58 research outputs found

    Notes on static cylindrical shells

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    Static cylindrical shells made of various types of matter are studied as sources of the vacuum Levi-Civita metrics. Their internal physical properties are related to the two essential parameters of the metrics outside. The total mass per unit length of the cylinders is always less than 1/4. The results are illustrated by a number of figures.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure

    Excavations and the afterlife of a professional football stadium, Peel Park, Accrington, Lancashire: towards an archaeology of football

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    Association football is now a multi-billion dollar global industry whose emergence spans the post-medieval to the modern world. With its professional roots in late 19th-century industrial Lancashire, stadiums built for the professionalization of football first appear in frequency in the North of England. While many historians of sport focus on consumerism and ‘topophilia’ (attachment to place) regarding these local football grounds, archaeological research that has been conducted on the spectator experience suggests status differentiation within them. Our excavations at Peel Park confirm this impression while also showing a significant afterlife to this stadium, particularly through children’s play

    D’Agents: Security in a Multiple-Language, Mobile-Agent System

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    Abstract. Mobile-agent systems must address three security issues: protecting an individual machine, protecting a group of machines, and protecting an agent. In this chapter, we discuss these three issues in the context of D’Agents, a mobile-agent system whose agents can be written in Tcl, Java and Scheme. (D’Agents was formerly known as Agent Tcl.) First we discuss mechanisms existing in D’Agents for protecting an individual machine: (1) cryptographic authentication of the agent’s owner, (2) resource managers that make policy decisions based on the owner’s identity, and (3) secure execution environments for each language that enforce the decisions of the resource managers. Then we discuss our planned market-based approach for protecting machine groups. Finally we consider several (partial) solutions for protecting an agent from a malicious machine.

    Risk factors of migraine-related brain white matter hyperintensities: an investigation of 186 patients

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    Brain white matter hyperintensities are more prevalent in migraine patients than in the general population, but the pathogenesis and the risk factors of these hyperintensities are not fully elucidated. The authors analyzed the routine clinical data of 186 migraine patients who were referred to the Outpatient Headache Department of the Department of Neurology, Medical School, University of Pécs, Hungary between 2007 and 2009: 58 patients with white matter hyperintensities and 128 patients without white matter hyperintensities on 3 T MRI. Significant associations between the presence of white matter hyperintensities and longer disease duration (14.4 vs. 19.9 years, p = 0.004), higher headache frequency (4.1 vs. 5.5 attacks/month, p = 0.017), hyperhomocysteinemia (incidence of hyperintensity is 9/9 = 100%, p = 0.009) and thyroid gland dysfunction (incidence of hyperintensity is 8/14 = 57.1%, p = 0.038) were found. These data support the theory that both the disease duration and the attack frequency have a key role in the formation of migraine-related brain white matter hyperintensities, but the effects of comorbid diseases may also contribute to the development of the hyperintensities

    Learning from AI: New Trends in Database Technology

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    With the steadily increasing demand for user-oriented systems, new trends in database technology have evolved outside of the scope of the traditional data models. The authors are concentrated in this article on two closely related efforts: The incorporation of more semantic modelling capabilities into database models, and the development of better user environment, which include user friendly interfaces and support different user views of the content and organization of the dat

    Polysaccharides of lotus root

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    The lotus (Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn.) is a crop of local importance in south-east Asia, both for the starchy roots and for the nut-like seeds. The monosaccharide composition of whole lotus root and extracted polysaccharide fractions were analysed by anion exchange high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The major polysaccharide was starch but the lotus root also contained appreciable quantities of other non-starch polysaccharides. Lotus root flour was fractionated by sequential extraction with cold water, hot water, and 3% NaOH. Analysis of the fractions suggested the probable presence of a water-soluble arabino-galactan, mannan, and fructan. Lotus root is a useful raw material for starch production in China although commercial starch tested was found to contain arabinogalactan. In a model cooking for lotus root, the polysaccharides were extracted and those remaining in the tissue were quantified. The texture of lotus roots was analysed and the fibrous cellulosic nature of the root limited softening after cooking. Lotus seeds were also tested and found to have a predominantly starchy endosperm with the presence of pectic type polysaccharides being indicated.link_to_subscribed_fulltex

    Comments on “a correct and unrestrictive implementation of general semaphores”

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