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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Small-Scale X-Ray Variability In The Cassiopeia A Supernova Remnant, Daniel J. Patnaude, Robert A. Fesen Dec 2007

Small-Scale X-Ray Variability In The Cassiopeia A Supernova Remnant, Daniel J. Patnaude, Robert A. Fesen

Dartmouth Scholarship

A comparison of X-ray observations of the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant taken in 2000, 2002, and 2004 with the Chandra ACIS-S3 reveals the presence of several small-scale features (≤10'') that exhibit significant intensity changes over a 4 yr time frame. Here we report on the variability of six features, four of which show count rate increases from ~10% to over 90%, and two of which show decreases of ~30%-40%. While extracted 1-4.5 keV X-ray spectra do not reveal gross changes in emission-line strengths, spectral fits using nonequilibrium-ionization, metal-rich plasma models indicate increased or decreased electron temperatures for features showing increasing …


Two's Company, Three's A Crowd: Stable Family And Threesome Roommates Problems, Chien-Chung Huang Dec 2007

Two's Company, Three's A Crowd: Stable Family And Threesome Roommates Problems, Chien-Chung Huang

Computer Science Technical Reports

We investigate Knuth's eleventh open question on stable matchings. In the stable family problem, sets of women, men, and dogs are given, all of whom state their preferences among the other two groups. The goal is to organize them into family units, so that no three of them have the incentive to desert their assigned family members to form a new family. A similar problem, called the threesome roommates problem, assumes that a group of persons, each with their preferences among the combinations of two others, are to be partitioned into triples. Similarly, the goal is to make sure that …


Exclusion And Object Tracking In A Network Of Processes, Yih-Kuen Tsay, Chien-Chung Huang Dec 2007

Exclusion And Object Tracking In A Network Of Processes, Yih-Kuen Tsay, Chien-Chung Huang

Computer Science Technical Reports

This paper concerns two fundamental problems in distributed computing---mutual exclusion and mobile object tracking. For a variant of the mutual exclusion problem where the network topology is taken into account, all existing distributed solutions make use of tokens. It turns out that these token-based solutions for mutual exclusion can also be adapted for object tracking, as the token behaves very much like a mobile object. To handle objects with replication, we go further to consider the more general $k$-exclusion problem which has not been as well studied in a network setting. A strong fairness property for $k$-exclusion requires that a …


Privacy In Location Aware Computing Environments, Denise Anthony, Tristan Henderson, David Kotz Dec 2007

Privacy In Location Aware Computing Environments, Denise Anthony, Tristan Henderson, David Kotz

Dartmouth Scholarship

As location-aware and pervasive computing technologies become more prevalent, privacy concerns are becoming increasingly more important. User preferences about location privacy may depend on place, not only in terms of their physical location but also in terms of their social context: how they define where they are, what they are doing, and whom they are with at the time. Using the experience sampling method, the authors explored the privacy preferences of 25 users during one week. They found that participants were more willing to share location information when at home or alone than when at other locations or with friends. …


Auroral Ion Outflow: Low Altitude Energization, Kristina A. Lynch, J. L. Semeter, M. Zettergren, P. Kintner, R. Arnoldy, E. Klatt, J. Labelle, R. G. Michell Oct 2007

Auroral Ion Outflow: Low Altitude Energization, Kristina A. Lynch, J. L. Semeter, M. Zettergren, P. Kintner, R. Arnoldy, E. Klatt, J. Labelle, R. G. Michell

Dartmouth Scholarship

The SIERRA nightside auroral sounding rocket made observations of the origins of ion upflow, at topside F-region altitudes (below 700 km), comparatively large topside plasma densities (above 20 000/cc), and low energies (10 eV). Upflowing ions with bulk velocities up to 2 km/s are seen in conjunction with the poleward edge of a nightside substorm arc. The upflow is limited within the poleward edge to a region (a) of northward convection, (b) where Alfvenic ´ and Pedersen conductivities are well-matched, leading to good ionospheric transmission of Alfvenic power, and (c) of ´ soft electron precipitation (below 100 eV). Models of …


Blacklistable Anonymous Credentials: Blocking Misbehaving Users Without Ttps (Extended Version), Patrick P. Tsang, Man Ho Au, Apu Kapadia, Sean W. Smith Sep 2007

Blacklistable Anonymous Credentials: Blocking Misbehaving Users Without Ttps (Extended Version), Patrick P. Tsang, Man Ho Au, Apu Kapadia, Sean W. Smith

Computer Science Technical Reports

Several credential systems have been proposed in which users can authenticate to services anonymously. Since anonymity can give users the license to misbehave, some variants allow the selective deanonymization (or linking) of misbehaving users upon a complaint to a trusted third party (TTP). The ability of the TTP to revoke a user's privacy at any time, however, is too strong a punishment for misbehavior. To limit the scope of deanonymization, systems such as ``e-cash'' have been proposed in which users are deanonymized under only certain types of well-defined misbehavior such as ``double spending.'' While useful in some applications, it is …


Yasir: A Low-Latency, High-Integrity Security Retrofit For Legacy Scada Systems, Patrick P. Tsang, Sean W. Smith Sep 2007

Yasir: A Low-Latency, High-Integrity Security Retrofit For Legacy Scada Systems, Patrick P. Tsang, Sean W. Smith

Computer Science Technical Reports

We construct a bump-in-the-wire (BITW) solution that retrofits security into time-critical communications over bandwidth-limited serial links between devices in Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems. Previous BITW solutions fail to provide the necessary security within timing constraints; the previous solution that does provide the necessary security is not BITW. At a comparable hardware cost, our BITW solution provides sufficient security, and yet incurs minimal end-to-end communication latency. A microcontroller prototype of our solution is under development.


The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters: M54 And Young Populations In The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy, Michael H. Siegel, Aaron Dotter, Steven R. Majewski, Ata Sarajedini, Brian Chaboyer, David L. Nidever, Jay Anderson, Antonio Martin-French, Alfred Rosenberg, Luigi R. Bedin, Antonio Aparicio, Ivan King, Giampolo Piotto, I. Neill Reid Sep 2007

The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters: M54 And Young Populations In The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy, Michael H. Siegel, Aaron Dotter, Steven R. Majewski, Ata Sarajedini, Brian Chaboyer, David L. Nidever, Jay Anderson, Antonio Martin-French, Alfred Rosenberg, Luigi R. Bedin, Antonio Aparicio, Ivan King, Giampolo Piotto, I. Neill Reid

Dartmouth Scholarship

As part of the ACS Survey of Galactic Globular Clusters, we present new Hubble Space Telescope photometry of the massive globular cluster M54 (NGC 6715) and the superposed core of the tidally disrupted Sagittarius (Sgr) dSph galaxy. Our deep (F606W ~ 26.5), high-precision photometry yields an unprecedentedly detailed color-magnitude diagram showing the extended blue horizontal branch and multiple main sequences of the M54+Sgr system. The distance and reddening to M54 are revised using both isochrone and main-sequence fitting to (m - M)0 = 17.27 and E(B - V) = 0.15. Preliminary assessment finds the …


Video Stabilization And Enhancement, Hany Farid, Jeffrey B. Woodward Sep 2007

Video Stabilization And Enhancement, Hany Farid, Jeffrey B. Woodward

Computer Science Technical Reports

We describe a simple and computationally efficient approach for video stabilization and enhancement. By combining multiple low-quality video frames, it is possible to extract a high-quality still image. This technique is particularly helpful in identifying people, license plates, etc. from low-quality video surveillance cameras.


Stellar Population Models And Individual Element Abundances. I. Sensitivity Of Stellar Evolution Models, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Jason W. Ferguson, Hyun-Chul Lee Sep 2007

Stellar Population Models And Individual Element Abundances. I. Sensitivity Of Stellar Evolution Models, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Jason W. Ferguson, Hyun-Chul Lee

Dartmouth Scholarship

Integrated light from distant galaxies is often compared to stellar population models via the equivalent widths of spectral features—spectral indices—whose strengths rely on the abundances of one or more elements. Such comparisons hinge not only on the overall metal abundance, but also on relative abundances. Studies have examined the influence of individual elements on synthetic spectra but little has been done to address similar issues in the stellar evolution models that underlie most stellar population models. Stellar evolution models will primarily be influenced by changes in opacities. In order to explore this issue in detail, 12 sets of stellar evolution …


Evaluating Opportunistic Routing Protocols With Large Realistic Contact Traces, Libo Song, David Kotz Sep 2007

Evaluating Opportunistic Routing Protocols With Large Realistic Contact Traces, Libo Song, David Kotz

Dartmouth Scholarship

Traditional mobile ad hoc network (MANET) routing protocols assume that contemporaneous end-to-end communication paths exist between data senders and receivers. In some mobile ad hoc networks with a sparse node population, an end-to-end communication path may break frequently or may not exist at any time. Many routing protocols have been proposed in the literature to address the problem, but few were evaluated in a realistic “opportunistic” network setting. We use simulation and contact traces (derived from logs in a production network) to evaluate and compare five existing protocols: direct-delivery, epidemic, random, PRoPHET, and Link-State, as well as our own proposed …


Hydrodynamic And Magnetohydrodynamic Computations Inside A Rotating Sphere, P. D. Mininni, D. C. Montgomery, L. Turner Aug 2007

Hydrodynamic And Magnetohydrodynamic Computations Inside A Rotating Sphere, P. D. Mininni, D. C. Montgomery, L. Turner

Dartmouth Scholarship

Numerical solutions of the incompressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations are reported for the interior of a rotating, perfectly-conducting, rigid spherical shell that is insulator-coated on the inside. A previously-reported spectral method is used which relies on a Galerkin expansion in Chandrasekhar–Kendall vector eigenfunctions of the curl. The new ingredient in this set of computations is the rigid rotation of the sphere. After a few purely hydrodynamic examples are sampled (spin down, Ekman pumping, inertial waves), attention is focused on selective decay and the MHD dynamo problem. In dynamo runs, prescribed mechanical forcing excites a persistent velocity field, usually turbulent at modest …


Displacement Detection With A Vibrating Rf Superconducting Interference Device: Beating The Standard Linear Limit, Eyal Buks, Stav Zaitsev, Eran Segev, Baleegh Abdo, M. P. Blencowe Aug 2007

Displacement Detection With A Vibrating Rf Superconducting Interference Device: Beating The Standard Linear Limit, Eyal Buks, Stav Zaitsev, Eran Segev, Baleegh Abdo, M. P. Blencowe

Dartmouth Scholarship

We study a configuration for displacement detection consisting of a nanomechanical resonator coupled to both a radio frequency superconducting interference device and to a superconducting stripline resonator. We employ an adiabatic approximation and rotating wave approximation and calculate the displacement sensitivity. We study the performance of such a displacement detector when the stripline resonator is driven into a region of nonlinear oscillations. In this region the system exhibits noise squeezing in the output signal when homodyne detection is employed for readout. We show that displacement sensitivity of the device in this region may exceed the upper bound imposed upon the …


Bubbling The False Vacuum Away, M. Gleiser, B. Rogers, J. Thorarinson Aug 2007

Bubbling The False Vacuum Away, M. Gleiser, B. Rogers, J. Thorarinson

Dartmouth Scholarship

We investigate the role of nonperturbative, bubble-like inhomogeneities on the decay rate of false- vacuum states in two and three-dimensional scalar field theories. The inhomogeneities are induced by setting up large-amplitude oscillations of the field about the false vacuum as, for example, after a rapid quench or in certain models of cosmological inflation. We show that, for a wide range of parameters, the presence of large-amplitude bubble-like inhomogeneities greatly accelerates the de- cay rate, changing it from the well-known exponential suppression of homogeneous nucleation to a power-law suppression. It is argued that this fast, power-law vacuum decay – known as …


Dynamical Modelling Of Luminous And Dark Matter In 17 Coma Early-Type Galaxies, J. Thomas, R. O. Saglia, R. Bender, D. Thomas, J K. Gebhardt, J. Magorrian, E. M. Corsini, G. Wegner Aug 2007

Dynamical Modelling Of Luminous And Dark Matter In 17 Coma Early-Type Galaxies, J. Thomas, R. O. Saglia, R. Bender, D. Thomas, J K. Gebhardt, J. Magorrian, E. M. Corsini, G. Wegner

Dartmouth Scholarship

Dynamical models for 17 early‐type galaxies in the Coma cluster are presented. The galaxy sample consists of flattened, rotating as well as non‐rotating early‐types including cD and S0 galaxies with luminosities between MB=−18.79 and −22.56. Kinematical long‐slit observations cover at least the major‐axis and minor‐axis and extend to 1–4reff. Axisymmetric Schwarzschild models are used to derive stellar mass‐to‐light ratios and dark halo parameters. In every galaxy, the best fit with dark matter matches the data better than the best fit without. The statistical significance is over 95 per cent for eight galaxies, around 90 per …


The Power Of Strong Fourier Sampling: Quantum Algorithms For Affine Groups And Hidden Shifts, Cristopher Moore, Daniel Rockmore, Alexander Russell, Leonard J. Schulman Aug 2007

The Power Of Strong Fourier Sampling: Quantum Algorithms For Affine Groups And Hidden Shifts, Cristopher Moore, Daniel Rockmore, Alexander Russell, Leonard J. Schulman

Dartmouth Scholarship

Many quantum algorithms, including Shor’s celebrated factoring and discrete log algorithms, proceed by reduction to a hidden subgroup problem, in which an unknown subgroupH of a group G must be determined from a quantum state ψ over G that is uniformly supported on a left coset of H. These hidden subgroup problems are typically solved by Fourier sampling: the quantum Fourier transform of ψ is computed and measured. When the underlying group is nonabelian, two important variants of the Fourier sampling paradigm have been identified: the weak standard method, where only representation names are measured, and the strong standard method, …


Fast-Converging Tatonnement Algorithms For The Market Problem, R Cole, L Fleischer Aug 2007

Fast-Converging Tatonnement Algorithms For The Market Problem, R Cole, L Fleischer

Computer Science Technical Reports

Why might markets tend toward and remain near equilibrium prices? In an effort to shed light on this question from an algorithmic perspective, this paper defines and analyzes two simple tatonnement algorithms that differ from previous algorithms that have been subject to asymptotic analysis in three significant respects: the price update for a good depends only on the price, demand, and supply for that good, and on no other information; the price update for each good occurs distributively and asynchronously; the algorithms work (and the analyses hold) from an arbitrary starting point. Our algorithm introduces a new and natural update …


Phase Transition In U(1) Configuration Space: Oscillons As Remnants Of Vortex-Antivortex Annihilation, M. Gleiser, J. Thorarinson Aug 2007

Phase Transition In U(1) Configuration Space: Oscillons As Remnants Of Vortex-Antivortex Annihilation, M. Gleiser, J. Thorarinson

Dartmouth Scholarship

We show that the annihilation of vortex-antivortex pairs can lead to very long-lived oscillon states in 2d Abelian Higgs models. The emergence of oscillons is controlled by the ratio of scalar and vector field masses, β=(ms/mv)2 and can be described as a phase transition in field configuration space with critical value βc≃0.13(6)±2: only models with βO(β)∼|β−βc|o, where O is an order parameter indicating the presence of oscillons and o=0.2(2)±2 is the critical exponent.


The Shift From Defined Benefit Pensions To 401(K) Plans And The Pension Assets Of The Baby Boom Cohort, James Poterba, Steven Venti, David A. Wise Aug 2007

The Shift From Defined Benefit Pensions To 401(K) Plans And The Pension Assets Of The Baby Boom Cohort, James Poterba, Steven Venti, David A. Wise

Dartmouth Scholarship

The rise of 401(k) plans and the decline of defined benefit plans will have an important effect on the wealth of future retirees. Changing demographic structure also will affect the aggregate stock of retirement wealth. We project the stock of assets held in retirement plans and the average retirement saving of retirees through 2040. Our projections show large increases in wealth at retirement, especially if the returns on corporate equities are comparable with historical returns. Retirement wealth will grow, however, even if equity returns fall substantially below their historical level.


Mixing And Homogenization In The Early Solar System: Clues From Sr, Ba, Nd, And Sm Isotopes In Meteorites, Rasmus Andreasen, Mukul Sharma Aug 2007

Mixing And Homogenization In The Early Solar System: Clues From Sr, Ba, Nd, And Sm Isotopes In Meteorites, Rasmus Andreasen, Mukul Sharma

Dartmouth Scholarship

High-precision barium isotopic compositions of large samples of an ordinary chondrite and a eucrite are identical to the terrestrial values. In contrast, the carbonaceous chondrites reveal excesses in 135Ba and 137Ba of around +39 and +22 parts per million (ppm), respectively; no anomalies are resolvable in 130,132,138Ba. High-precision Sr isotopic compositions of all meteorites are identical within error. The data are consistent with the carbonaceous chondrites having an excess in the r-process 135,137Ba with respect to Earth, eucrite parent bodies, and ordinary chondrites. The carbonaceous chondrites, however, display no variation in the r- and …


Microbial Nitrogen Limitation Increases Decomposition, Joseph M. Craine, Carl Morrow, Noah Fierer Aug 2007

Microbial Nitrogen Limitation Increases Decomposition, Joseph M. Craine, Carl Morrow, Noah Fierer

Dartmouth Scholarship

With anthropogenic nutrient inputs to ecosystems increasing globally, there are long-standing, fundamental questions about the role of nutrients in the decomposition of organic matter. We tested the effects of exogenous nitrogen and phosphorus inputs on litter decomposition across a broad suite of litter and soil types. In one experiment, C mineralization was compared across a wide array of plants individually added to a single soil, while in the second, C mineralization from a single substrate was compared across 50 soils. Counter to basic stoichiometric decomposition theory, low N availability can increase litter decomposition as microbes use labile substrates to acquire …


Periodic Properties Of User Mobility And Access-Point Popularity, Minkyong Kim, David Kotz Aug 2007

Periodic Properties Of User Mobility And Access-Point Popularity, Minkyong Kim, David Kotz

Dartmouth Scholarship

Understanding user mobility and its effect on access points (APs) is important in designing location-aware systems and wireless networks. Although various studies of wireless networks have provided useful insights, it is hard to apply them to other situations. Here we present a general methodology for extracting mobility information from wireless network traces, and for classifying mobile users and APs. We used the Fourier transform to reveal important periods and chose the two strongest periods to serve as parameters to a classification system based on Bayes' theory. Analysis of 1-month traces shows that while a daily pattern is common among both …


A High-Resolution Ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum Of Supernova Ejecta In Sn1006, Andrew J. S. Hamilton, Robert A. Fesen, William P. Blair Jul 2007

A High-Resolution Ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum Of Supernova Ejecta In Sn1006, Andrew J. S. Hamilton, Robert A. Fesen, William P. Blair

Dartmouth Scholarship

We report a high-resolution, far-ultraviolet, Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) E140M spectrum of the strong, broad Siii, iii and iv features produced by the ejecta of the supernova of 1006 ad (SN1006) seen in absorption against the background Schweizer–Middleditch OB subdwarf star. The spectrum confirms the extreme sharpness of the red edge of the redshifted Si ii 1260 Å feature, supporting the idea that this edge represents the location of the reverse shock moving into the freely expanding Si-rich ejecta. The expansion velocity of ejecta at the reverse shock is measured to be 7026 ± 3(relative) ±10(absolute) km s−1 …


Secure Cryptographic Precomputation With Insecure Memory, Patrick P. Tsang, Sean W. Smith Jul 2007

Secure Cryptographic Precomputation With Insecure Memory, Patrick P. Tsang, Sean W. Smith

Computer Science Technical Reports

Precomputation dramatically reduces the execution latency of many cryptographic algorithms. To sustain the reduced latency over time during which these algorithms are routinely invoked, however, a pool of precomputation results must be stored and be readily available. While precomputation is an old and well-known technique, how to securely and yet efficiently store these precomputation results has largely been ignored. For instance, requiring tamper-proof memory would be too expensive, if not unrealistic, for precomputation to be cost-effective. In this paper, we propose an architecture that provides secure storage for cryptographic precomputation using only insecure memory, which may be eavesdropped or even …


Quantum Analysis Of A Linear Dc Squid Mechanical Displacement Detector, M. P. Blencowe, E. Buks Jul 2007

Quantum Analysis Of A Linear Dc Squid Mechanical Displacement Detector, M. P. Blencowe, E. Buks

Dartmouth Scholarship

We provide a quantum analysis of a dc SQUID mechanical displacement detector within the subcritical Josephson current regime. A segment of the SQUID loop forms the mechanical resonator and motion of the latter is transduced inductively through changes in the flux threading the loop. Expressions are derived for the detector signal response and noise, which are used to evaluate the position and force detection sensitivity. We also investigate cooling of the mechanical resonator due to detector back reaction.


Constraints On A New Post-General Relativity Cosmological Parameter, Robert Caldwell, Asantha Cooray, Alessandro Melchiorri Jul 2007

Constraints On A New Post-General Relativity Cosmological Parameter, Robert Caldwell, Asantha Cooray, Alessandro Melchiorri

Dartmouth Scholarship

A new cosmological variable is introduced to characterize the degree of departure from Einstein’s general relativity with a cosmological constant. The new parameter, ϖ, is the cosmological analog of γ, the parametrized post-Newtonian variable which measures the amount of spacetime curvature per unit mass. In the cosmological context, ϖ measures the difference between the Newtonian and longitudinal potentials in response to the same matter sources, as occurs in certain scalar-tensor theories of gravity. Equivalently, ϖ measures the scalar shear fluctuation in a dark-energy component. In the context of a vanilla, cosmological constant-dominated universe, a nonzero ϖ signals a departure from …


Light-Based Sample Reduction Methods For Interactive Relighting Of Scenes With Minute Geometric Scale, William B. Kerr, Fabio Pellacini Jul 2007

Light-Based Sample Reduction Methods For Interactive Relighting Of Scenes With Minute Geometric Scale, William B. Kerr, Fabio Pellacini

Computer Science Technical Reports

Rendering production-quality cinematic scenes requires high computational and temporal costs. From an artist's perspective, one must wait for several hours for feedback on even minute changes of light positions and parameters. Previous work approximates scenes so that adjustments on lights may be carried out with interactive feedback, so long as geometry and materials remain constant. We build on these methods by proposing means by which objects with high geometric complexity at the subpixel level, such as hair and foliage, can be approximated for real-time cinematic relighting. Our methods make no assumptions about the geometry or shaders in a scene, and …


A Global Mhd Simulation Of An Event With A Quasi-Steady Northward Imf Component, V G. Merkin, J G. Lyon, B J. Anderson, H Korth, C C. Goodrich, K Papadopoulos Jun 2007

A Global Mhd Simulation Of An Event With A Quasi-Steady Northward Imf Component, V G. Merkin, J G. Lyon, B J. Anderson, H Korth, C C. Goodrich, K Papadopoulos

Dartmouth Scholarship

We show results of the Lyon-Fedder-Mobarry (LFM) global MHD simulations of an event previously ex- amined using Iridium spacecraft observations as well as DMSP and IMAGE FUV data. The event is chosen for the steady northward IMF sustained over a three-hour pe- riod during 16 July 2000. The Iridium observations showed very weak or absent Region 2 currents in the ionosphere, which makes the event favorable for global MHD model- ing. Here we are interested in examining the model’s per- formace during weak magnetospheric forcing, in particular, its ability to reproduce gross signatures of the ionospheric currents and convection pattern …


The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Ii. Stellar Evolution Tracks, Isochrones, Luminosity Functions, And Synthetic Horizontal-Branch Models, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Darko Jevremović, E. Baron Jun 2007

The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Ii. Stellar Evolution Tracks, Isochrones, Luminosity Functions, And Synthetic Horizontal-Branch Models, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Darko Jevremović, E. Baron

Dartmouth Scholarship

The ACS Survey of Galactic Globular Clusters, an HST Treasury Project, will deliver high-quality, homogeneous photometry of 65 globular clusters. This paper introduces a new collection of stellar evolution tracks and isochrones suitable for analyzing the ACS survey data. Stellar evolution models were computed at [Fe/H] = -2.5, -2.0, -1.5, -1.0, -0.5, and 0; [α/Fe] = -0.2, 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, and 0.8; and three initial He abundances for masses from 0.1 to 1.8 M and ages from 2 to 15 Gyr. Each isochrone spans a wide range in luminosity, from MV ~ 14 up to the tip …


A Combined Routing Method For Wireless Ad Hoc Networks, Soumendra Nanda, Zhenhui Jiang, David Kotz Jun 2007

A Combined Routing Method For Wireless Ad Hoc Networks, Soumendra Nanda, Zhenhui Jiang, David Kotz

Computer Science Technical Reports

To make ad hoc wireless networks adaptive to different mobility and traffic patterns, this paper proposes an approach to swap from one protocol to another protocol dynamically, while routing continues. By the insertion of a thin new layer, we were able to make each node in the ad hoc wireless network notify each other about the protocol swap. To ensure that routing works efficiently after the protocol swap, we initialized the destination routing protocol's data structures and reused the previous routing information to build the new routing table. We also tested our approach under different network topologies and traffic patterns …