2,426 research outputs found
Symmetry and reciprocity constraints on diffraction by gratings of quasi-planar particles
Symmetry and reciprocity constraints on polarization state of the field
diffracted by gratings of quasi-planar particles are considered. It is shown
that the optical activity effects observed recently in arrays of quasi-planar
plasmonic particles on a dielectric substrate are due to the reflection of the
field at the air-dielectric slab interface and are proportional to this
reflection coefficient.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 12 references; minor corrections for better
appearanc
Backward-wave regime and negative refraction in chiral composites
Possibilities to realize a negative refraction in chiral composites in in
dual-phase mixtures of chiral and dipole particles is studied. It is shown that
because of strong resonant interaction between chiral particles (helixes) and
dipoles, there is a stop band in the frequency area where the backward-wave
regime is expected. The negative refraction can occur near the resonant
frequency of chiral particles. Resonant chiral composites may offer a root to
realization of negative-refraction effect and superlenses in the optical
region
Text Mining Online Discussions in an Introductory Physics Course
We implemented a social networking platform called Course Networking (CN) in IUPUI’s introductory calculus
based mechanics course and recorded three semesters of online discussions. We used the Syuzhet package
in R to evaluate sentiment in the recorded discussions, and to quantify the incidence of eight basic emotions:
anger, anticipation, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, surprise, and trust. We applied this text mining method to over
nine thousand posts and replies to identify and analyze student sentiment during three semesters. We also investigated
the variation of these emotions throughout the semester, the role played by the most vocal students as
compared to the least frequent posters, and gender differences. With an abundance of students’ online discussions,
text mining offers an expedient and automated means of analysis, providing a new window into students
thinking and emotional state during semester-long physics course
A Flexible Privacy-preserving Framework for Singular Value Decomposition under Internet of Things Environment
The singular value decomposition (SVD) is a widely used matrix factorization
tool which underlies plenty of useful applications, e.g. recommendation system,
abnormal detection and data compression. Under the environment of emerging
Internet of Things (IoT), there would be an increasing demand for data analysis
to better human's lives and create new economic growth points. Moreover, due to
the large scope of IoT, most of the data analysis work should be done in the
network edge, i.e. handled by fog computing. However, the devices which provide
fog computing may not be trustable while the data privacy is often the
significant concern of the IoT application users. Thus, when performing SVD for
data analysis purpose, the privacy of user data should be preserved. Based on
the above reasons, in this paper, we propose a privacy-preserving fog computing
framework for SVD computation. The security and performance analysis shows the
practicability of the proposed framework. Furthermore, since different
applications may utilize the result of SVD operation in different ways, three
applications with different objectives are introduced to show how the framework
could flexibly achieve the purposes of different applications, which indicates
the flexibility of the design.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Efficient noninteractive certification of RSA moduli and beyond
In many applications, it is important to verify that an RSA public key (N; e) speci es a
permutation over the entire space ZN, in order to prevent attacks due to adversarially-generated
public keys. We design and implement a simple and e cient noninteractive zero-knowledge
protocol (in the random oracle model) for this task. Applications concerned about adversarial
key generation can just append our proof to the RSA public key without any other modi cations
to existing code or cryptographic libraries. Users need only perform a one-time veri cation of
the proof to ensure that raising to the power e is a permutation of the integers modulo N. For
typical parameter settings, the proof consists of nine integers modulo N; generating the proof
and verifying it both require about nine modular exponentiations.
We extend our results beyond RSA keys and also provide e cient noninteractive zero-
knowledge proofs for other properties of N, which can be used to certify that N is suitable
for the Paillier cryptosystem, is a product of two primes, or is a Blum integer. As compared to
the recent work of Auerbach and Poettering (PKC 2018), who provide two-message protocols for
similar languages, our protocols are more e cient and do not require interaction, which enables
a broader class of applications.https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/057First author draf
Ubiquity of optical activity in planar metamaterial scatterers
Recently it was discovered that periodic lattices of metamaterial scatterers
show optical activity, even if the scatterers or lattice show no 2D or 3D
chirality, if the illumination breaks symmetry. In this Letter we demonstrate
that such `pseudo-chirality' is intrinsic to any single planar metamaterial
scatterer and in fact has a well-defined value at a universal bound. We argue
that in any circuit model, a nonzero electric and magnetic polarizability
derived from a single resonance automatically imply strong bianisotropy, i.e.,
magneto-electric cross polarizability at the universal bound set by energy
conservation. We confirm our claim by extracting polarizability tensors and
cross sections for handed excitation from transmission measurements on
near-infrared split ring arrays, and electrodynamic simulations for diverse
metamaterial scatterers.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Perturbation theory for anisotropic dielectric interfaces, and application to sub-pixel smoothing of discretized numerical methods
We derive a correct first-order perturbation theory in electromagnetism for
cases where an interface between two anisotropic dielectric materials is
slightly shifted. Most previous perturbative methods give incorrect results for
this case, even to lowest order, because of the complicated discontinuous
boundary conditions on the electric field at such an interface. Our final
expression is simply a surface integral, over the material interface, of the
continuous field components from the unperturbed structure. The derivation is
based on a "localized" coordinate-transformation technique, which avoids both
the problem of field discontinuities and the challenge of constructing an
explicit coordinate transformation by taking a limit in which a coordinate
perturbation is infinitesimally localized around the boundary. Not only is our
result potentially useful in evaluating boundary perturbations, e.g. from
fabrication imperfections, in highly anisotropic media such as many
metamaterials, but it also has a direct application in numerical
electromagnetism. In particular, we show how it leads to a sub-pixel smoothing
scheme to ameliorate staircasing effects in discretized simulations of
anisotropic media, in such a way as to greatly reduce the numerical errors
compared to other proposed smoothing schemes.Comment: 10 page
The Design and Validation of the Quantum Mechanics Conceptual Survey
The Quantum Mechanics Conceptual Survey (QMCS) is a 12-question survey of
students' conceptual understanding of quantum mechanics. It is intended to be
used to measure the relative effectiveness of different instructional methods
in modern physics courses. In this paper we describe the design and validation
of the survey, a process that included observations of students, a review of
previous literature and textbooks and syllabi, faculty and student interviews,
and statistical analysis. We also discuss issues in the development of specific
questions, which may be useful both for instructors who wish to use the QMCS in
their classes and for researchers who wish to conduct further research of
student understanding of quantum mechanics. The QMCS has been most thoroughly
tested in, and is most appropriate for assessment of (as a posttest only),
sophomore-level modern physics courses. We also describe testing with students
in junior quantum courses and graduate quantum courses, from which we conclude
that the QMCS may be appropriate for assessing junior quantum courses, but is
not appropriate for assessing graduate courses. One surprising result of our
faculty interviews is a lack of faculty consensus on what topics should be
taught in modern physics, which has made designing a test that is valued by a
majority of physics faculty more difficult than expected.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Special Topics: Physics Education
Researc
Anisotropy and oblique total transmission at a planar negative-index interface
We show that a class of negative index (n) materials has interesting
anisotropic optical properties, manifest in the effective refraction index that
can be positive, negative, or purely imaginary under different incidence
conditions. With dispersion taken into account, reflection at a planar
negative-index interface exhibits frequency selective total oblique
transmission that is distinct from the Brewster effect.
Finite-difference-time-domain simulation of realistic negative-n structures
confirms the analytic results based on effective indices.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev.
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