71,252 research outputs found
Tuwati and Wasusarma: Imitating the behaviour of Assyria
This essay reviews the evidence concerning the Tabalian king Wasusarma and his father Tuwati, who appear in Neo-Assyrian and Urartian annals. The context for the removal of Wasusarma (Uassurme) from power by the Assyrian king is assumed to have lain in the events depicted in the large inscription of TOPADA. The historical and geographical import of this inscription is explored through a close reading of its historical portion, concluding that its background is set in a local struggle for power over north-western Cappadocia
The New Local Revenue Roller Coaster: Growth and Stability Implications for Increasing Local Sales Tax Reliance in Georgia
This report examines the relative growth and stability of the property tax and local sales tax bases across counties in Georgia
Hamiltonian Gravity and Noncommutative Geometry
A version of foliated spacetime is constructed in which the spatial geometry
is described as a time dependent noncommutative geometry. The ADM version of
the gravitational action is expressed in terms of these variables. It is shown
that the vector constraint is obtained without the need for an extraneous shift
vector in the action.Comment: 22 pages, AMS-LaTeX. Some improvements - mainly to sections 8 and 9.
Typographical errors to equations in appendix correcte
Recommended from our members
The Dangerous Method, or "Can Procrastination Ever Be a Good thing?"
We tell it to our clients all the time: Don't keep putting that project off! You need to get started on it now! That essay you slap-dash together at the last minute, literally printing off your first (and final) draft as you're rushing to class on the morning the project is due, will, nine times out of ten, not make the grade in any sense of the word. We've all been there. Peter Elbow even has a word for this last-minute process - he calls it "The Dangerous Method": Rather than writing a rough draft, then revising, then editing - a process that can take days, weeks, months, or years, depending on the scope of your project - when writers write by the "dangerous method," we try to get our drafts right on the first try. We want our ideas to magically come together, free of problems with organization, development, spelling, or mechanics; thus, there is no need to move ideas around, to dive back into our research to find more support for our claims, or to do more with proofreading than running a spell-check.University Writing Cente
- …