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the individual systems is not enough to reconstruct the state of the composite system. Just as density matrices specify the state of a subsystem of a larger system, analogously, positive operator-valued measures (POVMs) describe the effect on a subsystem of a measurement performed on a larger system. POVMs are extensiv... | mechanics (invented by Werner Heisenberg) and wave mechanics (invented by Erwin Schrödinger). An alternative formulation of quantum mechanics is Feynman's path integral formulation, in which a quantum-mechanical amplitude is considered as a sum over all possible classical and non-classical paths between the initial and... |
large-scale (often chintz) and small-scale (often calico) patterns. Some antique quilts made in North America have worn-out blankets or older quilts as the internal batting layer, quilted between new layers of fabric and thereby extending the usefulness of old material. During American pioneer days, foundation piecing ... | worked on whenever there was time." The first recorded kantha are more than 500 years old. Ralli quilts are traditionally made in Pakistan, western India, and the surrounding area. They are made by every sector of society including Hindu and Muslim women, women of different castes, and women from different towns or vil... |
e.g. Enterprise Controls are commercially sold by The Qt Company. Supported platforms Qt works on many different platforms; the following are officially supported: After Nokia opened the Qt source code to the community on Gitorious, various ports appeared. There are also some ports of Qt that may be available, but are ... | scientific, engineering, mathematical, and computing fields. Moonlight Stream, an open-source implementation of Nvidia Shield Musescore, an open-source, multiplatform notation software OBS, a libre cross-platform screencast software Orange data mining suite ParaView open-source cross-platform application for interactiv... |
logic using a custom scripting language and interpreter was dropped from the next generation Quake II engine in favor of compiled C code due to the overall inflexibility of QuakeC, the increasingly complex game logic, the performance to be gained by packaging game logic into a native dynamic link library, and the advan... | simply not needed by the original game. Most video games at the time had their game logic written in plain C/C++ and compiled into the executable, which is faster. However, this makes it harder for the community to create mods and it makes the process of porting the game to another platform (such as Linux) more costly.... |
Eric Christian Olsen, actor, Bettendorf Daniel David Palmer, chiropractor, Davenport Oran Pape, state patrol, Davenport Laurdine Patrick, musician, East Moline Mary Beth Peil, actress and singer, Davenport Nat Pendleton, wrestler and actor, Davenport Roger Perry, actor, Davenport James Philbrook, actor, Davenport Scott... | As it grew, Davenport annexed the communities of Rockingham, Nahant, Probstei, East Davenport, Oakdale, Cawiezeel, Blackhawk, Mt. Joy, Green Tree, and others. Bettendorf annexed portions of Pleasant Valley in the 1970s. In 1987, Rock Island, Moline, East Moline, Milan, Carbon Cliff, Hampton, Coal Valley and Silvis cons... |
scanning probe microscopy. Quantum chemistry studies the ground state of individual atoms and molecules, and the excited states, and transition states that occur during chemical reactions. On the calculations, quantum chemical studies use also semi-empirical and other methods based on quantum mechanical principles, and... | hydrogen molecular ion have been identified in terms of the generalized Lambert W function). Since all other atomic, or molecular systems, involve the motions of three or more "particles", their Schrödinger equations cannot be solved exactly and so approximate solutions must be sought. Valence bond Although the mathema... |
Uppercase). is . is . Greek The stress accents, indicated in red, are produced by pressing that key (or shifted key) followed by an appropriate vowel. Use of the "AltGr" key may produce the characters shown in blue. German Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, and Luxembourg use QWERTZ layouts, where the letter... | in most electronic keyboards. Some keyboards, such as the Kinesis or TypeMatrix, retain the QWERTY layout but arrange the keys in vertical columns, to reduce unnecessary lateral finger motion. Computer keyboards The first computer terminals such as the Teletype were typewriters that could produce and be controlled by v... |
The single-player mode is played against computer-controlled bots. It features music composed by Sonic Mayhem and Front Line Assembly founder Bill Leeb. Notable features of Quake III Arena include the minimalist design, lacking rarely used items and features; the extensive customizability of player settings such as fie... | "Bitterman" from Quake II, the "Ranger" character from Quake as well as Doomguy from id Software's sister franchise Doom. Development During early March 1999, ATI leaked the internal hardware vendor (IHV) copy of the game, which unveiled to the public in Macworld Conference & Expo at Moscone Center in January and Makuh... |
of the N64 port is used as a prologue. Some enemy types were removed and two new enemies was added: the Arachnid, a human-spider cyborg with twin railgun arms, and the Guardian, a bipedal boss enemy. Saving the game is only possible between levels and at mid-level checkpoints where the game loads, while in the PC versi... | attempt to prevent an alien invasion of Earth by launching a pre-emptive attack against the home planet of the hostile Strogg civilization. Most of the other soldiers are captured or killed as soon as they approach the planned landing zone. Bitterman survives because another Marine's personal capsule collided with his ... |
the centuries the descriptions of qi have varied and have sometimes been in conflict. Until China came into contact with Western scientific and philosophical ideas, the Chinese had not categorized all things in terms of matter and energy. Qi and li (: "pattern") were 'fundamental' categories similar to matter and energ... | /*kʰɯds/ (Zhengzhang Shangfang) and /*C.qʰəp-s/ (William H. Baxter and Laurent Sagart). The etymology of qì interconnects with Kharia kʰis "anger", Sora kissa "move with great effort", Khmer kʰɛs "strive after; endeavor", and Gyalrongic kʰɐs "anger". Characters In the East Asian languages, qì has three logographs: is t... |
by AU Optronics QUANTA, a user group for the Sinclair QL computer Quanta Services, a US-based speciality contractor for the electric, gas, and telecommunications industries Quanta Technology, a utility infrastructure consulting company Technology Quanta, an algorithm for random | US-based speciality contractor for the electric, gas, and telecommunications industries Quanta Technology, a utility infrastructure consulting company Technology Quanta, an algorithm for random number generation for smart contracts Quanta Plus, a web development tool Music Quanta, a 1997 album by Gilberto Gil Quanta Li... |
Web pages, encrypted email, and many other types of data. Breaking these would have significant ramifications for electronic privacy and security. Identifying cryptographic systems that may be secure against quantum algorithms is an actively researched topic under the field of post-quantum cryptography. Some public-key... | replaced with a finite gate set by appealing to the Solovay-Kitaev theorem. Quantum algorithms Progress in finding quantum algorithms typically focuses on this quantum circuit model, though exceptions like the quantum adiabatic algorithm exist. Quantum algorithms can be roughly categorized by the type of speedup achiev... |
science and technology Qt (software), a cross-platform application framework QuickTime, a multimedia technology from Apple Inc. Quiet Trader, cargo versions of the BAe 146 jet Quart (qt), a unit of volume equal to a quarter of a gallon Other uses Quality time, time spent with loved ones which is in some way special QT ... | pop singer QT: QueerTelevision, an LGBT newsmagazine which aired on Canada's CityTV in the 1990s Quentin Tarantino (born 1963), American filmmaker Question Time (TV programme), a topical debate BBC television programme in the UK Organizations QuikTrip, a US convenience store chain QT Inc., manufacturer of the Q-Ray ion... |
elements. See small Latin squares and quasigroups. Infinite quasigroups For a countably infinite quasigroup Q, it is possible to imagine an infinite array in which every row and every column corresponds to some element q of Q, and where the element a*b is in the row corresponding to a and the column responding to b. In... | One defines a quasigroup as a set with one binary operation, and the other, from universal algebra, defines a quasigroup as having three primitive operations. The homomorphic image of a quasigroup defined with a single binary operation, however, need not be a quasigroup. We begin with the first definition. Algebra A qu... |
the early republic, there were two quaestors, and their duties were maintaining the public treasury, both taking in funds and deciding whom to pay them to. This continued until 421 BCE when the number of quaestors was doubled to 4. While two continued with the same duties of those that had come before, the other two ha... | would often reflect their superiors. For example, Gaius Gracchus was quaestor under the consul Orestes in Sardinia, and many of his responsibilities involved leading military forces. While not in direct command of the army, the quaestor would be in charge of organizational and lesser duties that were a necessary part o... |
a simple statement such as "this completes the proof", "as required", "as desired", "as expected", "hence proved", "ergo", "so correct", or other similar locutions. Typographical forms used symbolically Due to the paramount importance of proofs in mathematics, mathematicians since the time of Euclid have developed conv... | Latin, and phrases such as Q.E.D. were often used to conclude proofs. Perhaps the most famous use of Q.E.D. in a philosophical argument is found in the Ethics of Baruch Spinoza, published posthumously in 1677. Written in Latin, it is considered by many to be Spinoza's magnum opus. The style and system of the book are, ... |
they live, and the quagga was the most southern-living of them all. Other large African ungulates diverged into separate species and subspecies during this period, as well, probably because of the same climate shift. The simplified cladogram below is based on the 2005 analysis (some taxa shared haplotypes and could, th... | Rau, pioneer of the Quagga Project, claimed that this is an optical illusion: that the base colour is a creamy white and that the stripes are thick and dark. Living in the very southern end of the plains zebra's range, the quagga had a thick winter coat that moulted each year. Its skull was described as having a straig... |
operating systems. It is used to view picture files from the still image formats that QuickTime supports. In macOS, it is replaced by Preview. As of version 7.7.9, the Windows version requires one to go to their "Windows Uninstall Or Change A Program" screen to "modify" their installation of QuickTime 7 to include the ... | 2.0 for System Software 7 in June 1994—the only version never released for free. It added support for music tracks, which contained the equivalent of MIDI data and which could drive a sound-synthesis engine built into QuickTime itself (using a limited set of instrument sounds licensed from Roland), or any external MIDI... |
Quoin or Du Quoin may also refer to: Places Quoin Bluff, Western Australia Quoin Hill Airfield, Vanuatu Du Quoin, Illinois, USA Du Quoin station Du Quoin State Fairgrounds DuQuoin | Quoin or Du Quoin may also refer to: Places Quoin Bluff, Western Australia Quoin Hill Airfield, Vanuatu Du Quoin, |
is the most common variety of crystalline quartz. The white color is caused by minute fluid inclusions of gas, liquid, or both, trapped during crystal formation, making it of little value for optical and quality gemstone applications. Rose quartz Rose quartz is a type of quartz which exhibits a pale pink to rose red hu... | only one termination pyramid is present. However, doubly terminated crystals do occur where they develop freely without attachment, for instance, within gypsum. α-quartz crystallizes in the trigonal crystal system, space group P3121 or P3221 (space group 152 or 154 resp.) depending on the chirality. Above , α-quartz in... |
another quantity, magnitudes as either stationary or in motion. Arithmetic, then, studies quantities as such, music the relations between quantities, geometry magnitude at rest, spherics [astronomy] magnitude inherently moving. Medieval usage At many medieval universities, this would have been the course leading to the... | a subject (nor faculty) in its own right, but was rather present implicitly as an 'auxiliary tool' within the discourses of the High faculties (especially theology); the complete emancipation of philosophy from theology happened only after the Medieval era. Origins These four studies compose the secondary part of the c... |
other roles (e.g., hands in the case of humans, wings in the case of birds, and fins in the case of whales). All of these animals are tetrapods, but none is a quadruped. Even snakes, whose limbs have become vestigial or lost entirely, are, nevertheless, tetrapods. In humans In July 2005, in rural Turkey, scientists dis... | maintains a four-legged posture and moves using all four limbs is said to be a quadruped (from Latin quattuor for "four", and pes, pedis for "foot"). Most quadrupeds are terrestrial vertebrates, including mammals and reptiles, though some are largely aquatic such as turtles, amphibians, and pinnipeds. Bipedal tetrapods... |
quarantine to wider society can be favourable." Short-term quarantines, e.g. for decontamination Quarantine periods can be very short, such as in the case of a suspected anthrax attack, in which people are allowed to leave as soon as they shed their potentially contaminated garments and undergo a decontamination shower... | 1780, when plague was in Poland, even vessels with grain from the Baltic had to spend forty days in quarantine, and unpack and air their cargoes, but due to complaints mainly from Edinburgh and Leith, an exception was made for grain after that date. About 1788 an order of the council required every ship liable to quara... |
observationally for the first time with images of the double quasar 0957+561. A study published in February, 2021, showed that there are more quasars in one direction (towards Hydra) than in the opposite direction, seemingly indicating that we are moving in that direction. But the direction of this dipole is about 28° ... | (QSOs), a name which reflected their unknown nature, and this became shortened to "quasar". Early observations (1960s and earlier) The first quasars (3C 48 and 3C 273) were discovered in the late 1950s, as radio sources in all-sky radio surveys. They were first noted as radio sources with no corresponding visible objec... |
Shrovetide rods (fastelavnsris), which "branches decorated with sweets, little presents, etc., that are used to decorate the home or give to children." In the Revised Common Lectionary the Sunday before Lent is designated "Transfiguration Sunday", and the gospel reading is the story of the Transfiguration of Jesus from... | Roman Rite, with its references to Quinquagesima Sunday, and to the Sexagesima and Septuagesima Sundays, continues to be observed in some communities. In traditional lectionaries, the Sunday concentrates on , "Jesus took the twelve aside and said, 'Lo, we go to Jerusalem, and everything written by the prophets about th... |
the family Simaroubaceae. Its size is disputed; some botanists treat it as consisting of only one species, Quassia amara from tropical South America, while others treat it in a wide circumscription as a pantropical genus containing up to 40 species of trees and shrubs. The genus was named after a former slave from Suri... | America, while others treat it in a wide circumscription as a pantropical genus containing up to 40 species of trees and shrubs. The genus was named after a former slave from Suriname, Graman Quassi in the eighteenth century. He discovered the medicinal properties of the bark of Quassia amara. Distribution Members of t... |
surname as a term predates World War II. The first recorded use of the term was by Norwegian Labour Party politician Oscar Torp in a 2 January 1933 newspaper interview, where he used it as a general term for Quisling's followers. Quisling was at this point in the process of establishing the Nasjonal Samling (National U... | to enforce his rule upon their fellow countrymen while grovelling low themselves." He used the term again in an address to both houses of Congress in the United States of America on 26 December 1941. Commenting upon the effect of a number of Allied victories against Axis forces, and moreover the United States’ decision... |
North America Quadrangle (Springfield, Massachusetts), a cluster of museums and cultural institutions Quadrangle Dormitories (University of Pennsylvania) Francis Quadrangle, University of Missouri Memorial Quadrangle, Yale University Radcliffe Quadrangle (Harvard) Schenley Quadrangle, University of Pittsburgh Universit... | College, Oxford Radcliffe Quadrangle, University College, Oxford Tom Quad (Great Quadrangle), Christ Church, Oxford Main Quad at the Main Building of University College London Oceania University of Sydney Quadrangle, a sandstone building at the University of Sydney (Camperdown) Other Quadrangle (geography), a United St... |
images on manuscripts, although many illuminators and painters preferred fine brushes for their work. The variety of different strokes in formal hands was accomplished by good penmanship as the tip was square cut and rigid, exactly as it is today with modern steel pens. It was much later, in the 1600s, with the increas... | clerks and intelligentsia. Some notable examples are the Radical Civic Union, the Czech National Social Party in combination with the hammer, symbol of the labour movement, or the Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro. Quills appear on the seals of the United States Census Bureau and the Administrative Office of... |
going to Rome to be crucified again"). Peter then gains the courage to continue his ministry and returns to the city, where he is martyred by being crucified upside-down. The Church of Domine Quo Vadis in Rome is built where the meeting between Peter and Jesus allegedly took place. The words "quo vadis" as a question a... | risen Christ during their encounter along the Appian Way. According to the apocryphal Acts of Peter (Vercelli Acts XXXV; late 2nd century AD), as Peter flees from crucifixion in Rome at the hands of the government, and along the road outside the city, he meets the risen Jesus. In the Latin translation, Peter asks Jesus... |
Pennsylvania Music QED (band), a 1980s Australian band Q.E.D. (Terje Rypdal album), 1993 Q.E.D. (Jim Allchin album) QED Records or Emanem Records Other uses Granville Gee Bee R-6, named "Q.E.D.", a 1930s racing monoplane QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, a 1985 physics book by Richard Feynman Quod Erat Demon... | disk image format for machine emulation and virtualization Quantum Effect Devices, a microprocessor design company Television KQED (TV), public television station in San Francisco, California Q.E.D. (U.S. TV series) Q.E.D. (UK TV series) WQED (TV), public television station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Music QED (band),... |
served pride cookies to its passengers. It had a rainbow roo float in the Mardi Gras parade. There has been criticism of Qantas using its corporate power to prosecute the private interests on their staff and the community. Peter Dutton has said that chief executives such as Alan Joyce at Qantas should "stick to their k... | a rainbow flag on the tail of the aircraft. Cabin Domestic Qantas domestic flights are primarily operated by Boeing 737–800 and Airbus A330-200 aircraft; Airbus A330-300s sometimes operate domestically as well. A two-class configuration (Business and Economy) is offered. Business Domestic Business Class is offered on a... |
by A. W. Winklehoff. Dennis Ritchie, Ken Thompson and Brian Kernighan wrote the QED manuals used at Bell Labs. Given that the authors were the primary developers of the Unix operating system, it is natural that QED had a strong influence on the classic UNIX text editors ed, sed and their descendants such as ex and sam,... | a line-oriented computer text editor that was developed by Butler Lampson and L. Peter Deutsch for the Berkeley Timesharing System running on the SDS 940. It was implemented by L. Peter Deutsch and Dana Angluin between 1965 and 1966. QED (for "quick editor") addressed teleprinter usage, but systems "for CRT displays [w... |
found. Brigadier general Frank Helmick, the assistant commander of 101st Airborne, commented that all occupants of the house died during the gun battle before U.S. troops were able to enter. Soldiers, who tried to enter the house three times, encountered resistance with AK-47 and grenades in the first two attempts. Uda... | Unlike Uday, who was known for extravagance and erratic, violent behavior, Qusay kept a low profile so details regarding his actions and roles are obscure. Iraqi dissidents claimed that Qusay was responsible for the killing of many political activists. The Sunday Times reported that Qusay Hussein ordered the killing of... |
are fifteen possible rhyme schemes, but the most traditional and common are ABAA, AAAA, ABAB, and ABBA. Forms The heroic stanza or elegiac stanza consists of the iambic pentameter, with the rhyme scheme of ABAB or AABB. An example can be found in the following of Thomas Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard". T... | a particularly widespread verse form: the form rubaiyat reflects the plural. One of FitzGerald's verses may serve to illustrate: Come, fill the Cup, and in the fire of Spring Your Winter garment of Repentance fling: The Bird of Time has but a little way To flutter—and the Bird is on the Wing. The Midnight Songs poetry ... |
way, invented in 1961 by Gell-Mann and Yuval Ne'eman. Gell-Mann and George Zweig, correcting an earlier approach of Shoichi Sakata, went on to propose in 1963 that the structure of the groups could be explained by the existence of three flavors of smaller particles inside the hadrons: the quarks. Gell-Mann also briefly... | respectively, which are subject to renormalization. An important theoretical concept is the Wilson loop (named after Kenneth G. Wilson). In lattice QCD, the final term of the above Lagrangian is discretized via Wilson loops, and more generally the behavior of Wilson loops can distinguish confined and deconfined phases.... |
head and tail drift around endlessly in that circle makes it unnecessary to ever move items stored in the array. If n is the size of the array, then computing indices modulo n will turn the array into a circle. This is still the conceptually simplest way to construct a queue in a high-level language, but it does admitt... | removing an element from the front is known as dequeue. Other operations may also be allowed, often including a peek or front operation that returns the value of the next element to be dequeued without dequeuing it. The operations of a queue make it a first-in-first-out (FIFO) data structure. In a FIFO data structure, ... |
special abilities. For example, the bread-and-butter Soldier class has medium armor, medium speed, and a well-rounded selection of weapons and grenades, while the Scout class is lightly armored, very fast, has a scanner that detects nearby enemies, but has very weak offensive weapons. One of the other differences with ... | a class system for the players. Players choose a class, which creates various restrictions on weapons and armor types available to that player, and also grants special abilities. For example, the bread-and-butter Soldier class has medium armor, medium speed, and a well-rounded selection of weapons and grenades, while t... |
but understandable.—J. Schwinger Standard Model In 1954, Yang Chen-Ning and Robert Mills generalised the local symmetry of QED, leading to non-Abelian gauge theories (also known as Yang–Mills theories), which are based on more complicated local symmetry groups. In QED, (electrically) charged particles interact via the ... | Murray Gell-Mann, and Heinrich Leutwyler discovered in 1971 that certain phenomena involving the strong interaction could also be explained by non-Abelian gauge theory. Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) was born. In 1973, David Gross, Frank Wilczek, and Hugh David Politzer showed that non-Abelian gauge theories are "asympto... |
it fails to take into account the fact that both photons and electrons can be polarized, which is to say that their orientations in space and time have to be taken into account. Therefore, P(A to B) consists of 16 complex numbers, or probability amplitude arrows. There are also some minor changes to do with the quantit... | any such complex interaction. It turns out that the basic idea of QED can be communicated while assuming that the square of the total of the probability amplitudes mentioned above (P(A to B), E(C to D) and j) acts just like our everyday probability (a simplification made in Feynman's book). Later on, this will be corre... |
i <= 25; i++)", " cout << l[i] << endl;", " for(int i = 0; i <= 34; i++)", " cout << l[0] + q + l[i] + q + ',' << endl;", " for(int i = 26; i <= 34; i++)", " cout << l[i] << endl;", " return 0;", "}", "=============<<<<<<<< Java Code >>>>>>>>=============", "public class Quine", "{", " public static void main(String[] ... | "self-reproducing programs", and "self-copying programs". A quine is a fixed point of an execution environment, when the execution environment is viewed as a function transforming programs into their outputs. Quines are possible in any Turing-complete programming language, as a direct consequence of Kleene's recursion ... |
is a categorical interpretation of this construction. Let be the category of integral domains and injective ring maps. The functor from to the category of fields which takes every integral domain to its fraction field and every homomorphism to the induced map on fields (which exists by the universal property) is the le... | consists of ratios between integral domain elements. The field of fractions of is sometimes denoted by or , and the construction is sometimes also called the fraction field, field of quotients, or quotient field of . All four are in common usage, but are not to be confused with the quotient of a ring by an ideal, which... |
Lemma, explicitly calculate this formula. The supplementary laws using Legendre symbols From these two supplements, we can obtain a third reciprocity law for the quadratic character -2 as follows: For -2 to be a quadratic residue, either -1 or 2 are both quadratic residues, or both non-residues :. So either : are both ... | 41, or 47. The former are ≡ 1 (mod 3) and the latter ≡ 2 (mod 3). Since the only residue (mod 3) is 1, we see that −3 is a quadratic residue modulo every prime which is a residue modulo 3. q = ±5 5 is in rows 11, 19, 29, 31, and 41 but not in rows 3, 7, 13, 17, 23, 37, 43, or 47. The former are ≡ ±1 (mod 5) and the lat... |
conditional quantum entropy. Unlike classical digital states (which are discrete), a qubit is continuous-valued, describable by a direction on the Bloch sphere. Despite being continuously valued in this way, a qubit is the smallest possible unit of quantum information, and despite the qubit state being continuous-value... | processing techniques. Quantum information refers to both the technical definition in terms of Von Neumann entropy and the general computational term. It is an interdisciplinary field that involves quantum mechanics, computer science, information theory, philosophy and cryptography among other fields. Its study is also... |
2-Quinolone 4-Quinolone Quinolone | Quinolone antibiotics |
sending in the quarterbacks with the play call from the sideline; Morton started in Super Bowl V, which his team lost, while Staubach started in Super Bowl VI the following year and won. Although Morton played most of the 1972 season due to an injury to Staubach, Staubach took back the starting job when he rallied the ... | season in which every game is vitally important". Most consistently successful NFL teams (for instance, multiple Super Bowl appearances within a short period of time) have been centered around a single starting quarterback; the one exception was the Washington Redskins under head coach Joe Gibbs who won three Super Bow... |
the diagonals. This is sometimes known as Euler's quadrilateral theorem and is a generalization of the parallelogram law. The German mathematician Carl Anton Bretschneider derived in 1842 the following generalization of Ptolemy's theorem, regarding the product of the diagonals in a convex quadrilateral This relation ca... | terms as where the lengths of the diagonals are and and the angle between them is . In the case of an orthodiagonal quadrilateral (e.g. rhombus, square, and kite), this formula reduces to since is . The area can be also expressed in terms of bimedians as where the lengths of the bimedians are and and the angle between ... |
The sender does not have to know the particular quantum state being transferred. Moreover, the location of the recipient can be unknown, but classical information needs to be sent from sender to receiver to complete the teleportation. Because classical information needs to be sent, teleportation can not occur faster th... | then sent through narrow-bandwidth filters to produce a coherence time that is much longer than the length of the pump pulse. They then used a two-photon interferometry for analyzing the entanglement so that the quantum property could be recognized when it is transferred from one photon to the other. Photon 1 was polar... |
requires (2n - 1) complex numbers (or a single point in a 2n-dimensional vector space). Standard representation In quantum mechanics, the general quantum state of a qubit can be represented by a linear superposition of its two orthonormal basis states (or basis vectors). These vectors are usually denoted as and . They ... | ground state. Sending the qubit through a quantum channel to a remote system or machine (an I/O operation), potentially as part of a quantum network. Quantum entanglement An important distinguishing feature between qubits and classical bits is that multiple qubits can exhibit quantum entanglement. Quantum entanglement ... |
and Yauyos–Chincha) have features of both Quechua I and Quechua II, and so are difficult to assign to either. Torero classifies them as the following: Quechua I or Quechua B, aka Central Quechua or Waywash, spoken in Peru's central highlands and coast. The most widely spoken varieties are Huaylas, Huaylla Wanca, and Co... | differ in the treatment of Spanish loanwords. These are sometimes adapted to the modern orthography and sometimes left as in Spanish. For instance, "I am Roberto" could be written Robertom kani or Ruwirtum kani. (The -m is not part of the name; it is an evidential suffix, showing how the information is known: firsthand... |
complexes that then assemble into even larger complexes. In such cases, one uses the nomenclature, e.g., "dimer of dimers" or "trimer of dimers", to suggest that the complex might dissociate into smaller sub-complexes before dissociating into monomers. Another distinction often made when referring to oligomers is wheth... | less certain than mass measurements, since unfolded proteins appear to have a much larger volume than folded proteins; additional experiments are required to determine whether a protein is unfolded or has formed an oligomer. Common techniques used to study protein quaternary structure Ultracentrifugation Surface-induce... |
legends, puns, and memorable characters, creating a 5-part series in the Sierra stable. The series was originally titled Hero's Quest. However, Sierra failed to trademark the name. The Milton Bradley Company successfully trademarked an electronic version of their unrelated joint Games Workshop board game, HeroQuest, wh... | rest or risking injury. Mana is only required by characters with skill in magic, and is calculated according to the character's intelligence and magic attributes. Puzzle and Experience points only show the development of the player and his progress in the game, though in the first game also affects the kind of random e... |
by the UK government. The number had been falling: there were 827 in 2007 and 790 in 2008. The number of NDPBs had fallen by over 10% since 1997. Staffing and expenditure of NDPBs had increased. They employed 111,000 people in 2009 and spent £46.5 billion, of which £38.4 billion was directly funded by the Government. U... | Accounting Standards Review Board, Takeovers Panel) to quasi-judicial (e.g. Police Complaints Authority, Race Relations Conciliator), to the arts (e.g. New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, NZ Film Commission), to social welfare (e.g. Housing Corporation of NZ) and to substantial enterprises (e.g. Auckland International Airp... |
wood, furs, and other natural materials, but are now often made of metal or plastic. Etymology The English word quiver has its origins in Old French, written as quivre, cuevre or coivre . Types Belt quiver The most common style of quiver is a flat or cylindrical container suspended from the belt. They are found across ... | being carried on the dominant hand side, off-hand side, or the small of the back. Some variants enclose almost the entire arrow, while minimalist "pocket quivers" consist of little more than a small stiff pouch that only covers the first few inches. The Bayeux Tapestry shows that most bowmen in medieval Europe used bel... |
the pound sterling. The Quid, a Canadian garage rock band from Winnipeg, Manitoba. Quid (encyclopedia), a French encyclopedia, established in 1963 by Dominique | The Quid, a Canadian garage rock band from Winnipeg, Manitoba. Quid (encyclopedia), a French encyclopedia, established in 1963 by Dominique Frémy. Quid Inc., a private software and services company, specializing in text-based data analysis. Tertium quids (sometimes quids), various factions of the Democratic-Republican |
malaria purine nucleoside phosphorylase enzyme. Chemistry The UV absorption of quinine peaks around 350 nm (in UVA). Fluorescent emission peaks at around 460 nm (bright blue/cyan hue). Quinine is highly fluorescent (quantum yield ~0.58) in 0.1 M sulfuric acid solution. The 3D structure of quinine can be viewed using QR... | but this risk is small and the physician should not hesitate to use quinine in people with G6PD deficiency when there is no alternative. Adverse effects Quinine can cause unpredictable serious and life-threatening blood and cardiovascular reactions including low platelet count and hemolytic-uremic syndrome/thrombotic t... |
People Quincy (name), including a list of people with the name Quincy Quincy political family, including members of the family Places and jurisdictions France Quincy, Cher, a commune in the Cher département A hamlet of Chilly in the Haute-Savoie département A former commune in the Seine-et-Marne département, now part o... | the Chicago Transit Authority's 'L' system Quincy House (disambiguation), several places Josiah Quincy House, a historical landmark in Quincy, Massachusetts built and owned by a Josiah Quincy Josiah Quincy Mansion, former mansion in Wollaston Park, Quincy, Massachusetts, built and owned by a Josiah Quincy Quincy Homest... |
a rare five-child multiple birth In music, a tuplet of five successive notes of equal duration The Quintuplet cluster, a star cluster near the | set of five similar items. It may refer to: Each of the children born in a rare five-child multiple |
pilot's license in the United States Quimby (surname), a list of people and fictional characters Quimby, Iowa, a small city in the United | woman to gain a pilot's license in the United States Quimby (surname), a list of people and fictional characters Quimby, Iowa, a small city in the United States Quimby (band), |
in the wild, where they may be released to supplement the wild population, or extend into areas outside their natural range. In 2007, 40 million quail were produced in the U.S. The collective noun for a group of quail is a flock, covey or bevy. New World Genus Callipepla Scaled quail, (commonly called blue quail) Calli... | bobwhite, Colinus nigrogularis Spot-bellied bobwhite, Colinus leucopogon Crested bobwhite, Colinus cristatus Genus Odontophorus Marbled wood quail, Odontophorus gujanensis Spot-winged wood quail, Odontophorus capueira Black-eared wood quail, Odontophorus melanotis Rufous-fronted wood quail, Odontophorus erythrops Black... |
Bunny Arts, entertainment and media Fictional entities Quagmire (comics), a Marvel Comics character Quagmire family, characters from the animated television sitcom Family Guy Glenn Quagmire, a friend of the head of the family Quagmire family, a principal family in the children's novel series A Series of Unfortunate Eve... | character Quagmire family, characters from the animated television sitcom Family Guy Glenn Quagmire, a friend of the head of the family Quagmire family, a principal family in the children's novel series A Series of Unfortunate Events Quagmire Moat, half of the Moat Twins from Eureeka's Castle Quagmire McDuck, a Disney ... |
fiber or aluminium alloy (or sometimes both aluminum and carbon are used), and is very lightweight for its strength. Shafts come with varying degrees of stiffness — referred to as the "spine" of the bolt. The more resistant to bending a bolt is, the more "spine" it is said to have, and a crossbow with higher draw weigh... | the shaft by acting like a stabilizer fin (fin-stabilization); reducing deviation from the longitudinal axis by creating a back-pulling center of pressure behind the bolt's center of mass (drag-stabilization); and in some particular cases, creating a rotation around the longitudinal axis (spin-stabilization) by having ... |
sequences. In the quasispecies model, mutations occur through errors made in the process of copying already existing sequences. Further, selection arises because different types of sequences tend to replicate at different rates, which leads to the suppression of sequences that replicate more slowly in favor of sequence... | copies with the same properties. Instead, what matters is the connectedness of the cloud. For example, the sequence AGGT has 12 (3+3+3+3) possible single point mutants AGGA, AGGG, and so on. If 10 of those mutants are viable genotypes that may reproduce (and some of whose offspring or grandchildren may mutate back into... |
China were lost to the Russian Empire in the mid-19th century. Manchuria was originally separated from China proper by the Inner Willow Palisade, a ditch and embankment planted with willows intended to restrict the movement of the Han Chinese, as the area was off-limits to civilian Han Chinese until the government star... | Others turned to fields such as engineering, medicine, or law, which by the nineteenth century demanded specialized learning. By the nineteenth century, it was no longer shameful to become an author or publisher of fiction. The Qing gentry were marked as much by their aspiration to a cultured lifestyle as by their lega... |
field theory. One might expect that, as with electromagnetism, the gravitational force should also have a corresponding quantum field theory. However, gravity is perturbatively nonrenormalizable. For a quantum field theory to be well defined according to this understanding of the subject, it must be asymptotically free... | It is widely hoped that a theory of quantum gravity would allow us to understand problems of very high energy and very small dimensions of space, such as the behavior of black holes, and the origin of the universe. Quantum mechanics and general relativity Graviton The observation that all fundamental forces except grav... |
service in terms of call quality even without QoS mechanisms in use on the user's connection to their ISP and the VoIP provider's connection to a different ISP. Under high load conditions, however, VoIP may degrade to cell-phone quality or worse. The mathematics of packet traffic indicate that network requires just 60%... | to cell-phone quality or worse. The mathematics of packet traffic indicate that network requires just 60% more raw capacity under conservative assumptions. IP and Ethernet efforts Unlike single-owner networks, the Internet is a series of exchange points interconnecting private networks. Hence the Internet's core is own... |
condition known as orthogonality or quadrature. The transmitted signal is created by adding the two carrier waves together. At the receiver, the two waves can be coherently separated (demodulated) because of their orthogonality property. Another key property is that the modulations are low-frequency/low-bandwidth wavef... | the noise level and linearity of the communications channel. QAM is being used in optical fiber systems as bit rates increase; QAM16 and QAM64 can be optically emulated with a 3-path interferometer. Demodulation of QAM In a QAM signal, one carrier lags the other by 90°, and its amplitude modulation is customarily refer... |
LGBT pride march held in the Indian city of Mumbai See also Qaem, refers to two completely separate Iranian weapons: | Meridiem), indicates medication should be taken every morning Quantum analog of AM complexity class - see QMA Queer Azaadi Mumbai, LGBT |
azhdarchid species. Q. lawsoni was found to be a valid taxon in 2021, and confirmed to belong to the same genus as Q. nothropi. An azhdarchid neck vertebra, discovered in 2002 from the Maastrichtian age Hell Creek Formation, may also belong to Quetzalcoatlus. The specimen (BMR P2002.2) was recovered accidentally when i... | an immigration event, as some experts have suggested. It co-existed with the thalassodromine Javelinadactylus, as well as an additional pterosaur taxon, suggesting a relatively high diversity of Late Cretaceous pterosaur genera. Feeding There have been a number of different ideas proposed about the lifestyle of Quetzal... |
death in 936, his widow Saint Matilda founded a religious community for women (Frauenstift) on the castle hill, where daughters of the higher nobility were educated. The main task of this collegiate foundation, Quedlinburg Abbey, was to pray for the memory of King Henry and the rulers who came after him. The Annals of ... | out repairs on the old architecture. Today, Quedlinburg is a center of restoration of Fachwerk houses. Quedlinburg is the setting for the acclaimed 2016 Frantz, serving as a quintessential small German town in the wake of WWI, home to the family who is reeling from the death of a son in the war. Geography Location The ... |
the integers). The term quantization may refer to: Signal processing Quantization (signal processing) Quantization (image processing) Color quantization Quantization (music) Physics Quantization (physics) Canonical quantization Geometric quantization Discrete spectrum, or otherwise discrete quantity Spatial quantizatio... | numbers) to a discrete set (such as the integers). The term quantization may refer to: Signal processing Quantization |
field of physics Old quantum theory, predating modern quantum mechanics Quantum field theory, an area of quantum mechanics that includes: Quantum electrodynamics Quantum chromodynamics Electroweak interaction Quantum gravity, a field of theoretical physics Quantum optics Quantum chemistry Quantum information Quantum Th... | quantum mechanics that includes: Quantum electrodynamics Quantum chromodynamics Electroweak interaction Quantum gravity, a field of theoretical physics Quantum optics Quantum chemistry Quantum |
U.S., amateurs can transmit up to 1,500 Watts. QRP enthusiasts contend that this practice is rarely necessary, and doing so wastes power, increases the likelihood of causing interference to nearby televisions, radios, and telephones and, for United States' amateurs, is contrary to FCC Part 97 rule, which states that on... | limit their transmitted RF output power to 5 Watts or less regardless of mode be it CW operation or SSB operation. Reliable two-way communication at such low power levels can be challenging due to changing radio propagation and the difficulty of receiving the relatively weak transmitted signals. QRP enthusiasts may emp... |
income tax law Quality, cost, delivery, in lean manufacturing Quintessential Player, formerly known as Quintessential CD | chromodynamics, is the theory of the strong interaction between quarks and gluons. |
Daltrey "Quicksilver" (instrumental), 1969 instrumental from Pink Floyd album Soundtrack from the Film More Shortened name form of Quicksilver Messenger Service, used by the band on their later record covers "Quicksilver Girl" (song), Steve Miller Band, 1968 album Sailor Film and television Quicksilver (U.S. game show)... | Comics universe Quicksilver, leader of the SilverHawks on the 1986 animated television series SilverHawks Quicksilver, a fictional synthetic hormone in The Invisible Man Other arts Quicksilver (novel) by Neal Stephenson, first volume of The Baroque Cycle Aircraft Eipper Quicksilver Quicksilver GT500 USS Quicksilver (SP... |
and baritone saxophone or (SATB). Often a second alto may be substituted for the soprano part (AATB) or a bass saxophone may be substituted for the baritone. Vocal quartet Compositions for four singers have been written for quartets a cappella; accompanied by instruments, such as a piano; and accompanied by larger voca... | instrument (e.g., double bass, tuba or bass guitar) and a drum kit. This configuration is sometimes modified by using a second horn replacing the chordal instrument, such as a trumpet and saxophone with string bass and drum kit, or by using two chordal instruments (e.g., piano and electric guitar). Popular music Rock a... |
the former occurs, then any subsequent measurement performed by Bob, in the same basis, will always return 1. If the latter occurs, (Alice measures 1) then Bob's measurement will return 0 with certainty. Thus, system has been altered by Alice performing a local measurement on system . This remains true even if the syst... | reference frames, in which each measurement (in its own relativistic time frame) occurs before the other, the measurement results remain correlated. The fundamental issue about measuring spin along different axes is that these measurements cannot have definite values at the same time―they are incompatible in the sense ... |
and Commerce between the two countries. France, then engaged in the 1792–1797 War of the First Coalition, which included Great Britain, viewed the 1794 Jay Treaty between the United States and Britain as incompatible with those treaties, and retaliated by seizing American ships trading with Britain. Diplomatic negotiat... | these to be built relatively quickly, and all saw action during the war. The US Navy was further reinforced by so-called 'subscription ships', privately funded vessels provided by individual cities. These included five frigates, among them the , commanded by Stephen Decatur, and four merchantmen converted into sloops. ... |
would have been prevented if Quality Systems had been in place. The rule is promulgated at 21 CFR 820. According to current Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP), medical device manufacturers have the responsibility to use good judgment when developing their quality system and apply those sections of the FDA Quality System... | The two have a great deal of similarity, and many manufacturers adopt QMS that is compliant with both guidelines. ISO 13485 are harmonized with the European Union medical devices directive (93/42/EEC) as well as the IVD and AIMD directives. The ISO standard is also incorporated in regulations for other jurisdictions su... |
or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 5.53% of the population. The median income for a household in the town was $26,250. About 22.4% of families and 21.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 39.4% of those under the age of 18. Transportation There are no significant highways passing t... | of the HMX-1 presidential helicopter squadron, the FBI Academy, the FBI Laboratory, the Marine Corps Combat Development Command, the Officer Candidates School, The Basic School, The United States Drug Enforcement Administration training academy, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the United States Army Criminal ... |
Diversion Supplementary Services (QSIG-CF), International and European Versions: ISO/IEC 13873, ETSI ETS 300 257 ECMA-178 - Private Integrated Services Network (PISN) - Inter-Exchange Signalling Protocol - Call Transfer Supplementary Service (QSIG-CT), International and European Versions: ISO/IEC 13869, ETSI ETS 300 26... | not owned by any company. This allows interoperability between communications platforms provided by disparate vendors. QSIG has two layers, called BC (basic call) and GF (generic function). QSIG BC describes how to set up calls between PBXs. QSIG GF provides supplementary services for large-scale corporate, educational... |
Penrose tiles, that produced only non-periodic tilings of the plane. These tilings displayed instances of fivefold symmetry. One year later Alan Mackay showed experimentally that the diffraction pattern from the Penrose tiling had a two-dimensional Fourier transform consisting of sharp 'delta' peaks arranged in a fivef... | the dimension of the space filled, e.g., the three-dimensional tiling displayed in a quasicrystal may have translational symmetry in two directions. Symmetrical diffraction patterns result from the existence of an indefinitely large number of elements with a regular spacing, a property loosely described as long-range o... |
people investing in hobbies has increased with time. Bricolage Bricolage and DIY are some of the terms describing the building, modifying, or repairing things without the direct aid of experts or professionals. Academic research has described DIY as behaviors where "individuals engage raw and semi-raw materials and par... | leisure is the purpose of work, and a reward in itself, and "leisure life" reflects the values and character of a nation. Leisure is considered a human right under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Play, recreation and work Recreation is difficult to separate from the general concept of play, which is usually ... |
the debt incurred to purchase them, then the equity must be negative, meaning the consumer or corporation is insolvent. Economist Paul Krugman wrote in 2014 that "the best working hypothesis seems to be that the financial crisis was only one manifestation of a broader problem of excessive debt—that it was a so-called "... | St. Louis posts the Smoothed U.S. Recession Probabilities (RECPROUSM156N). Inverted yield curve, the model developed by economist Jonathan H. Wright, uses yields on 10-year and three-month Treasury securities as well as the Fed's overnight funds rate. Another model developed by Federal Reserve Bank of New York economis... |
uses Bob's public key to send him an encrypted message. In the message, she can claim to be Alice, but Bob has no way of verifying that the message was from Alice, since anyone can use Bob's public key to send him encrypted messages. In order to verify the origin of a message, RSA can also be used to sign a message. Su... | encryption of the product of the respective plaintexts. That is, . Because of this multiplicative property, a chosen-ciphertext attack is possible. E.g., an attacker who wants to know the decryption of a ciphertext may ask the holder of the private key d to decrypt an unsuspicious-looking ciphertext for some value r ch... |
have been adapted for film and television. Life Birth, childhood, and early education Heinlein, born on July 7, 1907, to Rex Ivar Heinlein (an accountant) and Bam Lyle Heinlein, in Butler, Missouri, was the third of seven children. He was a sixth-generation German-American; a family tradition had it that Heinleins foug... | Paz, regarding the threat posed by government to individual freedom. Although Heinlein had previously written a few short stories in the fantasy genre, during this period he wrote his first fantasy novel, Glory Road. In Stranger in a Strange Land and I Will Fear No Evil, he began to mix hard science with fantasy, mysti... |
was found at Kostyonki and Borshchyovo, and at Sungir, dating back to 34,600 years ago—both, respectively in western Russia. Humans reached Arctic Russia at least 40,000 years ago, in Mamontovaya Kurya. Nomadic pastoralism developed in the Pontic–Caspian steppe beginning in the Chalcolithic. Remnants of these steppe ci... | Central Powers of World War I; Bolshevist Russia surrendered most of its western territories, which hosted 34% of its population, 54% of its industries, 32% of its agricultural land, and roughly 90% of its coal mines. The Allied powers launched an unsuccessful military intervention in support of anti-communist forces. ... |
order to part with it. In experiments, the latter price is sometimes significantly higher than the former (but see Plott and Zeiler 2005, Plott and Zeiler 2007 and Klass and Zeiler, 2013). Tversky and Kahneman do not characterize loss aversion as irrational. Behavioral economics includes a large number of other amendme... | the rationality assumption. However, the predictions made by a specific version of the theory are testable. In recent years, the most prevalent version of rational choice theory, expected utility theory, has been challenged by the experimental results of behavioral economics. Economists are learning from other fields, ... |
in between. All of these languages do have the "northwest" characteristics of lenition and loss of gemination. However: The Gallo‒Italic languages have vowel-changing plurals rather than /s/ plurals. The Lombard language in north-central Italy and the Rhaeto-Romance languages have the "southeast" characteristic of inst... | Lexical and grammatical similarities among the Romance languages, and between Latin and each of them, are apparent from the following examples having the same meaning in various Romance lects: {| cellspacing="3px" | English || She always closes the window before she dines/before dining. |- | Latin || |- | Vulgar Latin ... |
1995, following the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa. The respective world governing bodies are World Rugby (rugby union) and the Rugby League International Federation (rugby league). Rugby football was one of many versions of football played at English public schools in the 19th century. Although rugby league init... | and Europe also play in the Pacific Cup and European Cup respectively. Rules Distinctive features common to both rugby codes include the oval ball and throwing the ball forward is not allowed so that players can gain ground only by running with the ball or by kicking it. As the sport of rugby league moved further away ... |
by Sting "Russian", from the album Tubular Bells 2003 by Mike Oldfield "Russian", from the album <|°_°|> by Caravan Palace Nik Russian, the perpetrator of a con committed in 2002 The South African name for a variety of Kielbasa sausage Something related to Ruthenia Ruthenians Ruthenian language Something related to the... | people of Russia, regardless of ethnicity Russophone, Russian-speaking person (, russkogovoryashchy, russkoyazychny) Russian language, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages Russian alphabet Russian cuisine Russian culture Russian studies Russian may also refer to: Russian dressing The Russians, a book by Hedri... |
as the second five-eighth in the Southern Hemisphere. The centres will attempt to tackle attacking players; whilst in attack, they should employ speed and strength to breach opposition defences. The wings are generally positioned on the outside of the backline. Their primary function is to finish off moves and score tr... | and 22-metre line. In this area, a defensive player who cleanly catches a ball kicked by the other team, without the ball having already touched the ground after the kick, is entitled to claim a free kick, or "mark". Additional broken or dashed lines (of 5 metre dash lengths, according to the Laws) are drawn in each ha... |
finish first in the Pool of death and finish third overall in the tournament. The attention from Argentina's performance led to Argentina participating in SANZAAR and the professionalization of rugby in Argentina. The 2011 tournament was awarded to New Zealand in November 2005, ahead of bids from Japan and South Africa... | teams qualify automatically based on their performance in the previous World Cup — the top three teams in each of the four group (pool) stages of the previous tournament qualify for the next tournament as seeded teams. The qualification system for the remaining eight places is region-based, with a total eight teams all... |
postulates or Dedekind–Peano axioms), are axioms for the natural numbers presented in the 19th century by the German mathematician Richard Dedekind and by the Italian mathematician Giuseppe Peano. The Peano Axioms define the natural numbers referring to a recursive successor function and addition and multiplication as ... | recursion." An alternative form is the following, from Andrew Plotkin: "If you already know what recursion is, just remember the answer. Otherwise, find someone who is standing closer to Douglas Hofstadter than you are; then ask him or her what recursion is." Recursive acronyms are other examples of recursive humor. PH... |
completely renounced racism and segregation, and spoken in opposition to the Iraq War. Renowned for his knowledge of Senate precedent and parliamentary procedure, Byrd wrote a four-volume history of the Senate in later life. Near the end of his life, Byrd was in declining health and was hospitalized several times. He d... | a proposal to provide emergency, Byrd confirmed that he had spoken with United States Secretary of the Treasury G. William Miller about what Byrd called "excellent" chances that the Senate would complete work on a federal loans guarantees bill for Chrysler. In August 1980, Byrd stated that Congress was unlikely to pass... |
with a bony base (osteoderms), forming armor. In lepidosaurians, such as lizards and snakes, the whole skin is covered in overlapping epidermal scales. Such scales were once thought to be typical of the class Reptilia as a whole, but are now known to occur only in lepidosaurians. The scales found in turtles and crocodi... | base (osteoderms), forming armor. In lepidosaurians, such as lizards and snakes, the whole skin is covered in overlapping epidermal scales. Such scales were once thought to be typical of the class Reptilia as a whole, but are now known to occur only in lepidosaurians. The scales found in turtles and crocodiles are of d... |
plan promotes zero-emissions vehicles and investments in the infrastructure to support them. In 2014, Rhode Island received grants of $2,711,685 from the Environmental Protection Agency to clean up Brownfield sites in eight locations. The grants provided communities with funding to assess, clean up, and redevelop conta... | his religious views, and he settled at the top of Narragansett Bay on land sold or given to him by Narragansett sachem Canonicus. He named the site Providence, "having a sense of God's merciful providence unto me in my distress", and it became a place of religious freedom where all were welcome. In 1638 (after conferri... |
Some music historians have also pointed to important and innovative developments that built on rock and roll in this period, including multitrack recording, developed by Les Paul, the electronic treatment of sound by such innovators as Joe Meek, and the "Wall of Sound" productions of Phil Spector, continued desegregati... | neglects the black guitarists who did the same thing before Berry, such as Goree Carter, Gatemouth Brown, and the originator of the style, T-Bone Walker. Country boogie and Chicago electric blues supplied many of the elements that would be seen as characteristic of rock and roll. Inspired by electric blues, Chuck Berry... |
and culture, however, indicates that religion and culture can be seen as two separate systems, though not without some interplay. Social constructionism One modern academic theory of religion, social constructionism, says that religion is a modern concept that suggests all spiritual practice and worship follows a model... | frequently used in the writings of Josephus in the first century CE. It was used in mundane contexts and could mean multiple things from respectful fear to excessive or harmfully distracting practices of others; to cultic practices. It was often contrasted with the Greek word deisidaimonia which meant too much fear. Re... |
done by a Reed professor of statistics and her students to investigate the mechanics of the ranking algorithm, attempting to see if Reed's ranking had been purposefully devalued because the school refused to submit its information to U.S. News. Admissions Admissions For Fall 2016, the freshman class had 357 students. 1... | Division II schools at the final tournament of the Northwest Forensics Conference in February 2004. Loren Pope, former education editor for The New York Times, writes about Reed in Colleges That Change Lives, saying, "If you're a genuine intellectual, live the life of the mind, and want to learn for the sake of learnin... |
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