1,748,454 research outputs found
Richard Hell, 20th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Richard Hell musician, poet, and novelist is best known for his album with the Voidoids, “Blank Generation.” William Gibson has said, “Go Now is a vile, scabrous, unforgivable novel and deserving of the widest possible audience.” Hell is also the author of several books of poems including I Was a Spiral on the Floor (Soyo Publications, 1988), Across The Years, and Wanna Go Out, collaborative poems with Tom Verlain. His work has been widely anthologized in collections such as Out of this World (poems, Crown Publishers, 1992), and Jungles D’Ameriques (fiction, AAC Editions, Paris, 1993). Hell currently lives and writes in New York City
Nanoskopie mit fokussiertem Licht (Nobel-Aufsatz).
Ein Bild sagt mehr als tausend Worte – dies gilt sicher nicht nur für das tägliche Leben, sondern auch für die Naturwissenschaften. Es ist daher wohl kein Zufall, dass der Beginn der modernen Naturwissenschaften historisch erkennbar mit der Erfindung des Lichtmikroskops zusammenfällt. Wie man durch einen transienten molekularen Zustandsübergang die beugungsbedingte Auflösungsgrenze radikal überwinden kann, zeigt uns S. W. Hell in seinem Nobel-Aufsatz
Hell-vetica
Helvetica (connotes Swiss typeface) has been used the most widely from street signs to government campaign posters since 1957. Helvetica represents a great leap forward for modernity: clean, sans-serif, optimistic. However in history, there was a movement against Helvetica among American artists and designers since David Carson and Paula Scher indicted Helvetica as the cause of Vietnam war. Paradoxically, we celebrated its 50th birthday in 2007. Helvetica’s message it this: “you are going to get to your destination on time; your plan will not crash; your money is safe in our vault; we will not break the package; the paperwork has been filled in; everything is going to be OK” (Finlo Rohrer, Helvetica At 50, BBC News Magazine 9 May 2007). The artwork, Hell-vetica describes its characteristic of double agent for modernism and postmodernism in this contemporary era by combination of a stylised graphical form of a heart shape in red and a typographical manipulation - Hell-vetica
Nanoscopy with focused light
Stefan W. Hell received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2014 for the development of super-resolved fluorescence microscopy, together with Eric Betzig and William Moerner. With the invention of STED (Stimulated Emission Depletion) microscopy experimentally realized in 1999, he has revolutionized light microscopy, overcoming the resolution limit of conventional optical microscopes - a breakthrough that has enabled new ground-breaking discoveries in biological and medical research
A Hell marketingpolitikája-és észak-magyarországi jelenléte
A Hell marketingpolitikáját vizsgáltam a dolgozatomban. Arra voltam kíváncsi, hogy egy teljesen magyar tulajdonú cég, hogy érhet el ekkora sikereket mind hazánkban, mind pedig a külföldi piacon. Kezdeti marketing stratégiáját összehasonlítottam a 2018-as marketing koncepciójával. Mindemellett bemutattam a vállalat történetét, összehasonlítottam a nagy vetélytársával a Red Bull-lal, valamint elemeztem 3 reklámfilmjét a Hellnek. Másik része a dolgozatomnak az észak-magyarországi jelenlétéről szólt. A Hell ugyanis rengeteg beruházással és jótékonykodással segíti az elmaradt borsodi régió jobbá tételét.Kommunikáció-és médiatudományBSc/B
Equivalence of the Huygens-Fresnel and Debye approach for the calculation of high aperture point-spread-functions in the presence of refractive index mismatch.
As discussed in recent work (Sheppard, C. J. R. & Torok, P., I. Microsc.. 185, 366-384; Torok et al., J. Microsc., 188, 158-172), two approaches have been used extensively for vectorial computations of high aperture confocal point-spread functions when focusing through a dielectric interface. Whereas the equation by Hell, Reiner, Cremer & Stelzer (I. Microsc., 169, 391-405) is based on the Huygens-Fresnel principle, the more recent approach by Torok. Varga Br Booker (J. Opt. Sec. Aln. A, 12, 325-332; J. Opt. SOC. Am. A, 12, 2136-2144) is based on the Debye approximation. While the earlier theory considers a large but finite focal length the second theory is derived for an infinitely high Fresnel number, In a high aperture microscope, a high Fresnel number is equivalent to assuming that the focal length be infinitely large with respect to the wavelength. So far, the two theories are regarded as different, with the one by Torok et al, being rigorous, In this paper, we demonstrate that, if the same conditions are applied, the equation by Torok et ttl, can be analytically derived from that by Hell et nl. Producing the same results, the benefit brought about by the equation by Torok el nl. is improved flexibility and computational speed for cases with azimuthal symmetry
Victor Hell : Pour une culture sans frontières. L’Alsace, une autre histoire franco-allemande
Hell Bertrand. Victor Hell : Pour une culture sans frontières. L’Alsace, une autre histoire franco-allemande. In: Revue des sciences sociales de la France de l'Est, N°15, 1986. Traversées alsaciennes. p. 201
Novellen / von St. Nelly. Mit einem Vorwort von Th. Hell
NOVELLEN / VON ST. NELLY. MIT EINEM VORWORT VON TH. HELL
Novellen / von St. Nelly. Mit einem Vorwort von Th. Hell (1)
Title page (3)
Frontispiz (8)
Titelblatt (9)
Widmung (11)
Vorwort (15)
Inhalt (18)
Die Feier auf Espenthal (19)
Dunkle Nacht und Morgenhelle (197)
Valeria (205)
Verbesserungen (253)
Fotodokumentation (257
Trading Hell for Hope: An Interview with Nicholas Ansell
For Jürgen Moltmann, Hell is the nemesis of Hope. The “Annihilation of Hell” thus refers both to Hell’s annihilative power in history and to the overcoming of that power as envisioned by Moltmann’s distinctive theology of the cross in which God becomes “all in all” through Christ’s descent into Godforsakenness. The negation of Hell and the fulfillment of history are inseparable. Attentive to the overall contours and dynamics of Moltmann’s thinking — especially his zimzum doctrine of creation, his eschatologically oriented philosophy of time, and his expanded understanding of the nature-grace relationship — this study asks whether the universal salvation that he proposes can honor human freedom, promise vindication for those who suffer, and do justice to biblical revelation. As well as providing an in-depth exposition of Moltmann’s ideas, The Annihilation of Hell also explores how a “covenantal universalism” might revitalize our web of beliefs in a way that is attuned to the authorizing of Scripture and the spirituality of existence. If divine and human freedom are to be reconciled, as Moltmann believes, the confrontation between Hell and Hope will entail rethinking issues that are not only at the center of theology but at the heart of life itself.Nicholas Ansell’s teaching and research focus on several areas of systematic and biblical theology, notably Christology, eschatology, Old Testament wisdom thinking, and the theology of gender. He has an ongoing interest in the phenomenology of revelation and the spirituality of existence. His new book, The Annihilation of Hell: Universal Salvation and the Redemption of Time in the Eschatology of Jürgen Moltmann, was released in North America in October 2013 and exposits the work of Moltmann on the topic of hell and universalism for anyone who is interested in theology, scholar or otherwise. He has also written several articles on the topic including this one [http://theotherjournal.com/2009/04/20/hell-the-nemesis-of-hope/]in The Other Journal
Escape from Hell The True Story of the Auschwitz Protocol
Escape from Hell -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Just for Work -- Chapter 2. Work - German Style -- Chapter 3. An Exalted VisitA -- Chapter 4. An Even More Exalted Visit -- Chapter 5. The Ceremonial -- Chapter 6. A More or Less Normal Evening -- Chapter 7. Two Thousand Metres of Track -- Chapter 8. To Die - or to Perish? -- Chapter 9. 'In the Name of the Reichsführer SS' -- Chapter 10. Danger: Live Ammunition! -- Chapter 11. Two against a Regiment -- Chapter 12. Death Lives on the Other Side -- Chapter 13. 'Did You See It with Your Own Eyes?' -- Chapter 14. 'But What about the Postcards?' -- Chapter 15. There are Limits to Human Imagination -- Appendix I -- Appendix IIDescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
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