9,298 research outputs found
Solar coronal plumes and the fast solar wind
The spectral profiles of the coronal Ne viii line at 77 nm have different
shapes in quiet-Sun regions and coronal holes (CHs). A single Gaussian fit of
the line profile provides an adequate approximation in quiet-Sun areas, whereas
a strong shoulder on the long-wavelength side is a systematic feature in CHs.
Although this has been noticed since 1999, no physical reason for the peculiar
shape could be given. In an attempt to identify the cause of this peculiarity,
we address three problems that could not be conclusively resolved in a review
article by a study team of the International Space Science Institute (ISSI;
Wilhelm et al. 2011) : (1) The physical processes operating at the base and
inside of plumes as well as their interaction with the solar wind (SW). (2) The
possible contribution of plume plasma to the fast SW streams. (3) The signature
of the first-ionization potential (FIP) effect between plumes and inter-plume
regions (IPRs). Before the spectroscopic peculiarities in IPRs and plumes in
polar coronal holes (PCHs) can be further investigated with the instrument
Solar Ultraviolet Measurements of Emitted Radiation (SUMER) aboard the Solar
and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), it is mandatory to summarize the results
of the review to place the spectroscopic observations into context. Finally, a
plume model is proposed that satisfactorily explains the plasma flows up and
down the plume field lines and leads to the shape of the neon line in PCHs.Comment: 8 Pages; 3 Figures; To appear in Journal of Astrophysics & Astronomy
(Special Issue; Eds. V. Fedun, A.K. Srivastava, R. Erdelyi, J.C. Pandey
Gravitational redshift and the vacuum index of refraction
A physical process of the gravitational redshift was described in an earlier
paper (Wilhelm & Dwivedi 2014) that did not require any information for the
emitting atom neither on the local gravitational potential U nor on the speed
of light c. Although it could be shown that the correct energy shift of the
emitted photon resulted from energy and momentum conservation principles and
the speed of light at the emission site, it was not obvious how this speed is
controlled by the gravitational potential. The aim of this paper is to describe
a physical process that can accomplish this control. We determine the local
speed of light c by deducing a gravitational index of refraction nG as a
function of the potential U assuming a specific aether model, in which photons
propagate as solitons. Even though an atom cannot locally sense the
gravitational potential U (cf. Muller et al. 2010), the gravitational redshift
will nevertheless be determined by U (cf. Wolf et al. 2010)- mediated by the
local speed of light c.Comment: 8 Page
An Analytical Model of Packet Collisions in IEEE 802.15.4 Wireless Networks
Numerous studies showed that concurrent transmissions can boost wireless
network performance despite collisions. While these works provide empirical
evidence that concurrent transmissions may be received reliably, existing
signal capture models only partially explain the root causes of this
phenomenon. We present a comprehensive mathematical model that reveals the
reasons and provides insights on the key parameters affecting the performance
of MSK-modulated transmissions. A major contribution is a closed-form
derivation of the receiver bit decision variable for arbitrary numbers of
colliding signals and constellations of power ratios, timing offsets, and
carrier phase offsets. We systematically explore the root causes for successful
packet delivery under concurrent transmissions across the whole parameter space
of the model. We confirm the capture threshold behavior observed in previous
studies but also reveal new insights relevant for the design of optimal
protocols: We identify capture zones depending not only on the signal power
ratio but also on time and phase offsets.Comment: Accepted for publication in the IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communications under the title "On the Reception of Concurrent Transmissions
in Wireless Sensor Networks.
Correctional Practitioners on Reentry: A Missed Perspective
Much of the literature on reentry of formerly incarcerated individuals revolves around discussions of failures they incur during reintegration or the identification of needs and challenges that they have during reentry from the perspective of community corrections officers. The present research fills a gap in the reentry literature by examining the needs and challenges of formerly incarcerated individuals and what makes for reentry success from the perspective of correctional practitioners (i.e., wardens and non-wardens). The views of correctional practitioners are important to understand the level of organizational commitment to reentry and the ways in which social distance between correctional professionals and their clients may impact reentry success. This research reports on the results from an email survey distributed to a national sample of correctional officials listed in the American Correctional Association, 2012 Directory. Specifically, correctional officials were asked to report on needs and challenges facing formerly incarcerated individuals, define success, identify factors related to successful reentry, recount success stories, and report what could be done to assist them in successful outcomes. Housing and employment were raised by wardens and corrections officials as important needs for successful reentry. Corrections officials adopted organizational and systems perspectives in their responses and had differing opinions about social distance. Policy implications are presented
Key Generation in Wireless Sensor Networks Based on Frequency-selective Channels - Design, Implementation, and Analysis
Key management in wireless sensor networks faces several new challenges. The
scale, resource limitations, and new threats such as node capture necessitate
the use of an on-line key generation by the nodes themselves. However, the cost
of such schemes is high since their secrecy is based on computational
complexity. Recently, several research contributions justified that the
wireless channel itself can be used to generate information-theoretic secure
keys. By exchanging sampling messages during movement, a bit string can be
derived that is only known to the involved entities. Yet, movement is not the
only possibility to generate randomness. The channel response is also strongly
dependent on the frequency of the transmitted signal. In our work, we introduce
a protocol for key generation based on the frequency-selectivity of channel
fading. The practical advantage of this approach is that we do not require node
movement. Thus, the frequent case of a sensor network with static motes is
supported. Furthermore, the error correction property of the protocol mitigates
the effects of measurement errors and other temporal effects, giving rise to an
agreement rate of over 97%. We show the applicability of our protocol by
implementing it on MICAz motes, and evaluate its robustness and secrecy through
experiments and analysis.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computin
New Numerical Results Indicate a Half-Filling SU(4) Kondo State in Carbon Nanotubes
Numerical calculations simulate transport experiments in carbon nanotube
quantum dots (P. Jarillo-Herrero et al., Nature 434, 484 (2005)), where a
strongly enhanced Kondo temperature T_K ~ 8K was associated with the SU(4)
symmetry of the Hamiltonian at quarter-filling for an orbitally
double-degenerate single-occupied electronic shell. Our results clearly suggest
that the Kondo conductance measured for an adjacent shell with T_K ~ 16K,
interpreted as a singlet-triplet Kondo effect, can be associated instead to an
SU(4) Kondo effect at half-filling. Besides presenting spin-charge Kondo
screening similar to the quarter-filling SU(4), the half-filling SU(4) has been
recently associated to very rich physical behavior, including a
non-Fermi-liquid state (M. R. Galpin et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 186406
(2005)).Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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