Research
Elizabeth City State
University
Undergraduate Research Student
Depeartment of Mathematics and Computer Science
Mentors: Professor Christopher Edwards
Using Passive Network Discovery to Fingerprint Vulnerabilities within
Ethernet Broadcast Frames.
Team Abstract:
This paper examines how open source embedded network tools were used to
perform persistent internal audits of Ethernet Local Area Network
broadcast traffic. The initial requirements to define the project phases
were developed based on the analysis of each open source learning stage.
Open Source UNIX version, Unbuntu, was selected as the platform to
prototype because of its ease of use and usable business productivity,
internet, drawing and graphics applications. To understand why hosts
within the ONR LAB were experiencing a decrease in system performance and
transmission speed. A Passive Network Discovery of Ethernet Broadcast
Frames was captured and analyzed to determine if Local Area Network
traffic between the local and foreign hosts is malicious or valid. The
identification of remote active nodes and their system information was
collected to build a resource map of all remote hosts requesting services
from hosts within the ONR Lab and listing of local hosts listening ports
and services running on those ports. The passive analysis approach was
selected by the ONR UNIX Network Administration Team, because the
collection of active LAN traffic would be not impact ECSU’s LAN/WAN
assets. Moreover, this paper goal is to show that persistent packet
monitoring of Ethernet traffic can identify weaknesses that reduce LAN
performance and possibly harm valuable assets used to support major and/or
general support systems.
The University of Kansas
CReSIS Undergraduate Intern
Depeartment of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
Mentors: Dr. Sivaprasad Gogineni and Dr. Arvin Agah
The Development and Assimilation of Robots Using a 3d Animation Program
for the Antarctic and Greenland Coast to Help Detect Global Warming
Team Abstract:
Using simulation to test robot formation and shape change is beneficial in
terms of time and money. This paper discusses robot model design and
testing in the Webots mobile robot simulation software package. The
motivation for this research involves forming evenly-spaced grid patterns
with a team of mobile robots for future use in seismic imaging. A team of
robots is incrementally designed and tested by incorporating sensors and
altering each robot's controller. Challenges encountered throughout the
process as well as design issues are discussed. Attention was given for
each robot to travel efficiently from one location to the next. Simulation
images of robot details and shape transformations are displayed as results
of this research.
Elizabeth City State
University
Undergraduate Research Student
Depeartment of Mathematics and Computer Science
Mentors: Professor Christopher Edwards
Undergraduate Research Office Network Redesign.
Team Abstract:
Fifteen years ago, the Undergraduate Research Computer Lab located in115
Lester Hall consisted of daisy chained Apple Macintosh computer network.
At that time research mentors thought if students are going to work on
research projects during the spring and fall semesters not just during the
summer research program, specific software and hardware to support the
programs goals must be acquired and implemented.
The solution was to install SGI UNIX hosts along with a suite of UNIX and
Macintosh business applications and tools that students can use to explore
two and three dimensional computer based simulations when collecting
research data, creating research papers, and using academic software to
enhance their research skills.
Over the past fourteen years, the Undergraduate Research Computer Lab has
expanded from a single LAN into three segmented TCP/IP star based LANs
tied together via the ECSU backbone which consists of managed switches
that extend into each campus building d-marc. Two of the LANs are located
in Lester Hall room 115 and 116 and the third LAN is located in Dixon Hall
in room 216. Each LAN consists of a mixture of 15 UNX, 28 Macintosh, 40
Windows PCs, eight printers, and one video teleconference host. Within
Lester Hall room 116 two IBM Windows 2003 server hosts are used as web
servers, nia.ecsu.edu and cerser.ecsu.edu, for the Undergraduate Research
Program to communicate with its business partners, mentors, and
researches. Also located within room 115 is a Macintosh G4 OS X server
used as a Primary Domain Controller for 23 Macintosh G3 hosts. Also, in
the third office located in Dixon Hall, room 216, is one Tera Scan UNIX
server which is used to download satellite images from a NASA satellite
for analysis by students in the Undergraduate Research Remote Sensing
Education program. Within each office hosts communicate with one another
and the public using two transmission mediums, Ethernet Category 5e and
wireless 802.11b/g adapters.
The vision for the project is for the network team to wipe the slate clean
and redesign the network based on the University of North Carolina
Academic Computing Model. The network team goal for the 2006-2007 research
programs is to take a fresh look at the Undergraduate Research Computer
Lab network to make fully functional and secure.
The University of Kansas
CReSIS Undergraduate Intern
Depeartment of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
Mentors: Dr. Arvin Agah and Christopher Gifford
Modeling and Simulation of the Seismic TETwalker Concept
Team Abstract:
The objective of this project was to adapt the design of a robot that was
originally created at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center called the
TETwalker, in a computer simulation software program to demonstrate the
collection of seismic data of ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland. We
will take their design and adapt it for seismic data collection by placing
seismic sensors (geophones) in each ground node of the tetrahedral
structure, or in the center node for deployment. Seismic methods are
analyzed in order to determine which design could possibly be more
efficient and reliable in polar environments in terms of geophone
deployment and environmental characteristics.
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