2,303 research outputs found
Materials for "Indirect Discharge of Electric Field Responsible for Gamma-ray Glow Production"
# Materials for "Indirect Discharge of Electric Field Responsible for Gamma-ray Glow Production" ## AboutThis data repository contains data and materials used for Wada et al. "Indirect Discharge of Electric Field Responsible for Gamma-ray Glow Production" submitted to Geophysical Research Letters. If you have any questions or comments, please contact the corresponding author of the paper. ## Contact Yuuki Wada (Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University) wada (at) yuuki-wd.spac
穣生立誌 [= Baby memory book for Joe], English translation
A baby memory book for Joe Wada. Includes Tomoji Wada's message to his baby boy, Joe Wada. Original item is found in item: csudh_wad_0406.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
Indoor plants
A guidebook for indoor plants compiled by Tomoji Wada. He started a gardener job in June 1946.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
穣生立誌 [= Baby memory book for Joe]
A baby memory book for Joe Wada. Includes Tomoji Wada's message to his baby boy, Joe Wada. English translation is found in item: csudh_wad_0435.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
Materials for "Synoptic meteorological conditions of gamma-ray glows in winter thunderstorms"
# Materials for "Synoptic meteorological conditions of gamma-ray glows in winter thunderstorms" ## AboutThis data repository contains data and materials used for Wada et al. "Synoptic meteorological conditions of gamma-ray glows in winter thunderstorms" submitted to Progress in Earth and Planetary Science. If you have any questions or comments, please contact the corresponding author of the paper. ## Charts for all cases Documents for 24 glow cases and 11 non-detection cases are summarized in all_cases.pdf. ## Himawari-8 IR1 images Images of Advanced Himawari Imager IR1 are included. The data is provided by Japan Meteorological Agency via Center of Environmental Remote Sensing (CEReS), Chiba University, and plotted by the authors. ## MSM 500 hPa contours Contours of geopotential height at 500 hPa based on the meso-scale numerical prediction model (MSM) are included. The MSM model is provided by Japan Meteorological Agency via Research Institute of Sustainable Humanosphere, Kyoto University. ## Contact Yuuki Wada (Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University) wada (at) yuuki-wd.spac
Photograph of a plaque from a tree branch and trunk
A plaque from a tree branch and trunk with a carved poem by Tomoji Wada. It was created during his incarceration in the Poston camp in Arizona. His poem depicts the life in the camp. The item was photographed by the donor and the image file was donated.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
Gardener income details calendar 1954
A list of Tomoji Wada's gardener income details. Includes his customers and monthly income in 1954.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
Fig. 2 in First Northern Hemisphere Record of a Poorly Known Armored Searobin Peristedion richardsi (Actinopterygii: Teleostei: Peristediidae) from Taiwan
Fig. 2. (A) Dorsal and (B) ventral views of head of preserved specimen of Peristedion richardsi (same individual as Fig. 1).Published as part of Wada, Hidetoshi, Hata, Harutaka & Motomura, Hiroyuki, 2019, First Northern Hemisphere Record of a Poorly Known Armored Searobin Peristedion richardsi (Actinopterygii: Teleostei: Peristediidae) from Taiwan, pp. 203-207 in Species Diversity 24 on page 205, DOI: 10.12782/specdiv.24.203, http://zenodo.org/record/573845
Dichondra lawn
Tomoji Wada's handwritten guidelines for Dichondra lawn. He compiled the guidelines based on what he learned from Los Angeles Times' home magazine articles, the advices received from senior gardeners, and his own experience.Tomoji Wada was an interpreter, bookkeeper, operator of a grocery store, and manufacturer of tofu and mochi on Terminal Island, California prior to World War II. He established a tofu manufacturing plant at the Poston camp in Arizona during the war, and became a gardener after returning from the incarceration camp to Los Angeles, California. The collection consists of receipts, ledgers, taxes, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, journals, guidebooks, immigration materials, and incarceration camp records pertaining to Tomoji Wada and his family. Materials include born-digital objects created and transferred from the donor
Interpopulation variation of behavioural and morphological traits that affect downstream displacement of the juvenile white‐spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis
Downstream displacement is a riverine phenomenon in which organisms are advected by water flow from their home river section to a downstream area. Water flows that cause downstream displacement can be divided into two types: flood flows (Chapman & Kramer, 1991; Good et al., 2001; Meffe, 1984; Sato, 2006; Weese et al., 2011; Yamada & Wada, 2021) and flows under ordinary river conditions (i.e., ordinary flows; Lechner et al., 2016; Nagel et al., 2021; Thiesmeier & Schuhmacher, 1990). Although flood flows can cause catastrophic downstream displacement (Meffe, 1984; Sato, 2006; Weese et al., 2011), occurrences of such downstream displacement are often trait-dependent in riverine fishes (Blondel et al., 2021; Chapman & Kramer, 1991; Good et al., 2001; Meffe, 1984; Yamada & Wada, 2021). For example, smaller individuals are more likely to be displaced by strong floods from their home river section in populations of the molly Poecilia gillii (Kner 1863) (Chapman & Kramer, 1991) and the Trinidadian guppy Poecilia reticulata Peters 1859 (Blondel et al., 2021). Downstream displacement due to ordinary flows can also remove individuals with vulnerable traits from upstream populations. For example, reduced use of low-current habitats in the stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus (Linnaeus 1758) is correlated with increased downstream displacement under ordinary flow conditions (Jiang et al., 2015). Thus, downstream displacement can be a general evolutionary pressure that removes individuals with low resistance to flow-driven displacement from their home river reaches (Yamada & Wada, 2021)
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