20,959 research outputs found
Cyclic growth in Atlantic region continental crust
Atlantic region continental crust evolved in successive stages under the influence of regular, approximately 400 Ma-long tectonic cycles. Data point to a variety of operative tectonic processes ranging from widespread ocean floor consumption (Wilson cycle) to entirely ensialic (Ampferer-style subduction or simple crustal attenuation-compression). Different processes may have operated concurrently in some or different belts. Resolving this remains the major challenge
On commuting varieties of parabolic subalgebras
Let be a connected reductive algebraic group over an algebraically closed
field , and assume that the characteristic of is zero or a pretty good
prime for . Let be a parabolic subgroup of and let be
the Lie algebra of . We consider the commuting variety . Our main
theorem gives a necessary and sufficient condition for irreducibility of
in terms of the modality of the adjoint action of
on the nilpotent variety of . As a consequence, for the case a Borel subgroup of , we give a classification of when is irreducible; this builds on a partial classification given
by Keeton. Further, in cases where is irreducible, we
consider whether is a normal variety. In particular,
this leads to a classification of when is normal.Comment: 19 pages; minor update
Defining and delineating the central areas of towns for statistical monitoring using continuous surface representations
The increasing availability of very high spatial resolution data using the unit postcode as its geo-reference is making possible new kinds of urban analysis andmodelling. However, at this resolution the granularity of the data used to representurban functions makes it difficult to apply traditional analytical and modellingmethods. An alternative suggested here is to use kernel density estimation totransform these data from point or area 'objects' into continuous surfaces of spatialdensities. The use of this transformation is illustrated by a study in which we attemptto develop a robust, generally applicable methodology for identifying the centralareas of UK towns for the purpose of statistical reporting and comparison.Continuous density transformations from unit post code data relating to a series ofindicators of town centredness created using ArcView are normalised and thensummed to give a composite ?Index of Town Centredness?. Selection of key contourson these index surfaces enables town centres to be delineated. The work results froma study on behalf of DETR
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