10,405 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
Automorphism groups of Wada dessins and Wilson operations
Dessins d'enfants (children's drawings) may be defined as hypermaps, i.e. as bipartite graphs embedded in compact Riemann surfaces. They are very important objects in order to describe the surface of the embedding as an algebraic curve. Knowing the combinatorial properties of the dessin may, in fact, help us determining defining equations or the field of definition of the surface. This task is easier if the automorphism group of the dessin is "large". In this thesis we consider a special type of dessins, so-called Wada dessins, for which the underlying graph illustrates the incidence structure of points and of hyperplanes of projective spaces. We determine under which conditions they have a large orientation-preserving automorphism group. We show that applying algebraic operations called "mock" Wilson operations to the underlying graph we may obtain new dessins. We study the automorphism group of the new dessins and we show that the dessins we started with are coverings of the new ones.Dessins d'enfants (Kinderzeichnungen) wurden zuerst von Grothendieck (1984) als Objekte eingeführt, die sehr einfach, aber sehr wichtig sind, um kompakte Riemannsche Flächen als glatte algebraische Kurven über einem Zahlenkörper zu beschreiben. Dessins d'enfants können durch ihre Walsh-Darstellung definiert werden und entsprechen bipartiten Graphen, die in Riemannschen Flächen eingebettet sind. Ein grundlegendes Problem ist es, wie man aus den kombinatorischen Eigenschaften des Dessins auf die algebraischen Eigenschaften der Fläche, wie z.B. auf definierende Gleichungen und auf den Definitionskörper, schließen kann. Die Aufgabe ist normalerweise sehr schwierig, aber sie ist einfacher, wenn die Automorphismengruppe des Dessins besonders "groß" ist. In dieser Arbeit beschäftigen wir uns mit einem speziellen Typ von Dessins, mit sogenannten Wada-Dessins. Der zugrundeliegende Graph stellt die Inzidenzstruktur von Punkten und von Hyperebenen projektiver Räume dar. Wir bestimmen, unter welchen Bedingungen die orientierungserhaltende Automorphismengruppe "groß" ist. Wir zeigen, daß sich neue Dessins aus den ursprünglichen konstruieren lassen, wenn wir auf dem zugrundeliegenden Graphen sogenannte "mock" Wilson-Operationen anwenden. Wir analysieren die Automorphismengruppe der neuen Dessins und zeigen, daß die ursprünglichen Dessins Überlagerungen der neuen Dessins sind
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
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
Chromatic dispersion monitoring and adaptive compensation using pilot symbols in an 8 x 12.5 Gbit/s all-optical OFDM system
We propose and experimentally demonstrate a novel technique for chromatic dispersion (CD) monitoring and adaptive compensation in an 8 x 12.5 Gbit/s all-optical orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (AO-OFDM) system by using two pilot symbols and a virtually imaged phased array (VIPA) for a tunable CD compensator. The two pilot symbols are added to the first and the last sub-channels of the OFDM signal, and their relative time delay is detected and used for CD estimation at the CD monitoring circuit. The monitored CD value is fed to VIPA for CD compensation. In the experiments, the relative time delay between the two pilot symbols was successfully observed, and the adaptive CD compensation drastically improved the bit-error-rate (BER) from over 10(-5) to under 10(-9). The estimated CD values showed less than 10 ps/nm difference from the values measured by a photonic dispersion analyzer, which is accurate enough since the AO-OFDM system can keep BER<10(-9) upto 20 ps/nm residual CD
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