28,513 research outputs found

    Chen Chen, 42nd Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Chen Chen is the author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities (BOA Editions, 2017), which was long-listed for the National Book Award and won the Thom Gunn Award, among other honors. Bloodaxe Books published a UK edition in June. He is also the author of four chapbooks, most recently You MUST Use the Word Smoothie (Sundress Publications, 2019) and Gesundheit! (in collaboration with Sam Herschel Wein and forthcoming from Glass Poetry Press, fall 2019). His work appears in many publications, including Poem-a-Day, The Massachusetts Review, The Best American Poetry, and The Best American Nonrequired Reading. He has received a Pushcart Prize and fellowships from Kundiman and the National Endowment for the Arts. He holds an MFA from Syracuse University and a PhD from Texas Tech University. He teaches at Brandeis University as the Jacob Ziskind Poet-in-Residence and co-runs the journal, Underblong. He lives in Waltham, Massachusetts, with his partner, Jeff Gilbert, and their pug, Mr. Rupert Gile

    Supporting data used in the paper: Xi Chen, 2020, The LMARS based shallow-water dynamical core on generic gnomonic cubed-sphere geometry

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    # Simulation results of the unstaggered shallow water model This repository contains the supporting data used in the paper: Xi Chen, 2020, The LMARS based shallow‐water dynamical core on generic gnomonic cubed‐sphere geometry, DOI: 10.1029/2020MS002280 Organization of the repository: The tar archive with this data submission has a: doc directory contains a README.md with information regarding naming conventions to label the model configurations for a shallow water test simulation. Additional information can also be found in README.md. Table 4 in the paper provides additional details. The data directory contains the supporting data files (NetCDF format).Disclaimer: "This was prepared by Xi Chen under award NA18OAR4320123 from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce. The statements, findings, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or the U.S. Department of Commerce.

    Artimpaza brevilineata Tian & Chen, 2012 in Tian, Chen & Li 2012

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    Artimpaza brevilineata Tian & Chen, 2012 in Tian, Chen & Li, 2012: 43, figs. 1–9. (Figs. 28a, b) Type locality: China, Yunnan, Pu’er City, Yutang. Gender: female. Date collected: 2011.V.25 (2010.V.25, in the original description, is incorrect). Collector: Li-Chao TIAN & Gui-Qiang HUANG. Paratypes: 1 female, China, Yunnan, Lincang City, 1980.VI.1, Fen LIU leg. Remarks: In the original description, the type locality is “ Yunnan, Jinghong” while it is “ Yunnan, Yutang” according to the label. “Yutang” is actually in Pu’er, not Jinghong. The first author described the type locality by mistake. In the original description, the collector was only listed as Li-Chao TIAN, which was a mistake.Published as part of Li, Zhu & Chen, Li, 2020, Primary types of longhorned beetles (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Vesperidae and Disteniidae) of Southwest University (SWU), pp. 25-46 in Zootaxa 4718 (1) on page 33, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4718.1.2, http://zenodo.org/record/360220

    Author contributions

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    Please browse the "Files" tag to access the appendix specifying the author - Chen Hsi Tsai's contributions to the seven papers included in the thesis

    Ying Chen\u27s Impressions of Summer

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    Chapbook of narrative/personal poems by Ying Chen originally published by Finishing Line Press in 2013. Translated from the French by Peter Schulman, ODU Professor of French and International Studies.https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/worldlanguages_books/1016/thumbnail.jp

    《在中法之间 — 陈伟农的艺术体验》 Zai Zhong Fa zhi jian: Chen Weinong de yishu tijian / “Between China and France. The Artistic Experience of Chen Weinong”

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    The author analizes the artistic production of the Chinese contemporary artist Chen Weinong, who has travelled between China and France for more ten years. In his ink paintings and calligraphies, Chen Weinong reflects the essence of both Western and Eastern cultures, succeeding in refreshing the ancient tradition as well as blazing new trails in Chinese art

    Programmatic and performance observations for Two Chamber Works by Chen Yi

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    As a Chinese-American composer who was born and reared in China, then studied and settled in the United States, Chen Yi’s success is widely recognized around the world. However, this success is not coincidental and is closely related to her fusion of the Chinese and Western cultures in her works. At the time of this writing, Chen Yi has composed more than forty chamber works, from which the author researched two with the same instrumentation—flute, clarinet, violin, cello, and piano. By understanding Chen Yi’s life experiences and analyzing the theoretical aspects of these compositions, the author gives suggestions for ensemble, timbre, rhythm, pedaling, and performance techniques in these two chamber works by Chen Yi—Happy Rain on a Spring Night and … as like a raging fire

    [Ping Lao She zuo pin]. 3

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    [陳大鵬].Title and author supplied by cataloguer.Live recording.Electronic reproduction from Rulan Chao Pian Audio Cassette Collection.Spoken in Chinese.[Chen Dapeng]

    Mimesa sibirica

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    8. Mimesa sibirica (de Beaumont), 1937, first record from China Specimens examined: 1 Ψ 3 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Zhengbaiqi, Zhaganzhuoer, 1380m, 42 ° 18 'N 115 °E, 7 & 22.vii. 2001, coll. Yuanchao Guo; 1 Ψ, China: Inner Mongolia, Linhe river, 40 ° 45 'N 107 ° 25 'E, 11.vii. 1978, coll. Heming Chen; 2 Ψ, China: Inner Mongolia, Zhengbaiqi, 42 ° 18 'N 115 °E, 15.viii. 1978, coll. Heming Chen; 1 Ψ 5 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Hulunbeier, Manzhouli, Aoerjin, 49 ° 36 'N 117 ° 26 'E, 6.viii. 2006, coll. Ming Luo, Peng Wang, Haiyan Zhang & Tingjing Li; 1 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Baotou, Wudangzhao, 40 ° 39 'N 109 ° 49 'E, 21.viii. 2000, coll. Junhua He; 2 Ψ 5 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Hulunbeier, west of Manzhouli, 49 ° 36 'N 117 ° 26 'E, 5.viii. 2006, coll. Haiyan Zhang; 1 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Hailaer, north of Hulunqiao, 49 ° 12 'N 119 ° 42 'E, 3.viii. 2006, coll. Pengwang; 1 ɗ, China: Inner Mongolia, Ewenkeqi, Yimin Town, Wumuchang, 48 ° 25 'N 119 ° 46 'E, 8.viii. 2006, coll. Ming Luo; 1 ɗ, China: Hebei, Weixian county, Baile, 920m, 36 ° 58 'N 115 ° 15 'E, 5.viii. 1964, coll. Yinheng Han. Distribution: China: Inner Mongolia, Hebei Province; Russia; Mongolia.Published as part of Ma, Li, Li, Qiang & Chen, Xue-Xin, 2008, The genus Mimesa in China with descriptions of two new species (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Crabronidae), pp. 19-29 in Zootaxa 1745 on pages 27-28, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18163

    A systematic study of terminal area traffic management.

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    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major:Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics. Advisor:Yiyuan Joseph Zhao. 1 computer file (PDF); xi, 91 pages.This dissertation conducts a systematic study of terminal area traffic management using optimization methods. The critical role that the airport plays in national airspace system is introduced. The challenges in managing complex terminal traffic are explained. The necessity and importance of the study is addressed. To assist human air traffic controllers in managing complex terminal traffic, our solution strategy is to calculate each flight's optimal arrival/departure schedule, to minimize the overall flight delay and runway congestion in the entire airport. Three solutions are developed in the thesis, including the static solution, the dynamic solution, and the stochastic solution. The static solution uses one computation and attempts to optimize the schedules of many flights arriving/departing the airport within a wide time window. The accuracy of its solution heavily relies on the quality of the predicted traffic situation acquired right before the computation. On the contrary, the dynamic solution attempts to divide the entire traffic flow into a series of small pieces, and optimize flight schedules piece by piece. It collects the latest traffic information before each computation and experiences far less computational load. Both static and dynamic solutions assume the traffic information to be explicitly known. They are inherently deterministic solutions. The third solution proposed in this thesis is a stochastic solution. It assumes that traffic information is not known with certain due to a variety of random factors in actual flight operations. This stochastic solution is mathematically and structurally designed to handle multiple sources of uncertainties in managing terminal traffic. In the last, the conclusion is given based upon the simulation tests of the three proposed runway scheduling solutions. Future work is also suggested.Chen, Heming. (2012). A systematic study of terminal area traffic management.. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/136451
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