4,361 research outputs found

    Bakerville 210: Barn from Gloucester, RI

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    Originally located in Gloucester, RI. Moved by Steve Tyson for Anne Baker. Erected at 670 with a new lean-to addition on back. Original barn was smaller in length and added onto at an early date. - Anne Baker. In her book, Collecting Houses, Baker describes the barn as big enough to store whole houses.https://docs.rwu.edu/baker_images/1904/thumbnail.jp

    Bakerville 210: Barn from Gloucester, RI

    No full text
    Originally located in Gloucester, RI. Moved by Steve Tyson for Anne Baker. Erected at 670 with a new lean-to addition on back. Original barn was smaller in length and added onto at an early date. - Anne Baker. In her book, Collecting Houses, Baker describes the barn as big enough to store whole houses.https://docs.rwu.edu/baker_images/1904/thumbnail.jp

    Samson House: Baker\u27s Architectural Report for the Isaac Barker House and Brownell House, 1999

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    Anne Baker\u27s Architectural Report for the Isaac Barker House, located in Tiverton, RI and the Brownell House, located in Portsmouth, RI. The report offers architectural specifications, drawings, photographs, and floor plans. The last section details the reconstruction of the Barker and Brownell Houses for Hugh Samson at 43 Rockbridge Farm Rd., Little Compton, RI

    Samson House: Baker\u27s Architectural Report for the Isaac Barker House and Brownell House, 1999

    No full text
    Anne Baker\u27s Architectural Report for the Isaac Barker House, located in Tiverton, RI and the Brownell House, located in Portsmouth, RI. The report offers architectural specifications, drawings, photographs, and floor plans. The last section details the reconstruction of the Barker and Brownell Houses for Hugh Samson at 43 Rockbridge Farm Rd., Little Compton, RI

    Bakerville: Cole House - Baker Letter to Doyle

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    Anne Baker\u27s letter to Frank Doyle expressing interest in purchasing the Cole House located at 915 Warren Ave. East Providence, RI. In this letter she also describes the historical and architectural significance of the Cole House. Cole House was built c1690 and later dismantled and moved to 670 Drift Road to become part of Bakerville

    Bakerville: Cole House - Baker Letter to Doyle

    No full text
    Anne Baker\u27s letter to Frank Doyle expressing interest in purchasing the Cole House located at 915 Warren Ave. East Providence, RI. In this letter she also describes the historical and architectural significance of the Cole House. Cole House was built c1690 and later dismantled and moved to 670 Drift Road to become part of Bakerville

    A subjetividade jurídica internacional na história da doutrina brasileira: oposições entre Nação e Estado nos séculos XIX e XX

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    TCC(graduação) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. Centro de Ciências Jurídicas. Direito.Com o objetivo de observar de que maneira a pergunta “quem é o sujeito de direitos na comunidade internacional” foi respondida, ressaltando as oposições entre Nação e Estado, o presente trabalho investigou o pensamento de Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, descrevendo como que, utilizando por fundamento do direito internacional o Princípio da Nacionalidade, o jurista italiano propõe a exclusividade da Nação como sujeito de direito internacional, em oposição ao Estado e de que maneira isto influenciou os autores da escola italiana de direito internacional, em especial Terenzio Mamiami e Pasquale Fiore. A seguir, adentra-se na doutrina brasileira da segunda metade do século XIX para verificar de que forma se deu a oposição entre os conceitos de Nação e Estado. Posteriormente, debruçando-se por sobre o pensamento de Lafayette Rodrigues Pereira e Clóvis Beviláqua, busca-se demonstrar como se tratou a problemática da subjetividade jurídica internacional no Brasil durante o início do século XX. Finalmente, verifica-se qual termo passou a ser adotado majoritariamente pela doutrina brasileira, até se encontrar um autor nacional que não mais defenda o exclusivismo de um ente político em específico, mas, consciente das diversas configurações históricas pelas quais passou a comunidade internacional, aceite uma pluralidade de sujeitos. Busca-se, ainda, ao longo de todo trabalho reforçar as continuidades e rupturas entre os diversos autores analisados, além de se proporem, quando cabíveis, críticas às concepções apresentadas.In order to observe how the question “who is the subject of rights in the international community” was answered, focusing on the contrasts between Nation and State, the present study investigated the thought of Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, describing how, using the Principle of Nationality as the basis of international law, the Italian jurist proposes the exclusivity of the Nation as a subject of international law in opposition to the State and how it influenced the authors of the Italian school of international law, especially Terenzio Mamiami and Pasquale Fiore. Hereafter, enter in the Brazilian doctrine of the second half of the nineteenth century to verify how occurred the opposition between the concepts of Nation and State. Posteriorly, looking at the thought of Lafayette Rodrigues Pereira and Clóvis Beviláqua, we seek to demonstrate how the problem of international juridical subjectivity was treated in Brazil during the early twentieth century. Finally, we verify which term was mostly adopted by Brazilian doctrine, until find a national author who no longer defends the exclusivity of a political entity in specific, but, aware of different historical settings of the international community, accepts a plurality of subjects. We also try throughout the study to highlight the continuities and changes between the various authors analyzed, and to propose, as appropriate, critical to the concepts presented

    Quantum baker maps for spiraling chaotic motion

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    We define a coupling of two baker maps through a p=2 rotation both in position and in momentum. The classical trajectories thus exhibit spiraling, or loxodromic motion, which is only possible for conservative maps of at least two degrees of freedom. This loxodromic baker map is still hyperbolic, that is, fully chaotic. Quantization of this map follows on similar lines to other generalized baker maps. It is found that the eigenvalue spectrum for quantum loxodromic baker map is far removed from those of the canonical random matrix ensembles. An investigation of the symmetries of the loxodromic baker map reveals the cause of this deviation from the Bohigas-Giannoni-Schmit conjecture

    Quantum baker maps with controlled-NOT coupling

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    The characteristic stretching and squeezing of chaotic motion is linearized within the finite number of phase space domains which subdivide a classical baker map. Tensor products of such maps are also chaotic, but a more interesting generalized baker map arises if the stacking orders for the factor maps are allowed to interact. These maps are readily quantized, in such a way that the stacking interaction is entirely attributed to primary qubits in each map, if each j th subsystem has Hilbert space dimension Dj = 2nj . We here study the particular example of two baker maps that interact via a controlled-not interaction, which is a universal gate for quantum computation. Numerical evidence indicates that the control subspace becomes an ideal Markovian environment for the target map in the limit of large Hilbert space dimension
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