1,806 research outputs found
Electronic transport in a series of multiple arbitrary tunnel junctions
Monte Carlo simulations and an analytical approach within the framework of a
semiclassical model are presented which permit the determination of Coulomb
blockade and single electron charging effects for multiple tunnel junctions
coupled in series. The Coulomb gap in the I(V) curves can be expressed as a
simple function of the capacitances in the series. Furthermore, the magnitude
of the differential conductivity at current onset is calculated in terms of the
model. The results are discussed with respect to the number of junctions.Comment: 3 figures, revte
Cluster-Cluster Lensing and the Case of Abell 383
Extensive surveys of galaxy clusters motivate us to assess the likelihood of
cluster-cluster lensing (CCL), namely, gravitational-lensing of a background
cluster by a foreground cluster. We briefly describe the characteristics of
CCLs in optical, X-ray and SZ measurements, and calculate their predicted
numbers for CDM parameters and a viable range of cluster mass
functions and their uncertainties. The predicted number of CCLs in the
strong-lensing regime varies from several () to as high as a few dozen,
depending mainly on whether lensing triaxiality bias is accounted for, through
the c-M relation. A much larger number is predicted when taking into account
also CCL in the weak-lensing regime. In addition to few previously suggested
CCLs, we report a detection of a possible CCL in A383, where background
candidate high- structures are magnified, as seen in deep Subaru
observations.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
Experiment for Testing Special Relativity Theory
An experiment aimed at testing special relativity via a comparison of the
velocity of a non matter particle (annihilation photon) with the velocity of
the matter particle (Compton electron) produced by the second annihilation
photon from the decay Na-22(beta^+)Ne-22 is proposed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, Report on the Conference of Nuclear Physics
Division of Russian Academy of Science "Physics of Fundamental Interactions",
ITEP, Moscow, November 26-30, 200
Disagreeable Privacy Policies: Mismatches between Meaning and Users’ Understanding
Privacy policies are verbose, difficult to understand, take too long to read, and may be the least-read items on most websites even as users express growing concerns about information collection practices. For all their faults, though, privacy policies remain the single most important source of information for users to attempt to learn how companies collect, use, and share data. Likewise, these policies form the basis for the self-regulatory notice and choice framework that is designed and promoted as a replacement for regulation. The underlying value and legitimacy of notice and choice depends, however, on the ability of users to understand privacy policies.
This paper investigates the differences in interpretation among expert, knowledgeable, and typical users and explores whether those groups can understand the practices described in privacy policies at a level sufficient to support rational decision-making. The paper seeks to fill an important gap in the understanding of privacy policies through primary research on user interpretation and to inform the development of technologies combining natural language processing, machine learning and crowdsourcing for policy interpretation and summarization.
For this research, we recruited a group of law and public policy graduate students at Fordham University, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Pittsburgh (“knowledgeable users”) and presented these law and policy researchers with a set of privacy policies from companies in the e-commerce and news & entertainment industries. We asked them nine basic questions about the policies’ statements regarding data collection, data use, and retention. We then presented the same set of policies to a group of privacy experts and to a group of non-expert users.
The findings show areas of common understanding across all groups for certain data collection and deletion practices, but also demonstrate very important discrepancies in the interpretation of privacy policy language, particularly with respect to data sharing. The discordant interpretations arose both within groups and between the experts and the two other groups.
The presence of these significant discrepancies has critical implications. First, the common understandings of some attributes of described data practices mean that semi-automated extraction of meaning from website privacy policies may be able to assist typical users and improve the effectiveness of notice by conveying the true meaning to users. However, the disagreements among experts and disagreement between experts and the other groups reflect that ambiguous wording in typical privacy policies undermines the ability of privacy policies to effectively convey notice of data practices to the general public.
The results of this research will, consequently, have significant policy implications for the construction of the notice and choice framework and for the US reliance on this approach. The gap in interpretation indicates that privacy policies may be misleading the general public and that those policies could be considered legally unfair and deceptive. And, where websites are not effectively conveying privacy policies to consumers in a way that a “reasonable person” could, in fact, understand the policies, “notice and choice” fails as a framework. Such a failure has broad international implications since websites extend their reach beyond the United States
Spectrometric method to detect exoplanets as another test to verify the invariance of the velocity of light
Hypothetical influences of variability of light velocity due to the
parameters of the source of radiation, for the results of spectral measurements
of stars to search for exoplanets are considered. Accounting accelerations of
stars relative to the barycenter of the star - a planet (the planets) was
carried out. The dependence of the velocity of light from the barycentric
radial velocity and barycentric radial acceleration component of the star
should lead to a substantial increase (up to degree of magnitude) semi-major
axes of orbits detected candidate to extrasolar planets. Consequently, the
correct comparison of the results of spectral method with results of other
well-known modern methods of detecting extrasolar planets can regard the
results obtained in this paper as a reliable test for testing the invariance of
the velocity of light.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Local and macroscopic tunneling spectroscopy of Y(1-x)CaxBa2Cu3O(7-d) films: evidence for a doping dependent is or idxy component in the order parameter
Tunneling spectroscopy of epitaxial (110) Y1-xCaxBa2Cu3O7-d films reveals a
doping dependent transition from pure d(x2-y2) to d(x2-y2)+is or d(x2-y2)+idxy
order parameter. The subdominant (is or idxy) component manifests itself in a
splitting of the zero bias conductance peak and the appearance of subgap
structures. The splitting is seen in the overdoped samples, increases
systematically with doping, and is found to be an inherent property of the
overdoped films. It was observed in both local tunnel junctions, using scanning
tunneling microscopy (STM), and in macroscopic planar junctions, for films
prepared by either RF sputtering or laser ablation. The STM measurements
exhibit fairly uniform splitting size in [110] oriented areas on the order of
10 nm2 but vary from area to area, indicating some doping inhomogeneity. U and
V-shaped gaps were also observed, with good correspondence to the local
faceting, a manifestation of the dominant d-wave order parameter
Measurement of Cosmic-ray Electrons at TeV Energies by VERITAS
Cosmic-ray electrons and positrons (CREs) at GeV-TeV energies are a unique
probe of our local Galactic neighborhood. CREs lose energy rapidly via
synchrotron radiation and inverse-Compton scattering processes while
propagating within the Galaxy and these losses limit their propagation
distance. For electrons with TeV energies, the limit is on the order of a
kiloparsec. Within that distance there are only a few known astrophysical
objects capable of accelerating electrons to such high energies. It is also
possible that the CREs are the products of the annihilation or decay of heavy
dark matter (DM) particles. VERITAS, an array of imaging air Cherenkov
telescopes in southern Arizona, USA, is primarily utilized for gamma-ray
astronomy, but also simultaneously collects CREs during all observations. We
describe our methods of identifying CREs in VERITAS data and present an energy
spectrum, extending from 300 GeV to 5 TeV, obtained from approximately 300
hours of observations. A single power-law fit is ruled out in VERITAS data. We
find that the spectrum of CREs is consistent with a broken power law, with a
break energy at 710 40 140 GeV.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Subdegree Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Signal from Multifrequency BOOMERanG observations
The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect is the inverse Compton-scattering of
cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons by hot electrons in the intervening
gas throughout the universe. The effect has a distinct spectral signature that
allows its separation from other signals in multifrequency CMB datasets. Using
CMB anisotropies measured at three frequencies by the BOOMERanG 2003 flight we
constrain SZ fluctuations in the 10 arcmin to 1 deg angular range. Propagating
errors and potential systematic effects through simulations, we obtain an
overall upper limit of 15.3 uK (2 sigma) for rms SZ fluctuations in a broad bin
between multipoles of of 250 and 1200 at the Rayleigh-Jeans (RJ) end of the
spectrum. When combined with other CMB anisotropy and SZ measurements, we find
that the local universe normalization of the density perturbations is
sigma-8(SZ) < 0.96 at the 95% confidence level, consistent with sigma-8
determined from primordial perturbations.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ. Letter
Discovery of very-high-energy emission from RGB J2243+203 and derivation of its redshift upper limit
Very-high-energy (VHE; 100 GeV) gamma-ray emission from the blazar RGB
J2243+203 was discovered with the VERITAS Cherenkov telescope array, during the
period between 21 and 24 December 2014. The VERITAS energy spectrum from this
source can be fit by a power law with a photon index of , and a
flux normalization at 0.15 TeV of . The integrated
\textit{Fermi}-LAT flux from 1 GeV to 100 GeV during the VERITAS detection is
, which is an order of
magnitude larger than the four-year-averaged flux in the same energy range
reported in the 3FGL catalog, (). The detection with VERITAS
triggered observations in the X-ray band with the \textit{Swift}-XRT. However,
due to scheduling constraints \textit{Swift}-XRT observations were performed 67
hours after the VERITAS detection, not simultaneous with the VERITAS
observations. The observed X-ray energy spectrum between 2 keV and 10 keV can
be fitted with a power-law with a spectral index of , and the
integrated photon flux in the same energy band is . EBL model-dependent upper limits
of the blazar redshift have been derived. Depending on the EBL model used, the
upper limit varies in the range from z to z
Very-high-energy observations of the binaries V 404 Cyg and 4U 0115+634 during giant X-ray outbursts
Transient X-ray binaries produce major outbursts in which the X-ray flux can
increase over the quiescent level by factors as large as . The low-mass
X-ray binary V 404 Cyg and the high-mass system 4U 0115+634 underwent such
major outbursts in June and October 2015, respectively. We present here
observations at energies above hundreds of GeV with the VERITAS observatory
taken during some of the brightest X-ray activity ever observed from these
systems. No gamma-ray emission has been detected by VERITAS in 2.5 hours of
observations of the microquasar V 404 Cyg from 2015, June 20-21. The upper flux
limits derived from these observations on the gamma-ray flux above 200 GeV of F
cm s correspond to a tiny fraction (about
) of the Eddington luminosity of the system, in stark contrast to that
seen in the X-ray band. No gamma rays have been detected during observations of
4U 0115+634 in the period of major X-ray activity in October 2015. The flux
upper limit derived from our observations is F cm
s for gamma rays above 300 GeV, setting an upper limit on the ratio of
gamma-ray to X-ray luminosity of less than 4%.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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