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Displaying 2901 - 2925 of 7109

Digital Forensics at the National Institute of Standards and Technology

April 9, 2008
Author(s)
James R. Lyle, Douglas R. White, Richard P. Ayers
There are three digital forensic science projects: National Software Reference Library (NSRL), Computer Forensic Tool Testing (CFTT), Computer Forensic Reference Data Sets (CFReDS) currently providing resources for the digital investigator underway at the

Test Environment and Procedures for Testing SafeBack 2.18

June 1, 2003
Author(s)
James R. Lyle
This document describes the testing of SafeBack 1.18. The Test cases that were applied are described in Disk Imaging Tool Specification, Version 1.1.6.The tests were run on test systems in the Computer Forensics Tool Testing Lab at the National Institute

Temperature Compensated (Net) Volume Direct from Mass Flow Meters

September 12, 2011
Author(s)
Marc A. Buttler
Temperature compensated (net) volume can currently be measured by mass flow meters using one of two methods: 1. Gross volume flow is measured by the device. Temperature of the fluid is measured. Net volume is then computed by applying traditional

Chaotic Scattering and Escape Times of Marginally Trapped Ultracold Neutrons

July 1, 2005
Author(s)
Kevin Coakley, J M. Doyle, S N. Dzhosyuk, L Yang, Paul R. Huffman
We compute classical trajectories of ultracold neutrons (UCNs) in a superconducting Ioffe-type magnetic trap using a symplectic integration method. We find that the computed escape time for a particular set of initial conditions (momentum and position)

Kinetic Isotope Effects in the Active Site of B-Subtilis Chorismate Mutase

September 15, 2003
Author(s)
S. E. Worthington, A. E. Roitberg, Morris Krauss
Kinetic Isotope Effects are determined for the enzyme-catalyzed Claisen rearrangement of chorismate to prephenate using computational methods. The reported kinetic isotope effects compare reasonably well with the few available experimental values. The

Experimental Validation in Software Engineering

March 24, 1997
Author(s)
M V. Zelkowitz, D Wallace
Although experimentation is an accepted approach toward scientific validation in most scientific disciplines, it only recently has gained acceptance within the software development community. In this paper we discuss a 12-model classification scheme for

A Roadmap for STEP-NC Enabled Interoperable Manufacturing

June 17, 2011
Author(s)
Fiona Zhao, Frederick M. Proctor, Martin Hardwick, Sid Venkatesh, David Odendahl, Xun Xu
STEP-NC is the result of a ten-year international effort to replace the RS274D (ISO 6983) G and M code standard with a modern associative language. The new standard connects CAD design data to CAM process data so that smart applications can understand both

AN INFORMATION MODELING METHODOLOGY FOR STANDARDS

August 31, 2011
Author(s)
Anantha Narayanan Narayanan, Jae H. Lee, Paul W. Witherell, Prabir Sarkar, Sudarsan Rachuri
Standards are developed and introduced in the market to meet the needs of specific domains. Developed by experts within a particular domain, the modeling requirements necessary to represent the information associated with these standards are often not well

Theory of Optical Absorption with Electron-Hole Attraction

November 1, 1998
Author(s)
Eric L. Shirley, L Benedict, Robert B. Bohn
This work presents calculations of the optical absorption spectra of semiconductors and insulators. The background and underlying physics are discussed, and the efficient computational method used is sketched. Results for eight solids are presented and

A demonstration of Low Power Wide Area Networking for city-scale monitoring applications

September 25, 2019
Author(s)
Sebastian Barillaro, Dhananjay Anand, Avi Gopstein, Julian Barillaro
Networks of sensors are key components of an Internet of Things. This paper outlines a demonstration of a wireless technology called LoRa/LoRaWAN that may be used to network sensors over a range of several kilometers. LoRa is an example of a Low Power Wide

How High a Degree is High Enough for High Order Finite Elements?

January 1, 2015
Author(s)
William F. Mitchell
High order finite element methods can solve partial differential equations more efficiently than low order methods. But how large of a polynomial degree is beneficial? This paper addresses that question through a case study of three problems representing

The EXPRESS Web Server

February 1, 1999
Author(s)
Joshua Lubell, David A. Sauder
… ACM Symposium on Applied Computing

The Complexity and Verification of Quantum Random Circuit Sampling

October 29, 2018
Author(s)
Adam Bouland, William J. Fefferman, Chinmay Nirkhe, Umesh Vazirani
A critical milestone on the path to useful quantum computers is the demonstration of a quantum computation that is prohibitively hard for classical computers -- a task referred to as quantum supremacy. A leading near-term candidate is sampling from the

Robot Simulation Physics Validation

December 28, 2007
Author(s)
Christopher T. Pepper, Stephen B. Balakirsky, Christopher J. Scrapper Jr
Computer simulation of robot performance is an essential tool for the development of robot software. In order for simulation results to be valid for implementation, model accuracy is important. If developers use a robot model that is not similar enough to
Displaying 2901 - 2925 of 7109
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