2,309 research outputs found
Security analysis of communication system based on the synchronization of different order chaotic systems
This work analyzes the security weakness of a recently proposed communication
method based on chaotic modulation and masking using synchronization of two
chaotic systems with different orders. It is shown that its application to
secure communication is unsafe, because it can be broken in two different ways,
by high-pass filtering and by reduced order system synchronization, without
knowing neither the system parameter values nor the system key.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX forma
Movements of feral camels in central Australia determined by satellite telemetry
Movements of two female one-humped camels in central Australia were tracked using satellite telemetry between March 1986 and July 1987. During that time both animals travelled a minimum distance of over 1000 km within a radius of 125 km for one animal, and 200 km for the other. However, their movements were uite punctuated and both animals spent periods of up to several months in rleatively small areas before moving over longer distances to new areas. Both camels moved at greater rates overnight. An activity index, probably measuring feeding rate, declined during the study period for both animals. Patchy and sporadic rainfall may explain some of these results
Barium abundance in red giants of NGC 6752. Non-local thermodynamic equilibrium and three-dimensional effects
(Abridged) Aims: We study the effects related to departures from non-local
thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE) and homogeneity in the atmospheres of red
giant stars in Galactic globular cluster NGC 6752, to assess their influence on
the formation of Ba II lines. Methods: One-dimensional (1D) local thermodynamic
equilibrium (LTE) and 1D NLTE barium abundances were derived using classical 1D
ATLAS stellar model atmospheres. The three-dimensional (3D) LTE abundances were
obtained for 8 red giants on the lower RGB, by adjusting their 1D LTE
abundances using 3D-1D abundance corrections, i.e., the differences between the
abundances obtained from the same spectral line using the 3D hydrodynamical
(CO5BOLD) and classical 1D (LHD) stellar model atmospheres. Results: The mean
1D barium-to-iron abundance ratios derived for 20 giants are _{1D
NLTE} = 0.05 \pm0.06 (stat.) \pm0.08 (sys.). The 3D-1D abundance correction
obtained for 8 giants is small (~+0.05 dex), thus leads to only minor
adjustment when applied to the mean 1D NLTE barium-to-iron abundance ratio for
the 20 giants, _{3D+NLTE} = 0.10 \pm0.06(stat.) \pm0.10(sys.). The
intrinsic abundance spread between the individual cluster stars is small and
can be explained in terms of uncertainties in the abundance determinations.
Conclusions: Deviations from LTE play an important role in the formation of
barium lines in the atmospheres of red giants studied here. The role of 3D
hydrodynamical effects should not be dismissed either, even if the obtained
3D-1D abundance corrections are small. This result is a consequence of subtle
fine-tuning of individual contributions from horizontal temperature
fluctuations and differences between the average temperature profiles in the 3D
and 1D model atmospheres: owing to the comparable size and opposite sign, their
contributions nearly cancel each other.Comment: Minor typos corrected. Accepted for publication in A&A (9 pages, 3
figures, 6 tables
Problematising the discourses of the dominant: whiteness and reconciliation
This article investigates how underlying forms of power can affect the political actions of those in the dominant group, in this case white Australians. To do this we identify connections between the discourses used by white Australians involved in Reconciliation, the power and privilege of whiteness in Australia, and participants’ understandings and actions towards Reconciliation. Using Parker’s (1992) approach to discourse analysis, four discourses were identified from interviews and focus groups with white Australians involved in Reconciliation. These were labelled ‘indigenous project’, ‘institutional change’, ‘challenging racism’, and ‘bringing them together’. We argue that understanding the power relations that underlie the political actions of those in dominant positions is critical to ensuring the goals of anti-racism are achieved. Discourse analysis may allow us to gain a deeper understanding of the power and the potential impacts that may flow from particular positions and how power may be made more visible to the dominant group
Developing reading-writing connections; the impact of explicit instruction of literary devices on the quality of children's narrative writing
The purpose of this collaborative schools-university study was to investigate how the explicit instruction of literary devices during designated literacy sessions could improve the quality of children's narrative writing. A guiding question for the study was: Can children's writing can be enhanced by teachers drawing attention to the literary devices used by professional writers or “mentor authors”? The study was conducted with 18 teachers, working as research partners in nine elementary schools over one school year. The research group explored ways of developing children as reflective authors, able to draft and redraft writing in response to peer and teacher feedback. Daily literacy sessions were complemented by weekly writing workshops where students engaged in authorial activity and experienced writers' perspectives and readers' demands (Harwayne, 1992; May, 2004). Methods for data collection included video recording of peer-peer and teacher-led group discussions and audio recording of teacher-child conferences. Samples of children's narrative writing were collected and a comparison was made between the quality of their independent writing at the beginning and end of the research period. The research group documented the importance of peer-peer and teacher-student discourse in the development of children's metalanguage and awareness of audience. The study suggests that reading, discussing, and evaluating mentor texts can have a positive impact on the quality of children's independent writing
The double sub-giant branch of NGC 6656 (M22): a chemical characterization
We present an abundance analysis of 101 subgiant branch (SGB) stars in the
globular cluster M22. Using low resolution FLAMES/GIRAFFE spectra we have
determined abundances of the neutron-capture strontium and barium and the light
element carbon. With these data we explore relationships between the observed
SGB photometric split in this cluster and two stellar groups characterized by
different contents of iron, slow neutron-capture process (s-process) elements,
and the alpha element calcium, that we previously discovered in M22's red-giant
stars. We show that the SGB stars correlate in chemical composition and
color-magnitude diagram position: the stars with higher metallicity and
relative s-process abundances define a fainter SGB, while stars with lower
metallicity and s-process content reside on a relatively brighter SGB. This
result has implications for the relative ages of the two stellar groups of M22.
In particular, it is inconsistent with a large spread in ages of the two SGBs.
By accounting for the chemical content of the two stellar groups, isochrone
fitting of the double SGB suggests that their ages are not different by more
than 300 Myr.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Inositol 5-Phosphatase dOCRL Controls PI(4,5)P2 Homeostasis and Is Necessary for Cytokinesis
SummaryDuring cytokinesis, constriction of an equatorial actomyosin ring physically separates the two daughter cells. At the cleavage furrow, the phosphoinositide PI(4,5)P2 plays an important role by recruiting and regulating essential proteins of the cytokinesis machinery [1]. Accordingly, perturbation of PI(4,5)P2 regulation leads to abortive furrowing and binucleation [2–4]. To determine how PI(4,5)P2 is regulated during cytokinesis, we individually knocked down each of the enzymes controlling the phosphoinositide (PIP) cycle in Drosophila. We show that depletion of the Drosophila ortholog of human oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe 1 (OCRL1), an inositol 5-phosphatase mutated in the X-linked disorder oculocerebrorenal Lowe syndrome, triggers a high rate of cytokinesis failure. In absence of dOCRL, several essential components of the cleavage furrow were found to be incorrectly localized on giant cytoplasmic vacuoles rich in PI(4,5)P2 and in endocytic markers. We demonstrate that dOCRL is associated with endosomes and that it dephosphorylates PI(4,5)P2 on internal membranes to restrict this phosphoinositide at the plasma membrane and thereby regulates cleavage furrow formation and ingression. Identification of dOCRL as essential for cell division may be important to understand the molecular basis of the phenotypic manifestations of Lowe syndrome
Multiphoton Quantum Optics and Quantum State Engineering
We present a review of theoretical and experimental aspects of multiphoton
quantum optics. Multiphoton processes occur and are important for many aspects
of matter-radiation interactions that include the efficient ionization of atoms
and molecules, and, more generally, atomic transition mechanisms;
system-environment couplings and dissipative quantum dynamics; laser physics,
optical parametric processes, and interferometry. A single review cannot
account for all aspects of such an enormously vast subject. Here we choose to
concentrate our attention on parametric processes in nonlinear media, with
special emphasis on the engineering of nonclassical states of photons and
atoms. We present a detailed analysis of the methods and techniques for the
production of genuinely quantum multiphoton processes in nonlinear media, and
the corresponding models of multiphoton effective interactions. We review
existing proposals for the classification, engineering, and manipulation of
nonclassical states, including Fock states, macroscopic superposition states,
and multiphoton generalized coherent states. We introduce and discuss the
structure of canonical multiphoton quantum optics and the associated one- and
two-mode canonical multiphoton squeezed states. This framework provides a
consistent multiphoton generalization of two-photon quantum optics and a
consistent Hamiltonian description of multiphoton processes associated to
higher-order nonlinearities. Finally, we discuss very recent advances that by
combining linear and nonlinear optical devices allow to realize multiphoton
entangled states of the electromnagnetic field, that are relevant for
applications to efficient quantum computation, quantum teleportation, and
related problems in quantum communication and information.Comment: 198 pages, 36 eps figure
Recent developments in German corporate governance.
This paper provides an overview of the German corporate governance system. We review the governance role of large shareholders, creditors, the product market and the supervisory board. We also discuss the importance of mergers and acquisitions, the market in block trades, and the lack of a hostile takeover market. Given that Germany is often referred to as a bank-based economy, we pay particular attention to the role of the universal banks (Hausbanken). We show that the German system is characterised by a market for partial corporate control, large shareholders and bank/creditor monitoring, a two-tier (management and supervisory) board with co-determination between shareholders and employees on the supervisory board, a disciplinary product-market, and corporate governance regulation largely based on EU directives but with deep roots in the German codes and legal doctrine. Another important feature of the German system is its corporate governance efficiency criterion which is focused on the maximisation of stakeholder value rather than shareholder value. However, the German corporate governance system has experienced many important changes over the last decade. First, the relationship between ownership or control concentration and profitability has changed over time. Second, the pay-for-performance relation is influenced by large shareholder control: in firms with controlling blockholders and when a universal bank is simultaneously an equity- and debtholder, the pay-for-performance relation is lower than in widely-held firms or blockholder-controlled firms. Third, since 1995 several major regulatory initiatives (including voluntary codes) have increased transparency and accountability
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