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limit, and Jupiter's tidal forces had acted to pull apart the comet. The comet was later observed as a series of fragments ranging up to in diameter. These fragments collided with Jupiter's southern hemisphere between July 16 and 22, 1994 at a speed of approximately (Jupiter's escape velocity) or . The prominent scars ... | . The plume from the fireball quickly reached a height of over and was observed by the HST. A few minutes after the impact fireball was detected, Galileo measured renewed heating, probably due to ejected material falling back onto the planet. Earth-based observers detected the fireball rising over the limb of the plane... |
Ceres Brewery was a beer and soft drink producing facility in Århus, Denmark, that operated from 1856 until 2008. Although the brewery was closed by its owner Royal Unibrew the Ceres brand continues, with the product brewed at other facilities. The area where the brewery stood is being redeveloped for residential and c... | Ceres, and its opening was announced in the local newspaper, Århus Stiftstidende. Lottrup expanded the brewery after ten years, adding a grand new building as his private residence. He was succeeded by his son-in-law, Laurits Christian Meulengracht, who ran the brewery for almost thirty years, expanding it further befo... |
meeting to support his language and encourage the use of algebraic expressions, Grace Hopper sent a memo to the short-range committee reiterating Sperry Rand's efforts to create a language based on English. In 1980, Grace Hopper commented that "COBOL 60 is 95% FLOW-MATIC" and that COMTRAN had had an "extremely small" i... | Micro Focus and RainCode introduced object-oriented COBOL compilers targeting the .NET Framework. There were many other new features, many of which had been in the CODASYL COBOL Journal of Development since 1978 and had missed the opportunity to be included in COBOL-85. These other features included: Free-form code Use... |
a body or a class of people who work at a common activity, generally in a structured or hierarchical organization. A location in which a crew works is called a crewyard or a workyard. The word has nautical resonances: the tasks involved in operating a ship, particularly a sailing ship, providing numerous specialities w... | works is called a crewyard or a workyard. The word has nautical resonances: the tasks involved in operating a ship, particularly a sailing ship, providing numerous specialities within a ship's crew, often organised with a chain of command. Traditional nautical usage strongly distinguishes officers from crew, though the... |
response variable without a complete three-level factorial Complementary cumulative distribution function Continuous collision detection, especially in rigid-body dynamics Countercurrent distribution, used for separating mixtures Core complex die, an element of AMD Zen 3 microprocessors Medicine Canine compulsive disor... | behavioral condition in dogs, similar to human obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) Caput-collum-diaphyseal angle, the angle between the neck and the shaft of the femur in the hip Cleidocranial dysostosis (also called cleidocranial dysplasia), a genetic abnormality in humans Central core disease, a rare neuromuscular di... |
will travel. Simon Sze details the advantages of a buried-channel device: This thin layer (= 0.2–0.3 micron) is fully depleted and the accumulated photogenerated charge is kept away from the surface. This structure has the advantages of higher transfer efficiency and lower dark current, from reduced surface recombinati... | and the overall system's optical design. The choice of architecture comes down to one of utility. If the application cannot tolerate an expensive, failure-prone, power-intensive mechanical shutter, an interline device is the right choice. Consumer snap-shot cameras have used interline devices. On the other hand, for th... |
memory (DRAM) used for primary storage, and static random-access memory (SRAM) used for CPU cache. Most semiconductor memory is organized into memory cells each storing one bit (0 or 1). Flash memory organization includes both one bit per memory cell and multi-level cell capable of storing multiple bits per cell. The m... | memory made from discrete devices was first shipped by Texas Instruments to the United States Air Force in 1961. The same year, the concept of solid-state memory on an integrated circuit (IC) chip was proposed by applications engineer Bob Norman at Fairchild Semiconductor. The first bipolar semiconductor memory IC chip... |
central securities depository company Control Data Corporation, former supercomputer company CDC Software, a computer software company spun off from Control Data Corporation ComfortDelGro Australia, a major Australian operator of buses formerly named ComfortDelGro Cabcharge Construction Data Company, also known as CDC ... | and CDC Publishing, a commercial construction reporting service Loong Air, by ICAO code Other organizations Cult of the Dead Cow (cDc), a computer hacker and DIY media organization Places Center Day Camp, North Windham, Maine, U.S. , library in Quebec, Canada Communicable Disease Centre, former hospital in Novena, Sing... |
for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion National Center for Environmental Health and Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry National Center for Injury Prevention and Control Deputy Director – Infectious Diseases National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases National Center for Emerging... | Associate Director – Communication Associate Director – Laboratory Science and Safety Associate Director – Policy and Strategy The Office of Public Health Preparedness was created during the 2001 anthrax attacks shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Its purpose was to coordinate among the governmen... |
as a gas of nonrelativistic, non-interacting electrons and nuclei that obey Fermi–Dirac statistics. This Fermi gas model was then used by the British physicist Edmund Clifton Stoner in 1929 to calculate the relationship among the mass, radius, and density of white dwarfs, assuming they were homogeneous spheres. Wilhelm... | time. The fact that the roles of Stoner and Anderson are often overlooked in the astronomy community has been noted. Physics Electron degeneracy pressure is a quantum-mechanical effect arising from the Pauli exclusion principle. Since electrons are fermions, no two electrons can be in the same state, so not all electro... |
(1) every local church is a full realization in miniature of the entire Church of Jesus Christ; and (2) the Church, while on earth, besides the local church, can only be invisible and ideal. While other theories may insist on the truth of the former, the latter precept of congregationalism gives the entire theory a uni... | association. Finally, the congregational theory strictly forbids ministers from ruling their local churches by themselves. Not only does the minister serve by the approval of the congregation, but committees further constrain the pastor from exercising power without consent by either the particular committee, or the en... |
the 1890s. Volunteer cavalry regiments like the Rough Riders consisted of horsemen such as cowboys, ranchers and other outdoorsmen, that served as a cavalry in the United States Military. First World War Pre-war developments At the beginning of the 20th century all armies still maintained substantial cavalry forces, al... | are the Assakenoi and Aspasioi of the Classical writings, and the Ashvakayanas and Ashvayanas in Pāṇini's Ashtadhyayi. The Assakenoi had faced Alexander with 30,000 infantry, 20,000 cavalry and 30 war elephants. Scholars have identified the Assakenoi and Aspasioi clans of Kunar and Swat valleys as a section of the Kamb... |
enzyme for this conversion – succinyl-CoA:acetoacetate CoA-transferase (EC 2.8.3.5). Some variability also exists at the previous step – the conversion of 2-oxoglutarate to succinyl-CoA. While most organisms utilize the ubiquitous NAD+-dependent 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, some bacteria utilize a ferredoxin-dependent... | the mitochondrion. In prokaryotic cells, such as bacteria, which lack mitochondria, the citric acid cycle reaction sequence is performed in the cytosol with the proton gradient for ATP production being across the cell's surface (plasma membrane) rather than the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. The overall yield of ... |
blade from a Caterpillar D8 to a Sherman. The later M1 dozer blade was standardized to fit any Sherman with VVSS suspension and the M1A1 would fit the wider HVSS. Some M4s made for the Engineer Corps had the blades fitted permanently and the turrets removed. In the early stages of the 1944 Battle of Normandy before the... | keep up with tank formations. They were not used on D-Day but were issued to the 79th Armoured Division in Belgium during the latter part of 1944. In U.S. Forces, Sherman tanks were also fitted with dozer blades, and anti-mine roller devices were developed, enabling engineering operations and providing similar capabili... |
from the riches acquired in the Spanish colonisation of the Americas, but, in time, also carried the main burden of military expenses of the united Spanish kingdoms. After Isabella's death, Ferdinand II personally ruled both kingdoms. By virtue of descent from his maternal grandparents, Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabe... | a major international cultural centre and a major tourist destination. In 1992, Barcelona hosted the Summer Olympic Games. In November 2003, elections to the Parliament of Catalonia gave the government to a left-wing catalanist coalition formed by the Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC-PSOE), Republican Left of Catalo... |
to destroy the Egyptian fleet with fire ships that might have been successful if the wind had not failed just after the Greek ships entered Alexandria harbour. After the end of the War and the independence of Greece, Kanaris became an officer of the new Hellenic Navy, reaching the rank of admiral, and became a prominen... | uncle Dimitris Bourekas. Military career Kanaris gained his fame during the Greek War of Independence (1821–1829). Unlike most other prominent figures of the War, he had never been initiated into the Filiki Eteria (Society of Friends), which played a significant role in the uprising against the Ottoman Empire, primaril... |
in response to any physical challenge to Iraqi control of the oil assets, Sagan together with his "TTAPS" colleagues and Paul Crutzen, warned in January 1991 in The Baltimore Sun and Wilmington Morning Star newspapers that if the fires were left to burn over a period of several months, enough smoke from the 600 or so 1... | 11, also carrying another copy of the plaque, was launched the following year. He continued to refine his designs; the most elaborate message he helped to develop and assemble was the Voyager Golden Record, which was sent out with the Voyager space probes in 1977. Sagan often challenged the decisions to fund the Space ... |
if the missiles were removed. On October 26 at 6:00 pm EDT, the State Department started receiving a message that appeared to be written personally by Khrushchev. It was Saturday 2:00 am in Moscow. The long letter took several minutes to arrive, and it took translators additional time to translate and transcribe it. Ro... | ordered a naval "quarantine" on October 22 to prevent further missiles from reaching Cuba. By using the term "quarantine" rather than "blockade" (an act of war by legal definition), the United States was able to avoid the implications of a state of war. The US announced it would not permit offensive weapons to be deliv... |
blades 3-lobed -partite, and lobes lobulate and obtuse. The cauline leaves are similar to the basal ones, while the upper ones are bract like. The hermaphrodite (bisexual) flowers are terminal to stem and branches. They are usually pentamerous (with five spreading perianth petaloid sepal segments). Five tubular honey-l... | the innermost being scarious staminodes. There are ten membranaceous intrastaminal scales. There are five pistils and the Carpels are free. The fruit has several (five to 15) follicles which are semi erect and slightly connate downwards. These hold many seeds and are formed at the end of the pistils. The nectar is main... |
last-level cache. These caches have grown to handle synchronisation primitives between threads and atomic operations, and interface with a CPU-style MMU. DSPs Digital signal processors have similarly generalised over the years. Earlier designs used scratchpad memory fed by DMA, but modern DSPs such as Qualcomm Hexagon ... | the newly retrieved data. The heuristic used to select the entry to replace is known as the replacement policy. One popular replacement policy, "least recently used" (LRU), replaces the oldest entry, the entry that was accessed less recently than any other entry (see cache algorithm). More efficient caching algorithms ... |
announced in February 2011 that the company name would revert to Meritor, Inc. Cummins, Inc. is by far the region's largest employer, and the Infotech Park accounts for a sizable number of research jobs in Columbus proper. Just south of Columbus are the North American headquarters of Toyota Material Handling, U.S.A., I... | 18; 8.1% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 27.3% were from 25 to 44; 24.9% were from 45 to 64; and 14.4% were 65 years of age or older. The gender makeup of the city was 48.4% male and 51.6% female. 2000 census As of the census of 2000, there were 39,059 people, 15,985 households, and 10,566 families residing in the ... |
(PNG) Börje Langefors Chris Lattner – creator of Swift (programming language) and LLVM compiler infrastructure Steve Lawrence Edward D. Lazowska Joshua Lederberg Manny M Lehman Charles E. Leiserson – cache-oblivious algorithms, provably good work-stealing, coauthor of Introduction to Algorithms Douglas Lenat – artifici... | Bresenham's algorithm Sergey Brin – co-founder of Google David J. Brown – unified memory architecture, binary compatibility Per Brinch Hansen (surname "Brinch Hansen") – RC 4000 multiprogramming system, operating system kernels, microkernels, monitors, concurrent programming, Concurrent Pascal, distributed computing & ... |
them expensive to run. Two of the leading centres have been the University of Rennes (France) and the University of Birmingham (UK). A more recent development has been a pulsed version of the CRESU, which requires far less gas and therefore smaller pumps. Kinetics Most species have a negligible vapour pressure at such ... | species have a negligible vapour pressure at such low temperatures and this means that they quickly condense on the sides of the apparatus. Essentially, the CRESU technique provides a "wall-less flow tube," which allows the kinetics of gas phase reactions to be investigated at much lower temperatures than otherwise pos... |
it does not create them as their semantics are not fully POSIX-compliant. The POSIX API for handling access control lists (ACLs) is supported and maps to the Windows NT ACL system. Special formats of /etc/passwd and /etc/group are provided that include pointers to the Windows equivalent SIDs (in the Gecos field), allow... | are normal Windows executables. This means that Cygwin programs have full access to the Windows API and other Windows libraries, which allows gradual porting of programs from one platform to the other. However, programmers need to be careful about mixing conflicting POSIX and Windows functions. The version of gcc that ... |
city center. Local bus service is also available. Railways The metre gauge railway from Athens and Pireaeus reached Corinth in 1884. This station closed to regular public transport in 2007. In 2005, two years prior, the city was connected to the Proastiakos/Suburban, the Athens suburban rail network, following the comp... | Mountains, and the monolithic rock of Acrocorinth, where the medieval acropolis was built. History Corinth derives its name from Ancient Corinth, a city-state of antiquity. The site was occupied from before 3000 BC. Historical references begin with the early 8th century BC, when Corinth began to develop as a commercial... |
but whose metropolitan bishop Nunechius of Laodicea, the capital of the Roman province of Phrygia Pacatiana signed the acts on his behalf. Byzantine period and decline The city's fame and renowned status continued into the Byzantine period, and in 858, it was distinguished as a Metropolitan See. The Byzantines also bui... | name The medieval poet Manuel Philes, incorrectly, imagined that the name "Colossae" was connected to the Colossus of Rhodes. More recently, in an interpretation which ties Colossae to an Indo-European root that happens to be shared with the word kolossos, Jean-Pierre Vernant has connected the name to the idea of setti... |
The Golden Ass, Isis delivers what Ceisiwr Serith calls "essentially a charge of a goddess". This is rather different from the modern version known in Wicca, though they have the same premise, that of the rules given by a great Mother Goddess to her faithful. The Charge of the Goddess is also known under the title Levi... | of the Heart Girt with the Serpent by Aleister Crowley. The charge affirms that all acts of love and pleasure are sacred to the Goddess, e.g.: History Ancient precedents In book eleven, chapter 47 of Apuleius's The Golden Ass, Isis delivers what Ceisiwr Serith calls "essentially a charge of a goddess". This is rather d... |
box score known containing the name Young came from that season. In that game, Young played first base and had three hits in three at-bats. After the season, Young received an offer to play for the minor league Canton team, which started Young's professional career. Professional baseball career Minor leagues Young bega... | Young to face him so that he could repeat his performance against Boston's ace. Three days later, Young pitched a perfect game against Waddell and the Athletics. It was the first perfect game in American League history. Waddell was the 27th and last batter, and when he flied out, Young shouted, "How do you like that, y... |
justifiable way to write him out while still leaving enough scope for a possible return. The decision was made that Brian should die. Quinten was in Los Angeles when the storyline was decided, and upon his return to the United Kingdom, he was shocked at Brian's fate and threatened to fly back to America so that scenes ... | his character was married to Gail and the story conference called to write Brian out struggled to find a justifiable way to write him out while still leaving enough scope for a possible return. The decision was made that Brian should die. Quinten was in Los Angeles when the storyline was decided, and upon his return to... |
he was bored. While repeating the earlier stories, the later sources of Suetonius and Cassius Dio provide additional tales of insanity. They accuse Caligula of incest with his sisters, Agrippina the Younger, Drusilla, and Livilla, and say he prostituted them to other men. Additionally, they mention affairs with various... | the reign of Tiberius. He aided those who lost property in fires, abolished certain taxes, and gave out prizes to the public at gymnastic events. He allowed new members into the equestrian and senatorial orders. Perhaps most significantly, he restored the practice of elections. Cassius Dio said that this act "though de... |
effectively calculable function. Although the thesis has near-universal acceptance, it cannot be formally proven as the concept of an effectively calculability is only informally defined. Since its inception, variations on the original thesis have arisen, including statements about what can physically be realized by a ... | thesis have arisen, including statements about what can physically be realized by a computer in our universe (physical Church-Turing thesis) and what can be efficiently computed (Church–Turing thesis (complexity theory)). These variations are not due to Church or Turing, but arise from later work in complexity theory a... |
with the surname include: Alejandro Chomski (born 1968), Argentine film director and screenwriter Aviva Chomsky (born 1957), American historian Carol (Schatz) Chomsky (1930–2008), American linguist and wife of Noam Chomsky Judith Chomsky (born 1942), American human rights lawyer and co-founder of the Juvenile Law Cente... | at MIT (born 1957), Polish speedway rider and coach William Chomsky (1896–1977), American scholar of Hebrew (1925–2016), Soviet and Russian theater director See also Gryf coat of arms Odrowąż coat of arms Slavic-language surnames Polish-language surnames Surnames of Polish origin Polish toponymic surnames |
serving many users by multitasking their individual programs. In multiprogramming systems, a task runs until it must wait for an external event or until the operating system's scheduler forcibly swaps the running task out of the CPU. Real-time systems such as those designed to control industrial robots, require timely ... | runs until it must wait for an external event or until the operating system's scheduler forcibly swaps the running task out of the CPU. Real-time systems such as those designed to control industrial robots, require timely processing; a single processor might be shared between calculations of machine movement, communica... |
with Christianity, nationalism and authoritarianism that have some similarities to fascism. Frederic Wakeman suggested that the New Life Movement was "Confucian fascism". Under Chiang’s rule, there also existed the Blue Shirts Society, which was largely modelled on those of the Blackshirts in the National Fascist Party... | West and in the Soviet Union, Chiang Kai-shek was known as the "Red General". Movie theaters in the Soviet Union showed newsreels and clips of Chiang. At Moscow, Sun Yat-sen University portraits of Chiang were hung on the walls; and, in the Soviet May Day Parades that year, Chiang's portrait was to be carried along wit... |
heated air will not detonate without a fuel being present. Higher compression ratios can make gasoline (petrol) engines subject to engine knocking (also known as "detonation", "pre-ignition" or "pinging") if lower octane-rated fuel is used. This can reduce efficiency or damage the engine if knock sensors are not presen... | to be reached with less fuel, while giving a longer expansion cycle, creating more mechanical power output and lowering the exhaust temperature. Petrol engines In petrol (gasoline) engines used in passenger cars for the past 20 years, compression ratios have typically been between 8:1 and 12:1. Several production engin... |
Although a possible compromise solution had already been received from England, this does not seem to have ever been considered in-depth, probably on account of it containing an oath of Homage between Emperor and Pope, which been a historical sticking point in earlier negotiations. The papal delegation was led by Cardi... | survived except in subsequent copies. A copy of the former is also held in the Codex Udalrici, but this is an abridged version for political circulation, as it reduces the number of imperial concessions made. Indicating the extent that he saw the agreement as a papal victory, Calixtus had a copy of the Henricianum pain... |
This set is context-free, since the union of two context-free languages is always context-free. But there is no way to unambiguously parse strings in the (non-context-free) subset which is the intersection of these two languages. Dyck language The language of all properly matched parentheses is generated by the grammar... | with a pushdown automaton. Determining an instance of the membership problem; i.e. given a string , determine whether where is the language generated by a given grammar ; is also known as recognition. Context-free recognition for Chomsky normal form grammars was shown by Leslie G. Valiant to be reducible to boolean mat... |
caffeine is the coffee bean, the seed of the Coffea plant. People may drink beverages containing caffeine to relieve or prevent drowsiness and to improve cognitive performance. To make these drinks, caffeine is extracted by steeping the plant product in water, a process called infusion. Caffeine-containing drinks, such... | diagnostic model of caffeine addiction is not supported by evidence. The American Psychiatric Association's does not include the diagnosis of a caffeine addiction but proposes criteria for the disorder for more study. Dependence and withdrawal Withdrawal can cause mild to clinically significant distress or impairment i... |
Greiner while at Stanford University), but within a few years of the launch of the Cyc project it became clear that even representing a typical news story or novel or advertisement would require more than the expressive power of full first-order logic, namely second-order predicate calculus ("What is the relationship b... | Cyc; listed here are a few mutually dissimilar instances: Pharmaceutical Term Thesaurus Manager/Integrator For over a decade, Glaxo has used Cyc to semi-automatically integrate all the large (hundreds of thousands of terms) thesauri of pharmaceutical-industry terms that reflect differing usage across companies, countri... |
Navy), a Seabee occupational rating in the U.S. Navy Languages Canadian English Chechen language (ISO 639-1 language code: ce) Organizations Church of England, the state church of the U.K. and mother church of the Anglican Communion, also referred to as the C of E Command element (United States Marine Corps), headquart... | College English, an official publication of the American National Council of Teachers of English Common Entrance Examination, tests used by independent schools in the UK Conductive education, an educational system developed for people with motor disorders Continuing education, a broad spectrum of post-secondary learnin... |
time. Four years later, Valderrama led his nation to qualify for the 1998 World Cup in France, scoring three goals during the qualifying stages. His impact in the final tournament at the advancing age of 37, however, was less decisive, and, despite defeating Tunisia, Colombia once again suffered a first round exit, fol... | Most Valuable Player, finishing the season with 4 goals and 17 assists. He remained with the club for the 1997 season, and also spent a spell on loan back at Deportivo Cali in Colombia, before moving to another MLS side, Miami Fusion, in 1998, where he also remained for two seasons. He returned to Tampa Bay in 2000, sp... |
the United States. His daughter Rosa recounted that her father invented the salad at his restaurant Caesar's (at the Hotel Caesar in Tijuana, Mexico) when a Fourth of July rush in 1924 depleted the kitchen's supplies. Cardini made do with what he had, adding the dramatic flair of the table-side tossing "by the chef." C... | Cardini made do with what he had, adding the dramatic flair of the table-side tossing "by the chef." Cardini was living in San Diego, but he was also working in Tijuana, where he avoided the restrictions of Prohibition. A number of Cardini's staff have said that they invented the dish. Julia Child said that she had eat... |
"Please make no mystery about it—it was only an idea to put the black kitten on her cousin's shoulder. Nothing deeper." Beaux donated Sita and Sarita to the Musée du Luxembourg, but only after making a copy for herself. Another highly regarded portrait from that period is New England Woman (1895), a nearly all-white oi... | explained, "Please make no mystery about it—it was only an idea to put the black kitten on her cousin's shoulder. Nothing deeper." Beaux donated Sita and Sarita to the Musée du Luxembourg, but only after making a copy for herself. Another highly regarded portrait from that period is New England Woman (1895), a nearly a... |
control. The 1932 Chryslers introduced the Floating Power rubber engine mounts which eliminated further vibrations from the chassis. A vacuum-controlled automatic clutch, Oilite bearings, and the first universal joints with roller bearings were also added. In 1933 Chrysler models received a host of new improvements inc... | EFI Chryslers were so dissatisfied that all but one were retrofitted with carburetors (while that one has been completely restored, with original EFI electronic problems resolved). Imperial would see new body styles introduced every two to three years, all with V8 engines and automatic transmissions, as well as technol... |
of the metropolis of London, though it remains a notable part of central London. Administratively, it forms one of the 33 local authority districts of London; however, the City of London is not a London borough, a status reserved for the other 32 districts (including London's only other city, the City of Westminster). ... | when the County of London was created. The local authority for the city, namely the City of London Corporation, is unique in the UK and has some unusual responsibilities for a local council, such as being the police authority. It is also unusual in having responsibilities and ownerships beyond its boundaries. The corpo... |
understanding up to and throughout the Renaissance (i.e. for almost two thousand years), and various terms being used to describe the clitoris seemed to have further confused the issue of its structure. In addition to Avicenna's naming it the albaratha or virga ("rod") and Colombo's calling it sweetness of Venus, Hippo... | mm for the mean. Other research indicates that the clitoral body can measure in length, while the clitoral body and crura together can be or more in length. Hood The clitoral hood projects at the front of the labia commissure, where the edges of the labia majora (outer lips) meet at the base of the pubic mound; it is p... |
4–2. The Cubs are the oldest Major League Baseball team to have never changed their city; they have played in Chicago since 1871, and continuously so since 1874 due to the Great Chicago Fire. They have played more games and have more wins than any other team in Major League baseball since 1876. They have won three Worl... | decades of the 19th century, Chicago was the destination of waves of immigrants from Ireland, Southern, Central and Eastern Europe, including Italians, Jews, Russians, Poles, Greeks, Lithuanians, Bulgarians, Albanians, Romanians, Turkish, Croatians, Serbs, Bosnians, Montenegrins and Czechs. To these ethnic groups, the ... |
could no longer compete in performance. Models 6x86 The 6x86 (codename M1) was released by Cyrix in 1996. The first generation of 6x86 had heat problems. This was primarily caused by their higher heat output than other x86 CPUs of the day and, as such, computer builders sometimes did not equip them with adequate coolin... | as being a P5 Pentium 166's equal. However, the PR rating was not an entirely truthful representation of the 6x86's performance. While the 6x86's integer performance was significantly higher than P5 Pentium's, its floating point performance was more mediocre—between 2 and 4 times the performance of the 486 FPU per cloc... |
summarized in a specific call number: L,45;421:6;253:f.44'N5 Organization The colon classification system uses 42 main classes that are combined with other letters, numbers, and marks in a manner resembling the Library of Congress Classification. Facets CC uses five primary categories, or facets, to specify the sorting... | associated with every item in a library, and so form a reasonably universal sorting system. As an example, the subject "research in the cure of tuberculosis of lungs by x-ray conducted in India in 1950" would be categorized as: Medicine,Lungs;Tuberculosis:Treatment;X-ray:Research.India'1950 This is summarized in a spec... |
frame such as an address register. Census counts are necessary to adjust samples to be representative of a population by weighting them as is common in opinion polling. Similarly, stratification requires knowledge of the relative sizes of different population strata, which can be derived from census enumerations. In so... | sampling frame to count the population. This is the only way to be sure that everyone has been included as otherwise those not responding would not be followed up on and individuals could be missed. The fundamental premise of a census is that the population is not known and a new estimate is to be made by the analysis ... |
that proceed with the absorption of light by atoms or molecules.. History of physical chemistry – history of the study of macroscopic, atomic, subatomic, and particulate phenomena in chemical systems in terms of physical laws and concepts. History of chemical kinetics – history of the study of rates of chemical process... | to chemistry Alchemy (outline) History of alchemy History of the branches of chemistry History of analytical chemistry – history of the study of the separation, identification, and quantification of the chemical components of natural and artificial materials. History of astrochemistry – history of the study of the abun... |
Gilles Deleuze – Félix Guattari – Ernesto Laclau – Claude Lefort – A Cyborg Manifesto – Reconstructivism Reconstructivism Paulo Freire – John Dewey – Psychoanalytic theory Psychoanalytic theory Félix Guattari – Schizoanalysis – Ecosophy – Luce Irigaray – Teresa de Lauretis – Jacques Lacan – Julia Kristeva – Slavoj Žiže... | – The Future of an Illusion – Civilization and Its Discontents – Moses and Monotheism – Queer theory Queer theory Judith Butler – Heteronormativity – Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick – Gloria E. Anzaldúa – New Queer Cinema – Queer pedagogy – Semiotics Semiotics Roland Barthes – Julia Kristeva – Charles Sanders Peirce – Ferdinand ... |
Stratford-upon-Avon to just south of Bath near Radstock. It lies across the boundaries of several English counties; mainly Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire, and parts of Wiltshire, Somerset, Worcestershire, and Warwickshire. The highest point of the region is Cleeve Hill at , just east of Cheltenham. The hills give thei... | back to the eighth century AD. It has subsequently been noticed that "Cod" could derive philologically from a Brittonic female cognate "Cuda", a hypothetical mother goddess in Celtic mythology postulated to have been worshipped in the Cotswold region. Geography The spine of the Cotswolds runs southwest to northeast thr... |
and Milan, the team slowly lost position in the league table. With three matches remaining in the season, Chievo was third-from-last, a position which would see it relegated to Serie B. As a last resort, Beretta was fired and Maurizio D'Angelo, a former Chievo player, was appointed temporarily to replace him as coach. ... | Pellissier at the end of the transfer window. A new squad was constructed, most notably including the arrivals of midfielders Maurizio Ciaramitaro and Simone Bentivoglio, defender César and forward Antimo Iunco. This new incarnation of the gialloblu were crowned winter champions (along with Bologna), en route to a 41st... |
certain amount of time for doing the administration saving and loading registers and memory maps, updating various tables and lists, etc. What is actually involved in a context switch depends on the architectures, operating systems, and the number of resources shared (threads that belong to the same process share many ... | as switching between goroutines in Go, a context switch is equivalent to a coroutine yield, which is only marginally more expensive than a subroutine call. Switching cases There are three potential triggers for a context switch: Multitasking Most commonly, within some scheduling scheme, one process must be switched out... |
a 74-gun third rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched at Deptford in 1783 , a 74-gun third rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1823 | classical music of Southern India Carnatic may also refer to: Carnatic Wars, a series of military conflicts in India during the 18th century , a Bangor-class minesweeper of the Royal Indian Navy, |
as in the "wheel of time" or "wheel of dharma", such as in Rigveda hymn verse 1.164.11, pervasive in the earliest Vedic texts. In Buddhism, especially in Theravada, the Pali noun cakka connotes "wheel". Within the central "Tripitaka", the Buddha variously refers the "dhammacakka", or "wheel of dharma", connoting that t... | concepts emerged in other cultures in the East and the West, and these are variously called by other names such as subtle body, spirit body, esoteric anatomy, sidereal body and etheric body. According to Geoffrey Samuel and Jay Johnston, professors of Religious studies known for their studies on Yoga and esoteric tradi... |
can be used as an expansion of IVF to increase the number of available embryos. If both embryos are successful, it gives rise to monozygotic (identical) twins. Dolly the sheep Dolly, a Finn-Dorset ewe, was the first mammal to have been successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell. Dolly was formed by taking a cell fr... | However, a number of other features are needed, and a variety of specialised cloning vectors (small piece of DNA into which a foreign DNA fragment can be inserted) exist that allow protein production, affinity tagging, single stranded RNA or DNA production and a host of other molecular biology tools. Cloning of any DNA... |
dissolution process is reversible and are used in the production of regenerated celluloses (such as viscose and cellophane) from dissolving pulp. The most important solubilizing agent is carbon disulfide in the presence of alkali. Other agents include Schweizer's reagent, N-methylmorpholine N-oxide, and lithium chlorid... | relatively difficult compared to the breakdown of other polysaccharides. However, this process can be significantly intensified in a proper solvent, e.g. in an ionic liquid. Most mammals have limited ability to digest dietary fiber such as cellulose. Some ruminants like cows and sheep contain certain symbiotic anaerobi... |
city and county seat of Montezuma County Cortez, Florida, a census-designated place Cortez, Nevada, ghost town Cortez, Pennsylvania, an unincorporated community Elsewhere Sea of Cortez or Gulf of California, in Mexico Other uses Cortez Motor Home, a Class-A motor coach made in the U.S. from 1963 to 1979 Agnelli & Nelso... | who led an expedition that caused the fall of the Aztec Empire Heidi Cortez (born 1981), American actress, model and writer Jayne Cortez (1936–2012), American poet Joana Cortez (born 1979), Brazilian tennis player Jody Cortez (born c. 1960), American drummer Joe Cortez (born 1943), Puerto Rican boxing referee Jorge Cor... |
controlled by colonial settlers. The term colony originates from the ancient Roman colonia, a type of Roman settlement. Derived from colon-us (farmer, cultivator, planter, or settler), it carries with it the sense of 'farm' and 'landed estate'. Furthermore the term was used to refer to the older Greek apoikia (), which... | United States, classified by the United States as "an unincorporated territory". In 1914, the Puerto Rican House of Delegates voted unanimously in favor of independence from the United States, but this was rejected by the U.S. Congress as "unconstitutional" and in violation of the U.S. 1900 Foraker Act. In 1952, after ... |
photography as the result of an optical illusion due to motion blur, especially in interlaced video recording, and are typically afterimage trails of flying insects and their wingbeats. Optical analysis Robert Todd Carroll (2003), having consulted an entomologist (Doug Yanega), identified rods as images of flying insec... | flying insects. Subsequent investigations proved that the appearance of flying rods on video was an optical illusion created by the slower recording speed of the camera. After attending a lecture by Jose Escamilla, UFO investigator Robert Sheaffer wrote that "some of his “rods” were obviously insects zipping across the... |
is greater than the proportional limit of the material, the column is experiencing inelastic buckling. Since at this stress the slope of the material's stress-strain curve, Et (called the tangent modulus), is smaller than that below the proportional limit, the critical load at inelastic buckling is reduced. More comple... | porticoes and to support the roofs of the hypostylehall, partly inspired by the ancient Egyptian precedent. Since the columns carried timber beams rather than stone, they could be taller, slimmer and more widely spaced than Egyptian ones. Middle Ages Columns, or at least large structural exterior ones, became much less... |
supernatural layers to consider the story as a "derailed love story" and "a story about our tendency as humans to demonize the other". Music Doctor Carmilla aka Maki Yamazaki is a Retrospective-Futurist Visual Kei multi-instrumentalist, musician and composer. Autumn, album composed by A Letter for Carmilla in October 2... | disarms the general and disappears. The general explains that Carmilla is also Millarca, both anagrams for the original name of the vampire Mircalla, Countess Karnstein. The party is joined by Baron Vordenburg, the descendant of the hero who rid the area of vampires long ago. Vordenburg, an authority on vampires, has d... |
infants born with a 46,XX genotype but have genitalia affected by congenital adrenal hyperplasia and are treated surgically with vaginoplasty that often reduces the size of the clitoris without its total removal. The atypical size of the clitoris is due to an endocrine imbalance in utero. Other reasons for the surgery ... | Isaac Baker Brown (1812–1873), an English gynaecologist who was president of the Medical Society of London believed that the "unnatural irritation" of the clitoris caused epilepsy, hysteria, and mania, and he worked "to remove [it] whenever he had the opportunity of doing so", according to his obituary in the Medical T... |
the French cabale from the medieval Latin cabbala, and was known early in the 17th century through usages linked to Charles II and Oliver Cromwell. By the middle of the 17th century, it had developed further to mean some intrigue entered into by a small group and also referred to the group of people so involved, i.e. a... | and usually unbeknownst to those who are outside their group. The use of this term usually carries negative connotations of political purpose, conspiracy and secrecy. It can also refer to a secret plot or a clique, or it may be used as a verb (to form a cabal or secretly conspire). Etymology The term cabal is derived f... |
c2, with more recent examples designated by their reduced state R-band maximum, e.g. cyt c559. Structure and function The heme group is a highly conjugated ring system (which allows its electrons to be very mobile) surrounding an iron ion. The iron in cytochromes usually exists in a ferrous (Fe2+) and a ferric (Fe3+) s... | They are classified according to the type of heme and its mode of binding. Four varieties are recognized by the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (IUBMB), cytochromes a, cytochromes b, cytochromes c and cytochrome d. Cytochrome function is linked to the reversible redox change from ferrous (Fe(I... |
Seymour were interviewed on Rove Live and the band, with Hart and Sherrod, performed "Don't Stop Now" to promote the new album, which was titled Time on Earth. The single was a minor hit in Australia and the UK. The album was released worldwide in June and July. It topped the album chart in New Zealand and made number ... | family commitments. Early albums (1986–1990) Thanks to their Split Enz connection, the newly formed Crowded House had an established Australasian fanbase. They began by playing at festivals in Australia and New Zealand and released their debut album, Crowded House, in August 1986. Capitol Records initially failed to se... |
infidelities and partly to her affair with her 16-year-old stepson, Bertrand de Jouvenel. In 1925 she met Maurice Goudeket, who became her final husband; the couple stayed together until her death. Colette was by then an established writer (The Vagabond had received three votes for the prestigious Prix Goncourt). The d... | wife and one of the most notorious libertines in Paris, he introduced his wife into avant-garde intellectual and artistic circles and encouraged her lesbian alliances. And it was he who chose the titillating subject matter of the Claudine novels: "the secondary myth of Sappho... the girls' school or convent ruled by a ... |
for a series of genre portraits depicting southern black life. In 1940, he completed Tobacco Farmer, the portrait of a young black farmer in white overalls and a blue shirt with a youthful yet serious look upon his face, sitting in front of the landscape and buildings he works on and in. That same year Alston received ... | Lindsay appointed him to the New York City Art Commission in 1969. In 1973, he was made full professor at City College of New York, where he had taught since 1968. In 1975, he was awarded the first Distinguished Alumni Award from Teachers College. The Art Student's League created a 21-year merit scholarship in 1977 und... |
seconds. This then allows recruitment of the DNA repair enzyme MRE11, to initiate DNA repair, within 13 seconds. γH2AX, the phosphorylated form of H2AX is also involved in the early steps leading to chromatin decondensation after DNA damage occurrence. The histone variant H2AX constitutes about 10% of the H2A histones ... | chromatin differs vastly to that of interphase. It is optimised for physical strength and manageability, forming the classic chromosome structure seen in karyotypes. The structure of the condensed chromatin is thought to be loops of 30 nm fibre to a central scaffold of proteins. It is, however, not well-characterised. ... |
is unitary, then The condition number with respect to L2 arises so often in numerical linear algebra that it is given a name, the condition number of a matrix. If is the matrix norm induced by the (vector) norm] and is lower triangular non-singular (i.e. for all ), then recalling that the eigenvalues of any triangular ... | The ratio of the relative error in the solution to the relative error in b is The maximum value (for nonzero b and e) is then seen to be the product of the two operator norms as follows: The same definition is used for any consistent norm, i.e. one that satisfies When the condition number is exactly one (which can only... |
most popular cheese in the UK, accounting for 51% of the country's £1.9 billion annual cheese market. It is the second-most popular cheese in the US behind mozzarella, with an average annual consumption of per capita. The US produced approximately of cheddar cheese in 2014, and the UK produced in 2008. History The chee... | precipitated when matured for times longer than six months. Cheddar can be a deep to pale yellow (off-white) colour, or a yellow-orange colour when certain plant extracts are added, such as beet juice. One commonly used spice is annatto, extracted from seeds of the tropical achiote tree. Originally added to simulate th... |
defining the concept of "order" Following the examples of Vitruvius and the five books of the Regole generali di architettura sopra le cinque maniere de gli edifici by Sebastiano Serlio published from 1537 onwards, Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola produced an architecture rule book that was not only more practical than the p... | with plain, round capitals (tops) and no base. With a height that is only four to eight times its diameter, the columns are the most squat of all orders. The shaft of the Doric order is channeled with 20 flutes. The capital consists of a necking or annulet, which is a simple ring. The echinus is convex, or circular cus... |
"The Black Hole of Negrav" (1975) Collected in The Unorthodox Engineers (1979) Other stories "Breaking Point" (1959) "Survival Problem" (1959) "Lambda I" (1962) "The Night-Flame" (1964) "Hunger Over Sweet Waters" (1965) "Ambassador to Verdammt" (1967) "The Imagination Trap" (1967) "The Cloudbuilders" (1968) "I Bring Yo... | (1964) "The Pen and the Dark" (1966) "Getaway from Getawehi" (1969) "The Black Hole of Negrav" (1975) Collected in The Unorthodox Engineers (1979) Other stories "Breaking Point" (1959) "Survival Problem" (1959) "Lambda I" (1962) "The Night-Flame" (1964) "Hunger Over Sweet Waters" (1965) "Ambassador to Verdammt" (1967) ... |
at Old St. Paul's Cathedral. A dowry of 200,000 ducats had been agreed, and half was paid shortly after the marriage. Once married, Arthur was sent to Ludlow Castle on the borders of Wales to preside over the Council of Wales and the Marches, as was his duty as Prince of Wales, and his bride accompanied him. A few mont... | starting an extensive programme for the relief of the poor. She was a patron of Renaissance humanism, and a friend of the great scholars Erasmus of Rotterdam and Thomas More. Early life Catherine was born at the Archbishop's Palace of Alcalá de Henares near Madrid, on the early hours of 16 December 1485. She was the yo... |
the empty tube. The voltage applied between the electrodes accelerates these low mass particles to high velocities. Cathode rays are invisible, but their presence was first detected in these Crookes tubes when they struck the glass wall of the tube, exciting the atoms of the glass and causing them to emit light, a glow... | depends on the voltage on the grid. Thus, a small voltage on the grid can be made to control a much larger voltage on the anode. This is the principle used in vacuum tubes to amplify electrical signals. The triode vacuum tube developed between 1907 and 1914 was the first electronic device that could amplify, and is sti... |
electrolytic cell where the copper electrode is the positive terminal and also the anode. In a diode, the cathode is the negative terminal at the pointed end of the arrow symbol, where current flows out of the device. Note: electrode naming for diodes is always based on the direction of the forward current (that of the... | in which the internal current would run parallel to and in the same direction as a hypothetical magnetizing current loop around the local line of latitude which would induce a magnetic dipole field oriented like the Earth's. This made the internal current East to West as previously mentioned, but in the event of a late... |
RGB color signals into luma and chrominance allows the bandwidth of each to be determined separately. Typically, the chrominance bandwidth is reduced in analog composite video by reducing the bandwidth of a modulated color subcarrier, and in digital systems by chroma subsampling. History The idea of transmitting a colo... | from the accompanying luma signal (or Y' for short). Chrominance is usually represented as two color-difference components: U = B′ − Y′ (blue − luma) and V = R′ − Y′ (red − luma). Each of these difference components may have scale factors and offsets applied to it, as specified by the applicable video standard. In comp... |
media Chirality (mathematics), the property of a figure not being identical to its mirror image Chirality (physics), when a phenomenon is not identical to its mirror image Chirality (journal), an academic journal dealing with chiral chemistry Chirality (manga), a 4-volume yuri manga series | image Chirality (journal), an academic journal dealing with chiral chemistry Chirality (manga), a 4-volume yuri manga series written and illustrated by author Satoshi Urushihara Chirality (album), a 2014 solo piano |
college campus includes libraries, lecture halls, residence halls, student centers or dining halls, and park-like settings. A modern campus is a collection of buildings and grounds that belong to a given institution, either academic or non-academic. Examples include the Googleplex and the Apple Campus. Etymology The wo... | university property. A school might have one space called a campus, another called a field, and still another called a yard. History The tradition of a campus began with the medieval European universities where the students and teachers lived and worked together in a cloistered environment. The notion of the importance... |
the Cham by a Chinese in 1171. The Khmer also had double bow crossbows mounted on elephants, which Michel Jacq-Hergoualc’h suggests were elements of Cham mercenaries in Jayavarman VII's army. Ancient Greece The earliest crossbow-like weapons in Europe probably emerged around the late 5th century BC when the gastraphete... | an arbalist (after the arbalest, a European crossbow variant used during the 12th century). Although crossbows and bows use the same launch principle, the difference is that an archer must maintain a bow's draw manually by pitching the bowstring with fingers, pulling it back with arm and back muscles and then holding t... |
ratios for the development of SJS or TEN in people who carry the allele can be in the double, triple or even quadruple digits, depending on the population studied. HLA-B*1502 occurs almost exclusively in people with ancestry across broad areas of Asia, but has a very low or absent frequency in European, Japanese, Korea... | improves remission) when compared to phenytoin and valproate the choice of medications should be considered for each person individually as further research is needed to determine which medication is most helpful for people with newly-onset seizures. In the United States, the FDA-approved medical uses are epilepsy (inc... |
four-letter abbreviation that may stand for: California Coalition for Immigration Reform, a California political advocacy group for immigration reduction Campaign for Comprehensive Immigration Reform, a Washington, DC organization for immigrant rights Canadian Centre for Investigative Reporting, produces thoroughly res... | reporting in the public interest Centre for Counseling Innovation and Research (CCIR), at Kish Island, Tehran, Mashhad Comité Consultatif International pour la Radio, a forerunner of the ITU-R CCIR 601, the former name of a broadcasting standard promulgated by the CCIR CCIR-tones, A selective calling system used in som... |
beliefs. The reference to "co-essential with the Father" was directed at Arianism; "co-essential with us" is directed at Apollinarianism; "Two Natures unconfusedly, unchangeably" refutes Eutychianism; and "indivisibly, inseparably" and "Theotokos" are against Nestorianism. Oriental Orthodox dissent The Chalcedonian Def... | Non-Chalcedonian. Context The Council of Chalcedon was summoned to consider the Christological question in light of the "one-nature" view of Christ proposed by Eutyches, archimandrite at Constantinople, which prevailed at the Second Council of Ephesus in 449, sometimes referred to as the "Robber Synod". The Council fir... |
to our understanding of the physical world, in that they describe which processes can or cannot occur in nature. For example, the conservation law of energy states that the total quantity of energy in an isolated system does not change, though it may change form. In general, the total quantity of the property governed ... | have been described, associated with inversion or reversal of space, time, and charge. Conservation laws are considered to be fundamental laws of nature, with broad application in physics, as well as in other fields such as chemistry, biology, geology, and engineering. Most conservation laws are exact, or absolute, in ... |
otherwise unconnected railway lines. Andrew Chord, a comic book character who is the former mentor of the New Warriors Chord Overstreet, American actor and musician Canadian Hydrogen Observatory and Radio-transient Detector (CHORD), a proposed successor to the CHIME radio telescope The Chord (painting), a c.1715 painti... | in the direction of the normal airflow. The term chord was selected due to the curved nature of the wing's surface Chord (peer-to-peer), a peer-to-peer protocol and algorithm for distributed hash tables (DHT) Chord (concurrency), a concurrency construct in some object-oriented programming languages In British railway t... |
how!"), Greek tailor Euripides Eumenades ("You rip-a these, you mend-a these"), cloakroom attendant Mahatma Coate ("My hat, my coat"), seat cushion tester Mike Easter (my keister) and many, many others, usually concluding with Erasmus B. Dragon ("Her ass must be draggin'"), whose job title varied, but who was often sai... | one occasion, the show featured Martha Stewart as an in-studio guest, whom the Magliozzis twice during the segment referred to as "Margaret". Celebrities and public figures were featured as "callers" as well, including Geena Davis, Ashley Judd, Morley Safer, Gordon Elliott, former Major League Baseball pitcher Bill Lee... |
reasons in the actual text of the Canon that the episcopacy of these cities had been granted their status was the importance of these cities as major cities of the empire of the time. Consequently, Pope Leo declared canon 28 null and void. Confession of Chalcedon The Confession of Chalcedon provides a clear statement o... | of these cities as major cities of the empire of the time. Consequently, Pope Leo declared canon 28 null and void. Confession of Chalcedon The Confession of Chalcedon provides a clear statement on the two natures of Christ, human and divine: The full text of the definition reaffirms the decisions of the Council of Ephe... |
of the provinces, has also never hosted a CFL game. League play Canadian football is played at several levels in Canada; the top league is the professional nine-team Canadian Football League (CFL). The CFL regular season begins in June, and playoffs for the Grey Cup are completed by late November. In cities with outdoo... | field. The team may, however use its third down in an attempt to advance the ball and gain a cumulative 10 yards. Change in possession The ball changes possession in the following instances: If the offence scores a field goal, the scored-against team can either scrimmage from its 35-yard line or have the scoring team k... |
Days 21 to 29 are written with the character Niàn () before the characters one through nine; Niànsān (), for example, is the 23rd day of the month. Day 30 (as applicable) is written as the numeral Sānshí (). History books use days of the month numbered with the 60 stem-branches: Because astronomical observation determi... | To fix this, traditional Chinese years have a 13-month year approximately once every three years. The 13-month version has the same alternation of long and short months, but adds a 30-day leap month () at the end of the year. Years with 12 months are called common years, and 13-month years are known as long years. Alth... |
forums can also be used to collect and analyze information. Understanding the customer and capturing this data allows companies to convert customers' signals into information and knowledge that the firm can use to understand a potential customer's desired relations with a brand. Employee training Many firms have also i... | different reasons. Firstly, firms can customize their offerings for each customer. By accumulating information across customer interactions and processing this information to discover hidden patterns, CRM applications help firms customize their offerings to suit the individual tastes of their customers. This customizat... |
than most other casino games and can be much greater. For example, there are 216 (6 × 6 × 6) possible outcomes for a single throw of three dice. For a specific number: there are 75 possible outcomes, where only one die will match the number; there are 15 possible outcomes, where only two dice will match; and there is o... | game resembles Crown and anchor, but with numbered dice instead of symbols. Additional wagers that are commonly seen, and their associated odds, are set out in the table below. House advantage or edge Chuck-a-luck is a game of chance. On average, the players are expected to lose more than they win. The casino's advanta... |
have an omnivorous diet primarily consisting of seeds, nuts and other fruits, and buds. They also commonly eat grass, shoots, and many other forms of plant matter, as well as fungi, insects and other arthropods, small frogs, worms, and bird eggs. They will also occasionally eat newly hatched baby birds. Around humans, ... | the twentieth century have placed the chipmunks into a single genus. However, studies of mitochondrial DNA show that the divergence between each of the three chipmunk groups is comparable to the genetic differences between Marmota and Spermophilus, so the three genera classifications have been adopted here. The common ... |
Koenig produced algorithmic composition programs which were a generalisation of his own serial composition practice. This is not exactly similar to Xenakis' work as he used mathematical abstractions and examined how far he could explore these musically. Koenig's software translated the calculation of mathematical equat... | present exponent of this technique is David Cope, whose computer programs analyse works of other composers to produce new works in a similar style. Cope's best-known program is Emily Howell. Melomics, a research project from the University of Málaga (Spain), developed a computer composition cluster named Iamus, which c... |
the brain uses to denote a class of things in the world. This is to say that it is literally, a symbol or group of symbols together made from the physical material of the brain. Concepts are mental representations that allow us to draw appropriate inferences about the type of entities we encounter in our everyday lives... | (or recollections, in Plato's term) of an independently existing world of ideas, in that it denies the existence of any such realm. It also contrasts with the empiricist view that concepts are abstract generalizations of individual experiences, because the contingent and bodily experience is preserved in a concept, and... |
now published biweekly. Abstracting and indexing The journal is abstracted and indexed in: According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2017 impact factor of 3.304. See | and Tissue Research References External links Molecular and cellular biology journals Biweekly journals Publications established in 2002 English-language journals Taylor & Francis academic |
Competition (Brussels, Belgium) Ronald Sachs International Music Competition – Strings, Woodwinds, Brass, Piano (North Carolina, US) Trinity International Music Competition - Online (Toronto, Canada) TROMP international music competition & Festival (Eindhoven, Netherlands) TONALi Music Competition (Hamburg, Germany) SV... | Competition (Berlin, Germany) The 1st International IMMA Records Classical Music Competition Gaudeamus Competition (Netherlands) Grand Maestro International Music Competition - Online (Canada) Grand Metropolitan International Music Competition - Online (Canada) International Guitar Competition & Festival (Berlin, Germa... |
the information prior to his presentation, Powell pushed for reform in the intelligence community, including the creation of a national intelligence director who would assure that "what one person knew, everyone else knew". Other foreign policy issues Additionally, Powell was critical of other aspects of U.S. foreign p... | and Carlucci formed a close friendship, referring to each by first names in private, as Powell refused any sort of first-name basis in an official capacity. It was on Powell's advice that Roy Benavidez received the Medal of Honor, after the presentation had been ignored by the Carter administration. Powell also decline... |
stromatolites in 2010; a molecular formula of C55H70O6N4Mg and a structure of (2-formyl)-chlorophyll a were deduced based on NMR, optical and mass spectra. Photosynthesis Chlorophyll is vital for photosynthesis, which allows plants to absorb energy from light. Chlorophyll molecules are arranged in and around photosyste... | a fluoresces at 673 nm (maximum) and 726 nm. The peak molar absorption coefficient of chlorophyll a exceeds 105 M−1 cm−1, which is among the highest for small-molecule organic compounds. In 90% acetone-water, the peak absorption wavelengths of chlorophyll a are 430 nm and 664 nm; peaks for chlorophyll b are 460 nm and ... |
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