4,969 research outputs found
Riley, Maxwell Patrick, TX2938
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/413409Surname: RILEY. Given Name(s) or Initials: MAXWELL PATRICK. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: TX2938. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 15547.232119
Item: [2016.0049.45670] "Riley, Maxwell Patrick, TX2938
Mcquinn, Maxwell Patrick, [No Service Number]
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/404404Surname: MCQUINN. Given Name(s) or Initials: MAXWELL PATRICK. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: [No Registration Number]. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 58298.241095
Item: [2016.0049.36696] "Mcquinn, Maxwell Patrick, [No Service Number]
2022 IEEE Long Island Systems, Applications and Technology Conference (LISAT 2022)
Uma Balaji (with Patrick Evans, Ryan Avery, Maxwell Malcy, and Maverick Ruiz) is a contributing author, Multipurpose Solar Charging Station.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/engineering-books/1079/thumbnail.jp
Tuttiett, Mary Gleed [pseud. Maxwell Gray] (1846–1923), novelist
Biographical entry of popular female author Maxwell Gray
Canada and the Battle of Vimy Ridge
Public history posters on Canada’s military past about the April 9 - 12, 1917 battle of Vimy Ridge by the Canadian Corps, by students Barry Ho, Maxwell Blair, Elena Melania Panescu, and Patrick Jedrzejkohttps://source.sheridancollege.ca/swfhass_military_posters/1003/thumbnail.jp
DECAY OF SOLUTIONS OF MAXWELL-KLEIN-GORDON EQUATIONS WITH ARBITRARY MAXWELL FIELD
In the author's previous work, it has been shown that solutions of Maxwell-Klein-Gordon equations in R3+1 possess some form of global strong decay properties with data bounded in some weighted energy space. In this paper, we prove pointwise decay estimates for the solutions for the case when the initial data are merely small on the scalar field but can be arbitrarily large on the Maxwell field. This extends the previous result of Lindblad and Sterbenz, in which smallness was assumed both for the scalar field and the Maxwell field.SCI(E)ARTICLE81829-1902
Foreign direct investment in a macroeconomic framework : finance, efficiency, incentives, and distortions
Does foreign direct investment (FDI) increase domestic investment, or does it provide additional foreign exchange for a pre-existing current account deficit, or some linear combination of the two? The author investigates this question for a group of five Pacific Basin countries and a control group of 11 other developing countries. For the sample of all 16 developing countries, the author finds that FDI does not provide additional balance of payments financing for a pre-existing current account deficit. In the control group of 11 developing countries, FDI is associated with reduced domestic investment - implying that FDI to those countries is simply a close substitute for other capital inflows. For the five Pacific Basin market economies, however, FDI raises domestic investment by the full extent of the FDI inflow. The author finds that FDI has a significantly negative impact on national saving in the sample of all 16 developing countries. For the control group, this negative effect is similar in magnitude to FDI's negative effect on domestic investment - implying a zero effect on the current account. But FDI's negative effect on national saving in the five Pacific Basin developing market economies implies that FDI could have more of a negative effect on the current account than through increased domestic investment alone. The author also investigates the impact of FDI on economic growth in these 16 countries, taking into account distortions in the economies. He estimates reduced-form current account equations, and presents an analytical framework for estimating FDI's effect on economic growth in the presence of incentive-disincentive packages and other economic distortions. He illustrates his framework using indicators of foreign trade and financial distortions. His main conclusion: the effect of FDI differs markedly from one group of countries to another. FDI has a negative effect on economic growth in the control group. It has the same positive effect on growth as domestically financed investment does in the Pacific Basin countries. The main cause for the different effect is the low level of distortion in the Pacific Basin countries.Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Foreign Direct Investment,International Terrorism&Counterterrorism,Macroeconomic Management
The Electromagnetic Wave Equations of James Clerk Maxwell
The purpose of this paper is to give an elementary presentation of Maxwell's Wave Equations. It is not the aim of the author to present any new information and the sources of this paper are as follows s The historical-data is taken almost entirely from the book "James Clerk Maxwell and Modern Physics" by Glazebrook except for a few details from "Introduction to Modern Physics" by Richtmyer and Kennard. The field equations, the method of derivation from the differential standpoint and the discussion of the wave equations are entirely from "Principles of Electricity" by Page and Adams, except for the references to Gauss' and Stokes' Theorems. These Theorems, together with the vector derivation are from "Introduction to Theoretical Physics" by Page. Neither of these derivations is the same as that given by Maxwell, but are rather so arranged as to give a good introduction to the subject while involving a minimum of confusion. To facilitate reading the paper is divided into four sections. The first deals with the life of Maxwell and the development of electrical thought prior to the time of Maxwell. The second section deals with the approach of Maxwell to the problem. The third section contains the derivation of the wave equations from the differential form of the field equations and a short discussion of the wave equations. The fourth section contains the derivation of the wave equations by vector means
A Toroidal Maxwell-Cremona-Delaunay Correspondence
We consider three classes of geodesic embeddings of graphs on Euclidean flat tori:
- A torus graph G is equilibrium if it is possible to place positive weights on the edges, such that the weighted edge vectors incident to each vertex of G sum to zero.
- A torus graph G is reciprocal if there is a geodesic embedding of the dual graph G^* on the same flat torus, where each edge of G is orthogonal to the corresponding dual edge in G^*.
- A torus graph G is coherent if it is possible to assign weights to the vertices, so that G is the (intrinsic) weighted Delaunay graph of its vertices. The classical Maxwell-Cremona correspondence and the well-known correspondence between convex hulls and weighted Delaunay triangulations imply that the analogous concepts for plane graphs (with convex outer faces) are equivalent. Indeed, all three conditions are equivalent to G being the projection of the 1-skeleton of the lower convex hull of points in ℝ³. However, this three-way equivalence does not extend directly to geodesic graphs on flat tori. On any flat torus, reciprocal and coherent graphs are equivalent, and every reciprocal graph is equilibrium, but not every equilibrium graph is reciprocal. We establish a weaker correspondence: Every equilibrium graph on any flat torus is affinely equivalent to a reciprocal/coherent graph on some flat torus
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