463 research outputs found
sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089221095636 - Supplemental material for Mixing characteristics and pressure drop analysis in a spiral micromixer
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089221095636 for Mixing characteristics and pressure drop analysis in a spiral micromixer by Ekta Tripathi, Promod Kumar Patowari and Sukumar Pati in Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part E: Journal of Process Mechanical Engineering</p
Discorso pedagogico e prospettiva sistemico-relazionale
Starting with a few thoughts about the current pedagogical debate expressed within the work, the contribution of Luigi Pati, highlights the importance of relational systems perspective in the pedagogical discourse. The author proposes an analysis and historical evolution of the General Theory of Systems (TGS), illustrating the importance of the same in the action and in the educational relationship between educator and student
sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089211051640 - Supplemental material for Numerical assessment of hydrodynamic and mixing characteristics for mixed electroosmotic and pressure-driven flow through a wavy microchannel with patchwise surface heterogeneity
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pie-10.1177_09544089211051640 for Numerical assessment of hydrodynamic and mixing characteristics for mixed electroosmotic and pressure-driven flow through a wavy microchannel with patchwise surface heterogeneity by Kasavajhula Naga Vasista, Sumit Kumar Mehta and Sukumar Pati in Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part E: Journal of Process Mechanical Engineering</p
L-invariants for cohomological representations of PGL(2) over arbitrary number fields
Gehrmann L, Pati MR. L-invariants for cohomological representations of PGL(2) over arbitrary number fields. Forum of Mathematics, Sigma. 2024;12: e71.**Abstract**
Let
be a cuspidal, cohomological automorphic representation of an inner form
G
of
over a number field
F
of arbitrary signature. Further, let
be a prime of
F
such that
G
is split at
and the local component
of
at
is the Steinberg representation. Assuming that the representation is noncritical at
, we construct automorphic
-invariants for the representation
. If the number field
F
is totally real, we show that these automorphic
-invariants agree with the Fontaine–Mazur
-invariant of the associated
p
-adic Galois representation. This generalizes a recent result of Spieß respectively Rosso and the first named author from the case of parallel weight
to arbitrary cohomological weights.
</p
Sahyadriana keshari Pati & Thackeray 2021, n. sp.
Sahyadriana keshari n. sp. (Figs 3E; 8 A-D; 9 A-H) urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 548CA624-C80A-48BF-86D0-19F9B835609E TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype. India • ♂ (CW 13.96 mm, CL 10.88 mm, CH 6.38 mm, FW 4.98 mm); Maharashtra: Nashik district: Bramhagiri, near Trimbak; 19°54’46”N, 73°31’4”E; alt. 1048 m; 17.VIII.2017; Tejas Thackeray leg.; ZSI-WRC C.2007. Paratypes. India • ♂ (CW 13.97 mm, CL 11.02 mm, CH 6.24 mm, FW 5.06 mm), ♀ (CW 15.92 mm, CL 12.16 mm, CH 6.35 mm, FW 5.74 mm); same data as for holotype; ZSI-WRC C.2008 • 5 ♂ (CW 12.44-14.18 mm, CL 9.55-11.01 mm, CH 5.58-7.16 mm, FW 4.46-4.94 mm), 5 ♀ (CW 12.11-15.53 mm, CL 9.39-11.73 mm, CH 6.14-7.23 mm, FW 4.44-5.44 mm); same data as for holotype; ZSI-WRC C.2009. TYPE LOCALITY. — India: Maharashtra: Nashik district: Bramhagiri, near Trimbak; 19°54’46”N, 73°31’4”E; alt. 1048 m. DIAGNOSIS. — Carapace in adult slightly broader than long (CW/ CL = 1.3), moderately to strongly deep (CH /CL = 0.5-0.7); epibranchial tooth visible as relative distinct notch; branchial regions inflated; epistome posterior margin with gently concave lateral lobes (Fig. 8 A-C). Third maxilliped lacking flagellum on exopod (Fig. 9A). Chelipeds with pointed fingertips (Figs 8A, D; 9B). Ambulatory legs with densely setose dactylus and propodus (Fig. 8A, D). Male sternopleonal cavity long, extending beyond imaginary line joining bases of third maxillipeds (Figs 8D; 9C). Male pleon relatively broad, T-shaped; pleonal somite 5 with concave lateral margins; pleonal somite 6 subquadrate, broader than long, subequal in length to telson, lateral margins strongly convex (Figs 8D; 9C). Male telson short (Figs 8D; 9C). G1 distinctly stout, almost straight; terminal segment relatively slender, subcylindrical, distally gently curved inwards, relatively short, c. 0.4 times length of subterminal segment; subterminal segment distinctly stout, triangular, distally relatively broad, with convex inner margin (Fig. 9D, E). G2 very short, with very short distal segment (Fig. 9F). Female pleon in adult broadly subtriangular (Fig. 9G). Vulvae in adult positioned apart from each other (VD/SW = c. 0.4), each suborbicular in shape, relatively large, occupying c. 0.5 times length of S6, positioned close to S5/S6 (Fig. 9H). ETYMOLOGY. — The species name, derived from the Marathi language for orange coloured, refers to live colouration of the crab. The name is used as a Latin noun in apposition. COLOUR IN LIFE. — Carapace, chelipeds, and ambulatory legs all are completely orange in colour (Fig. 3E). The orange colour on the ventral side of the carapace, however, is relatively faint. ECOLOGICAL NOTES. — Sahyadriana keshari n. sp. dwells on the walls of high mountainous cliffs (1048 m above a.s.l.), which host ephemeral waterfalls. Crabs gather in large numbers during the daytime on these exposed walls between the downpour. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — Sahyadriana keshari n. sp. is currently known only from Bramhagiri, an isolated high mountain of the Western Ghats in Nashik district of Maharashtra state, India. The new species is very likely to occur on the adjacent mountainous peak “Anjneri” of the same district because the second author (TT) once saw a dead crab of the species there. REMARKS The carapace of S. keshari n. sp. most resembles to that of S. waghi (Pati in Pati, Thackeray & Khaire, 2016) mainly due to the relatively distinct notch between the epibranchial tooth and the external orbital angle (Fig. 8A, B; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 11A; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29A), the gently concave lateral lobes of the epistome posterior margin (Fig. 8C; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 11B; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29B), and the pointed fingertips of the chelipeds (Figs 8A, D; 9B; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 11A, C, D; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29A, C). In the G1 structure, S. keshari n. sp. is most similar to S. waghi and S. triangulus because all have a distinctly stout G1, with the relatively slenderer, subcylindrical terminal segment (Fig. 9D, E; see Pati & Sharma 2014: fig. 7E-G; Pati et al. 2016: fig. 12A-C; Pati & Thackeray 2018: figs 28D, E, H; 29D-G, I-K). Both S. keshari n. sp. and S. waghi can be differentiated from S. triangulus by the relatively distinct notch between the epibranchial tooth and the external orbital angle (Fig. 8A, B; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 11A; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29A) (vs indistinct notch between the epibranchial tooth and the external orbital angle in S. triangulus; see Pati & Sharma 2014: fig. 6A; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 28A), the gently concave lateral lobes of the epistome posterior margin (Fig. 8C; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 11B; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29B) (vs strongly concave lateral lobes of the epistome posterior margin in S. triangulus; see Pati & Sharma 2014: fig. 6B; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 28B), the relatively shorter G1 terminal segment, c. 0.4 times the length of the subterminal segment, with the gently inwardly curved distal portion (Fig. 9D; see Pati & Thackeray 2018: figs 29I-K) (vs relatively longer G1 terminal segment, c. 0.5 times the length of the subterminal segment, with the distinctly outwardly curved distal portion in S. triangulus; see Pati & Sharma 2014: fig. 7E-G; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 28D, E, H), and the convex inner margin of the G1 subterminal segment (Fig. 9D, E; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 12A, B; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29D, F, I-K) (vs almost straight inner margin of the G1 subterminal segment in S. triangulus; see Pati & Sharma 2014: fig. 7E, F; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 28D, E, H). Sahyadriana keshari n. sp. can be further separated from S. waghi by the relatively stouter G1 terminal segment (Fig. 9D) (vs relatively slenderer G1 terminal segment; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 12A; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29D, I-K), the relatively broader distal portion of the G1 subterminal segment (Fig. 9D) (vs relatively narrower distal portion of the G1 subterminal segment; see Pati et al. 2016: fig. 12A; Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29D, I-K), and the relatively larger adult vulva that occupies c. 0.5 times the length of the S6 and is positioned close to S5/S6 (Fig. 9H) (vs relatively smaller adult vulva that occupies c. 0.4 times the length of the S6 and is positioned a clear distance from S5/S6; see Pati & Thackeray 2018: fig. 29M).Published as part of Pati, Sameer K. & Thackeray, Tejas, 2021, Five new species of freshwater crabs of the genera Ghatiana Pati & Sharma, 2014 and Sahyadriana Pati & Thackeray, 2018 from India (Decapoda: Brachyura: Gecarcinucidae), pp. 627-647 in Zoosystema 43 (26) on pages 639-642, DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2021v43a26, http://zenodo.org/record/560029
La scelta del nido da parte dei “nuovi” genitori: tra esigenze di conciliazione famiglia-lavoro e richieste di competenza educativa
The contribution focuses on the need to create, within the local community, a network of educational services that meet the changing needs of parents and their children. One aspect on which the author draws attention is the importance of qualifying these services through the presence of professional educators who possess specific planning skills in the educational field, especially from the methodological and relational point of view
Author Exchange
Anthropologist Mukulika Banerjee and political scientist Sushmita Pati have a conversation about their recently published books set in rural Bengal and Delhi’s urban villages, respectively. They situate their analyses of the intersections between democracy, capitalism, urbanization, and globalization in events, relations, and cultures of the everyday. Their exchange offers important insights for how political subjectivities and social ties are differently constituted or, to use Banerjee’s term, “cultivated” in these two settings. The two books offer a fine-grained view of how active citizenship in rural and urban India is refracted through distinct social and institutional structures. India is home to some of the world’s largest cities while more than 900 million people continue to live in the countryside. Its democratic future is therefore inextricably tied to the evolution of political behavior and political economy in both contexts, and, as Banerjee and Pati’s joint response indicates, to how urban and rural dynamics shape each other through (but not only through) migrants and their networks.
Contents:
Review of Mukulika Banerjee’s \u27Cultivating Democracy: Politics and Citizenship in Agrarian India\u27 by Sushmita Pati
Response from Mukulika Banerjee
Review of Sushmita Pati’s \u27Properties of Rent: Community, Capital and Politics in Globalising Delhi\u27 by Mukulika Banerjee
Response from Sushmita Pati
Joint Commentary from Banerjee and Pat
Essere genitori oggi, fra tradizione e rinnovamento dei valori.
Given the significance of the term "alienation," the report to today's living condition of parents is quite easy: many emphasizes the loss of education where there are the new fathers and new mothers. With this in mind, often we made the error of assuming an attitude of rejection of the present or of deep regret of the past. With his speech, the author seeks to address the issue by formulating an interpretation of educational displacement of parents and highlighting some ways in which it manifests itself in everyday life. This allows him to point out a specific task for pedagogical reflection: aim to the training of parents, in order to enhance their ability to interpret the present and plan the future in light of the rediscovery of peculiar meanings
L'educazione per la conquista dell'identità personale
The essay argues the need to pay attention to the educational growth and welfare of the individual personality that has relations in a certain context. The author reflects on the strategies through which the environment can facilitate or not the process of individual humanization
Famiglia e scuola: luoghi di cultura educativa chiamati alla co-progettazione
In this paper the author dwells on the importance of school-family participation for the formation of new generations.It suggests the overcoming of mere formalistic participation,to the benefit of the perspective of a qualified institutional relationship about the theme of the educational co-responsibility
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