1,154 research outputs found
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Trust Model for Optimized Cloud Services
Cloud computing with its inherent advantages draws attention for business critical applications, but concurrently expects high level of trust in cloud service providers. Reputation-based trust is emerging as a good choice to model trust of cloud service providers based on available evidence. Many existing reputation based systems either ignore or give less importance to uncertainty linked with the evidence. In this paper, we propose an uncertainty model and define our approach to compute opinion for cloud service providers. Using subjective logic operators along with the computed opinion values, we propose mechanisms to calculate the reputation of cloud service providers. We evaluate and compare our proposed model with existing reputation models
The muon collider
We describe the scientific motivation for a new type of accelerator, the muon collider. This accelerator would permit an energy-frontier scientific program and yet would fit on the site of an existing laboratory. Such a device is
quite challenging, and requires a substantial R&D program. After describing the ingredients of the facility, the ongoing R&D activities of the Muon Accelerator Program are discussed. A possible U.S. scenario that could lead to a muon collider at Fermilab is briefly mentioned
Muon Collider Progress: Accelerators
A muon collider would be a powerful tool for exploring the energy-frontier
with leptons, and would complement the studies now under way at the LHC. Such a
device would offer several important benefits. Muons, like electrons, are point
particles so the full center-of-mass energy is available for particle
production. Moreover, on account of their higher mass, muons give rise to very
little synchrotron radiation and produce very little beamstrahlung. The first
feature permits the use of a circular collider that can make efficient use of
the expensive rf system and whose footprint is compatible with an existing
laboratory site. The second feature leads to a relatively narrow energy spread
at the collision point. Designing an accelerator complex for a muon collider is
a challenging task. Firstly, the muons are produced as a tertiary beam, so a
high-power proton beam and a target that can withstand it are needed to provide
the required luminosity of ~1 \times 10^34 cm^-2s^-1. Secondly, the beam is
initially produced with a large 6D phase space, which necessitates a scheme for
reducing the muon beam emittance ("cooling"). Finally, the muon has a short
lifetime so all beam manipulations must be done very rapidly. The Muon
Accelerator Program, led by Fermilab and including a number of U.S. national
laboratories and universities, has undertaken design and R&D activities aimed
toward the eventual construction of a muon collider. Design features of such a
facility and the supporting R&D program are described.Comment: 9 pages; 13 figures. Contribution ID 345 Proc. of the DPF-2011
Conference, Providence, RI, August 8-13, 201
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Secure communication using dynamic VPN provisioning in an Inter-Cloud environment
Most of the current cloud computing platforms offer Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) model, which aims to provision basic virtualised computing resources as on-demand and dynamic services. Nevertheless, a single cloud does not have limitless resources to offer to its users, hence the notion of an Inter-Cloud enviroment where a cloud can use the infrastructure resources of other clouds. However, there is no common framework in existence that allows the srevice owners to seamlessly provision even some basic services across multiple cloud service providers, albeit not due to any inherent incompatibility or proprietary nature of the foundation technologies on which these cloud platforms are built. In this paper we present a novel solution which aims to cover a gap in a subsection of this problem domain. Our solution offer a security architecture that enables service owners to provision a dynamic and service-oriented secure virtual private network on top of multiple cloud IaaS providers. It does this by leveraging the scalability, robustness and flexibility of peer- to-peer overlay techniques to eliminate the manual configuration, key management and peer churn problems encountered in setting up the secure communication channels dynamically, between different components of a typical service that is deployed on multiple clouds. We present the implementation details of our solution as well as experimental results carried out on two commercial clouds
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Dynamic virtual private network provisioning from multiple cloud infrastructure service providers
The Cloud infrastructure service providers currently provision basic virtualized computing resources as on demand and dynamic services but there is no common framework in existence that allows the seamless provisioning of even these basic services across multiple cloud service providers, although this is not due to any inherent incompatibility or proprietary nature of the foundation technologies on which these cloud platforms are built. We present a solution idea which aims to provide a dynamic and service oriented provisioning of secure virtual private networks on top of multiple cloud infrastructure service providers. This solution leverages the benefits of peer to peer overlay networks, i.e., the flexibility and scalability to handle the churn of nodes joining and leaving the VPNs and can adapt the topology of the VPN as per the requirements of the applications utilizing its intercloud secure communication framework
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Opinion Model Based Security Reputation Enabling Cloud Broker Architecture
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Status of the International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE)
An international experiment to demonstrate muonionization cooling is scheduled for beam at RutherfordAppleton Laboratory (RAL) in 2007. The experimentcomprises one cell of the Study II cooling channel [1],along with upstream and downstream detectors to identifyindividual muons and measure their initial and final 6Dphase-space parameters to a precision of 0.1percent. Magneticdesign of the beam line and cooling channel are completeand portions are under construction. The experiment willbe described, including cooling channel hardware designs,fabrication status, and running plans. Phase 1 of theexperiment will prepare the beam line and providedetector systems, including time-of-flight, Cherenkov,scintillating-fiber trackers and their spectrometersolenoids, and an electromagnetic calorimeter. The Phase2 system will add the cooling channel components,including liquid-hydrogen absorbers embedded insuperconducting Focus Coil solenoids, 201-MHz normalconductingRF cavities, and their surrounding CouplingCoil solenoids. The MICE Collaboration goal is tocomplete the experiment by 2010; progress toward this isdiscussed
A Possible Hybrid Cooling Channel for a Neutrino Factory
A Neutrino Factory requires an intense and well-cooled (in transverse phase
space) muon beam. We discuss a hybrid approach for a linear 4D cooling channel
consisting of high-pressure gas-filled RF cavities- potentially allowing high
gradients without breakdown- and discrete LiH absorbers to provide the
necessary energy loss that results in the required muon beam cooling. We report
simulations of the channel performance and its comparison with the vacuum case;
we also briefly discuss technical and safety issues associated with cavities
filled with high-pressure hydrogen gas. Even with additional windows that might
be needed for safety reasons, the channel performance is comparable to that of
the original, all-vacuum Feasibility Study 2a channel on which our design is
based. If tests demonstrate that the gas-filled RF cavities can operate
effectively with an intense beam of ionizing particles passing through them,
our approach would be an attractive way of avoiding possible breakdown problems
with a vacuum RF channel.Comment: 3 pages, 9 figures; submitted to IPAC10, The First International
Particle Accelerator Conference, May 23-28, 201
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