1,942,975 research outputs found
In Four Four: A Sydney Writers\u27 Festival Event
Four very special authors - Barbara Blackman, Brian Castro, Gretchen Miller and Gerry Turcotte - tell their own stories about nights spent dancing. Four extraordinary musicians - Sandy Evans (saxophones), Alister Spence (piano), Brett Hirst (double bass), and Philip South (percussion) - bring the stories to life through music.
As the writers tell their stories the musicians respond to the words, weaving lines of emotion and adding layers of meaning. The result is a multi-dimensional performance experience arising from a shifting spiral of text, speech music and sound.
Concept, composition and design by Gretchen Miller.
Written and performed by Barbara Blackman, Brian Castro, Gretchen Miller and Gerry Turcotte.
Music performed by Sandy Evans, Brett Hirst, Phillip South and Alister Spence.
Lighting design by Neil Simpson Dramaturgy by Virginia Baxter.
A download of this live performance is currently unavailable at ResearchOnline@ND.
The Media Release for this performance may be downloaded for further information
Philosophy & Architecture
Philosophy & Architecture
special number of
philosophy@LISBON (International eJournal)
5 | 2016
edited by Tomás N. Castro with Maribel Mendes Sobreira
Centro de Filosofia da Universidade de Lisboa
ISSN 2182-437
CASTRO: A New Compressible Astrophysical Solver. III. Multigroup Radiation Hydrodynamics
We present a formulation for multigroup radiation hydrodynamics that is
correct to order using the comoving-frame approach and the
flux-limited diffusion approximation. We describe a numerical algorithm for
solving the system, implemented in the compressible astrophysics code, CASTRO.
CASTRO uses an Eulerian grid with block-structured adaptive mesh refinement
based on a nested hierarchy of logically-rectangular variable-sized grids with
simultaneous refinement in both space and time. In our multigroup radiation
solver, the system is split into three parts, one part that couples the
radiation and fluid in a hyperbolic subsystem, another part that advects the
radiation in frequency space, and a parabolic part that evolves radiation
diffusion and source-sink terms. The hyperbolic subsystem and the frequency
space advection are solved explicitly with high-order Godunov schemes, whereas
the parabolic part is solved implicitly with a first-order backward Euler
method. Our multigroup radiation solver works for both neutrino and photon
radiation.Comment: accepted by ApJS, 27 pages, 20 figures, high-resolution version
available at https://ccse.lbl.gov/Publications/wqzhang/castro3.pd
MAESTRO, CASTRO, and SEDONA -- Petascale Codes for Astrophysical Applications
Performing high-resolution, high-fidelity, three-dimensional simulations of
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) requires not only algorithms that accurately
represent the correct physics, but also codes that effectively harness the
resources of the most powerful supercomputers. We are developing a suite of
codes that provide the capability to perform end-to-end simulations of SNe Ia,
from the early convective phase leading up to ignition to the explosion phase
in which deflagration/detonation waves explode the star to the computation of
the light curves resulting from the explosion. In this paper we discuss these
codes with an emphasis on the techniques needed to scale them to petascale
architectures. We also demonstrate our ability to map data from a low Mach
number formulation to a compressible solver.Comment: submitted to the Proceedings of the SciDAC 2010 meetin
The Relations of Order and the Identity of the Indiscernible: Leibniz´s Solution to the Problem of the Indistinction between Repose and Uniform Movement
Abstract
The indistinction between repose and uniform movement exposed in the principle of inertia marks one of the most famous dissertations: the discussion between Newton and Leibniz. Through their respective conceptions of space, both seek to solve the problem of indistinction. The relational space of Leibniz, supported by the principle of sufficient reason and the identity of indiscernibles leads to the kinematic solution of the problem of inertia. The objective of this paper is to show the contribution of Leibniz, in terms of relations of order, by distinguishing between equality by identity and equality by equivalence. Under a philosophical approach we link identity, equivalence and equality as relations of order with the indiscernibility between different states of movement. We expose first the principle of sufficient reason and the identity of indiscernibles. Under Bernoulli's principle of indifference, we argue that we distinguish between equality in abstract and equality in concrete. As a third part, we present the relationship between the identity of the indiscernibles and the predicate of equality under logical analysis. Finally we present the conclusions
COLOMBOS v3.0: leveraging gene expression compendia for cross-species analyses
open13siCOLOMBOS is a database that integrates publicly available transcriptomics data for several prokaryotic model organisms. Compared to the previous version it has more than doubled in size, both in terms of species and data available. The manually curated condition annotation has been overhauled as well, giving more complete information about samples' experimental conditions and their differences. Functionality-wise cross-species analyses now enable users to analyse expression data for all species simultaneously, and identify candidate genes with evolutionary conserved expression behaviour. All the expression-based query tools have undergone a substantial improvement, overcoming the limit of enforced co-expression data retrieval and instead enabling the return of more complex patterns of expression behaviour. COLOMBOS is freely available through a web application at http://colombos.net/. The complete database is also accessible via REST API or downloadable as tab-delimited text files.openMoretto, Marco; Sonego, Paolo; Dierckxsens, Nicolas; Brilli, Matteo; Bianco, Luca; Ledezma-Tejeida, Daniela; Gama-Castro, Socorro; Galardini, Marco; Romualdi, Chiara; Laukens, Kris; Collado-Vides, Julio; Meysman, Pieter; Engelen, KristofMoretto, Marco; Sonego, Paolo; Dierckxsens, Nicolas; Brilli, Matteo; Bianco, Luca; Ledezma Tejeida, Daniela; Gama Castro, Socorro; Galardini, Marco; Romualdi, Chiara; Laukens, Kris; Collado Vides, Julio; Meysman, Pieter; Engelen, Kristo
Why aren't more veterinary practices owned or led by women?
The increasing proportion of women among the body of UK veterinary surgeons practicing clinical medicine has been consistently highlighted in RCVS surveys (RCVS 2006, 2010, 2014a). Despite women outnumbering men in clinical practice (57% v 43%) in 2014 (RCVS, 2014a) they do not own veterinary practices or hold practice partnerships or leadership positions in proportions that may be expected, even when adjusting for age and experience (RCVS, 2014b)
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