135,001 research outputs found
Ellen Nakamura photograph
Ellen Nakamura, who had been interned at the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas, served as a recruitment scout for Seabrook Farms. She regularly communicated with H. Leon Yager, the WRA official in charge of the Philadelphia office, about the working and housing situations of relocated internees at Seabrook, and on the numbers of additional detained Nisei and Issei who might be brought to New Jersey.Early 1950s photo of Japanese American Ellen Nakamura. Ellen was relocated to the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas. She later led a group of Japanese American interns to New Jersey to work at Seabrook Farms Co
Letter from George Hideo Nakamura to Sam A. Goldenberg, April 19, 1943
Correspondence from George Hideo Nakamura to Sam Goldenberg regarding offer of employment for Nakamura at Comet Model Airplane Company.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
Applicability of nonlinear static procedures for low-rise unreinforced masonry buildings with flexible diaphragms
Abstract not availableYasuto Nakamura, Hossein Derakhshan, Michael C. Griffith, Guido Magenes, Abdul H. Sheik
Letter from George Hideo Nakamura to Internal Security Division, November 1943
Correspondence from George Hideo Nakamura to the Internal Security Division regarding his removal from the Comet Model Airplane Company and loyalty to the United States. See also sac_jaac_2252.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
Analytic wave front set for solutions to Schrödinger equations
AbstractThis paper is a continuation of [A. Martinez, S. Nakamura, V. Sordoni, Analytic smoothing effect for the Schrödinger equation with long-range perturbation, Comm. Pure Appl. Math. LIX (2006) 1330–1351], where an analytic smoothing effect was proved for long-range type perturbations of the Laplacian H0 on Rn. In this paper, we consider short-range type perturbations H of the Laplacian on Rn, and we characterize the analytic wave front set of the solution to the Schrödinger equation: e−itHf, in terms of that of the free solution: e−itH0f, for t<0 in the forward non-trapping region. The same result holds for t>0 in the backward non-trapping region. This result is an analytic analogue of results by Hassel and Wunsch [A. Hassel, J. Wunsch, The Schrödinger propagator for scattering metrics, Ann. of Math. 162 (2005) 487–523] and Nakamura [S. Nakamura, Wave front set for solutions to Schrödinger equations, J. Funct. Anal. 256 (2009) 1299–1309]
H. Nakamura. Indian Buddhism, a Survey with Bibliographical Notes
Bareau André. H. Nakamura. Indian Buddhism, a Survey with Bibliographical Notes. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 199, n°4, 1982. pp. 434-435
Alopias pelagicus Nakamura 1935
<p> 13. <i>Alopias pelagicus</i> Nakamura, 1935:3, 5, pl. 1, fig. 2</p> <p>Syntype: unknown, four specimens collected from Market at Suô [Suao], 24°36’N, 121°52’E, eastern coast of Formosa, Mar. 1934, coll. H. Nakamura.</p> <p> <i>Remark</i>. The original type series was not registered and apparently does not exist.</p>Published as part of <i>Ho, Hsuan-Ching & Shao, Kwang-Tsao, 2011, 2957, pp. 1-74 in Zootaxa 2957</i> on page 1
The Nakamura numbers for computable simple games
The Nakamura number of a simple game plays a critical role in preference aggregation (or multi-criterion ranking): the number of alternatives that the players can always deal with rationally is less than this number. We comprehensively study the restrictions that various properties for a simple game impose on its Nakamura number. We find that a computable game has a finite Nakamura number greater than three only if it is proper, nonstrong, and nonweak, regardless of whether it is monotonic or whether it has a finite carrier. The lack of strongness often results in alternatives that cannot be strictly ranked
Letter from Sachiko Okada to Pvt. George H. Nakamura, August 15, 1945
Correspondence from Sachiko Okada to George Hideo Nakamura regarding general updates on family and friends and feelings about the end of World War II.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
Eosentomon impar Nakamura 2010, sp. nov.
Eosentomon impar Nakamura sp. nov. Fig. 27; Table 11 Type specimens. Holotype female (NSMT –Ap 481), Kenmarubi, Mt. Fuji, Fujiyoshida–shi, Yamanashi Prefecture, 35º27'06"N, 138º45'12"E, 1060 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by P. densiflora, 22-IX-2001, R. Itoh leg. Paratypes: 3 females (NSMT –Ap 482–484), same data as for the holotype; 1 female (NSMT –Ap 485), Mt. Komaga–take, Kanegasaki–cho, Iwate Prefecture, 39º11'21"N, 140º55'41"E, 920 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by F. crenata, 18-VIII-2001, H. Tamura et al. leg.; 1 female (NSMT –Ap 486), Otaki, Chichibu–shi, Saitama Prefecture, 35º56'58"N, 138º53'57"E, 900 m elevation, 1-V-1991, Y. Kuwabara leg.; 2 females (NSMT – Ap 487–488), Busseki, Nakatsugawa, Chichibu–shi, Saitama Prefecture, 35º59'44"N, 138º49'30"E, 670 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by F. crenata and Q. crispula, 26- IV- 1988, K. Machida leg.; 2 females (NSMT –Ap 489–490), Omaru–yama, Kamikuisshiki–mura, Yamanashi Prefecture, 35º26'32"N, 138º38'26"E, 1130 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by F. crenata and Q. crispula, 18- IV- 2001, R. Itoh leg. Other specimens examined. One female, Mt. Iwate –san, Takizawa –mura, Iwate Prefecture, 39º50'29"N, 141º01'22"E, 1080 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by Q. crispula, 28-VI-1985, O. Nakamura leg.; 1 female, Bato –machi, Tochigi Prefecture, 36º45'57"N, 140º08'52"E, 150 m elevation, litter of a forest dominated by Quercus serrata, 8-VII-2002, Y. Hagiwara leg. Description. Body length 605 µm (605–852 µm). Head 104 (96–107) µm long, 80 (68–84) µm wide. Setae and sensilla on head similar to the preceding species (Figs. 27A, C, F); seta sp 1.3 (1.2–1.7) times longer than p; seta rs inflated, as long as sr (Fig. 27B). On galea (Fig. 27D) digit O longer than M and I, M and I close to each other. Mandible with 3 teeth (Fig. 27E). Clypeal apodemes distinct (Figs. 27A, B). Pseudoculus circular (Fig. 27F), 11 (9–11) µm long, PR = 9 (9–11). Foretarsus length (Figs. 27G–I) 69 (59–71) µm; claw 15 (14–16) µm, TR = 4.9 (4.4–5.1); empodium as long as claw, 15 (13–16) µm, EU = 1.0; sensillum s slightly longer than claw, 16 (16–17) µm. Sensillum t1 closer to α 3 than to α 3 ', BS = 0.9 (0.8–0.9); t2 thinly spatulate; t3 broadened, reaching base of α 7; a not reaching base of γ 2; b spatulate; c reaching nearly to base of γ 3; d broadened, surpassing base of α 6; e and g roundedly spatulate and long; f1 thinly spatulate; f2 reaching base of γ 5; a' at same level with α 3; b'1 nearer to δ 3' than to δ 4', slightly broadened and almost reaching base of δ 4'; b'2 thin; c' absent. Length of middle tarsus 36 (29–38) µm, length of claw 11 (9– 11) µm; hind tarsus 45 (36–45) µm, claw 11 (10–13) µm; both empodia short (Figs. 27J, K), 3 (1–2) µm long; on hind tarsus (Fig. 27K) D2 and D4 spine-like, but more slender than D5. Tracheal camerae distally contracted (Fig. 27L). Central lobe trapezoidal and inner line constricted in middle (Fig. 27M). Laterostigmata II–IV large, with no inner structure; those on V–VII small. On female squama genitalis (Fig. 27N) S-shaped sclerotization on processus sternalis, caput processus of duck’s head-type, filum processus long. Male unknown. Chaetotaxy as in Table 11. On thoracic tergites II–III, P1a seta-like, posterior to P1–P2; P2a seta-like, nearer to P2 than to P3. P1a on abdominal tergite I, P1a and P2a on II–VI and P2a on VII filiform and longer than P1; P1a on VII sensillum-like and about one-third length of P1, posterior to P1–P2; on tergite VIII P1a' oblong and anterior to P2 (Fig. 27O); P1a' and P2 nearly the same level with M4; P2a linear. Setae 1 and 2 on abdominal tergite XI microchaetae. A pair of ventral anterior setae on telson small and sensillum-like. Diagnosis. The present species is similar to E. brevicorpusculum Yin and E. dissimilis Yin from China (Yin 1965, 1979, 1999) in many respects, but this new species is different in the absence of foretarsal sensillum c' (present in the latter two). Moreover the present species is different from E. brevicorpusculum in having four pairs of anterior setae on abdominal tergites V–VI (five pairs in E. brevicorpusculum), and from E. dissimilis in three pairs of anterior setae on the abdominal tergite VII (four pairs in E. dissimilis) and the length of foretarsal sensillum b'1 reaching nearly to base of δ 4' (not reaching base of δ 4 in E. dissimilis). The present species is also similar to E. udagawai, E. taiwanense Nakamura, 1997 from Taiwan (Nakamura, 1997) and E. pusillum Ewing from Michigan, Florida and Carolina, USA (Ewing, 1940; Bernard, 1990), but it is easily distinguished by the long empodium on the hind tarsus (short in this new species). Chaetotaxic variations observed consisted of the asymmetric absences of P1 on the abdominal tergite III in one female and A3 on the abdominal sternite III in another female from Mt. Fuji. Etymology. The specific name is the Latin word for “unequal” and referes to the long inclusion of this species in E. udagawai and its allies. Distribution. Japan (Honshu).Published as part of Nakamura, Osami, 2010, Taxonomic revision of the family Eosentomidae (Hexapoda: Protura) from Japan 2701, pp. 1-109 in Zootaxa 2701 on pages 49-5
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