29,367 research outputs found
Investigating SRAM PUFs in large CPUs and GPUs
Physically unclonable functions (PUFs) provide data that can be used for
cryptographic purposes: on the one hand randomness for the initialization of
random-number generators; on the other hand individual fingerprints for unique
identification of specific hardware components. However, today's off-the-shelf
personal computers advertise randomness and individual fingerprints only in the
form of additional or dedicated hardware.
This paper introduces a new set of tools to investigate whether intrinsic
PUFs can be found in PC components that are not advertised as containing PUFs.
In particular, this paper investigates AMD64 CPU registers as potential PUF
sources in the operating-system kernel, the bootloader, and the system BIOS;
investigates the CPU cache in the early boot stages; and investigates shared
memory on Nvidia GPUs. This investigation found non-random non-fingerprinting
behavior in several components but revealed usable PUFs in Nvidia GPUs.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures. Code in appendi
Contour calculus for many-particle functions
In non-equilibrium many-body perturbation theory, Langreth rules are an
efficient way to extract real-time equations from contour ones. However, the
standard rules are not applicable in cases that do not reduce to simple
convolutions and multiplications. We introduce a procedure for extracting
real-time equations from general multi-argument contour functions with an
arbitrary number of arguments. This is done for both the standard Keldysh
contour, as well as the extended contour with a vertical track that allows for
general initial states. This amounts to the generalization of the standard
Langreth rules to much more general situations. These rules involve
multi-argument retarded functions as key ingredients, for which we derive
intuitive graphical rules. We apply our diagrammatic recipe to derive Langreth
rules for the so-called double triangle structure and the general vertex
function, relevant for the study of vertex corrections beyond the
approximation
Scaling the propulsive performance of heaving and pitching foils
Scaling laws for the propulsive performance of rigid foils undergoing
oscillatory heaving and pitching motions are presented. Water tunnel
experiments on a nominally two-dimensional flow validate the scaling laws, with
the scaled data for thrust, power, and efficiency all showing excellent
collapse. The analysis indicates that the behaviour of the foils depends on
both Strouhal number and reduced frequency, but for motions where the viscous
drag is small the thrust closely follows a linear dependence on reduced
frequency. The scaling laws are also shown to be consistent with biological
data on swimming aquatic animals.Comment: 11 page
Manganese carbonyl-mediated reactions of azabutadienes with phenylacetylene, methyl acrylate and other unsaturated molecules
Reaction of PhCHâMn(CO)â
with l,4-di-aryl-1-aza-1,3-butadienes gave substituted pyrrolinonyl rings which were Ρâ´-coordinated to a Mn(CO)â group. These are formed by intramolecular CO insertion into a (non-isolated) cyclomanganated intermediate, followed by cyclisation. Other unsaturated reagents (PhCâĄCH, CH2=CHCOOMe, PhNCO) gave products arising from insertion of these, including a structurally characterised tri-aryl-Ρâľ-azacyclohexadienyl-Mn(CO)â complex from the reaction with the alkyne.
PhCHâMn(CO)â
reacts with l,4-di-aryl-1-aza-1,3-butadienes in the presence of unsaturated substrates to give products based on a cyclomanganated intermediate
What Explains the Variation in Estimates of Labour Supply Elasticities?
This paper performs a meta-analysis of empirical estimates of uncompensated labour supply elasticities. We find that much of the variation in elasticities can be explained by the variation in gender, participation rates, and country fixed effects. Country differences appear to be small though. There is no systematic impact of the model specification or marital status on reported elasticities. The decision to participate is more responsive than is the decision regarding hours worked. Even at the intensive margin, we find that the elasticity for women exceeds that for men. For men and women in the Netherlands, we predict an uncompensated labour supply elasticity of 0.1 and 0.5, respectively. These values are robust for alternative samples and specifications of the meta regression.labour supply, meta-analysis, uncompensated elasticity
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