%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% asme2e.tex %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% Template for producing ASME-format articles using LaTeX %
% Written by Harry H. Cheng %
% Integration Engineering Laboratory %
% Department of Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering %
% University of California %
% Davis, CA 95616 %
% Tel: (530) 752-5020 (office) %
% (530) 752-1028 (lab) %
% Fax: (530) 752-4158 %
% Email: hhcheng@ucdavis.edu %
% WWW: http://iel.ucdavis.edu/people/cheng.html %
% May 7, 1994 %
% Modified: February 16, 2001 by Harry H. Cheng %
% Modified: January 01, 2003 by Geoffrey R. Shiflett %
% Use at your own risk, send complaints to /dev/null %
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%%% use twocolumn and 10pt options with the asme2e format
\documentclass[twocolumn,10pt]{asme2e}
\special{papersize=8.5in,11in}
%% The class has several options
% onecolumn/twocolumn - format for one or two columns per page
% 10pt/11pt/12pt - use 10, 11, or 12 point font
% oneside/twoside - format for oneside/twosided printing
% final/draft - format for final/draft copy
% cleanfoot - take out copyright info in footer leave page number
% cleanhead - take out the conference banner on the title page
% titlepage/notitlepage - put in titlepage or leave out titlepage
%
%% The default is oneside, onecolumn, 10pt, final
%%% Replace here with information related to your conference
\confshortname{IDETC/CIE 2009}
\conffullname{the ASME 2009 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences \&\\
Computers and Information in Engineering Conference}
%%%%% for date in a single month, use
%\confdate{24-28}
%\confmonth{September}
%%%%% for date across two months, use
\confdate{August 30-September 2}
\confyear{2009}
\confcity{San Diego}
\confcountry{USA}
%%% Replace DETC2009/MESA-12345 with the number supplied to you
%%% by ASME for your paper.
\papernum{DETC2009/MESA-12345}
%%% You need to remove 'DRAFT: ' in the title for the final submitted version.
\title{DRAFT: AN ARTICLE CREATED USING \LaTeX2\raisebox{-.3ex}{$\epsilon$}\ IN ASME FORMAT}
%%% first author
\author{Harry H. Cheng
\affiliation{
Integration Engineering Laboratory\\
Department of Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering\\
University of California\\
Davis, California 95616\\
Email: hhcheng@ucdavis.edu
}
}
%%% second author
%%% remove the following entry for single author papers
%%% add more entries for additional authors
\author{First Coauthor\thanks{Address all correspondence to this author.} \\
{\tensfb Second Coauthor}
\affiliation{Department or Division Name\\
Company or College Name\\
City, State (spelled out), Zip Code\\
Country (only if not U.S.)\\
Email address (if available)
}
}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
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\begin{abstract}
{\it This article illustrates preparation of ASME paper using \LaTeX2\raisebox{-.3ex}{$\epsilon$}. An abstract for an ASME paper should be less than 150 words and is normally in italics.}
\end{abstract}
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\begin{nomenclature}
\entry{A}{You may include nomenclature here.}
\entry{$\alpha$}{There are two arguments for each entry of the nomemclature environment, the symbol and the definition.}
\end{nomenclature}
The spacing between abstract and the text heading is two line spaces. The primary text heading is boldface in all capitals, flushed left with the left margin. The spacing between the text and the heading is also two line spaces.
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\section*{INTRODUCTION}
This article illustrates preparation of ASME paper using \LaTeX2\raisebox{-.3ex}{$\epsilon$}. The \LaTeX\ macro \verb+asme2e.cls+, the {\sc Bib}\TeX\ style file \verb+asmems4.bst+, and the template \verb+asme2e.tex+ that create this article are available on the WWW at the URL address \verb+http://iel.ucdavis.edu/code/+. To ensure compliance with the 2003 ASME MS4 style guidelines \cite{asmemanual}, you should modify neither the \LaTeX\ macro \verb+asme2e.cls+ nor the {\sc Bib}\TeX\ style file \verb+asmems4.bst+. By comparing the output generated by typesetting this file and the \LaTeX2\raisebox{-.3ex}{$\epsilon$} source file, you should find everything you need to help you through the preparation of ASME paper using \LaTeX2\raisebox{-.3ex}{$\epsilon$}. Details on using \LaTeX\ can be found in \cite{latex}. Instructions for submitting an electronic version of a paper via ftp for publication on CD-ROM or online are given at the URL address \verb+http://www.asme.org/pubs/submittal.html+.
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\section*{VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY VERY LONG HEADING}
If the heading should run into more than one line, the run-over is flush left.
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\subsection*{Second-Level Heading}
The next level of heading is boldface with upper and lower case letters. The heading is flushed left with the left margin. The spacing to the next heading is two line spaces.
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\subsubsection*{Third-Level Heading.}
The third-level of heading follows the style of the second-level heading, but it is indented and followed by a period, a space, and the start of corresponding text.
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\section*{PAPER NUMBER}
ASME assigns each accepted paper with a unique number. Replace {\bf DETC98/DAC-1234} in the input file preamble (the location will be obvious) with the paper number supplied to you by ASME for your paper.
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\section*{USE OF SI UNITS}
An ASME paper should use SI units. When preference is given to SI units, the U.S. customary units may be given in parentheses or omitted. When U.S. customary units are given preference, the SI equivalent {\em shall} be provided in parentheses or in a supplementary table.
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\section*{MATHEMATICS}
Equations should be numbered consecutively beginning with (1) to the end of the paper, including any appendices. The number should be enclosed in parentheses and set flush right in the column on the same line as the equation. An extra line of space should be left above and below a displayed equation or formula. \LaTeX\ can automatically keep track of equation numbers in the paper and format almost any equation imaginable. An example is shown in Eqn.~(\ref{eq_ASME}). The number of a referenced equation in the text should be preceded by Eqn.\ unless the reference starts a sentence in which case Eqn.\ should be expanded to Equation.
\begin{equation}
f(t) = \int_{0_+}^t F(t) dt + \frac{d g(t)}{d t}
\label{eq_ASME}
\end{equation}
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\section*{FIGURES AND TABLES}
All figures should be positioned at the top of the page where possible. All figures should be numbered consecutively and captioned; the caption uses all capital letters, and centered under the figure as shown in Fig.~\ref{figure_ASME}. All text within the figure should be no smaller than 7~pt. There should be a minimum two line spaces between figures and text. The number of a referenced figure or table in the text should be preceded by Fig.\ or Tab.\ respectively unless the reference starts a sentence in which case Fig.\ or Tab.\ should be expanded to Figure or Table.
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% begin figure %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\begin{figure}[t]
\begin{center}
\setlength{\unitlength}{0.012500in}%
\begin{picture}(115,35)(255,545)
\thicklines
\put(255,545){\framebox(115,35){}}
\put(275,560){Beautiful Figure}
\end{picture}
\end{center}
\caption{THE FIGURE CAPTION USES CAPITAL LETTERS.}
\label{figure_ASME}
\end{figure}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% end figure %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% begin table %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\begin{table}[t]
\caption{THE TABLE CAPTION USES CAPITAL LETTERS, TOO.}
\begin{center}
\label{table_ASME}
\begin{tabular}{c l l}
& & \\ % put some space after the caption
\hline
Example & Time & Cost \\
\hline
1 & 12.5 & \$1,000 \\
2 & 24 & \$2,000 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\end{table}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% end table %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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All tables should be numbered consecutively and captioned; the caption should use all capital letters, and centered above the table as shown in Table~\ref{table_ASME}. The body of the table should be no smaller than 7 pt. There should be a minimum two line spaces between tables and text.
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\section*{FOOTNOTES\protect\footnotemark}
\footnotetext{Examine the input file, asme2e.tex, to see how a footnote is given in a head.}
Footnotes are referenced with superscript numerals and are numbered consecutively from 1 to the end of the paper\footnote{Avoid footnotes if at all possible.}. Footnotes should appear at the bottom of the column in which they are referenced.
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\section*{CITING REFERENCES}
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The ASME reference format is defined in the authors kit provided by the ASME. The format is:
\begin{quotation}
{\em Text Citation}. Within the text, references should be cited in numerical order according to their order of appearance. The numbered reference citation should be enclosed in brackets.
\end{quotation}
The references must appear in the paper in the order that they were cited. In addition, multiple citations (3 or more in the same brackets) must appear as a `` [1-3]''. A complete definition of the ASME reference format can be found in the ASME manual \cite{asmemanual}.
The bibliography style required by the ASME is unsorted with entries appearing in the order in which the citations appear. If that were the only specification, the standard {\sc Bib}\TeX\ unsrt bibliography style could be used. Unfortunately, the bibliography style required by the ASME has additional requirements (last name followed by first name, periodical volume in boldface, periodical number inside parentheses, etc.) that are not part of the unsrt style. Therefore, to get ASME bibliography formatting, you must use the \verb+asmems4.bst+ bibliography style file with {\sc Bib}\TeX. This file is not part of the standard BibTeX distribution so you'll need to place the file someplace where LaTeX can find it (one possibility is in the same location as the file being typeset).
With \LaTeX/{\sc Bib}\TeX, \LaTeX\ uses the citation format set by the class file and writes the citation information into the .aux file associated with the \LaTeX\ source. {\sc Bib}\TeX\ reads the .aux file and matches the citations to the entries in the bibliographic data base file specified in the \LaTeX\ source file by the \verb+\bibliography+ command. {\sc Bib}\TeX\ then writes the bibliography in accordance with the rules in the bibliography .bst style file to a .bbl file which \LaTeX\ merges with the source text. A good description of the use of {\sc Bib}\TeX\ can be found in \cite{latex, goosens} (see how 2 references are handled?). The following is an example of how three or more references \cite{latex, asmemanual, goosens} show up using the \verb+asmems4.bst+ bibliography style file in conjunction with the \verb+asme2e.cls+ class file. Here are some more \cite{art, blt, ibk, icn, ips, mts, mis, pro, pts, trt, upd} which can be used to describe almost any sort of reference.
% Here's where you specify the bibliography style file.
% The full file name for the bibliography style file
% used for an ASME paper is asmems4.bst.
\bibliographystyle{asmems4}
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\begin{acknowledgment}
Thanks go to D. E. Knuth and L. Lamport for developing the wonderful word processing software packages \TeX\ and \LaTeX. I also would like to thank Ken Sprott, Kirk van Katwyk, and Matt Campbell for fixing bugs in the ASME style file \verb+asme2e.cls+, and Geoff Shiflett for creating
ASME bibliography stype file \verb+asmems4.bst+.
\end{acknowledgment}
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% The bibliography is stored in an external database file
% in the BibTeX format (file_name.bib). The bibliography is
% created by the following command and it will appear in this
% position in the document. You may, of course, create your
% own bibliography by using thebibliography environment as in
%
% \begin{thebibliography}{12}
% ...
% \bibitem{itemreference} D. E. Knudsen.
% {\em 1966 World Bnus Almanac.}
% {Permafrost Press, Novosibirsk.}
% ...
% \end{thebibliography}
% Here's where you specify the bibliography database file.
% The full file name of the bibliography database for this
% article is asme2e.bib. The name for your database is up
% to you.
\bibliography{asme2e}
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\appendix %%% starting appendix
\section*{Appendix A: Head of First Appendix}
Avoid Appendices if possible.
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\section*{Appendix B: Head of Second Appendix}
\subsection*{Subsection head in appendix}
The equation counter is not reset in an appendix and the numbers will
follow one continual sequence from the beginning of the article to the very end as shown in the following example.
\begin{equation}
a = b + c.
\end{equation}
\end{document}