• Title/Summary/Keyword: host-based

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A Study on Detection Method of Multi-Homed Host and Implementation of Automatic Detection System for Multi-Homed Host (망혼용단말 탐지방법에 대한 연구 및 자동탐지시스템 구현)

  • Lee, Mi-hwa;Yoon, Ji-won
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.457-469
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    • 2018
  • This study aimed to investigate the fundamental reasons for the presence of multi-homed host and the risks associated with such risky system. Furthermore, multi-homed host detection methods that have been researched and developed so far were compared and analyzed to determine areas for improvement. Based on the results, we propose the model of an improved automatic detection system and we implemented it. The experimental environment was configured to simulate the actual network configuration and endpoints of an organization employing network segmentation. And the functionality and performance of the detection system were finally measured while generating multi-homed hosts by category, after the developed detection system had been installed in the experiment environment. We confirmed that the system work correctly without false-positive, false-negative in the scope of this study. To the best of our knowledge, the presented detection system is the first academic work targeting multi-homed host under agent-based.

Host galaxy of tidal disruption object, Swift J1644+57

  • Yoon, Yongmin;Im, Myungshin
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.38 no.2
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    • pp.70.1-70.1
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    • 2013
  • We present long-term optical to NIR data of the tidal disruption object, Swift J1644+57. The data were obtained with CQUEAN, UKIRT WFCAM observations. We analyze the morphology of the host galaxy of this object and decompose the bulge component using high resolution HST WFC3 images. We conclude that the host galaxy is bulge dominant. We also estimate the multi-band fluxes of the host galaxy through the light curves based on the long-term observational data. We fit the SED models to the multi-band fluxes of the host galaxy and determine its stellar mass. Finally, we estimate the mass of the central super massive black hole which is thought to be the main role of the tidal disruption event. The estimated stellar mass and black hole mass are $10^{9.1}M_{\odot}$, $10^{6.8}M_{\odot}$ respectively. We compare our results to other results that have studied before.

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The evolution of dark matter halo profiles in a cosmological context

  • Park, Jinwoo;Choi, Hoseung;Yi, Sukyoung
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.42 no.2
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    • pp.73.3-73.3
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    • 2017
  • Environment has a significant impact on the evolution of dark halo profiles. We used a cosmological N-body simulation based on WMAP5 cosmology to study environmental effects on halo profiles. Host haloes located in sparse regions are highly concentrated, and more massive haloes have higher concentration index. This is because mass accretion affects only the outer part of the halo and consequently increase the virial radius having no effect on the scale radius. Conversely, host haloes located in dense regions have low concentration index. This is because frequent mergers affect even the inner part of the halo. So, scale radius increases with the growth of virial radius. Evolutions of subhalo profiles are essentially different from those of host haloes because subhaloes undergo tidal stripping. The stripping begins once a subhalo approaches closer than ~3 virial radii of the host halo. During the stripping, the inner part of the subhalo keep following NFW profile, but the mass of the outer part gradually decreases. As a result, when the subhalo reaches the pericenter of its host, only about inner 30% of the subhalo follows the NFW profile.

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Host galaxy of tidal disruption object, Swift J1644+57

  • Yoon, Yongmin;Im, Myungshin;Lee, Seong-Kook;Pak, Soojong
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.39 no.1
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    • pp.48.2-48.2
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    • 2014
  • We present long-term optical to NIR data of the tidal disruption object, Swift J1644+57. The data were obtained with CQUEAN, UKIRT WFCAM observations. We analyze the morphology of the host galaxy of this object and decompose the bulge component using high resolution HST WFC3 images. We conclude that the host galaxy is bulge dominant. We also estimate the multi-band fluxes of the host galaxy through the light curves based on the long-term observational data. We fit the SED models to the multi-band fluxes of the host galaxy and determine its stellar mass. Finally, we estimate the mass of the central super massive black hole which is responsible for the tidal disruption event. The estimated stellar mass and black hole mass are ${\sim}10^{9.1}M_{\odot}$, ${\sim}10^{6.8}M_{\odot}$, respectively. We compare our results to other previous estimates.

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The Effects of Financial Development on Foreign Direct Investment (금융 발전이 외국인직접투자에 미치는 영향에 대한 분석)

  • Jung-Whan Cho;Tae-Hwang Kim
    • Korea Trade Review
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    • v.45 no.4
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    • pp.195-205
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    • 2020
  • This study investigates the effects of financial development on the foreign direct investment (FDI) flow in host countries. Using bilateral FDI data from 34 OECD source countries to 146 host countries, we performed panel data analysis based on a gravity FDI equation. We hypothesized that the financial development would increase the volume of FDI flows. The results suggest that the well-functioning finance market of source countries as well as a better accessable financial market of host countries contribute to the increase in FDI of OECD in their partner countries. We found also that the financial development effects of source countries are larger than those of host countries. This result shows that the financial development can play a crucial role to impact the FDI inflows as push factor in source country than as a pull factor in host countries.

Isolation, Physiological Characterization of Bacteriophages from Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal Activated Sludge and Their Putative Role

  • Lee, Sang-Hyon;Satoh, Hiroyasu;Katayama, Hiroyuki;Mino, Takashi
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.730-736
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    • 2004
  • This study aims at characterizing the bacteriophages isolated from activated sludge performing enhanced biological phosphorous removal (EBPR) to understand the interactions between the phage-host system and bacterial community. Sixteen bacterial isolates (E1-E16) were isolated as host bacterial strains from EBPR activated sludge for phage isolation. Forty bacteriophages based on their plaque sizes (2 plaques on E4, 4 on E8, 11 on E10, 5 on E14, 18 on E16) were obtained from filtered supernatant of the EBPR activated sludge. Each bacteriophage did not make any plaque on bacterial strains tested in this study except on its own host bacterial strain, respectively, indicating that the bacteriophages are with narrow host specificity. However, fourteen of the forty bacteriophages obtained in this study lost their virulent ability even on their own host bacteria. All of the lytic phages showed similar one-step growth patterns and had long latent period (about 9 hours) to reproduce their phage particles in their host bacterial cells. On the other hand, their probable burst sizes (6 to 48 per host cell) were large enough to actively lyse their host bacterial cells. Therefore, it could be implied that bacteriophages are also important members of the microbial community in EBPR activated sludge, and lytic phages directly decrease the population size of their host bacterial groups in EBPR activated sludge by lysis.

Performance Improvement Methods of Multicast using FEC and Local Recovery based on Sever in Mobile Host (이동 호스트에서 FEC와 서버기반 지역복구를 이용한 멀티캐스트 성능 향상 방안)

  • Kim, Hoe-Ok;Yang, Hwan-Seok;Lee, Ung-Gi
    • The KIPS Transactions:PartC
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    • v.9C no.4
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    • pp.589-596
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    • 2002
  • Tn the data transmission service of the mobile host, it is needed to reduce the bandwidth and to make a reliable error recovery. there are two appropriate methods in that. One is FEC which retransmits the parity of error recovery, in case of happening of the loss after forming the parity of error recovery by grouping original data. The other is local recovery based on server which can block the implosion of transmission. The use of FEC and local recovery based on server at the same time enables the reliable multicast. This paper suggests algorithm that recovers the loss by FEC and local recovery based on server through the solution of the problems about triangle routing, tunnel convergence by dividing mobile host into two parts-the sender and the receiver. This model about the loss of algorithm tested the efficiency of performance by the homogeneous independent loss, the heterogeneous independent loss, the shared source link loss model. The suggested algorithm confirms effectiveness in the environment where there are much data and many receivers in mobile host.

A Mobile Multicasting Mechanism Based on Mobility Information of Mobile Hosts (호스트의 이동 정보에 근거한 모바일 멀티캐스팅 기법)

  • Baek DeukHwa;Kim Jaesoo
    • Journal of Korea Multimedia Society
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.258-268
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    • 2005
  • The efficient provision of multicast service to moving hosts in mobile computing environments is not so easy task. Bi-directional tunneling scheme causes overhead about encapsulation and triangular routing. On the other hand, remote subscription scheme need freDuent tree reconstruction, which is inefficient for rapid moving hosts. In this paper we propose Mobility Based Mobile Multicast(MBMOM) scheme which is based on host's mobility information. Ultimately MBMOM try to find the strong points of remote subscription scheme and hi-directional tunneling scheme. If host's mobility speed is considered to be high, multicast packets are forwarded using hi-directional tunneling scheme from home agent continuously. If host's mobility speed is considered to be slow, remote subscription scheme is applied for foreign agent and it try to join multicast tree. We developed analytical models to analyze the performance of proposed scheme and simulated our scheme compared with MOM(Mobile Multicast), RBMOM(Range Based MOM), and TBMOM(Timer Based MOM) schemes. Simulation results show that our scheme has shorter transmission delay than above 3 schemes in the aspect of host's mobility speed and multicast group size.

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Verification of aecial host ranges of four Gymnosporangium species based on artificial inoculation.

  • Yun, Hye-Young;Lee, Seung-Kyu;Lee, Kyung-Joon
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Plant Pathology Conference
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    • 2003.10a
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    • pp.134.1-134
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    • 2003
  • Aecial host ranges of four Gymnosporangium species causing cedar-apple rust diseases, G. asiaticum, G. cornutum, 5. japonicum and G. yamadae, were investigated through artificial inoculation. Thirteen species of nine genera among Rosaceous plants, which have been reported as social hosts in Korea, were inoculated with fresh teliospores spores in early days of May of 2000 and of 2001, respectively. In the results, we re-confirmed that there was highly specific relationship between the rust species and aecial hosts and report new aecial hosts of four Gymnosporangium species. Teliospores of G. cornutum collected from Juniperus rigida successively produced spermogonia and aecia only on Sorbus alntifolia, the first report on host alteration of G. cornutum in Korea. Positive responses by teliospores of G. japonicum from J. chinenis of Suwon and from J. chinenis var. horizontalis of Jeju island were obtained only on P. villosa. Crataegus pinnatifida was confirmed as a new aecial host of G. viatium. Until this time, G. ymadae was believed to have Malus as the aecial host. However, teliospores of G. yamadae collected from J. chinensis var. kaizuka successively formed spermogonia and aecia on the leaves of Chaenomeles lagenaria, C. sinensis, Pyrus pyrtifolia var, culta, P. ussuriensis, Malus pumila and M. sileboldii. The date for maturation of spermogonia and aecia, and symptom development varied according to the rust fungi and aecial host plants, respectively.

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Identification of Aecial Host Ranges of Four Korean Gymnosporangium Species Based on the Artificial Inoculation with Teliospores Obtained from Various Forms of Telia

  • Yun, Hye-Young;Lee, Seung-Kyu;Lee, Kyung-Joon
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.310-316
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    • 2005
  • The objectives of this study were to identify the aecial host ranges of four Korean Gymnosporangium species, G. asiaticum, G. cornutum, Gjaponicum and Gyamadae, and to verify the morphological characteristics of telia as diagnostic keys to the species. Thirteen Korean Rosaceous woody species were artificially inoculated with teliospores obtained from Juniperus species. There was high specificity between telial and aecial hosts and the fungal species, providing the first experimental proof on host alternation of these rust fungi in Korea. Telia on the witches' broom and on the small galls were identified as new telial characteristics in G asiaticum and in G. yamadae, respectively. Aecial hosts of G. asiaticum and G. yamadae showed varying responses in their susceptibility and in the days required for formation and duration of spermogonia and aecia after inoculation. Four telial host species in Juniperus were confirmed for the first time in Korea, which include J. chinensis var. kaizuka, J. chinensis var. horizontalis and J. chinensis var. globosa for G. asiaticum; and J. chinensis var. kaizuka for G. yamadae.