This article presents a computational approach to the image reconstruction of a perfectly conducting cylinder illuminated by transverse electric waves. A perfectly conducting cylinder of unknown shape buried in one half-space and scatters the incident wave from another half-space where the scattered field is recorded. Based on the boundary condition and the measured scattered field, a set of nonlinear integral equations is derived, and the imaging problem is reformulated into an optimization problem. The steady state genetic algorithm is then employed to find out the global extreme solution of the cost function. Numerical results demonstrated that, even when the initial guess is far away from the exact one, good reconstruction can be obtained. In such a case, the gradient-based methods often get trapped in a local extreme. In addition, the effect of different noise on the reconstruction is investigated.
Until the development of HTTP request smuggling in 2005, individual HTTP requests were considered as independent entities and could not be split or merged. This is a security problem caused by inconsistent content length interpretation approach between web servers, or the web server is not fully implemented in accordance with the RFC standard. It is especially dangerous for web services with complex web architectures. It can route the victims to receive malicious responses, amplify the impact of certain low-threat vulnerabilities, steal user credentials, or bypass network devices’ defenses. However, since its concept and implementation are quite difficult to overcome, it is often ignored by many network administrators, making users who browse such websites vulnerable to the HTTP request smuggling attacks. This paper proposes a general solution to deal with various HTTP request smuggling attacks. A reverse proxy implemented by Flask validates and cleans dubious HTTP requests from the client side and ensures that the original requests comply with RFC standards. Therefore, the website administrators no longer need to configure complicated network settings or customize some open-source project codes to resist or minimize the risk of the HTTP request smuggling attacks. A series of experiments demonstrate that this method is effective and practical.
To figure out the reason causing ladle nozzle clogging during a continuous casting process (or CC for short) for the silicon steel and get away to solve it, this paper studied the theoretical calculation of flow rates during casting, inclusions around the slide gate where ladle nozzle clogging happened, and Ca-treatment on refining units for producing the silicon steel. The results showed that: The bigger diameter of a nozzle or less nozzle clogging can guarantee an enough flow rate for reaching the target casting speed. Ladle nozzle clogging can be predicted by analyzing the percentage of a slide gate being opened. Al2O3 and its composite inclusions were the main ones which cause the nozzle clogging during the CC process of the silicon steel. Ca-treatment could transform those high melting point inclusions into C12A7 by adding Si-Ca wires and prevent the ladle nozzle clogging of the silicon steel.
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