ࡱ> egd_ RxYbjbjzyzy3[6b6b8w##sssT<4 4444444$6t9;4Es " ;4##4### &#8s4# 4##m1[%20#1440429#9(%29s%2 # ;4;4# 4 9 Q : ASIAEM 2019-Title* line 1: 1st Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address line 1: 4th Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address line 1: 2nd Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address line 1: 5th Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address line 1: 3rd Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address line 1: 6th Given Name Surname line 2: dept. name of organization (of Affiliation) line 3: name of organization (of Affiliation) line 4: City, Country line 5: email address  AbstractThis document gives instructions for preparing and submitting an extended abstract of no more than 3 pages to the ASIAEM 2019, which will be held in Xian, China in September 2019. The abstract, including figures and tables, must be written in English. Please pick one of the Technical Committees or Special Sessions under which your contribution will be most appropriate. Your paper of abstract will be reviewed as per the review process. If accepted it will be published in the Book of Abstracts available as an electronic copy. It will be the authors responsibility to get the submission approved for public release before submitting it. The ASIAEM 2019 does not keep the copyright of the abstract. The document is to be prepared and submitted as a single PDF file or DOC file. Please ensure that your fonts are embedded and all mathematical symbols and equations are clearly seen while preparing your manuscript. Keywordscomponent, formatting, style, styling, insert Introduction (Heading 1) This template, modified in MS Word 2007 and saved as a Word 97-2003 Document for the PC, provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. All standard paper components have been specified for three reasons: (1) ease of use when formatting individual papers, (2) automatic compliance to electronic requirements that facilitate the concurrent or later production of electronic products, and (3) conformity of style throughout a conference proceedings. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in; examples of the type styles are provided throughout this document and are identified in italic type, within parentheses, following the example. Some components, such as multi-leveled equations, graphics, and tables are not prescribed, although the various table text styles are provided. The formatter will need to create these components, incorporating the applicable criteria that follow. Ease of Use Selecting a Template (Heading 2) First, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. This template has been tailored for output on the A4 paper size. Maintaining the Integrity of the Specifications The template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations. Prepare Your Paper Before Styling Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save the content as a separate text file. Complete all content and organizational editing before formatting. Please note sections A-D below for more information on proofreading, spelling and grammar. Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text has been formatted and styled. Do not use hard tabs, and limit use of hard returns to only one return at the end of a paragraph. Do not add any kind of pagination anywhere in the paper. Do not number text heads the template will do that for you. Abbreviations and Acronyms Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, MKS, CGS, sc, dc, and rms do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable. Units Use either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units are encouraged.) English units may be used as secondary units (in parentheses). An exception would be the use of English units as identifiers in trade, such as 3.5-inch disk drive. Identify applicable funding agency here. If none, delete this text box. Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This often leads to confusion because equations do not balance dimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearly state the units for each quantity that you use in an equation. Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: Wb/m2 or webers per square meter, not webers/m2. Spell out units when they appear in text: . . . a few henries, not . . . a few H. Use a zero before decimal points: 0.25, not .25. Use cm3, not cc. (bullet list) Equations The equations are an exception to the prescribed specifications of this template. You will need to determine whether or not your equation should be typed using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol font (please no other font). To create multileveled equations, it may be necessary to treat the equation as a graphic and insert it into the text after your paper is styled. Number equations consecutively. Equation numbers, within parentheses, are to position flush right, as in (1), using a right tab stop. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate equations with commas or periods when they are part of a sentence, as in: a + b = g (1) Note that the equation is centered using a center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before or immediately following the equation. Use  (1) , not  Eq. (1) or  equation (1) , except at the beginning of a sentence:  Equation (1) is . . . Some Common Mistakes The word  data is plural, not singular. The subscript for the permeability of vacuum m0, and other common scientific constants, is zero with subscript formatting, not a lowercase letter  o . In American English, commas, semicolons, periods, question and exclamation marks are located within quotation marks only when a complete thought or name is cited, such as a title or full quotation. When quotation marks are used, instead of a bold or italic typeface, to highlight a word or phrase, punctuation should appear outside of the quotation marks. A parenthetical phrase or statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) A graph within a graph is an inset, not an insert. The word alternatively is preferred to the word alternately (unless you really mean something that alternates). Do not use the word essentially to mean approximately or effectively. In your paper title, if the words that uses can accurately replace the word using, capitalize the u; if not, keep using lower-cased. Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones affect and effect, complement and compliment, discreet and discrete, principal and principle. Do not confuse imply and infer. The prefix non is not a word; it should be joined to the word it modifies, usually without a hyphen. There is no period after the et in the Latin abbreviation et al.. The abbreviation i.e. means that is, and the abbreviation e.g. means for example. An excellent style manual for science writers is [7]. Using the Template After the text edit has been completed, the paper is ready for the template. Duplicate the template file by using the Save As command, and use the naming convention prescribed by your conference for the name of your paper. In this newly created file, highlight all of the contents and import your prepared text file. You are now ready to style your paper; use the scroll down window on the left of the MS Word Formatting toolbar. Authors and Affiliations The template is designed for, but not limited to, six authors. A minimum of one author is required for all conference articles. Author names should be listed starting from left to right and then moving down to the next line. This is the author sequence that will be used in future citations and by indexing services. Names should not be listed in columns nor group by affiliation. Please keep your affiliations as succinct as possible (for example, do not differentiate among departments of the same organization). For papers with more than six authors: Add author names horizontally, moving to a third row if needed for more than 6 authors. For papers with less than six authors: To change the default, adjust the template as follows. Selection: Highlight all author and affiliation lines. Change number of columns: Select the Columns icon from the MS Word Standard toolbar and then select the correct number of columns from the selection palette. Deletion: Delete the author and affiliation lines for the extra authors. Identify the Headings Headings, or heads, are organizational devices that guide the reader through your paper. There are two types: component heads and text heads. Component heads identify the different components of your paper and are not topically subordinate to each other. Examples include Acknowledgments and References and, for these, the correct style to use is Heading 5. Use figure caption for your Figure captions, and table head for your table title. Run-in heads, such as Abstract, will require you to apply a style (in this case, italic) in addition to the style provided by the drop down menu to differentiate the head from the text. Text heads organize the topics on a relational, hierarchical basis. For example, the paper title is the primary text head because all subsequent material relates and elaborates on this one topic. If there are two or more sub-topics, the next level head (uppercase Roman numerals) should be used and, conversely, if there are not at least two sub-topics, then no subheads should be introduced. Styles named Heading 1, Heading 2, Heading 3, and Heading 4 are prescribed. Figures and Tables Positioning Figures and Tables: Place figures and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may span across both columns. Figure captions should be below the figures; table heads should appear above the tables. Insert figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the abbreviation Fig. 1, even at the beginning of a sentence. Table Type Styles Table HeadTable Column HeadTable column subheadSubheadSubheadcopyMore table copyaSample of a Table footnote. (Table footnote) Example of a figure caption. (figure caption) Figure Labels: Use 8 point Times New Roman for Figure labels. Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when writing Figure axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an example, write the quantity Magnetization, or Magnetization, M, not just M. If including units in the label, present them within parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. In the example, write Magnetization (A/m) or Magnetization {A[m(1)]}, not just A/m. Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write Temperature (K), not Temperature/K. Acknowledgment (Heading 5) The preferred spelling of the word acknowledgment in America is without an e after the g. Avoid the stilted expression one of us (R. B. G.) thanks .... Instead, try R. B. G. thanks.... Put sponsor acknowledgments in the unnumbered footnote on the first page. References The template will number citations consecutively within brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the bracket [2]. Refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]do not use Ref. [3] or reference [3] except at the beginning of a sentence: Reference [3] was the first ... Number footnotes separately in superscripts. Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it was cited. Do not put footnotes in the abstract or reference list. Use letters for table footnotes. Unless there are six authors or more give all authors names; do not use et al.. Papers that have not been published, even if they have been submitted for publication, should be cited as unpublished [4]. Papers that have been accepted for publication should be cited as in press [5]. Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols. For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [6]. G. Eason, B. Noble, and I. N. Sneddon, On certain integrals of Lipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol. A247, pp. 529551, April 1955. (references) J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed., vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.6873. I. S. Jacobs and C. P. Bean, Fine particles, thin films and exchange anisotropy, in Magnetism, vol. III, G. T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds. New York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271350. K. Elissa, Title of paper if known, unpublished. R. Nicole, Title of paper with only first word capitalized, J. Name Stand. Abbrev., in press. Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, Electron spectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface, IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740741, August 1987 [Digests 9th Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p. 301, 1982]. M. Young, The Technical Writers Handbook. Mill Valley, CA: University Science, 1989.     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