276,640 research outputs found

    19. LC and RLC oscillators. Electric vs magnetic energy

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    Lecture slides 19 for Elementary Physics II (PHY 204), taught by Gerhard MĂŒller and Robert Coyne at the University of Rhode Island. Some of the slides contain figures from the textbook, Paul A. Tipler and Gene Mosca. Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 5th/6th editions. The copyright to these figures is owned by W.H. Freeman. We acknowledge permission from W.H. Freeman to use them on this course web page

    19. Magnetic force on currents or moving charged particles

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    Annotated lecture slides of lecture 19 for Elementary Physics II (PHY 204), taught by Gerhard MĂŒller and Robert Coyne at the University of Rhode Island. Some of the slides contain figures from the textbook, Paul A. Tipler and Gene Mosca. Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 5th/6th editions. The copyright to these figures is owned by W.H. Freeman. We acknowledge permission from W.H. Freeman to use them on this course web page

    Protestant letter networks in the reign of Mary I: A quantitative approach

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    Sebastian E. Ahnert was supported by The Royal Society, UK

    Boston University Choral Ensembles, October 19, 1995

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    This is the concert program of the Boston University Choral Ensembles performance on Thursday, October 19, 1995 at 8:00 p.m., the Boston University Concert Hall, 855 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Works performed were Ave Maris Stella by Thomas Luis de Victoria, Tota Pulchra Es by Maurice Duruflé, Missa Brevis in D by Benjamin Britten, Vesperae solennes de Confessore, K. 339 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Motet III, Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227 by Johann Sebastian Bach, and The Last Words of David by Randall Thompson. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund

    Political rivalry in Rhode Island: William H. Vanderbilt vs. J. Howard McGrath: the wiretapping case

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    The 1939 wiretapping case bared many of the intra- and inter- party struggles that had been festering during the interwar years. Pitting Democrat J. Howard McGrath and Republican William H. Vanderbilt, two energetic and ambitious rival politicians, against each other, this scandal raised the issues of the right to privacy and the legality of using evidence obtained through electronic surveillance. Additionally, the case exposed the heated rivalry between the old and new guard within the Republican Party, while simultaneously restoring harmony among the competing forces within the Democrat Party

    Cultural Distortion: The Dedication of the Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson Monument at Manassas National Battlefield Park

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    The Stonewall Jackson monument on Henry Hill at the Manassas National Battlefield Park stands as a testament to the propensity of Americans to manipulate history in order to fit current circumstances. The monument reflects not the views and ideologies of the veterans of the Civil War, but rather the hopes and fears of those who spent the prime years of their lives immersed in the Great Depression. Those of the latter generation searched in vain for heroes among the corrupted businessmen on Wall Street who ran the economic affairs of the country, and who, in the eyes of the public, plunged the nation into insurmountable debt. Historian Lawrence Levine observed that fear served as a motivator for 1930s Americans as they struggled to feed their children during the Great Depression. One reflection of this overwhelming fear appeared in President Franklin Roosevelt\u27s 1933 inaugural address as he insisted “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” In order to cope with this stress, Americans turned to a plethora of heroes as guiding lights for the dark days of the Great Depression. Some turned to gangster heroes like Bonnie and Clyde who undermined the financial and legal systems by lashing out against the institutions. Others devoured the serialized adventures of Superman, a new kind of hero created by the sons of Jewish immigrants in 1938. Still others turned to literature that reminisced about other crises in American history, namely Margaret Mitchell?s Gone with the Wind, a bestseller in 1938. It was in this cultural setting that the Virginia State Legislature conceived and financed the idea for a Stonewall Jackson monument

    The biographical construction of Robert Fergusson, 1774-1900

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    This article traces the biographical construction of Robert Fergusson from his death to the nineteenth-century biography by A.B. Grosart. It explores the influence of Romanticism, the Burns cult and the literature of sensibility on the construction of Fergusson's life, and explores some fictional representations of the poet

    Barnes Hospital Bulletin

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    https://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/bjc_barnes_bulletin/1194/thumbnail.jp
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