2,748 research outputs found
Miller, John (Birth, 1904-01-03)
Address: 640 W. 7th385/Pg 83/1904/MW/Amer/Amer/Dr. D.D. BrambleOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MILLER, A-MILLER, K'
Miller (Birth, 1880-11-06)
Address: 605 Sycamore St.6939/Pg 48/1880/M W/Ger./Ger./Dr. D.D. BrambleOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MEYERS, D- MILLER, A'
Miller (Birth, 1876-12-24)
Address: S.W. C. Sycamore & Maine5339/Pg 76/1876/M W/Ger./Ger./D.D. Bramble, MD.Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MEYERS, D- MILLER, A'
Miller, Susan Margaret (Birth, 1875-03-08)
Address: 247 Broadway1092/Pg.98/1875/F W/America/America/D.D. Bramble,MD.Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MILLER, K-MIS'
Miller, Amelia (Death, 1888-03-05)
Address: 15 StorrsAge at death: 3976/Pg. 29/1888/F W M/City/D.D. Bramble, M.D./Jacob Fuldner/Walnut HillsOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MEYERS, D- MILLER, A'
Readers’ attitudes to self-archiving in the UK
The online self-archiving by authors of their scholarly articles has been proposed as an alternative to author-pays open access publication, but has the potential to undermine journal publisher income if the ready availability of self-archived articles leads to a drop in subscriptions. This study investigated the awareness of self-archiving and use of self-archived articles in a survey of a mainly academic population including both authors and non-authors, and looks at their attitudes to self-archived papers and whether they view them as an authoritative alternative to subscription access. In total, 70% of respondents had heard of self-archiving, though only 15% knew a lot about it, and 71% had used self-archived papers. These proportions are higher than in previous studies, suggesting that awareness has grown. Most self-archived papers used came from websites rather than repositories, particularly among those whose awareness of self-archiving was low. Use of self-archived articles was greater amongst those who had published more papers and also depended strongly on subject field – use and awareness were both particularly low in the field of medicine. People who were more aware of self-archiving were less likely to view the publisher’s official version as the only authoritative version and more likely not to care about the online location of articles. Moreover, authors who had self-archived tended to archive the publisher’s official version regardless of whether they were permitted to. These results suggest that the awareness of self-archiving is currently mostly limited to academic authors and is unlikely to grow beyond this in the short term. However, in the long term, the combination of high rates of self-archiving of the publisher’s official version, coupled with the devaluation of the journal as the authoritative source of material together with increased convenience of access to self-archived material, could result in fewer people accessing articles through subscription-based methods
View of dirt road through windshield of Ford car, 1919 [picture].
Part of the: Horrie Miller aviation photograph collection, 1906 to 1984.; 1 of 3 photographs mounted on cardboard.; Inscription: "D.D. Defence Dept Ford ? 83 used by HCM to survey Melbourne to Sydney aerodromes"--In ink on mount.; Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4774151
The turbulent dissipation rate from PIV measurements
The result of a particle-image velocimetry (PIV) measurement is a velocity field averaged over interrogation windows. This severely affects the measurement of small-scale turbulence quantities when the interrogation window size is much larger than the smallest length scale in turbulence. A direct measurement of the dissipation rate demands the measurement of gradients of the velocity field, which are now underestimated because the small-scale motion is not resolved. A popular procedure is to relate the statistical properties of the measured, but underresolved gradients to those of the true ones, invoking a large-eddy argument [3]. We show that the used proportionality constant, the Smagorinsky constant, should depend on the window overlap, on the used elements of the strain tensor, and on the way in which derivatives are approximate
How the dispersion of a droplet cloud depends on its initial size
A cloud of droplets evolves under the influence of strong turbulence. The droplets are made from a phosphorescent fluid. From this cloud we select at t = 0 a narrow line by exciting the droplets with a UV laser, which causes them to glow for a few milliseconds. The dispersion of this line is followed in time using a fast intensified camera. A large range of droplet sizes (Stokes number St) was measured. It appears that lines with St \approx 1 disperse faster than a line of fluid tracers. Lines of droplets which are narrowest initially, spread fastest
Reverend William M. Paden, D.D.
This photograph is a portrait, featured in a publication, of Reverend William M. Paden, D.D. He is wearing a dark suit, light shirt, and a dark tie with polka dots. His hair is parted in the middle and he wears a mustache. He is also wearing wire-rimmed glasses. The background is a medium gray shade.The photograph is in good condition, except for a slight wrinkle in the bottom right corner. On the back the paper appears torn because of glue and there is a small pink spot in the bottom half of the photograph. The following text is printed at the bottom of the photograph: "Reverend William M. Paden D.D. Beloved, purposeful, Missioner of Good Cheer. Leader of Presbyterianism in Utah for thirty-four years, as Pastor, Executive, Author and Counselor. Together by the grace of God, we enter the forward-looking years, growing ever richer in Christian faith and service." The Archives, Giovale Library, Westminster College, has a collection of materials authored by William Paden and also materials about him. Additional biographic information about Dr Paden is available in: Brackenridge, R. Douglas. Westminster College of Salt Lake City. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press, 1998, pp. 118, 121, 124, 140
- …
