37,413 research outputs found
Marzieh Abbas: Cook Prize 2025, Silver Medal Acceptance Speech
Author Marzieh Abbas gives an acceptance speech for Yasmeen Lari, Green Architect: The True Story of Pakistan’s First Woman Architect (Clarion)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/cook/1014/thumbnail.jp
General use of rubber tire powder in concrete; a review
Generally, using rubber as fine aggregate in mortar and concrete showed some advantages, of which some properties are improved, and some disadvantages, of which some properties have defected. The advantages of using rubber sand are decreasing density, improving impact energy, improving impact load, increasing toughness, increasing ductility, increasing freeze/thaw resistance, increasing thermal insulation, increasing sound insulation, increasing damping capacity, increasing strain capacity, reducing micro-cracks after firing, increasing abrasion resistance (according to rubber sand content and w/c ratio) increasing resistance against HCl attack, improving energy absorption, increasing electrical resistance and increasing cracking resistance. On the other hand, the disadvantages of using rubber sand are decreasing workability, increasing bleeding, decreasing mechanical strength, increasing drying shrinkage, decreasing carbonation resistance, decreasing corrosion resistance (rubber sand content P 10%), increasing water absorption, increasing chloride ion penetration depth and decreasing sulfuric acid resistance. bleeding, decreasing mechanical strength, increasing drying shrinkage, decreasing carbonation resistance, decreasing corrosion resistance (rubber sand content P 10%), increasing water absorption, increasing chloride ion penetration depth and decreasing sulfuric acid resistance
Introduction to the Special Issue on Decision Analysis and Social Media
Published as:
Ali E. Abbas, Jay Simon, Chris Smith (2017) Introduction to the Special Issue on Decision Analysis and Social Media. Decision
Analysis 14(4):227-228. https://doi.org/10.1287/deca.2017.036
Masterclass : Ackbar Abbas = 大師班:記錄香港文化
Among Ackbar Abbas\u27 famous arguments has been one of a strange role of the archives in Hong Kong: the déjà disparu, or the \u27feeling that what is new and unique about the situation is always already gone, and we are left holding a handful of cliché, or a cluster of memories of what has never been’. Abbas\u27 work has drawn attention to a rather special role that the archives possess in Hong Kong: as evidence, then, of what may have been in the face of erasure. His more recent work has been on both the production of fakes and on fraudulent memory
Poetry of Islamic Revolution as a cradle of the International Islamic resistance Poetry
<p>volume = {1}, number = {1}, author = {S N Abbas (Kaify)}, title = {Poetry of Islamic Revolution as a cradle of the International Islamic resistance Poetry }, publisher = {Saurabh Chandra}, journal = {SOCRATES}, ISSN 2347-6869 year = {2013}</p
Abbas Ibn Firnas
Abbas Ibn Firnas (81 0-887 A.D.), also known as Abbas Qasim Ibn Firnas, was a Muslim Andalusian polymath: an inventor, engineer, aviator, physician, Arabic poet, and Andalusian musician. Of Berber descent, he was born in lzn-Rand Onda, AI-Andalus (today's Ronda, Spain), and lived in the Emirate of Cordoba. He is known for an early attempt at aviation
Physopelta (Neophysopelta) Ahmad & Abbas 1987
Subgenus Neophysopelta Ahmad & Abbas, 1987 Physopelta Ahmad & Abbas, 1987: 132 (as genus). Type species by original designation: Cimex slanbuschii Fabricius, 1787. Synonymized with Physopelta by Stehlík & Kerzhner (1999: 121). Restituted as subgenus of Physopelta by Stehlík (2013: 518). For detailed descriptions see Ahmad & Abbas (1987) and Stehlík (2013).Published as part of Souma, Jun & Ishikawa, Tadashi, 2021, A taxonomic review of the genus Physopelta (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Largidae) from Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, with a new record of Ph. parviceps from China, pp. 461-491 in Zootaxa 4951 (3) on page 464, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4951.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/466817
Methodology matters ⋯ but so does interpretation!
[No abstract available]Abbas O, 2009, BRIT J DERMATOL, V161, P228, DOI 10.1111-j.1365-2133.2009.09250.x; Abbas O, 2011, J EUR ACAD DERMATOL, V25, P311, DOI 10.1111-j.1468-3083.2010.03791.x; Amoh Y, 2005, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V102, P17734, DOI 10.1073-pnas.0508440102; Amoh Y, 2005, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V102, P5530, DOI 10.1073-pnas.0501263102; Amoh Y, 2004, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V101, P13291, DOI 10.1073-pnas.0405250101; Amoh Y, 2011, EUR J DERMATOL, V21, P209, DOI 10.1684-ejd.2011.1306; Chiou SH, 2008, CLIN CANCER RES, V14, P4085, DOI 10.1158-1078-0432.CCR-07-4404; FIALKOW PJ, 1967, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V58, P1468, DOI 10.1073-pnas.58.4.1468; HAMBURGER AW, 1977, SCIENCE, V197, P461, DOI 10.1126-science.560061; Hoang MP, 2009, BRIT J DERMATOL, V160, P609, DOI 10.1111-j.1365-2133.2008.09015.x; Kanoh M, 2008, EUR J DERMATOL, V18, P518, DOI 10.1684-ejd.2008.0485; Li LN, 2003, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V100, P9958, DOI 10.1073-pnas.1733025100; Lim YC, 2011, ORAL ONCOL, V47, P83, DOI 10.1016-j.oraloncology.2010.11.011; Mahalingam M, 2010, AM J DERMATOPATH, V32, P774, DOI 10.1097-DAD.0b013e3181dafd8c; Mignone JL, 2007, CELL CYCLE, V6, P2161; Misago N, 2009, BRIT J DERMATOL, V160, P1128, DOI 10.1111-j.1365-2133.2009.09075.x; Reya T, 2001, NATURE, V414, P105, DOI 10.1038-35102167; Ryuge S, 2011, CHEST, V139, P862, DOI 10.1378-chest.10-1121; Sakuma H, 2009, J DERMATOL, V36, P453, DOI 10.1111-j.1346-8138.2009.00675.x; Sellheyer K, 2011, J CUTAN PATHOL, V38, P460, DOI 10.1111-j.1600-0560.2010.01671.x; Sellheyer K, 2010, J AM ACAD DERMATOL, V63, P93, DOI 10.1016-j.jaad.2009.07.013; Singh SK, 2004, ONCOGENE, V23, P7267, DOI 10.1038-sj.onc.1207946; Uchugonova A, 2011, J CELL BIOCHEM, V112, P2046, DOI 10.1002-jcb.23122; Wang JCY, 2005, TRENDS CELL BIOL, V15, P494, DOI 10.1016-j.tcb.2005.07.004; Wang Y, 2006, CELL BIOL INT, V30, P144, DOI 10.1016-j.cellbi.2005.09.0050
Dermatinus pakistanensis Ahmad & Abbas 1986
Aderrhis pakistanensis (Ahmad & Abbas, 1986) Dermatinus pakistanensis Ahmad & Abbas, 1986: 71 (as new species). Distribution in Iran. Iran (no locality cited) (Kiritshenko 1966, as Dermatinus aethiopicus Lethierry; Kerzhner 2001). General distribution. Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan. Genus Pyrrhocoris Fallén, 1814Published as part of Ghahari, Hassan & Moulet, Pierre, 2013, An annotated catalog of the Iranian Pyrrhocoridae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Pentatomomorpha: Pyrrhocoroidea), pp. 335-342 in Zootaxa 3609 (3) on page 337, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3609.3.8, http://zenodo.org/record/21789
Perjalanan Kejayaan Kerajaan Safawi Masa Abbas I dan Regresi Kerajaan Safawi Di Persia Sepeninggal Abbas I
After Shah Abbas I died in 1629, the Safawi Kingdom began to decline. Abbas I brought Safawi to the pinnacle of glory with political stability, a strong military, and a thriving economy. However, his successor, Shah Safi I, was unable to maintain the achievement. His government was weakened by reliance on incompetent advisers and widespread corruption. In addition, external threats such as the Ottoman and Uzbek Empire attacks further exacerbated the situation. They took advantage of the Safavid weakness to expand their territory and undermine the stability of the kingdom. The previously prosperous economy also began to collapse due to the inability of the rulers to manage trade. Various rebellions and internal conflicts have further undermined the Safavid power. The rulers after Abbas I were unable to restore political and economic power, which ultimately led the kingdom to collapse in the mid-18th century. This paper examines the factors that led to the decline of the Safavid post-Abbas I
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