3,706 research outputs found

    Through a Screen Darkly: Popular Culture, Public Diplomacy,and America’s Image Abroad, by Martha Bayles

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    This is a wonderful, wonderful book. It is very much more than even its title and subtitle suggest. And it’s a great read even though it deals with subjects and policy debates about which most of us would rather not think because they’re either upsetting, or too complicated, or both. The first half of the book is devoted to the image of America that our low (and getting lower all the time) popular culture projects worldwide. When I embarked on reading it, I was intimidated by how much of our popular culture Martha Bayles proposed to cover in detail by focusing on (seemingly) so many individual products. I felt I already knew how vulgar and vile the movies and television shows we export are. When the author started in on Sex in the City, I thought, “Well, better her than me at least: somebody needs to know about this particular offense, but not me.

    The Inclusion of Thermal Emissions Within the SASKTRAN Framework

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    The current capabilities of SASKTRAN – a radiative transfer model at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada – are to accurately model the scattering of solar radiation within the earth’s atmosphere for the ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) and near infra-red (NIR) regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. However, the current model does not account for the radiation emitted by the ground and atmosphere, approximated by the blackbody spectrum. In the UV-Vis, this contribution is unimportant, but when transitioning to wavelengths longer than 2.5 μm, the solar spectrum decreases in intensity while radiation of terrestrial and atmospheric origin increases along the blackbody curve. At wavelengths longer than 5 μm in the far infra-red (FIR), the blackbody radiation is the dominant source in the atmosphere. A modification to the source code of SASKTRAN was made in order to include the additional effect of this “thermal” radiation – with the help of the spectral line database HITRAN – while still maintaining scattering capabilities of solar radiation. This would make SASKTRAN one of the first radiative transfer models with the ability to model radiation in the difficult region between 3 and 5 μm – the mid infra-red (MIR) region – where the solar and thermal radiation sources are equally diminished and are the same order of magnitude. An introduction is given to atmospheric physics with a focus on the science of infra-red active molecules like H2O, CO2, CH4, N2O, O3, and CO – the so-called “greenhouse gases” – and the measurement techniques used to determine their atmospheric distribution. A theoretical basis is then provided for general radiative transfer, and the physics of molecular absorption and emission is examined in detail. A summary of the implementation of thermal radiation within the SASKTRAN framework is given, followed by verification studies where the model’s radiative transfer calculations in the infra-red are compared against measurements, including those made by the ground-based instrument E-AERI, the space-borne instruments IASI and GOSAT, and against model results from the LBLRTM, another well-verified radiative transfer model

    Secondary electron emission characteristics of molybdenum-masked, ion-textured OFHC copper

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    A method for producing a uniform, highly textured surface on oxygen-free, high conductivity (OFHC) copper by ion bombardment using sputtered molybdenum as a texture-inducing masking film was developed and used to provide samples for study. The purpose was to develop a basically OFHC copper surface having very low secondary electron emission characteristics. Surfaces having low secondary electron emission are a requirement for the electrodes of very high efficiency multistage depressed collectors (MDC's). Such MDC's are used in microwave amplifier traveling wave tubes for space communications and other applications. OFHC copper is the material most commonly used for MDC electrodes because it has high thermal conductivity, it is easy to machine, and its fabrication and brazing procedures are well established. However, its untreated surface displays relatively very high levels of secondary electron emissions. Textured OFHC copper samples were tested for true secondary electron emission and relative reflected primary electron yield at primary electron beam energy levels from 200 to 2000 eV and at direct (0 deg) to oblique (60 deg) beam impingement angles. The test results for three of the samples, each of which was processed in a slightly different way, are compared with each other and with test results for a machined OFHC copper sample. Although the textured samples are not represented here as having been processed optimally, their measured secondary electron emission characteristics are significantly lower than those of the untreated OFHC copper sample over the range of conditions studied. Importantly, the relative reflected primary electron yield of one of the textured samples is conspicuously lower than that of the others. Clearly, with further development, the molybdenum-masked ion-textured OFHC copper surface will be a promising material for high-efficiency MDC electrodes

    Mobile Authentication with NFC enabled Smartphones

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    Smartphones are becoming increasingly more deployed and as such new possibilities for utilizing the smartphones many capabilities for public and private use are arising. This project will investigate the possibility of using smartphones as a platform for authentication and access control, using near field communication (NFC). To achieve the necessary security for authentication and access control purposes, cryptographic concepts such as public keys, challenge-response and digital signatures are used. To focus the investigation a case study is performed based on the authentication and access control needs of an educational institutions student ID. To gain a more practical understanding of the challenges mobile authentication encounters, a prototype has successfully been developed on the basis of the investigation. The case study performed in this project argues that NFC as a standalone technology is not yet mature to support the advanced communication required by this case. However, combining NFC with other communication technologies such as Bluetooth has proven to be effective. As a result, a general evaluation has been performed on several aspects of the prototype, such as cost-effectiveness, usability, performance and security to evaluate the viability of mobile authentication

    Hysterectomy: Advances in Perioperative Care

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    Russia against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace

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