394 research outputs found
Spatial variations of radon and helium concentrations in soil-gas across the Shan-Chiao fault, Northern Taiwan
Spatial variability of gases like radon and helium in soil-gas can be used for seismic surveillance and for finding fault
system.The present study is aimed at determining a possible connection between eventual radon/helium anomalies and active
fault.Radon and helium concentrations in subsurface soil-gas have been monitored along the Shan-Chiao fault,Northern
Taiwan.Twenty transverse pro file surveys have been conducted across the fault,where 235 and 125 samples were collected
for helium and radon analyses,respectively.The data analysis clearly reveals anomalous values of both radon and helium
along the fault.To find the fault system,where the migration of gases is governed by advection,it is essential to identify the
anomalies in both radon and helium together.The consistency ofthis pattern con firms that radon and helium together can act
as a powerful tool for the detection and mapping of active fault zones
Robust decentralized authentication for public keys and geographic location:
Authentication has traditionally been done either in a decentralized manner with human assistance or automatically through a centralized security infrastructure. In the security infrastructure approach, a central trusted authority takes on the responsibility of authenticating participants within its domain of control. While the security infrastructure approach works well in traditional organizations, it does not address the needs of open membership systems.
We propose automatic decentralized authentication mechanisms for peer-to-peer systems, email systems, and ad-hoc networks. Our byzantine fault tolerant public-key authentication protocol (BPKA) provides decentralized authentication to peer-to-peer systems with honest majority. Authentication is done over an insecure asynchronous network without using trusted third parties or human input. We also authenticate public keys in the email environment through our social-group key authentication protocol (SGKA). The protocol provides end-to-end authentication at the email client without using infrastructure or centralized authorities. Finally, location authentication in ad-hoc networks is proposed through our geographical secure path routing protocol (GSPR). The protocol authenticates geographic locations of anonymous nodes in order to provide location authentication and anonymity simultaneously.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical references (p. 121o-128)by Vivek Patha
Conservational Analysis of Influenza A Virus RNA-dependent RNA Polymerase
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist. Copyright: 2015 Darapaneni V et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. *Correspondence to: Vivek Darapaneni, Department of virology and computational biochemistry, Sake
Debt maturity and firm performance : a panel study of Indian companies
Economic policy makers traditionally hold the view that, because of imperfections in capital markets, a shortage of long-term finance acts as a barrier to industrial performance and growth. Long term finance is thought to allow firms to invest in more productive technologies, even when they do not produce immediate payoffs, without fear of premature liquidation. As a result, special state-supported term-lending institutions have been established, especially in developing countries. But some believe that short-term finance may offer better incentives because it allows suppliers of finance to monitor and control firms more effectively, thus improving the firms'performance. The authors empirically investigate the determinants and consequences of the term structure of debt. Using a rich panel of data on privately owned companies in India, they also examine the influence of debt maturity structures on those firm's performance, especially on productivity. The results are not conclusive, but seem to support conventional beliefs about the importance of long term finance to firm performance. Heavy leveraging, however, has a strong negative impact on productivity. They base their econometric evidence on estimates of a maturity equation and of a production function augmented by financial variables. The data on which these results are based have been generated by a financial system in which there is little competition, in which state-owned financial institutions are not guided by the profit motive and have no control over interest rates, so one cannot say whether short term finance would have been more beneficial in a less regulated system. Moreover, by the end of the 1980s, the capital base of India's government-owned financial institutions had been severely eroded and they carried a heavy burden of nonperforming assets. This means that the benefits of long term finance must be weighed against the costs.Banks&Banking Reform,Financial Intermediation,Economic Theory&Research,Municipal Financial Management,Environmental Economics&Policies
Lattice approximation in the stochastic quantization of ([phi]4̳)2̳fields
Caption title. "August 1988." On the title page, the bracketed word in the title appears as the Greek mathematical symbol representing [phi], the numeral four preceded by a double underscore appears as superscript, and the numeral two preceded by a double underscore appears as subscript.Includes bibliographical references.The research of the second author was supported in part by the U.S. Army Research Office, contract DAAL03-86-K-0171 The research of the second author was supported in part by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under contract AFOSR-85-0227by Vivek S. Borkar, Sanjoy K. Mitter
On a 3GPP ray-based spatial channel model for MIMO system emulation: implementation and evaluation
The mitigation of random effects in a wireless communication channel is a problem considered for many years. In the present day context, given the ever increasing need for, and growth of, bandwidth intensive applications like streaming wireless HD video on fast moving user equipment (UEs, i.e., user communication devices), this issue has intensified from being a theoretical pursuit to a must-be-solved practical endeavor. In that regard, the ability to accurately model the outdoor (or indoor) propagation conditions in a laboratory setting becomes vital to validating state-of-the-art wireless standards and the devices that derive from them. Laboratory-based analysis is a significant catalyst in reducing the time-to-market for telecom equipment manufacturers. Modeling a wireless channel has been a topic under quite a bit of study. This has progressed from the Jakes model developed for single antenna systems to the correlation and ray-based models used for multiple antenna systems. The models prescribed by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) in its standards, like the ray-based model, aim to realistically reproduce channel environments in software and hardware, by incorporating all the variables that characterize any particular fading scenario. In this thesis, the technical report produced by 3GPP detailing the Spatial Channel Modeling (SCM) for multiple input multiple output (MIMO) simulations is followed closely as a basis for developing a real-time channel emulator on a National Instruments (NI) based Real Time (RT) Platform. First, a general purpose channel emulator is described in terms of its structure and functionality and currently known channel models are briefly investigated. Next, the spatial channel model in the standard is described in detail along with the reasons for choosing to use it in the thesis. All the parameters involved are defined, and the formula for constructing the channel is carefully investigated. Next, the channel emulator built on the National Instruments LabVIEW platform is described along with both the changes and modifications made to the design parameters so as to adapt it to the operating constraints of the RT platform. The spatial and temporal characteristics of the model are also described and plotted. Finally, the model is tested for reliability by methodically changing the various channel parameters and observing their effects on an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) test vector by generating BER performance plots in MATLAB. Diversity schemes are also employed to improve rate performance.M.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Sabarish Karthik Vivek Sarath
Review essay: Vivek Chibber, Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital
Thye article is a review essay of Vivek Chibber's recent book, Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital. The publication of this book has raised lively and highly polemical debates, which are also reviewed in the artifcle. More generally, the essay discusses at length the development and the achievements of subaltern studies, testing Chibber's critique and dismissal of this important strand of critical theory. At the center of the discussion is the relation between subaltern (and more generally postcolonial) studies and historical as well as contemporary capitalism. The author discusses this question as well as the related problem of the relation between capital and universalism, proposing ananalytical framework which radically differes from the one elaborated by Chibber
Vivek Chibber and the spectre of postcolonial theory
In this critical assessment of Vivek Chibber’s Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital, the author argues that the book contributes appreciably to the materialist critique of postcolonial studies, but that its effect is weakened both by its tone and its failure to identify its object precisely enough. In conflating the historiographic project of ‘Subaltern Studies’ with ‘postcolonial theory’, Chibber misrepresents the histories of each of these formations and also the institutional relationship between them. He is at his most compelling in his commentary on capital’s ‘universalising tendency’, in which he demonstrates that arguments about capitalist globalisation do not require one to anticipate an increased homogenisation of the world or, more narrowly still, the progressive universalisation of ‘western’ norms, values and modes of social life. His critique of the deep-set postcolonialist conviction as to the radical difference and incommensurability between ‘western’ and ‘non-western’ worlds is also very valuable. But because he does not utilise the full resources of Marxist and anti-imperialist theory – above all, the theory of uneven and combined development – Chibber fails to diagnose ‘postcolonial theory’ for what it is: a conjuncturally distinct version of ‘Third Worldism’. He wrongly accuses it, instead, of ‘Eurocentrism’
Low-overhead scheduling for improving performance of scientific applications
Application performance can degrade significantly due to node-local load imbalances during application execution on a large number of SMP nodes. These imbalances can arise from the machine, operating system, or the application itself. Although dynamic load balancing within a node can mitigate imbalances, such load balancing is challenging because of its impact to data movement and synchronization overhead. We developed a series of scheduling strategies that mitigate imbalances without incurring high overhead. Our strategies provide performance gains for various HPC codes, and perform better than widely known scheduling strategies such as OpenMP guided scheduling. Our developed scheme and methodology allows for scaling applications to next-generation clusters of SMPs with minimal application programmer intervention. We expect these techniques to be increasingly useful for future machines approaching exascale.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I only', the embargo will last until 2017-05-01The student, Vivek Kale, accepted the attached license on 2015-04-21 at 12:10.The student, Vivek Kale, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2015-04-21 at 12:22.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2015-04-24 at 10:48.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #7981 on 2015-07-22 at 14:18:24Made available in DSpace on 2015-07-22T22:33:40Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Previous issue date: 2015-04-24Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 79883
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Interview with Lakshmi Raj Sharma, Author of The Tailor’s Needle
Interview with Indian writer Lakshmi Raj Sharma, author of 'The Tailor's needle
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