3,374 research outputs found

    The Supervision Process through the Eyes of the Supervisor

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    Gordon Valentine Manley and his contribution to the study of climate change: a review of his life and work

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    British climatologist and geographer, Gordon Manley (1902–1980), is perhaps best known for his pioneering work on climate variability in the UK, for establishing the Central England Temperature series and, for his pivotal role in demonstrating the powerful relationship between climate, weather, and culture in post-World War II Britain. Yet Manley made many contributions, both professional and popular, to climate change debates in the twentieth century, where climate change is broadly understood to be changes over a range of temporal and spatial scales rather than anthropogenic warming per se. This review first establishes how Manley's work, including that on snow and ice, was influenced by key figures in debates over climatic amelioration around the North Atlantic between 1920s and 1950s. His research exploring historical climate variability in the UK using documentary sources is then discussed. His perspectives on the relationship between climate changes and cultural history are reviewed, paying particular attention to his interpretation of this relationship as it played out in the UK. Throughout, the review aims to show Manley to be a fieldworker and an empiricist and reveals how he remained committed to rigorous scientific investigation despite changing trends within his academic discipline

    Effect of exotic S=+1 resonances on KL0pK^0_L p scattering data

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    We consider the effect of an exotic S=+1 Θ+\Theta^+ resonance on the scattering of neutral kaons off protons. Explicit results are presented for the KL0pK^0_L p total cross sections.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figure

    Socio-spatial inequalities and intergenerational dependencies

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    Inner-ear abnormalities and their functional consequences in Belgian Waterslager canaries (Serinus canarius)

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    Recent reports of elevated auditory thresholds in canaries of the Belgian Waterslager strain have shown that this strain has an inherited auditory deficit in which absolute auditory thresholds at high frequencies (i.e. above 2.0 kHz) are as much as 40 dB less sensitive than the thresholds of mixed-breed canaries and those of other strains. The measurement of CAP audiograms showed that the hearing deficit is already present at the level of the auditory nerve (Gleich and Dooling, 1992). Here we show gross abnormalities in the anatomy of the basilar papilla of Belgian Waterslager canaries at the level of the hair cell. The extent of these abnormalities was correlated with the amount of hearing deficit as measured behaviorally

    Full-scale Wind-tunnel Research on Tail Buffeting and Wing-fuselage Interference of a Low-wing Monoplane

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    Some preliminary results of full scale wind tunnel testing to determine the best means of reducing the tail buffeting and wing-fuselage interference of a low-wing monoplane are given. Data indicating the effects of an engine cowling, fillets, auxiliary airfoils of short span, reflexes trailing edge, propeller slipstream, and various combinations of these features are included. The best all-round results were obtained by the use of fillets together with the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) cowling. This combination reduced the tail buffeting oscillations to one-fourth of their original amplitudes, increased the maximum lift 11 percent, decreased the minimum drag 9 percent, and increased the maximum ratio of lift to drag 19 percent

    Wing-Fuselage Interference, Tail Buffeting, and Air Flow About the Tail of a Low-Wing Monoplane

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    This report presents the results of wind tunnel tests on a Mcdonnell Douglas airplane to determine the wing-fuselage interference of a low-wing monoplane. The tests included a study of tail buffeting and the air flow in the region of the tail. The airplane was tested with and without the propeller slipstream, both in the original condition and with several devices designed to reduce or eliminate tail buffeting. The devices used were wing-fuselage fillets, a NACA cowling, reflexed trailing edge of the wing, and stub auxiliary airfoils

    Improving Pedagogy Through The Use Of Dynamic Excel Presentations In Financial Management Courses

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    This paper discusses and illustrates the use of dynamic Excel presentations to improve learning in Financial Management courses.  Through the use of such presentations, multiple and varied examples of important principles in Financial Management, which would ordinarily take an excessive amount of time to cover, can be considered within the time span of a single class.  Two applications of these techniques are presented in this paper: (1) Time Value of Money -- Classic Retirement Annuity analysis and (2) Capital Structure Decisions -- EBIT-EPS Analysis.  By using these Excel techniques to cover multiple examples under different initial conditions and assumptions, the authors contend that students gain a broader understanding of these financial problems and their solutions, than would otherwise be possible
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