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Creators/Authors contains: "Gargan, J M"

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  3. Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) are professional, sophisticated threats that pose a serious concern to our technologically-dependent society. As these threats become more common, conventional response-driven cyberattack management needs to be substituted with anticipatory defense measures. Understanding adversarial behavior and movement is critical to improve our ability to proactively defend. This paper focuses on understanding adversarial movement and adaptation using a case study from a real-time cybersecurity exercise. Through multidisciplinary methodologies from social and hard sciences, this paper presents a mechanism to dissect cyberadversarial intrusion chains to unpack movement, and adaptations. 
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  4. Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
  5. Abstract A multi-TeV muon collider offers a spectacular opportunity in the direct exploration of the energy frontier. Offering a combination of unprecedented energy collisions in a comparatively clean leptonic environment, a high energy muon collider has the unique potential to provide both precision measurements and the highest energy reach in one machine that cannot be paralleled by any currently available technology. The topic generated a lot of excitement in Snowmass meetings and continues to attract a large number of supporters, including many from the early career community. In light of this very strong interest within the US particle physics community, Snowmass Energy, Theory and Accelerator Frontiers created a cross-frontier Muon Collider Forum in November of 2020. The Forum has been meeting on a monthly basis and organized several topical workshops dedicated to physics, accelerator technology, and detector R&D. Findings of the Forum are summarized in this report. 
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  6. This paper presents a search for massive, charged, long-lived particles with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider using an integrated luminosity of $$140~fb^{โˆ’1}$$ of proton-proton collisions at $$\sqrt{s}=13$$~TeV. These particles are expected to move significantly slower than the speed of light. In this paper, two signal regions provide complementary sensitivity. In one region, events are selected with at least one charged-particle track with high transverse momentum, large specific ionisation measured in the pixel detector, and time of flight to the hadronic calorimeter inconsistent with the speed of light. In the other region, events are selected with at least two tracks of opposite charge which both have a high transverse momentum and an anomalously large specific ionisation. The search is sensitive to particles with lifetimes greater than about 3 ns with masses ranging from 200 GeV to 3 TeV. The results are interpreted to set constraints on the supersymmetric pair production of long-lived R-hadrons, charginos and staus, with mass limits extending beyond those from previous searches in broad ranges of lifetime 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026