1,816 research outputs found
Method for forming hermetic seals
The firmly adherent film of bondable metal, such as silver, is applied to the surface of glass or other substrate by decomposing a layer of solution of a thermally decomposable metallo-organic deposition (MOD) compound such as silver neodecanoate in xylene. The MOD compound thermally decomposes into metal and gaseous by-products. Sealing is accomplished by depositing a layer of bonding metal, such as solder or a brazing alloy, on the metal film and then forming an assembly with another high melting point metal surface such as a layer of Kovar. When the assembly is heated above the temperature of the solder, the solder flows, wets the adjacent surfaces and forms a hermetic seal between the metal film and metal surface when the assembly cools
Methods of Science Vocabulary Instruction with a Focus on the Inclusive Classroom
Language and its use is the key to communicating to others the world around us. Science, like many other subjects has a language all its own. Language in the science classroom is fi lied with words that the students may never hear outside of that classroom. This study employed lesson study to find and implement a vocabulary strategy that would work for the students. The literature was reviewed for common strategies that are in use today and what possible modifications cou ld be used to enhance student learning. Throughout the study, student achievement and confidence rose as a result of the implementation of the strategies
Spotting Suspicious Link Behavior with fBox: An Adversarial Perspective
How can we detect suspicious users in large online networks? Online
popularity of a user or product (via follows, page-likes, etc.) can be
monetized on the premise of higher ad click-through rates or increased sales.
Web services and social networks which incentivize popularity thus suffer from
a major problem of fake connections from link fraudsters looking to make a
quick buck. Typical methods of catching this suspicious behavior use spectral
techniques to spot large groups of often blatantly fraudulent (but sometimes
honest) users. However, small-scale, stealthy attacks may go unnoticed due to
the nature of low-rank eigenanalysis used in practice.
In this work, we take an adversarial approach to find and prove claims about
the weaknesses of modern, state-of-the-art spectral methods and propose fBox,
an algorithm designed to catch small-scale, stealth attacks that slip below the
radar. Our algorithm has the following desirable properties: (a) it has
theoretical underpinnings, (b) it is shown to be highly effective on real data
and (c) it is scalable (linear on the input size). We evaluate fBox on a large,
public 41.7 million node, 1.5 billion edge who-follows-whom social graph from
Twitter in 2010 and with high precision identify many suspicious accounts which
have persisted without suspension even to this day
The Applicability of the Distribution Coefficient, KD, Based on Non-Aggregated Particulate Samples from Lakes with Low Suspended Solids Concentrations
Separate phases of metal partitioning behaviour in freshwater lakes that receive varying degrees of atmospheric contamination and have low concentrations of suspended solids were investigated to determine the applicability of the distribution coefficient, KD. Concentrations of Pb, Ni, Co, Cu, Cd, Cr, Hg and Mn were determined using a combination of filtration methods, bulk sample collection and digestion and Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS). Phytoplankton biomass, suspended solids concentrations and the organic content of the sediment were also analysed. By distinguishing between the phytoplankton and (inorganic) lake sediment, transient variations in KD were observed. Suspended solids concentrations over the 6-month sampling campaign showed no correlation with the KD (n = 15 for each metal, p > 0.05) for Mn (r2 = 0.0063), Cu (r2 = 0.0002, Cr (r2 = 0.021), Ni (r2 = 0.0023), Cd (r2 = 0.00001), Co (r2 = 0.096), Hg (r2 = 0.116) or Pb (r2 = 0.164). The results implied that colloidal matter had less opportunity to increase the dissolved (filter passing) fraction, which inhibited the spurious lowering of KD. The findings conform to the increasingly documented theory that the use of KD in modelling may mask true information on metal partitioning behaviour. The root mean square error of prediction between the directly measured total metal concentrations and those modelled based on the separate phase fractions were ± 3.40, 0.06, 0.02, 0.03, 0.44, 484.31, 80.97 and 0.1 μg/L for Pb, Cd, Mn, Cu, Hg, Ni, Cr and Co respectively. The magnitude of error suggests that the separate phase models for Mn and Cu can be used in distribution or partitioning models for these metals in lake water
What Are They Doing Anyway?: Library as Place and Student Use of a University Library
Objective - To determine student use of library spaces, the authors recorded student location and behaviors within the Library, to inform future space design.
Methods - The case study method was used with both quantitative and qualitative measures. The authors had two objectives to guide this assessment of library spaces: 1) To determine what library spaces are being used by students and whether students are working individually, communally, or collaboratively and 2) To determine whether students use these spaces for learning activities and/or social engagement.
Results - After data collection and analysis, the authors determined students are using individual or communal spaces almost equally as compared with collaborative group spaces. Data also revealed peak area usage and times.
Conclusion - Observed student individual and social work habits indicate further need for spaces with ample electrical outlets and moveable tables. Further study is recommended to see whether additional seating and renovated spaces continue to enhance informal learning communities at URI and whether the Library is becoming a “third place” on campus
- …
