32,976 research outputs found
Business Papers (MS 80-0003)
Letter from Norman G. Kittrell, Jr. to F. A. Williams enclosing a signed tenancy regarding the property Mr. Dan Rafferty is living on
Erratum to: Effect of moderate red wine intake on cardiac prognosis after recent acute myocardial infarction of subjects with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (Diabetic Medicine, (2006), 23, 9, (974-981), 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2006.01886.x)
In an article by Marfella et al, the author name C. Saron is incorrect and should be listed as C. Sardu. Therefore the correct author list is: R. Marfella, F. Cacciapuoti, M. Siniscalchi, F. C. Sasso, F. Marchese, F. Cinone, E. Musacchio, M. A. Marfella, L. Ruggiero, G. Chiorazzo, D. Liberti, G. Chiorazzo, G. F. Nicoletti, C. Sardu, F. D'Andrea, C. Ammendola, M. Verza and L. Coppola.In an article by Marfella et al, the author name C. Saron is incorrect and should be listed as C. Sardu. Therefore the correct author list is: R. Marfella, F. Cacciapuoti, M. Siniscalchi, F. C. Sasso, F. Marchese, F. Cinone, E. Musacchio, M. A. Marfella, L. Ruggiero, G. Chiorazzo, D. Liberti, G. Chiorazzo, G. F. Nicoletti, C. Sardu, F. D'Andrea, C. Ammendola, M. Verza and L. Coppola
Elaboration on Kwapien's theorem: Representing bounded mean zero functions f as coboundary f = g ◦ T − g
In [8] Kwapien proved that every mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] we can write as f = g ◦ T − g for some g ∈ L∞[0, 1] and some measure preserving transformation T of [0, 1]. However, as was discovered in [4] there is a gap in the proof for the case that f is not continuous. The aim of this bachelor thesis is filling in that gap in the proof. We first extend Kwapien’s proof for continuous functions to certain other measure spaces. Thereafter, we use the method of proof suggested by Kwapien, to proof the theorem for mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] for which λ(f−1({x})) = 0 for all x ∈ R. Using this result we then proof that every mean zero function f ∈ L∞[0, 1] can be written as a sum f =(g1 ◦ T1 − g1) + (g2 ◦ T2 − g2) where g1, g2 ∈ L∞[0, 1] and where T1, T2 are measure preserving transformations of [0, 1]. We finish this thesis with an application of Kwapien’s theorem in the study to singular traces Applied Mathematic
TWO-PHOTON SPECTROSCOPY OF THE AND STATES OF
Research supported by AFOSR K. Hoshiba et al. J. Phys. B 18, 1.875 (1985). T. Sakai et al., J. Phys. B. 21, 229 (1988).Author Institution: Molecular Physics Laboratory, SRI InternationalThe and states of are excited from the ground by two photons near 207 nm and detected by vuv fluorescence or by ionization by a third photon. The laser source for these measurements is an excimer-pumped dye laser operating with PBBO dye at 415 nm. This light is doubled in a crystal and focused into a cell containing a mixture of in He. The uv wavelengths were calibrated against the (3.0) band in NO, which was calibrated against in the visible. Vibrational levels were observed in the state and in the state, based on the previous electron-impact , and partially resolved rotationally (the effective excitation linewidth is ). These assignments are supported by simulations of the two-photon excitation spectra. Although the fluorescence has not yet been spectrally resolved, we believe that it arises predominantly from the triplet state even when the singlet is initially excited. In the latter case, the fluorescence is temporally delayed, and increases in intensity as the He density is increased. The two-phonon excitation scheme we have developed should be useful in investigating the kinetics of the 158 nm laser, which is believed to arise from a transition from the outer well of the state to a weakly bound state correlating to ground state atoms.$^{2}
Community Participation in Planning (CPiP)-Participatory Skills Framework
2 Community Participation in Planning (CPiP) was a two year collaborative project involving Ulster University (UK), Community Places (UK), the University of Aveiro (Portugal) and the Politecnico di Milano (Italy). CPiP was funded through the European Union's (EU) Erasmus+ programme, supporting education and training activities in order to foster quality improvements and innovation across a range of sectors. The information and opinions expressed in this report have been compiled by the authors in good faith and informed by the active participation in, and reflections from, the CPiP project. All opinions contained in this report constitute the judgment of the authors at the date of publication and are subject to change. This report is intended to provide an overview of the project and the presentation of the project's skills framework. It is not intended to provide a comprehensive statement on community participation in planning and does not necessarily reflect the views of the academic partners, local partnering organisations, the Erasmus+ programme or the European Union. "The European Commission support for the production of this publication does not constitute an endorsement of the contents which reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
Free product subgroups between Chevalley groups G(Φ,F) and G(Φ,F[t])
AbstractWe investigate subgroups of a Chevalley group G=G(Φ,A) over a ring A, containing its elementary subgroup E=E(Φ,F) over a subring F⊆A. Assume that the root system Φ is simply laced and A=F[t] is a polynomial ring. We show that if G is of adjoint type, then there exists an element g∈E(Φ,A) such that 〈g,E(Φ,F)〉=〈g〉*E(Φ,F), where 〈X〉 denotes the subgroup, generated by a set X, and * stands for the free product.It follows that under the above assumptions the lattice L=L(E,G) is not standard. Moreover, combining the above result with theorems of Nuzhin and the author one obtains a necessary and sufficient condition for L to be standard provided that A and F are fields of characteristic not 2 and Φ≠G2
f(G,T) and its Cosmological Implications
A coupled formulation of the Gauss-Bonnet invariant term G and the
energy momentum trace T term provide a modified f(G,T) gravity,
has been analyzed in this study. The functional form for the
f(G,T) gravity has been taken as f(G,T)=αT+ βGThe presentation of the authors' names and (or) special characters in the title of the pdf file of the accepted manuscript may differ slightly from what is displayed on the item page. The information in the pdf file of the accepted manuscript reflects the original submission by the author
b-Generalized Skew Derivations on Multilinear Polynomials in Prime Rings
Let R be a prime ring of characteristic different from 2, Qr be its right Martindale quotient ring and C be its extended centroid. In this paper we define b-generalized skew derivations of prime rings. Then we describe all possible forms of two b-generalized skew derivations F and G satisfying the condition F(x)x − xG(x) = 0, for all x ∈ S, where S is the set of the evaluations of a multilinear polynomial f(x1, ..., xn) over C with n non-commuting variables. Several potential research topics related to our current work are also presented. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Combining social network analysis and the NATO Approach Space to define agility. Topic 2: networks and networking
This paper takes the NATO SAS-050 Approach Space, a widely accepted model of command and control, and gives each of its primary axes a quantitative measure using social network analysis. This means that the actual point in the approach space adopted by real-life command and control organizations can be plotted along with the way in which that point varies over time and function. Part 1 of the paper presents the rationale behind this innovation and how it was subject to verification using theoretical data. Part 2 shows how the enhanced approach space was put to use in the context of a large scale military command post exercise. Agility is represented by the number of distinct areas in the approach space that the organization was able to occupy and there was a marked disparity between where the organization thought it should be and where it actually was, furthermore, agility varied across function. The humans in this particular scenario bestowed upon the organization the levels of agility that were observed, thus the findings are properly considered from a socio-technical perspective
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