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Wired warfare 3.0: protecting the civilian population during cyber operations
As a general matter, international humanitarian law is up to the task of providing the legal framework for cyber operations during an armed conflict. However, two debates persist in this regard, the resolution of which will determine the precise degree of protection the civilian population will enjoy during cyber operations. The first revolves around the meaning of the term “attack” in various conduct of hostilities rules, while the second addresses the issue of whether data may be considered an object such that operations destroying or altering it are subject to the prohibition on attacking civilian objects and that such effects need be considered when considering proportionality and the taking of precautions in attack. Even if these debates were to be resolved, the civilian population would still face risks from the unique capabilities of cyber operations. This article proposes two policies which parties to a conflict should consider adopting in order to ameliorate such risks. They are both based on the premise that military operations must reflect a balance between military concerns and the interest of States in prevailing in the conflict
Credible monetary policy to sustain growth
Despite the fact that the U.S. economy has been performing very well recently, monetary policymakers have been the targets of some criticism. In the speech reprinted here, which was delivered to a group of bankers in June 1997, St. Louis Federal Reserve President Thomas C. Melzer responds to the critics and outlines some ideas for maintaining sustaining, noninflationary economic growth. In his assessment, credibility is a key aspect of successful monetary policy.Monetary policy ; Monetary policy - United States ; Inflation (Finance)
Sine-Gordon =/= Massive Thirring, and Related Heresies
By viewing the Sine-Gordon and massive Thirring models as perturbed conformal
field theories one sees that they are different (the difference being
observable, for instance, in finite-volume energy levels). The UV limit of the
former (SGM) is a gaussian model, that of the latter (MTM) a so-called {\it
fermionic} gaussian model, the compactification radius of the boson underlying
both theories depending on the SG/MT coupling. (These two families of conformal
field theories are related by a ``twist''.) Corresponding SG and MT models
contain a subset of fields with identical correlation functions, but each model
also has fields the other one does not, e.g. the fermion fields of MTM are not
contained in SGM, and the {\it bosonic} soliton fields of SGM are not in MTM.
Our results imply, in particular, that the SGM at the so-called ``free-Dirac
point'' is actually a theory of two interacting bosons with
diagonal S-matrix , and that for arbitrary couplings the overall sign of
the accepted SG S-matrix in the soliton sector should be reversed. More
generally, we draw attention to the existence of new classes of quantum field
theories, analogs of the (perturbed) fermionic gaussian models, whose partition
functions are invariant only under a subgroup of the modular group. One such
class comprises ``fermionic versions'' of the Virasoro minimal models.Comment: 50 pages (harvmac unreduced), CLNS-92/1149, ITP-SB-92-3
Massive-Conformal Dictionary
The finite-volume spectrum of an integrable massive perturbation of a
rational conformal field theory interpolates between massive multi-particle
states in infinite volume (IR limit) and conformal states, which are approached
at zero volume (UV limit). Each state is labeled in the IR by a set of `Bethe
Ansatz quantum numbers', while in the UV limit it is characterized primarily by
the conformal dimensions of the conformal field creating it. We present
explicit conjectures for the UV conformal dimensions corresponding to any IR
state in the -perturbed minimal models and . The
conjectures, which are based on a combinatorial interpretation of the
Rogers-Ramanujan-Schur identities, are consistent with numerical results
obtained previously for low-lying energy levels.Comment: 18/11 pages in harvmac, Tel-Aviv preprint TAUP 2109/9
Lessons for SUSY from the LHC after the first run
A review of direct searches for new particles predicted by Supersymmetry
after the first run of the LHC is proposed. This review is based on the results
provided by the ATLAS and CMS experiments.Comment: 31 pages, 41 figures, Appear in the special issue of the EPJ C
journal entitled "SUSY after the Higgs discovery
3D-printing based Transducer Holder for Robotic Assisted Ultrasound Guided HIFU
The InnoMotion (Synthes Inc., previously by Innomedic GmbH) is a Conformité Européene (CE) marked (in 2005) robotic system for image-guided percutaneous interventions, providing five pneumatically driven degrees of freedom (DoF) and two manually adjusted DoF. It is a fully MR and CT compatible pneumatic driven tele-manipulator for image guided insertion of cannula and probes for biopsy, drainage, drug delivery, and energetic tumor destruction. In order to achieve the robotic assisted ultrasound guided HIFU therapy, a specific holder was designed for the INNOMOTION robotic arm by using SolidWorks (Dassault Systèmes, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France). The holder provides at least seven degrees of freedom (DoF), which let the InnoMotion robotic arm hold a HIFU transducer and an ultrasound imaging probe at the same time. The HIFU transducer is mounted to the holder, while the ultrasound (US) probe could be adjusted manually to cover the expected ablation area before therapy. The main components of the holder were 3D-printed by using plastic material and were well compatible with the MR system and InnoMotion robotic arm. And the robotic assisted HIFU experiment could be performed based on this designed setup.</p
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