386,278 research outputs found
Reexamining the "finite-size" effects in isobaric yield ratios using a statistical abrasion-ablation model
The "finite-size" effects in the isobaric yield ratio (IYR), which are shown
in the standard grand-canonical and canonical statistical ensembles (SGC/CSE)
method, is claimed to prevent obtaining the actual values of physical
parameters. The conclusion of SGC/CSE maybe questionable for neutron-rich
nucleus induced reaction. To investigate whether the IYR has "finite-size"
effects, the IYR for the mirror nuclei [IYR(m)] are reexamined using a modified
statistical abrasion-ablation (SAA) model. It is found when the projectile is
not so neutron-rich, the IYR(m) depends on the isospin of projectile, but the
size dependence can not be excluded. In reactions induced by the very
neutron-rich projectiles, contrary results to those of the SGC/CSE models are
obtained, i.e., the dependence of the IYR(m) on the size and the isospin of the
projectile is weakened and disappears both in the SAA and the experimental
results.Comment: 5 pages and 4 figure
Pyrite oxidation under initially neutral pH conditions and in the presence of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and micromolar hydrogen peroxide
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) at a micromolar level played a role in the microbial surface oxidation of pyrite crystals under initially neutral pH. When the mineral-bacteria system
was cyclically exposed to 50 μM H2O2, the colonization of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans onto the mineral surface was markedly enhanced, as compared to the control(no added H2O2). This can be attributed to the effects of H2O2 on increasing the roughness of the mineral surfaces, as well as the acidity and Fe2+ concentration at the mineral-solution interfaces. All of these effects tended to create more favourable nanoto micro-scale environments in the mineral surfaces for the cell adsorption. However, higher H2O2 levels inhibited the attachment of cells onto the mineral surfaces, possibly due to the oxidative stress in the bacteria when they approached the mineral surfaces
where high levels of free radicals are present as a result of Fenton-like reactions. The more aggressive nature of H2O2 as an oxidant caused marked surface flaking of the
mineral surface. The XPS results suggest that H2O2 accelerated the oxidation of pyrite-S and consequently facilitated the overall corrosion cycle of pyrite surfaces. This was accompanied by pH drop in the solution in contact with the pyrite cubes
Cenozoic plate driving forces
Past studies of plate driving forces have concluded that the forces due to subducted slabs in the upper mantle and those due to the thickening of the oceanic lithosphere are the principal driving forces. We reexamine the balance of driving forces for the present-day and extend our analysis through the Cenozoic, using an analytical torque balance method which accounts for interactions between plates via viscous coupling to the induced mantle flow, We use an evolving mantle density heterogeneity field based on the last 200 Myr. of subduction to drive plate motions, an approach which has proven successful in predicting the present-day mantle heterogeneity field. We find that for plausible upper mantle viscosities the forces due to subducted slabs in the Cenozoic and Mesozoic account for in excess of 90% of plate driving forces and those due to lithospheric thickening for less than 10%
Inherent robustness of discrete-time adaptive control systems
Global stability robustness with respect to unmodeled dynamics, arbitrary bounded internal noise, as well as external disturbance is shown to exist for a class of discrete-time adaptive control systems when the regressor vectors of these systems are persistently exciting. Although fast adaptation is definitely undesirable, so far as attaining the greatest amount of global stability robustness is concerned, slow adaptation is shown to be not necessarily beneficial. The entire analysis in this paper holds for systems with slowly varying return difference matrices; the plants in these systems need not be slowly varying
Analysis of the contour structural irregularity of skin lesions using wavelet decomposition
The boundary irregularity of skin lesions is of clinical significance for the early detection of
malignant melanomas and to distinguish them from other lesions such as benign moles. The
structural components of the contour are of particular importance. To extract the structure from
the contour, wavelet decomposition was used as these components tend to locate in the lower
frequency sub-bands. Lesion contours were modeled as signatures with scale normalization to
give position and frequency resolution invariance. Energy distributions among different wavelet
sub-bands were then analyzed to extract those with significant levels and differences to enable
maximum discrimination.
Based on the coefficients in the significant sub-bands, structural components from the original
contours were modeled, and a set of statistical and geometric irregularity descriptors researched
that were applied at each of the significant sub-bands. The effectiveness of the descriptors was
measured using the Hausdorff distance between sets of data from melanoma and mole contours.
The best descriptor outputs were input to a back projection neural network to construct a
combined classifier system. Experimental results showed that thirteen features from four
sub-bands produced the best discrimination between sets of melanomas and moles, and that a
small training set of nine melanomas and nine moles was optimum
QCD Factorization for Quarkonium Production in Hadron Collions at Low Transverse Momentum
Inclusive production of a quarkonium in hadron collisions at low
transverse momentum can be used to extract various
Transverse-Momentum-Dependent(TMD) gluon distributions of hadrons, provided the
TMD factorization for the process holds. The factorization involving
unpolarized TMD gluon distributions of unpolarized hadrons has been examined
with on-shell gluons at one-loop level. In this work we study the factorization
at one-loop level with diagram approach in the most general case, where all TMD
gluon distributions at leading twist are involved. We find that the
factorization holds and the perturbative effects are represented by one
perturbative coefficient. Since the initial gluons from hadrons are off-shell
in general, there exists the so-called super-leading region found recently. We
find that the contributions from this region can come from individual diagrams
at one-loop level, but they are cancelled in the sum. Our factorized result for
the differential cross-section is explicitly gauge-invariant.Comment: discussions and references are added. Published version on Phys. Rev.
Biometric identity-based cryptography for e-Government environment
Government information is a vital asset that must be kept in a trusted environment and efficiently managed by authorised parties. Even though e-Government provides a number of advantages, it also introduces a range of new security risks. Sharing confidential and top-secret information in a secure manner among government sectors tend to be the main element that government agencies look for. Thus, developing an effective methodology is essential and it is a key factor for e-Government success. The proposed e-Government scheme in this paper is a combination of identity-based encryption and biometric technology. This new scheme can effectively improve the security in authentication systems, which provides a reliable identity with a high degree of assurance. In addition, this paper demonstrates the feasibility of using Finite-state machines as a formal method to analyse the proposed protocols
Vertical absorption edge and universal onset conductance in semi-hydrogenated graphene
We show that for graphene with any finite difference in the on-site energy
between the two sub-lattices (), The optical absorption edge is
determined by the . The universal conductance will be broken and the
conductance near the band edge varies with frequency as . Moreover,
we have identified another universal conductance for such systems without
inversion symmetry, i.e., the onset conductance at the band edge is , independent of the size of the band gap. The
total integrated optical response is nearly conserved despite of the opening of
the band gap.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Integrating security and usability into the requirements and design process
According to Ross Anderson, 'Many systems fail because their designers protect the wrong things or protect the right things in the wrong way'. Surveys also show that security incidents in industry are rising, which highlights the difficulty of designing good security. Some recent approaches have targeted security from the technological perspective, others from the human–computer interaction angle, offering better User Interfaces (UIs) for improved usability of security mechanisms. However, usability issues also extend beyond the user interface and should be considered during system requirements and design. In this paper, we describe Appropriate and Effective Guidance for Information Security (AEGIS), a methodology for the development of secure and usable systems. AEGIS defines a development process and a UML meta-model of the definition and the reasoning over the system's assets. AEGIS has been applied to case studies in the area of Grid computing and we report on one of these
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