2,487 research outputs found

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Stuart Mackenzie: new paintings

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    This exhibition was held in The Mackintosh House for an Art Lover, it comprised thirty oil paintings that explored aspects of the Scottish landscape specifically river estuaries where salmon rivers meet the sea

    Stuart Mackenzie & Alastair Strachan

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    Two person show, featuring an ambitious collaborative project involving a large body of works on paper. This exhibition has been organized by Prof Ed Smith and will form the basis of a platform to provide educational exchange links between GSA and the Marist College

    Professor Peter Singer speaking at the National Press Club Canberra, 11 February 2009 [picture] /

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    Title devised by cataloguer based on information from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Humanitarian author Professor Peter Singer at the National Press Club, Canberra, 11 February 2009.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia, 2009

    La Cour de justice des Communautés européennes et le contrôle du pouvoir discrétionnaire

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    Stuart Mackenzie. La Cour de justice des Communautés européennes et le contrôle du pouvoir discrétionnaire. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 26 N°1, Janvier-mars 1974. pp. 61-72

    The Court of Justice of the European Communities: The Scope of its Jurisidction and the Evolution of its Case Law under the EEC Treaty

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    The European Court of Justice, as the sole judicial institution of the European Communities, has evolved into a vigorous body asserting a strong cohesive influence upon the Member States through application of the principles asserted in the Communities\u27 Treaties. In this article, Lord Mackenzie Stuart examines the jurisdiction of the Court in light of recent case law. In particular, Judge MacKenzie Stuart discusses doctrines of jurisdiction adopted by the Court and the application of these doctrines to recent developments involving free movement of goods and of persons within the Communities and other Treaty principles such as equal pay for men and women

    Black & White

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    Group exhibition organised by Prof Ed Smith, Head Of Fine Art, Marist College This exhibition will comprise of works on paper made by a group of Scottish artists. The artists are chosen through a collaborative dialogue with Prof Ed Smith, Stuart Mackenzie and Alastair Strachan

    RSA New Contemporaries: Presenting Scotland's Finest Emerging Artists and Architects

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    The Royal Scottish Academy in Edinburgh visit the Degree Awarding institutions in Scotland during the Final Year Degree shows and select a cross section of work from Fine art and Architecture for their annual showcase exhibition in Edinburgh. Myself and Stuart Mackenzie, Lecturer in Painting and Printmaking were invited to write the essay for the publication based on the selection made from GSA students

    Spectroscopy and Dynamics of Metal Clusters

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    A range of spectroscopic and computational techniques have been applied to the study of three metal cluster systems: vanadium monoxide, the Au2 molecule, and RhnN2O+ clusters. A new instrument has been built for spectroscopy experiments on metal clusters, consisting of a laser ablation cluster source and a linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The instrument was characterised using nitric oxide spectroscopy and applied to the electronic REMPI spectrum of vanadium oxide in the visible region. The rotational constants and band origins of several known states have been determined, and the observation of a new spin-forbidden transition has been used to connect the energies of the quartet and doublet manifolds of VO. A new 3 2Pi state was also observed and characterised. The photoionisation and photodissociation of Au2 were then studied at 157 nm, and between 35500 and 37200 cm-1 with another new instrument recently constructed in the group. Excited and ground state Au photofragments were produced in both spectral regions, and have been detected and assigned using velocity map imaging. The 157 nm photodissociation produced gold atom products in the seven highest-energy accessible channels in a single-photon dissociation process. The complex near-UV spectrum involved two-photon excitation to two 0g+ excited states close to their dissociation thresholds, followed by predissociation to thirteen different Au product channels. The branching ratios for dissociation into each of these channels varied across the spectrum as different dissociation limits and curve crossings occurred. The mid- and far-infrared multiple-photon dissociation spectra of RhnN2O+ clusters have been recorded using the argon-tagging action spectroscopy technique and free electron laser radiation. The results have been compared to density functional theory calculations to deduce the nature of the binding and the likely low-lying electronic and geometrical structures. The N2O was found to be molecularly adsorbed on the surface of the cluster but, upon infrared heating of the complex via the N2O vibrational modes, was observed to undergo a reaction, producing N2 and cluster oxides RhnO+. The reaction is believed to be thermal and mode-independent, but the efficiency of the surface reaction does vary with cluster size, with the n=5 cluster showing no detectable reaction. </p

    DSpace for e-print archives

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    DSpaceTM (http://dspace.org/) is the new open source digital repository system from the MIT Libraries and Hewlett-Packard Labs designed to support the digital collections of academic research institutions, as well as the SPARC conception of Institutional Repositories for digital research material. The DSpace system has been described elsewhere in detail so the focus of this article is on its implementation at MIT for archiving e-prints and other artifacts of scholarly communication, and making these available to the public. The MIT Libraries are deeply concerned about the well-documented crisis in scholarly communication and are committed to working towards innovative solutions. We share this concern with many of the MIT faculty and administration, several of who have been key supporters of the DSpace project and related initiatives at the university. The MIT Libraries were a founding member of SPARC, and are a signatory of the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI). This article will describe how MIT Libraries have implemented DSpace to support these goals
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