906 research outputs found

    Wormald, J D, 420326

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/427249Surname: WORMALD. Given Name(s) or Initials: J D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 420326. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 53379.250264 Item: [2016.0049.59510] "Wormald, J D, 420326

    Francis Wormald (1904-1972)

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    d'Alverny Marie-Thérèse. Francis Wormald (1904-1972). In: Cahiers de civilisation médiévale, 15e année (n°60), Octobre-décembre 1972. pp. 347-348

    F. Wormald. Decorated Initials from English mss. from A. D. 900 to 1100. Society of Antiquaries of London, Archaeologia, XCI

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    Delaissé L.-M.-J. F. Wormald. Decorated Initials from English mss. from A. D. 900 to 1100. Society of Antiquaries of London, Archaeologia, XCI. In: Scriptorium, Tome 2 n°2, 1948. p. 305

    Factorisation of regular graphs into forests of short paths

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    AbstractThe k-linear arboricity of a graph G is the minimum number of forests whose connected components are paths of length at most k which partition E(G). Motivated by this index, we investigate a variation of this idea for d-regular graphs. Namely, we define a d-regular graph G to be (l,k)-linear arborific if E(G) can be partitioned into edge sets of l linear forests consisting of paths of length at most k. By extending an inductive tool developed by Jackson and Wormald, we determine, for d ⩾ 4, values of k such that every d-regular graph is (d − 1, k)-linear arborific

    Francis Wormald. English Benedictine Kalendars after A. D. 1100. Vol. I : Abbotsbury-Durham. Londres, Henry Bradshaw Society, 1939. In-8°, IX-179 pages, (vol. LXXVII)

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    Van Moé Émile-Aurèle. Francis Wormald. English Benedictine Kalendars after A. D. 1100. Vol. I : Abbotsbury-Durham. Londres, Henry Bradshaw Society, 1939. In-8°, IX-179 pages, (vol. LXXVII). In: Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes. 1939, tome 100. pp. 343-344

    Platelet activation by crushed and uncrushed muscle: a flow cytometry analysis

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    Abstract not availableAlistair Jukes, Dijana Miljkovic, P.J. Wormald and Alkis J. Psalti

    Morphometric analysis of the submarine arc volcano Monowai (Tofua - Kermadec Arc) to decipher tecteno-magnetic interactions

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    Morphometric analysis of multibeam bathymetry and backscatter data is applied to Monowai, a submarine volcano of the active Tofua – Kermadec Arc to map and document the structure and evolution of the volcanic centre. Low rates of erosion and sedimentation, and pervasive tectonic and magmatic processes, allow quantification through detailed structural analysis and measurement of deformation. The Slope, Aspect, Curvature, Rugosity, and Hydrology (flow) tools of ArcGIS provide a robust structural interpretation and the development of a model of Monowai evolution.A nested caldera structure with a volume of ~31 km3 and a stratovolcano of ~18 km3 dominate the magmatic constructs. The outer caldera is elongate along 125º, and the inner caldera along 135º. Numerous parasitic cones and fissure ridges are also observed, oriented at 039º and 041º, respectively. Northeast trending faults (with a regional average strike of 031º) are widespread within this part of the backarc, forming a nascent rift graben to the west of the Monowai caldera complex. The distribution of throw varies spatially, reaching a maximum total along-rift of 320 m and across rift of 120 m, with greater throw values measured in the west.Elongation directions of the two nested calderas are near-perpendicular to the trends of faults and fissure ridges. The inner caldera is more orthogonal to the magmatic constructs (fissure ridges and aligned vent cones) and the outer caldera is approximately orthogonal to the regional fault fabric, suggesting a strong interaction between magmatic and tectonic processes, and the directions of the horizontal principal stress directions. We present a detailed morphometric analysis of these relationships and the data are used to interpret the spatial and temporal evolution of the tectono-magmatic system at Monowai, and classify the type of rifting as transtensional. Similar analysis is possible elsewhere in the Kermadec backarc and within other regions of submarine volcanism

    Characterization of the in vivo host response to a bi-labeled chitosan-dextran based hydrogel for postsurgical adhesion prevention

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    Article first published online: 31 DEC 2014Abstract not availableJaydee D. Cabral, Michelle A. McConnell, Clare Fitzpatrick, Sonya Mros, Gail Williams, Peter J. Wormald, Stephen C. Moratti, and Lyall R Hanto

    Iatrogenic Brown's syndrome during endoscopic sinus surgery with powered instruments

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    Copyright © 2005 American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation, Inc. Published by Mosby, Inc.Igal Leibovitch, Peter J. Wormald, John Crompton, and Dinesh Selvahttp://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623171/description#descriptio

    3-star factors in random d-regular graphs

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    AbstractThe small subgraph conditioning method first appeared when Robinson and the second author showed the almost sure hamiltonicity of random d-regular graphs. Since then it has been used to study the almost sure existence of, and the asymptotic distribution of, regular spanning subgraphs of various types in random d-regular graphs and hypergraphs. In this paper, we use the method to prove the almost sure existence of 3-star factors in random d-regular graphs. This is essentially the first application of the method to non-regular subgraphs in such graphs
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