1,400 research outputs found
The transmission of the thought of St John of the cross 1600 - 1630
The aim of this thesis is to examine the history of the transmission of the ideas of St John of the Cross during the early years of the seventeenth century. Thomas of Jesus is shown to have exercised a profound and detrimental influence over this transmission both by his early, unfulfilled commission to prepare a first edition of St John's works and, more significantly, by the use he made of the saint's doctrines in his own descriptions of prayer and the subsequent absorption of his ideas into the Carmelite school of spirituality. Father Salablanca was responsible for the numerous textual alterations to St. John's works in their first edition. His interventions are found to have misrepresented key aspects of St John's system, an influence which persisted for almost three hundred years, until the first critical edition appeared in 1912. Despite precautions taken by Salablanca, the sect of the alumbrados in Seville derived many of its doctrines from St John's works. This thesis reveals the correspondence between the Sevillian Inquisition and the Inquisitor General relating to the involvement of the 1618 edition with the alumbrados. The defence made of St John's works by Basilio Ponce de Leon is discussed. It is found that this defence relies largely on the textual amendments introduced by Salablanca and on doctrinal accommodations similar to those initiated by Thomas of Jesus. Therefore, while accomplishing its immediate aim, the defence was to reinforce the flawed image of St John's ideas which had been promoted by St John's editor and earliest commentators. The coincidence of themes misrepresented by Thomas of Jesus, amended by Salablanca, adopted by the alumbrados and censured by the Inquisition is finally taken to indicate the areas where St John made innovative contributions to the field of spirituality
Exact solution at integrable coupling of a model for the Josephson effect between small metallic grains
A model is introduced for two reduced BCS systems which are coupled through
the transfer of Cooper pairs between the systems. The model may thus be used in
the analysis of the Josephson effect arising from pair tunneling between two
strongly coupled small metallic grains. At a particular coupling strength the
model is integrable and explicit results are derived for the energy spectrum,
conserved operators, integrals of motion, and wave function scalar products. It
is also shown that form factors can be obtained for the calculation of
correlation functions. Further, a connection with perturbed conformal field
theory is made.Comment: 12 pages, latex, no figure
A descriptive spatial analysis of bovine tuberculosis in intensively controlled cattle farms in New Zealand
We describe the temporal and geographical distribution of confirmed cases of
bovine tuberculosis (TB) in a population of cattle in the south-east of the
North Island of New Zealand. Data were derived from routine TB testing
conducted between 1980 and 2003 and included details for 69 farms. Four
six-year periods were defined to coincide with changes in depopulation
strategies against the wildlife TB reservoir, the brushtail possum
Trichosurus vulpecula. For the periods 1980 to 1985 and 1986 to 1991 the median annual incidence
rate of TB was 0.4 and 4.7 cases per 1000 cattle-years at risk,
respectively. For the period 1992 to 2003 the median annual incidence rate
of TB decreased to 1.8 cases per 1000 cattle-years at risk, coincident with
the use of poisoning to control possums in the surrounding forest park (a
major possum habitat area). We identified clusters of TB cases adjacent to
the forest park and found no evidence of spatio-temporal interaction of TB
risk among farms. Our findings support the hypothesis that possums living in
the forest park are a source of bovine TB in this area and that farm-to-farm
spread of disease was not an important infection mechanism
A combinatorial investigation of sputtered Ta-Al-C thin films
We describe a combinatorial experiment investigating the Ta–Al–C material system, conducted with the aim of determining why the tantalum-containing Mn + 1AXn phases have so far proved to be not amenable to thin-film synthesis. Samples were deposited onto (0001) Al2O3 wafers at 850 °C and characterized by X-ray diffraction wafer maps, scanning electron microscopy, and surface optical scattering. Elemental Ta, the binary phases TaC, Ta2C, and TaAl3, and the ternary phases Ta3Al2C and Ta5Al3C were identified. The morphology, phase composition and preferred orientation of the films deposited were found to be highly sensitive to the Ta fraction of the incident flux during deposition. No MAX phase material was observed, indicating that the Ta-containing MAX phases do not form under the deposition conditions investigated. Explanations associated with inadequate coverage of stochiometries, preferential sputtering, and thermodynamic instability have been ruled out. An explanation based on reduced surface diffusion of Ta during growth is proposed. A substantially higher substrate temperature during deposition is likely to be required to synthesize Ta-containing MAX phases
Heating Features of Interesting Supra-Arcade Downflows
Supra-arcade downflows (SADs) have been observed above flare loops during the decay phase of flare. They appear as tadpole-like dark plasma voids traveling towards the Sun. In areas surrounding where they appear, temperatures are often high. We aim to investigate temperature and heating mechanism of SADs. We apply our analysis to the M1.7 flare that occurred on 2012 July 12 and was observed by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on the Solar Dynamics Observatory. There are many obvious SADs above the arcade during this event in the AIA 131 channel. We calculate the differential emission measure and emission measure weighted temperature with AIA data in the region where SADs are concentrated. We find that the temperature in SADs region tends to be lower than the surrounding plasma. We also calculate velocities of SADs using the Fourier Local Correlation Tracking (FLCT, Fisher & Welsch, 2008) method to derive velocities in the supra-arcade region. Using corks to track the calculated velocities, we find our velocity results are consistent with the SAD motions in the AIA 131 intensity movie. We use the velocities to derive the adiabatic heating caused by the compression of plasma. Preliminary results indicate that there is adiabatic heating in front of the SADs
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