35,823 research outputs found
Influential cited references in FEMS Microbiology Letters: lessons from Reference Publication Year Spectroscopy (RPYS)
The journal FEMS Microbiology Letters covers all aspects of microbiology including virology. On which scientific shoulders do the papers published in this journal stand? Which are the classic papers used by the authors? We aim to answer these questions in this study by applying the Reference Publication Year Spectroscopy (RPYS) analysis to all papers published in this journal between 1977 and 2017. In total, 16 837 publications with 410 586 cited references are analyzed. Mainly, the studies published in the journal FEMS Microbiology Letters draw knowledge from methods developed to quantify or characterize biochemical substances such as proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, or carbohydrates and from improvements of techniques suitable for studies of bacterial genetics. The techniques frequently used for studying the genetic of microorganisms in FEMS Microbiology Letters' studies were developed using samples prepared from microorganisms. Methods required for the investigation of proteins, carbohydrates, or lipids were mostly transferred from other fields of life science to microbiology
Microwave Scattering and Noise Emission from Afterglow Plasmas in a Magnetic Field
The microwave reflection and noise emission (extraordinary mode) from cylindrical rare‐gas (He, Ne, Ar) afterglow plasmas in an axial magnetic field is described. Reflection and noise emission are measured as a function of magnetic field near electron cyclotron resonance (ω ≈ ω_c) with electron density as a parameter (ω_p < ω). A broad peak, which shifts to lower values of ω_c/ω) as electron density increases, is observed for (ω_c/ω) ≤ 1. For all values of electron density a second sharp peak is found very close to cyclotron resonance in reflection measurements. This peak does not occur in the emission data. Calculations of reflection and emission using a theoretical model consisting of a one‐dimensional, cold plasma slab with nonuniform electron density yield results in qualitative agreement with the observations. Both the experimental and theoretical results suggest that the broad, density‐dependent peak involves resonance effects at the upper hybrid frequency ((ω_h)^2 = (ω_c)^2 + (ω_p)^2) of the plasma
THE PRODUCTIVITY OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND EXTENSION EXPENDITURES IN THE SOUTHEAST
Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
Correlations and contrasts in structural history and style between an Archaean greenstone belt and adjacent gneiss belt, NE Minnesota
An analysis of the deformation along the boundary between the Vermilion Granitic Complex (VGC) and the Vermilion district indicates that the two terranes have seen a similar deformation history since the earliest stages of folding in the area. Despite this common history, variations in structural style occur between the two terranes, such as the relative development of D sub 1 fabrics and D sub 2 shear zones, and these can be attributed to differences in the crustal levels of the two terranes during the deformation. Similarly, the local development of F sub 3 folds in the VGC, but not in the Vermilion district, is interpreted to be a result of later-D sub 2 pluton emplacement which was not significant at the level of exposure of ther Vermilion district
Phase Transition with the Berezinskii--Kosterlitz--Thouless Singularity in the Ising Model on a Growing Network
We consider the ferromagnetic Ising model on a highly inhomogeneous network
created by a growth process. We find that the phase transition in this system
is characterised by the Berezinskii--Kosterlitz--Thouless singularity, although
critical fluctuations are absent, and the mean-field description is exact.
Below this infinite order transition, the magnetization behaves as
. We show that the critical point separates the phase
with the power-law distribution of the linear response to a local field and the
phase where this distribution rapidly decreases. We suggest that this phase
transition occurs in a wide range of cooperative models with a strong
infinite-range inhomogeneity. {\em Note added}.--After this paper had been
published, we have learnt that the infinite order phase transition in the
effective model we arrived at was discovered by O. Costin, R.D. Costin and C.P.
Grunfeld in 1990. This phase transition was considered in the papers: [1] O.
Costin, R.D. Costin and C.P. Grunfeld, J. Stat. Phys. 59, 1531 (1990); [2] O.
Costin and R.D. Costin, J. Stat. Phys. 64, 193 (1991); [3] M. Bundaru and C.P.
Grunfeld, J. Phys. A 32, 875 (1999); [4] S. Romano, Mod. Phys. Lett. B 9, 1447
(1995). We would like to note that Costin, Costin and Grunfeld treated this
model as a one-dimensional inhomogeneous system. We have arrived at the same
model as a one-replica ansatz for a random growing network where expected to
find a phase transition of this sort based on earlier results for random
networks (see the text). We have also obtained the distribution of the linear
response to a local field, which characterises correlations in this system. We
thank O. Costin and S. Romano for indicating these publications of 90s.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. We have added a note indicating that the infinite
order phase transition in the effective model we arrived at was discovered in
the work: O. Costin, R.D. Costin and C.P. Grunfeld, J. Stat. Phys. 59, 1531
(1990). Appropriate references to the papers of 90s have been adde
Regularization independent of the noise level: an analysis of quasi-optimality
The quasi-optimality criterion chooses the regularization parameter in
inverse problems without taking into account the noise level. This rule works
remarkably well in practice, although Bakushinskii has shown that there are
always counterexamples with very poor performance. We propose an average case
analysis of quasi-optimality for spectral cut-off estimators and we prove that
the quasi-optimality criterion determines estimators which are rate-optimal
{\em on average}. Its practical performance is illustrated with a calibration
problem from mathematical finance.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
On the Running of the Cosmological Constant in Quantum General Relativity
We present arguments that show what the running of the cosmological constant
means when quantum general relativity is formulated following the prescription
developed by Feynman.Comment: 5 page
The Sensoria Approach Applied to the Finance Case Study
This chapter provides an effective implementation of (part of) the Sensoria approach, specifically modelling and formal analysis of service-oriented software based on mathematically founded techniques. The ‘Finance case study’
is used as a test bed for demonstrating the feasibility and effectiveness of the use of the process calculus COWS and some of its related analysis techniques and tools. In particular, we report the results of an application of a temporal logic and its model checker for expressing and checking functional properties of services and a type system for guaranteeing confidentiality properties of services
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