37,558 research outputs found
Quantum radiation reaction force on a one-dimensional cavity with two relativistic moving mirrors
We consider a real massless scalar field inside a cavity with two moving
mirrors in a two-dimensional spacetime, satisfying Dirichlet boundary condition
at the instantaneous position of the boundaries, for arbitrary and relativistic
laws of motion. Considering vacuum as the initial field state, we obtain
formulas for the exact value of the energy density of the field and the quantum
force acting on the boundaries, which extend results found in previous papers.
For the particular cases of a cavity with just one moving boundary,
non-relativistic velocities, or in the limit of infinity length of the cavity
(a single mirror), our results coincide with those found in the literature.Comment: 6 pages 9 figure
Detecting and characterizing lateral phishing at scale
We present the first large-scale characterization of lateral phishing attacks, based on a dataset of 113 million employee-sent emails from 92 enterprise organizations. In a lateral phishing attack, adversaries leverage a compromised enterprise account to send phishing emails to other users, benefit-ting from both the implicit trust and the information in the hijacked user's account. We develop a classifier that finds hundreds of real-world lateral phishing emails, while generating under four false positives per every one-million employee-sent emails. Drawing on the attacks we detect, as well as a corpus of user-reported incidents, we quantify the scale of lateral phishing, identify several thematic content and recipient targeting strategies that attackers follow, illuminate two types of sophisticated behaviors that attackers exhibit, and estimate the success rate of these attacks. Collectively, these results expand our mental models of the 'enterprise attacker' and shed light on the current state of enterprise phishing attacks
Laminar-flow flight experiments
The flight testing conducted over the past 10 years in the NASA laminar-flow control (LFC) will be reviewed. The LFC program was directed towards the most challenging technology application, the high supersonic speed transport. To place these recent experiences in perspective, earlier important flight tests will first be reviewed to recall the lessons learned at that time
Use of a Granulocyte Immunofluorescence Assay Designed for Humans for Detection of Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies in Dogs with Chronic Enteropathies
Perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (pANCA) previously have been shown to be serum markers in dogs with chronic enteropathies, with dogs that have food‐responsive disease (FRD) having higher frequencies of seropositivity than dogs with steroid‐responsive disease (SRD). The indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) assay used in previous publications is time‐consuming to perform, with low interobserver agreement. Forty‐four dogs with FRD, 20 dogs with SRD, 20 control dogs, and 38 soft‐coated wheaten terrier (SCWT) or SCWT‐cross dogs
Time transfer between the Goddard Optical Research Facility and the U.S. Naval Observatory using 100 picosecond laser pulses
A horizontal two-way time comparison link in air between the University of Maryland laser ranging and time transfer equipment at the Goddard Optical Research Facility (GORF) 1.2 m telescope and the Time Services Division of the U.S. Naval Observatory (USNO) was established. Flat mirrors of 25 cm and 30 cm diameter respectively were placed on top of the Washington Cathedral and on a water tower at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center. Two optical corner reflectors at the USNO reflect the laser pulses back to the GORF. Light pulses of 100 ps duration and an energy of several hundred microjoules are sent at the rate of 10 pulses per second. The detection at the USNO is by means of an RCA C30902E avalanche photodiode and the timing is accomplished by an HP 5370A computing counter and an HP 1000 computer with respect to a 10 pps pulse train from the Master Clock
Many-body excitations in tunneling current spectra of a few-electron quantum dot
Inherent asymmetry in the tunneling barriers of few-electron quantum dots
induces intrinsically different tunneling currents for forward and reverse
source-drain biases in the non-linear transport regime. Here we show that in
addition to spin selection rules, overlap matrix elements between many-body
states are crucial for the correct description of tunneling transmission
through quantum dots at large magnetic fields. Signatures of excited
(N-1)-electron states in the transport process through the N-electron system
are clearly identified in the measured transconductances. Our analysis clearly
confirms the validity of single-electron quantum transport theory in quantum
dots.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Observation of macroscopic Landau-Zener transitions in a superconducting device
A two-level system traversing a level anticrossing has a small probability to
make a so-called Landau-Zener (LZ) transition between its energy bands, in
deviation from simple adiabatic evolution. This effect takes on renewed
relevance due to the observation of quantum coherence in superconducting qubits
(macroscopic "Schrodinger cat" devices). We report an observation of LZ
transitions in an Al three-junction qubit coupled to a Nb resonant tank
circuit.Comment: REVTeX4, 4pp., 4 EPS figures. v2: clarifications added; final, to
appear in EP
Far-from-equilibrium Ostwald ripening in electrostatically driven granular powders
We report the first experimental study of cluster size distributions in
electrostatically driven granular submonolayers. The cluster size distribution
in this far-from-equilibrium process exhibits dynamic scaling behavior
characteristic of the (nearly equilibrium) Ostwald ripening, controlled by the
attachment and detachment of the "gas" particles. The scaled size distribution,
however, is different from the classical Wagner distribution obtained in the
limit of a vanishingly small area fraction of the clusters. A much better
agreement is found with the theory of Conti et al. [Phys. Rev. E 65, 046117
(2002)] which accounts for the cluster merger.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in PR
Convergence and Psychometric Properties of Character Strengths Measures: The VIA-IS and the VIA-IS-R.
This study compares the German versions of the original measure of character strengths (VIA-IS) with its latest revision (VIA-IS-R) regarding reliability and convergent, discriminant, and criterion-related validity. A sample of 499 German-speaking adults (79% women, mean age: 33.3 years) provided self-reports of character strengths (VIA-IS, VIA-IS-R) and several criteria: Core virtues, thriving, and moral behaviors. Results suggested that both measures showed satisfactory internal consistency and converged well in a multitrait-multimethod analysis. Further, both measures were comparable regarding their relationships with the criteria. Overall, the results of the current study suggest that both questionnaires are reliable and valid, and that findings based on these instruments can be considered highly comparable
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