2,213 research outputs found

    Who Paid The Rent For Mrs. Rip Van Winkle?

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/2751/thumbnail.jp

    By the Old Rustic Seat I\u27ll be Waiting

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/1193/thumbnail.jp

    Wee Wee Marie : Will You Do Zis For Me

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/2644/thumbnail.jp

    Contact matters: voters like to be asked personally for their support

    Get PDF
    Ed Miliband has announced that to counter the Conservative party’s financial advantage during the 2015 election campaign Labour will outnumber them in supporters out on the streets engaging with voters – and will benefit accordingly. Is that a sensible strategy? David Cutts, Ed Fieldhouse, Justin Fisher, Ron Johnston and Charles Pattie have done a lot of research into the impact of local campaigns and use data from the 2010 election to assess whether Labour’s strategy will bring the hoped-for benefits

    I\u27ve Said My Last Farewell (Toot-Toot-Good-Bye) / music by Fred Fisher; words by Ed Rose

    Get PDF
    Cover: caricature drawing of an African American male waving goodbye to an African American female, as his train moves through a blizzard; photo inset of singer Cordella Mitchell; Publisher: Helf and Hager Co. (New York)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/sharris_b/1068/thumbnail.jp

    Monte Carlo investigations of phase transitions: status and perspectives

    Full text link
    Using the concept of finite-size scaling, Monte Carlo calculations of various models have become a very useful tool for the study of critical phenomena, with the system linear dimension as a variable. As an example, several recent studies of Ising models are discussed, as well as the extension to models of polymer mixtures and solutions. It is shown that using appropriate cluster algorithms, even the scaling functions describing the crossover from the Ising universality class to the mean-field behavior with increasing interaction range can be described. Additionally, the issue of finite-size scaling in Ising models above the marginal dimension (d*=4) is discussed.Comment: 23 pages, including 14 PostScript figures. Presented at StatPhys-Taiwan, August 9-16, 1999. Also available as PDF file at http://www.cond-mat.physik.uni-mainz.de/~luijten/erikpubs.htm

    Violation of Lee-Yang circle theorem for Ising phase transitions on complex networks

    Get PDF
    The Ising model on annealed complex networks with degree distribution decaying algebraically as p(K)∼K−λp(K)\sim K^{-\lambda} has a second-order phase transition at finite temperature if λ>3\lambda> 3. In the absence of space dimensionality, λ\lambda controls the transition strength; mean-field theory applies for λ>5\lambda >5 but critical exponents are λ\lambda-dependent if λ<5\lambda < 5. Here we show that, as for regular lattices, the celebrated Lee-Yang circle theorem is obeyed for the former case. However, unlike on regular lattices where it is independent of dimensionality, the circle theorem fails on complex networks when λ<5\lambda < 5. We discuss the importance of this result for both theory and experiments on phase transitions and critical phenomena. We also investigate the finite-size scaling of Lee-Yang zeros in both regimes as well as the multiplicative logarithmic corrections which occur at λ=5\lambda=5.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    The Ursinus Weekly, April 9, 1962

    Get PDF
    Junior class goes Parisian for Sunnybrook event Friday • Wurster elected YMCA president • Dr. Helfferich elected as UCC educators treasurer • Coeds tap Taney, Hartzell, Andrews for prexy posts • Pre-medicals hear Hahneman\u27s Bondi on chemotherapy • Sophomores slate weekend wingding • Thousands visit science fair at Ursinus College • Forum to present Sokoloffs in piano recital Wednesday • Pi Nu will sponsor music month here • Weekly banquet is Swint\u27s swansong • Moll announces MSGA now accepting petitions for 1962 membership • Editorial: A matter of policy; Is it worth it, men? • Letters to the editor • Next war praised; Bravo for Mackey • Meistersinger reports progress of New England tour via phone call • Conservative coed goes Dixie-way • Fighting Shaner leads Siebmen in sloppy 11-7 victory over Dickinson • Cindermen drop practice meet to Lehighers, 64 to 54 • Intramural corner • Dryfoos named outstanding player by coaches of MAC college division • Snyder places second in chess tournament • Greek gleanings • Miss Pennsylvania betroths UC grad • Final student concert spots Prokofieff work • Graduate grantshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1316/thumbnail.jp

    The Evolution of myExperiment

    No full text
    The myExperiment social website for sharing scientific workflows, designed according to Web 2.0 principles, has grown to be the largest public repository of its kind. It is distinctive for its focus on sharing methods, its researcher-centric design and its facility to aggregate content into sharable 'research objects'. This evolution of myExperiment has occurred hand in hand with its users. myExperiment now supports Linked Data as a step toward our vision of the future research environment, which we categorise here as '3rd generation e-Research'
    • …
    corecore