302 research outputs found
You Can't See Me: Anonymizing Graphs Using the Szemerédi Regularity Lemma.
Complex networks gathered from our online interactions provide a rich source of information that can be used to try to model and predict our behavior. While this has very tangible benefits that we have all grown accustomed to, there is a concrete privacy risk in sharing potentially sensitive data about ourselves and the people we interact with, especially when this data is publicly available online and unprotected from malicious attacks. k-anonymity is a technique aimed at reducing this risk by obfuscating the topological information of a graph that can be used to infer the nodes' identity. In this paper we propose a novel algorithm to enforce k-anonymity based on a well-known result in extremal graph theory, the Szemerédi regularity lemma. Given a graph, we start by computing a regular partition of its nodes. The Szemerédi regularity lemma ensures that such a partition exists and that the edges between the sets of nodes behave almost randomly. With this partition, we anonymize the graph by randomizing the edges within each set, obtaining a graph that is structurally similar to the original one yet the nodes within each set are structurally indistinguishable. We test the proposed approach on real-world networks extracted from Facebook. Our experimental results show that the proposed approach is able to anonymize a graph while retaining most of its structural information
Very high-energy constraints on the infrared extragalactic background light
Context. Measurements of the Extragalactic Background Light (EBL) are a
fundamental source of information on the collective emission of cosmic sources.
Aims. At infrared wavelengths, however, these measurements are precluded by
the overwhelming dominance from Interplanetary Dust emission and the Galactic
infrared foreground. Only at m, where the foregrounds are
minimal, has the Infrared EBL (IR EBL) been inferred from analysis of the COBE
maps. The present paper aims to assess the possibility of evaluating the IR EBL
from a few m up to the peak of the emission at >100 m using an
indirect method that avoids the foreground problem.
Methods. To this purpose we exploit the effect of pair-production from
gamma-gamma interaction by considering the highest energy photons emitted by
extragalactic sources and their interaction with the IR EBL photons. We
simulate observations of a variety of low redshift emitters with the
forthcoming Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope (IACT) arrays (CTA in
particular) and water Cherenkov observatories (LHAASO, HAWC, SWGO) to assess
their suitability to constrain the EBL at such long wavelengths.
Results. We find that, even under the most extremely favorable conditions of
huge emission flares, extremely high-energy emitting blazars are not very
useful for our purpose because they are much too distant (>100 Mpc the nearest
ones, MKN 501 and MKN 421). Observations of more local Very High Energy (VHE)
emitting AGNs, like low-redshift radio galaxies (M87, IC 310, Centaurus A), are
better suited and will potentially allow us to constrain the EBL up to m
Extreme & High Synchrotron Peaked Blazars at the limit of Fermi-LAT detectability: the -ray spectrum of 1BIGB sources
We present the 1-100 GeV spectral energy distribution for a population of 148
high-synchrotron-peaked blazars (HSPs) recently detected with Fermi-LAT as part
of the First Brazil-ICRANet Gamma-ray Blazar catalogue (1BIGB). Most of the
1BIGB sources do not appear in previous Fermi-LAT catalogues and their
gamma-ray spectral properties are presented here for the first time,
representing a significant new extension of the gamma-ray blazar population.
Since our sample was originally selected from an excess signal in the 0.3-500
GeV band, the sources stand out as promising TeV blazar candidates, potentially
in reach of the forthcoming very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray observatory, CTA.
The flux estimates presented here are derived considering PASS8 data,
integrating over more than 9 years of Fermi-LAT observations. We also review
the full broadband fit between 0.3-500 GeV presented in the original 1BIGB
paper for all sources, updating the power-law parameters with currently
available Fermi-LAT dataset. The importance of these sources in the context of
VHE population studies with both current instruments and the future CTA is
evaluated. To do so, we select a subsample of 1BIGB sources and extrapolate
their gamma-ray SEDs to the highest energies, properly accounting for
absorption due to the extragalactic background light. We compare those
extrapolations to the published CTA sensitivity curves and estimate their
detectability by CTA. Two notable sources from our sample, namely 1BIGB
J224910.6-130002 and 1BIGB J194356.2+211821, are discussed in greater detail.
All gamma-ray SEDs, which are shown here for the first time, are made publicly
available via the Brazilian Science Data Center (BSDC) service, maintained at
CBPF, in Rio de Janeiro.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Hereditary Cancer Syndromes: A Comprehensive Review with a Visual Tool
Hereditary cancer syndromes account for nearly 10% of cancers even though they are often underdiagnosed. Finding a pathogenic gene variant could have dramatic implications in terms of pharmacologic treatments, tailored preventive programs, and familiar cascade testing. However, diagnosing a hereditary cancer syndrome could be challenging because of a lack of validated testing criteria or because of their suboptimal performance. In addition, many clinicians are not sufficiently well trained to identify and select patients that could benefit from a genetic test. Herein, we searched the available literature to comprehensively review and categorize hereditary cancer syndromes affecting adults with the aim of helping clinicians in their daily clinical practice through a visual tool
MAGIC eyes to the extreme: testing the blazar emission models on EHBLs
Extreme high-energy peaked BL Lac objects (EHBLs) are blazars whose
synchrotron emission peaks at exceptionally high energies, above few keV, in
the hard X-ray regime. So far, only a handful of those objects has been
detected at very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma rays by Imaging
Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes. Very remarkably, VHE observations of some of
these blazars (like 1ES 0229+200) have provided evidence of a VHE gamma-ray
emission extending to several TeV, which is difficult to explain with standard,
one-zone synchrotron self-Compton models usually applied to BL Lac objects. The
MAGIC collaboration coordinated a multi-year, multi-wavelength observational
campaign on ten targets. The MAGIC telescopes detected VHE gamma rays from four
EHBLs. In this paper we focus on the source 1ES 1426+426 and its X-ray and VHE
gamma-ray properties. The results of different models (synchrotron
self-Compton, spine-layer, hadronic) reproducing the broadband spectral energy
distribution are also presented.Comment: Proceedings of the 36th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2019), July 24th-August 1st, 2019. Madison, WI, U.S.
AGILE Observations of GRB 220101A: A "new Year's Burst" with an Exceptionally Huge Energy Release
We report the AGILE observations of GRB 220101A, which took place at the beginning of 2022 January 1 and was recognized as one of the most energetic gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) ever detected since their discovery. The AGILE satellite acquired interesting data concerning the prompt phase of this burst, providing an overall temporal and spectral description of the event in a wide energy range, from tens of kiloelectronvolts to tens of megaelectronvolts. Dividing the prompt emission into three main intervals, we notice an interesting spectral evolution, featuring a notable hardening of the spectrum in the central part of the burst. The average fluxes encountered in the different time intervals are relatively moderate, with respect to those of other remarkable bursts, and the overall fluence exhibits a quite ordinary value among the GRBs detected by MCAL. However, GRB 220101A is the second farthest event detected by AGILE, and the burst with the highest isotropic equivalent energy of the entire MCAL GRB sample, releasing Eiso = 2.54 Ă 1054 erg and exhibiting an isotropic luminosity of Liso = 2.34 Ă 1052 erg sâ1 (both in the 400 keVâ10 MeV energy range). We also analyzed the first 106 s of the afterglow phase, using the publicly available Swift-XRT data, carrying out a theoretical analysis of the afterglow, based on the forward shock model. We notice that GRB 220101A is with high probability surrounded by a wind-like density medium, and that the energy carried by the initial shock shall be a fraction of the total Eiso, presumably near âŒ50%.publishedVersio
Driven Topological Transitions in Active Nematic Films
The topological properties of many materials are central to their behavior,
with the dynamics of topological defects being particularly important to
intrinsically out-of-equilibrium, active materials. In this paper, local
manipulation of the ordering, dynamics, and topological properties of
microtubule-based extensile active nematic films is demonstrated in a joint
experimental and simulation study. Hydrodynamic stresses created by
magnetically actuated rotation of disk-shaped colloids in proximity to the
films compete with internal stresses in the active nematic, enabling local
control of the motion of the +1/2 charge topological defects that are intrinsic
to spontaneously turbulent active films. Sufficiently large applied stresses
drive the formation of +1 charge topological vortices in the director field
through the merger of two +1/2 defects. The directed motion of the defects is
accompanied by ordering of the vorticity and velocity of the active flows
within the film that is qualitatively unlike the response of passive viscous
films. Many features of the film's response to the disk are captured by Lattice
Boltzmann simulations, leading to insight into the anomalous viscoelastic
nature of the active nematic. The topological vortex formation is accompanied
by a rheological instability in the film that leads to significant increase in
the flow velocities. Comparison of the velocity profile in vicinity of the
vortex with fluid-dynamics calculations provides an estimate of film viscosity
AGILE gamma-ray detection of the exceptional GRB 221009A
Gamma-ray emission in the MeV-GeV range from explosive cosmic events is of
invaluable relevance to understanding physical processes related to the
formation of neutron stars and black holes. Here we report on the detection by
the AGILE satellite in the MeV-GeV energy range of the remarkable long-duration
gamma-ray burst GRB 221009A. The AGILE onboard detectors have good exposure to
GRB 221009A during its initial crucial phases. Hard X-ray/MeV emission in the
prompt phase lasted hundreds of seconds, with the brightest radiation being
emitted between 200 and 300 seconds after the initial trigger. Very intense GeV
gamma-ray emission is detected by AGILE in the prompt and early afterglow phase
up to 10,000 seconds. Time-resolved spectral analysis shows time-variable
MeV-peaked emission simultaneous with intense power-law GeV radiation that
persists in the afterglow phase. The coexistence during the prompt phase of
very intense MeV emission together with highly non-thermal and hardening GeV
radiation is a remarkable feature of GRB 221009A. During the prompt phase, the
event shows spectrally different MeV and GeV emissions that are most likely
generated by physical mechanisms occurring in different locations. AGILE
observations provide crucial flux and spectral gamma-ray information regarding
the early phases of GRB 221009A during which emission in the TeV range was
reported.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL on September 19, 202
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