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Item type: Item , [UN]PREDICTABLE SUBURBIA: An Exploration of Rules, Representation, & Rigidity(University of Waterloo, 2026-03-23) Ma, Nhuy CindySuburbia presents itself as an uninspiring, homogenous landscape, where our personal lot lines define our boundaries of care. Characterized by detached houses with private gardens and fences, the controlled and uniform design of these spaces, which are rooted in historical policy, greatly limits potential for social and spatial complexity. As experts in charge of understanding the rules, guidelines, and best practices that dictate the design of urban zones, we often confront this entrenched reality, built through decades of regulatory frameworks. This thesis anchors itself within urbanism, exploring the boundaries and intersections between rules, guidelines, and suggestions. It tests various design methodologies that work within established frameworks of control to subvert suburban monotony and enable greater agency and complexity. Rather than rejecting urban rules outright, the research examines how both control and agency can coexist to produce varied and unexpected outcomes within a suburban context. Drawing upon the work of Michael Sorkin’s Local Code, Alex Lehnerer’s Grand Urban Rules, Ekim Tan’s Play the City, and Archizoom’s No Stop City, the thesis develops a novel, iterative design methodology combining analytical study with tests of agency and complexity. This method critically examines and reimagines urban rules through design experimentation aimed at uncovering new possibilities for suburban transformation. This thesis offers both a theoretical critique of suburban spatial and social homogeneity, as well as a practical methodology for designers to engage with and reshape suburban environments. By reframing suburbia as a space of controlled agency, this work encourages architectural and urban innovation within traditionally rigid, mono-programmatic landscapes. Thus, suburbia is positioned not as a fixed condition, but rather a mutable environment capable of supporting complexity and social diversity.Item type: Item , Measuring the Weak Gravitational Lensing Signal from Cosmic Voids(University of Waterloo, 2026-03-23) Martin, HunterThe field of cosmology is currently in an era principally focused on statistical precision. To achieve greater precision, deeper and wider surveys are actively being developed and conducted to gather more and more information about the surrounding cosmos. Alternatively, there are efforts to develop new statistical probes to better utilize currently-existing data to obtain tighter constraints. Cosmic voids, as vast underdense regions, then represent an ideal candidate to complement the statistical information already extracted from the opposite density extremes: massive luminous galaxies and galaxy clusters. Voids have already seen some success in constraining cosmology through probes like the void size function and void-galaxy cross-correlations. This thesis introduces the matter distribution within cosmic voids as measured by weak gravitational lensing as a new probe that is significantly detectable within current and future data sets. The goal of this demonstration is to justify future efforts in extracting the cosmological information from this newfound signal. For data currently available, we make use of the large overlap of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) and the Ultraviolet Near-Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS). We measure void lensing around BOSS voids and find that we can detect the signal at 6.2 sigma significance, the most significant detection from spectroscopically-identified voids to date. We additionally are able to significantly detect differences in the void profile with void size between the larger half and smaller half of the void catalogue at 2.3 sigma. To help perform this measurement, we present and validate a novel method for computing the Gaussian component of the conventional weak lensing covariance, adapted for use with void studies. Comparing the void profile to a measurement of the void-galaxy cross-correlation to test the linearity of the relationship between mass and light, we find good visual agreement between the two, and a galaxy bias factor of 2.45 pm 0.36, consistent with other works. We additionally assist in future developments of the UNIONS data by running quality control tests for the future photometric redshift data sets. These future releases will provide additional data to make these detections stronger. For future data, we use the Flagship simulation of the Euclid survey to simulate the expected data from the Euclid VISible imager (VIS) and Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP) instruments across an octant of the sky. This octant then roughly corresponds to an equivalent area of the planned second data release of the survey. We extend the methodology and covariance model to a lensing tomography setup by binning voids and sources along the line of sight. We then stack information along source bins. From this, we are able to detect the void lensing profiles with 12 sigma, 11 sigma, 7.1 sigma, and 4.7 sigma significance across the four different void redshift bins. Scaling the most significant result to the expected areas for the first and final data releases, we get 6.9 sigma and 21 sigma respectively. We additionally find a 4.4 sigma difference between the lensing profiles of the smallest voids and the largest voids.Item type: Item , Communities on-Track: A Spatial Reprogramming of Regional Railway Stations for Interinstitutional and Civic Exchange(University of Waterloo, 2026-03-23) Yuen, Hoi Man NeliAs our society grows more mobile, public transport is becoming an increasingly important alternative to private transport. In Ontario, this shift is compounded by the decentralization of post-secondary education, accelerated by the expansion of satellite campuses and changing patterns of study following the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, post-secondary students are becoming more reliant on public transport than ever before. However, in the North American context, public transit is often still seen as secondary to private transit, resulting in stations which are underutilized, and underperform socially and functionally. This work addresses the site of the regional railway station. Having once been central to the socio-economic development of towns and cities, this role has since diminished as the result of a fixation on network connectivity alone. In response, this thesis leverages the transformational developments in both sectors to propose a network-based strategy, where public transit and post-secondary systems are conceived of and developed in conjunction. By positioning stations as sites of intersection between mobility and knowledge production, the project frames them as spaces for civic exchange, where the rhythms of travel create opportunities for collective encounter. The implementation of design interventions at three stations along GO Transit’s Kitchener Line demonstrates how context-specific programming can reactivate stations as civic anchors. Together, they offer a distributed model for linking mobility, learning, and community across the regional railway network, repositioning railway infrastructure as an active component of social life rather than a purely functional system.Item type: Item , Decentralized Traffic Correlation Using Programmable Switches(University of Waterloo, 2026-03-19) Singh, GurjotAttributing network attacks to their sources is challenging as adversaries employ proxy chains, virtual private networks, and anonymity infrastructures to obscure their origins. Traffic correlation techniques mitigate this challenge by linking flows observed at multiple network vantage points using invariant characteristics such as timing and packet volume. However, existing attack attribution systems largely rely on centralized architectures that aggregate flow features at dedicated correlators, introducing computational and communication overheads that hinder scalability in high-speed networks. This thesis discusses RevealNet, a decentralized framework for attack attribution that leverages P4-programmable switches to perform traffic correlation directly within the network fabric. RevealNet distributes feature extraction and correlation across cooperating networks, reducing dependence on centralized processing and minimizing telemetry offloading. Upon detection of a malicious flow, flow features are disseminated to participating switches, which locally correlate them against outgoing traffic using lightweight similarity metrics. To operate within the constraints of programmable data planes, RevealNet employs compact flow feature representations based on traffic aggregation matrices and sketching techniques designed for integer-only computation. The framework further incorporates heuristic optimizations that exploit temporal alignment and traffic-volume similarity to reduce correlation complexity and limit false positives. Experimental evaluation conducted over a prototype of our framework using multiple real-world attack datasets demonstrates that RevealNet achieves attack attribution accuracy comparable to state-of-the-art centralized systems while significantly improving scalability. Notably, compact flow feature representations achieve accuracy comparable to complete flow representations, substantially reducing memory requirements without sacrificing attribution performance. Overall, RevealNet's distributed design reduces bandwidth overhead by up to 96\% when deployed on a testbed consisting of 20 P4-enabled switches and enables programmable switches to correlate a significantly larger number of flows concurrently, demonstrating that attack attribution can be effectively decentralized within programmable network infrastructures.Item type: Item , Investigation of Magneto-Optical and Photonic Properties of Plasmonic Tungsten Oxide and Alkali Tungsten Bronze Nanocrystals(University of Waterloo, 2026-03-13) Jaics, Gyorgy J.Emerging quantum phenomena in multifunctional materials are reshaping the conceptual and technological foundations of modern condensed matter physics, driving the rapid adoption of plasmonic materials within quantum, optoelectronic, and photonics industries. Plasmonic semiconductor nanocrystals, characterized by collective charge carrier oscillations that are intrinsically linked to their electronic structure, provide a powerful platform for exploring quantum and photonic functionalities beyond conventional noble metal-based plasmonics. After introducing the fundamental principles of localized surface plasmon resonances (Chapter 1) and experimental methodologies (Chapter 2), in this dissertation, I experimentally examined the electronic structure, magneto-optical properties, and photonic applications of oxygen-deficient, doped plasmonic semiconductor metal oxide nanocrystals (NCs), using magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy. First, I investigated the electronic structure of compositionally and electronically com- plex semiconductor NCs, focusing on oxygen-deficient tungsten oxide (WO3-x) NCs. The motivation of this study (presented in Chapter 3) was to revisit and elucidate the electronic structure of plasmonic compound semiconductor nanostructures that have recently been reported to exhibit unique and promising plasmonic properties based solely on conventional optical absorption data. Unlike conventional optical absorption spectroscopy, MCD spectroscopy, which utilizes excitation by circularly polarized light in an external magnetic field, enables spectral specificity and sensitive detection of plasmon resonances. Using variable- field and variable-temperature MCD spectroscopy, I demonstrated that the broad optical absorption bands (visible-to-near infrared region) of colloidal plasmonic WO3-x NCs originate from intraionic W5+ ligand-field transitions at higher energies (visible region) and free-carrier-related plasmonic absorption at lower energies (near infrared region), which spectrally overlap despite fundamentally different electronic origin. The results of this study demonstrated that caution must be exercised when assigning the absorption spectra of complex semiconductor NCs, particularly those containing transition-metal ions, to LSPR. Consequently, a sizeable portion of the literature on plasmonic semiconductor NCs should be re-examined and their conclusions revisited. With that, MCD spectroscopy is also demonstrated to serve as an effective methodology for reliable assignment and detailed investigation of LSPR in NCs. Importantly, owing to their electronic band structure, plasmonic semiconductor NCs support the coexistence and interaction of plasmonic oscillation with other quasiparticles, enabling intrinsic (interface-free) interactions such as plasmon-exciton, plasmon-spin, vii plasmon-phonon, and plasmon-magnon coupling. Owing to the non-resonant nature of plasmonic and interband (excitonic) absorption in doped plasmonic semiconductor NCs, realization and modulation of intrinsic plasmon-exciton coupling are challenging. In Chap- ter 4, I investigated the impact of NC geometry on the intrinsic plasmon-exciton interactions, using colloidal Cs-doped non-stoichiometric tungsten oxide (Cs:WO3-x) hexagonal prisms. With the aid of variable-field and variable-temperature MCD spectroscopy, I observed that NC aspect ratio as controlled geometric parameter enables the modulation of excitonic Zeeman splitting mechanism in the presence of external magnetic fields. Specifically, while for low-aspect-ratio nanostructures (nanoplatelets) the splitting of excitonic states are dictated by the spin of localized carriers (anomalous Zeeman splitting), the high-aspect-ratio nanostructures (nanorods) exhibit free-carrier-induced splitting (normal Zeeman splitting) of the NC excited states. The results of this study demonstrate that manipulation of the aspect ratio of degenerately doped semiconductor NCs can allow for unique control of their excitonic magneto-optical properties, providing promising opportunities for further fundamental investigations and potential applications of this phenomenon in quantum technologies. Owing to their highly tunable free carrier densities and thus plasmon energies, plasmonic semiconductor NC enable a plethora of technologically relevant photonic and optoelectronic applications. In this context, we investigated the applicability of plasmonic colloidal WO3-x and Cs:WO3-x NCs for near-infrared sensing in metal-semiconductor- metal (MSM) photodetector devices, as presented in Chapter 5. The NCs, as photoactive components, were drop-cast on the active region of the detector. In the presence of the NCs, significant enhancements of photoresponse (by up to a factor of ∼2.5) were observed. The results of this work demonstrated the potential for a cost-effective and scalable method exploiting tailored plasmonic semiconductor NCs to improve the performance of NIR optoelectronic devices, such as enhanced speed and sensitivity of receivers in optical fiber communications or increased range and reliability of light detection for autonomous vehicles. Owing to their unique electronic band structures, plasmonic semiconductor nanocrystals can harness visible-NIR light to facilitate chemical reactions with high efficiency. Upon resonant photon absorption, their localized plasmon resonances generate strong electro- magnetic near-field enhancement and energetic charge carriers, which enhance light ab- sorption, foster charge carrier separation and injection, and promote surface reaction pro- cesses. This combination of optical and electronic effects allows for a precise control over photocatalytic activity, making these nanocrystals highly tunable platform for visible- and NIR-light-driven chemical transformations. In Chapter 6, I investigated the plasmonic photocatalytic activity of post-synthetically surface-modified WO3-x NCs, using Rhodamine 6G (Rh6G) dye as model compound. In this study, we observed an approximately 3.3 times improvement in the plasmonic photocatalytic activity of ligand-free WO3-x NCs, attributed to a higher surface accessibility of Rh6G dye. Through post-synthetic annealing in air at elevated temperatures (350-800°C), we modulated the oxygen-deficiency (and thus the free carrier density and plasmon resonance) of the NCs. As a result of the high temperature treatment, we observed sintering and large specific surface area of NCs, as evidenced by scanning electron micrographs and BET analysis, respectively. However, in nanostructures with large specific surface area, adsorption processes are inevitable and can co-exist with photocatalytic degradation processes, which, in the literature, is often not accurately accounted for. In this study, we used a combination of electronic absorption spectroscopy, surface area analysis, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, and examined the coupling be- tween the adsorption and plasmonic catalytic activity. The results of this work show that the contribution from adsorption processes can be modulated via post-synthetic annealing while retaining coupling with the photocatalysis.