18,608 research outputs found
Delay-dependent robust stability of stochastic delay systems with Markovian switching
In recent years, stability of hybrid stochastic delay systems, one of the important issues in the study of stochastic systems, has received considerable attention. However, the existing results do not deal with the structure of the diffusion but estimate its upper bound, which induces conservatism. This paper studies delay-dependent robust stability of hybrid stochastic delay systems. A delay-dependent criterion for robust exponential stability of hybrid stochastic delay systems is presented in terms of linear matrix inequalities (LMIs), which exploits the structure of the diffusion. Numerical examples are given to verify the effectiveness and less conservativeness of the proposed method
The Mason Test: A Defense Against Sybil Attacks in Wireless Networks Without Trusted Authorities
Wireless networks are vulnerable to Sybil attacks, in which a malicious node
poses as many identities in order to gain disproportionate influence. Many
defenses based on spatial variability of wireless channels exist, but depend
either on detailed, multi-tap channel estimation - something not exposed on
commodity 802.11 devices - or valid RSSI observations from multiple trusted
sources, e.g., corporate access points - something not directly available in ad
hoc and delay-tolerant networks with potentially malicious neighbors. We extend
these techniques to be practical for wireless ad hoc networks of commodity
802.11 devices. Specifically, we propose two efficient methods for separating
the valid RSSI observations of behaving nodes from those falsified by malicious
participants. Further, we note that prior signalprint methods are easily
defeated by mobile attackers and develop an appropriate challenge-response
defense. Finally, we present the Mason test, the first implementation of these
techniques for ad hoc and delay-tolerant networks of commodity 802.11 devices.
We illustrate its performance in several real-world scenarios
Luminous Infrared Galaxies in the Local Universe
We study the morphology and star formation properties of 159 local luminous
infrared galaxy (LIRG) using multi-color images from Data Release 2 (DR2) of
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The LIRGs are selected from a
cross-correlation analysis between the IRAS survey and SDSS. They are all
brighter than 15.9 mag in the r-band and below redshift ~ 0.1, and so can be
reliably classified morphologically. We find that the fractions of
interacting/merging and spiral galaxies are ~ 48% and ~ 40% respectively. Our
results complement and confirm the decline (increase) in the fraction of spiral
(interacting/merging) galaxies from z ~1 to z ~ 0.1, as found by Melbourne, Koo
& Le Floc'h (2005). About 75% of spiral galaxies in the local LIRGs are barred,
indicating that bars may play an important role in triggering star formation
rates > 20 M_{sun}/yr in the local universe. Compared with high redshift LIRGs,
local LIRGs have lower specific star formation rates, smaller cold gas
fractions and a narrower range of stellar masses. Local LIRGs appear to be
either merging galaxies forming intermediate mass ellipticals or spiral
galaxies undergoing high star formation activities regulated by bars.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, title changed,
typos corrected,major revisions following referee's comments,updated
reference
Distributed state estimation in sensor networks with randomly occurring nonlinearities subject to time delays
This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version can be accessed from the links below - Copyright @ 2012 ACM.This article is concerned with a new distributed state estimation problem for a class of dynamical systems in sensor networks. The target plant is described by a set of differential equations disturbed by a Brownian motion and randomly occurring nonlinearities (RONs) subject to time delays. The RONs are investigated here to reflect network-induced randomly occurring regulation of the delayed states on the current ones. Through available measurement output transmitted from the sensors, a distributed state estimator is designed to estimate the states of the target system, where each sensor can communicate with the neighboring sensors according to the given topology by means of a directed graph. The state estimation is carried out in a distributed way and is therefore applicable to online application. By resorting to the Lyapunov functional combined with stochastic analysis techniques, several delay-dependent criteria are established that not only ensure the estimation error to be globally asymptotically stable in the mean square, but also guarantee the existence of the desired estimator gains that can then be explicitly expressed when certain matrix inequalities are solved. A numerical example is given to verify the designed distributed state estimators.This work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants 61028008, 60804028 and 61174136, the Qing Lan Project of Jiangsu Province of China, the Project sponsored by SRF for ROCS of SEM of China, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of the UK under Grant GR/S27658/01, the Royal Society of the UK,
and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany
Metallic state in La-doped YBaCuO thin films with -type charge carriers
We report hole and electron doping in La-doped YBaCuO(YBCO) thin
films synthesized by pulsed laser deposition technique and subsequent
\emph{in-situ} postannealing in oxygen ambient and vaccum. The -type samples
show a metallic behavior below the Mott limit and a high carrier density of
10 cm at room temperature (\emph{T}) at the
optimally reduced condition. The in-plane resistivity () of the
-type samples exhibits a quadratic \emph{T} dependence in the
moderate-\emph{T} range and shows an anomaly at a relatively higher \emph{T}
probably related to pseudogap formation analogous to underdoped
NdCeCuO (NCCO). Furthermore, (T), \emph{T} and
\emph{T} with minimum resistivity (\emph{T}) were investigated in both
- and -side. The present results reveal the - asymmetry (symmetry)
within the metallic-state region in an underdoped cuprate and suggest the
potential toward ambipolar superconductivity in a single YBCO system.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Orbital-dependent metamagnetic response in Sr4Ru3O10
We show that the metamagnetic transition in SrRuO bifurcates
into two transitions as the field is rotated away from the conducting planes.
This two-step process comprises partial or total alignment of moments in
ferromagnetic bands followed by an itinerant metamagnetic transition whose
critical field increases with rotation. Evidence for itinerant metamagnetism is
provided by the Shubnikov-de Hass effect which shows a non-trivial evolution of
the geometry of the Fermi surface and an enhancement of the quasiparticles
effective-mass across the transition. The metamagnetic response of
SrRuO is orbital-dependent and involves ferromagnetic and
metamagnetic bands.Comment: Physical Review B (in press
Correlation of conductivity and angle integrated valence band photoemission characteristics in single crystal iron perovskites for 300 K < T < 800 K: Comparison of surface and bulk sensitive methods
A single crystal monolith of La0.9Sr0.1FeO3 and thin pulsed laser deposited
film of La0.8Sr0.2Fe0.8Ni0.2O3 were subject to angle integrated valence band
photoemission spectroscopy in ultra high vacuum and conductivity experiments in
ambient air at temperatures from 300 K to 800 K. Except for several sputtering
and annealing cycles, the specimen were not prepared in-situ.. Peculiar changes
in the temperature dependent, bulk representative conductivity profile as a
result of reversible phase transitions, and irreversible chemical changes are
semi-quantitatively reflected by the intensity variation in the more surface
representative valence band spectra near the Fermi energy. X-ray photoelectron
diffraction images reflect the symmetry as expected from bulk iron perovskites.
The correlation of spectral details in the valence band photoemission spectra
(VB PES) and details of the conductivity during temperature variation suggest
that valuable information on electronic structure and transport properties of
complex materials may be obtained without in-situ preparation
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