64 research outputs found

    Self-Organized Branching Processes: A Mean-Field Theory for Avalanches

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    We discuss mean-field theories for self-organized criticality and the connection with the general theory of branching processes. We point out that the nature of the self-organization is not addressed properly by the previously proposed mean-field theories. We introduce a new mean-field model that explicitly takes the boundary conditions into account; in this way, the local dynamical rules are coupled to a global equation that drives the control parameter to its critical value. We study the model numerically, and analytically we compute the avalanche distributions.Comment: 4 pages + 4 ps figure

    Tank Applied Testing of Load-Bearing Multilayer Insulation (LB-MLI)

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    The development of long duration orbital cryogenic storage systems will require the reduction of heat loads into the storage tank. In the case of liquid hydrogen, complete elimination of the heat load at 20 K is currently impractical due to the limitations in lift available on flight cryocoolers. In order to reduce the heat load, without having to remove heat at 20 K, the concept of Reduced Boil-Off uses cooled shields within the insulation system at approximately 90 K. The development of Load-Bearing Multilayer Insulation (LB-MLI) allowed the 90 K shield with tubing and cryocooler attachments to be suspended within the MLI and still be structurally stable. Coupon testing both thermally and structurally were performed to verify that the LB-MLI should work at the tank applied level. Then tank applied thermal and structural (acoustic) testing was performed to demonstrate the functionality of the LB-MLI as a structural insulation system. The LB-MLI showed no degradation of thermal performance due to the acoustic testing and showed excellent thermal performance when integrated with a 90 K class cryocooler on a liquid hydrogen tank

    Trust and vulnerability in open source software

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    dcTPM: A generic architecture for dynamic context management

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    With the emergence of new technologies the requirements for trusted platforms are constantly changing. Thus, the current Trusted Platform Modules (TPMs) have to cope with issues they have not been designed for. One such deficit of current TPMs is the inability to support multiple stakeholders as in mobile computing, virtualization, and cloud computing applications. In such scenarios, a TPM has to attest the state of their applications on the platform to each stakeholder and to additionally protect their individual assets. Therefore, we present a novel architecture, called Dynamic-Context TPM (dcTPM), to satisfy the needs of each participant in multiple stakeholder applications. Though there exist related approaches in literature, they address only software-based TPM instances. In contrast, the architecture proposed in this paper supports not only software-based TPMs, but also dedicated hardware TPMs or a combination of both for each stakeholder. As an additional asset, the dcTPM architecture enables a dynamic exchange of contexts (TPM instances) without any modification of the underlying architecture. This architecture has been implemented as a proof-of-concept on top of a Xilinx Virtex-5 FPGA platform, demonstrating a test case with off-the-shelf hardware and software TPMs
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