farming as secondary sources of income. Average landholding for homestead, cultivable and non-cultivable was 24.40, 129.71 and 29.47 decimal, respectively. About 59% farms started for commercial purpose, 32% for non-commercial purpose and 9% for both. About 60% respondents kept less than 50 turkeys and only 2% kept 501-1000 turkeys. Among the surveyed farms55% stopped their operation and 45% farms found running their business. Among the running farms cent percent were small-scale group. The average feed intake was 192.13 grams per day per bird at 20 weeks of age. Turkey laid on an average 139 eggs a year irrespective of variety and for hatching poults, the fertility and hatchability rate found between 65 to 100% and 50 to 90%, respectively. About 28% farmers experienced the deaths of turkey because of Cold, Pox, Ranikhet, Bird flu and unknown cases and 69.47% farmers took veterinary advice from Upazila Livestock Hospital and rest from other sources. Farmers to consumers were the most common and widely used marketing channel for egg, chick and adult turkey. The market intermediaries of turkey farm carried out different marketing functions e.g. buying and selling, pricing, transportation, sorting, distribution and market information. The average net return and benefit-cost ratio was BDT 127838.04 and 1.38, respectively for 50 turkeys per year. In the study, turkey rearing found some comparative benefit over chicken and ducks e.g. higher weight gain, forage eater, lower diseases rate and suitability for the country. The main problem of turkey rearing identified as market instability, lack of quality turkey feed, higher feed price, lack of proper marketing facility and training on turkey farming. In conclusion, the small-scale turkey farming could be a viable source of income for the rural people of Bangladesh after taking some remedial steps by the Government of Bangladesh for the aforesaid hindrances faced by the turkey farmers

    Universal EEG Encoder for Learning Diverse Intelligent Tasks

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    Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) have become very popular with Electroencephalography (EEG) being one of the most commonly used signal acquisition techniques. A major challenge in BCI studies is the individualistic analysis required for each task. Thus, task-specific feature extraction and classification are performed, which fails to generalize to other tasks with similar time-series EEG input data. To this end, we design a GRU-based universal deep encoding architecture to extract meaningful features from publicly available datasets for five diverse EEG-based classification tasks. Our network can generate task and format-independent data representation and outperform the state of the art EEGNet architecture on most experiments. We also compare our results with CNN-based, and Autoencoder networks, in turn performing local, spatial, temporal and unsupervised analysis on the data
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