5,922 research outputs found

    Time series analysis of migratory stabilization: a research technique for quantifying individual and group patterns of cyclic migration, with special reference to sub-Saharan Africa

    Get PDF
    Africa Studies Institute Seminar series. Pater presented, 1967. Marked 'Additional Seminar paper" Reprinted from AFRICAN STUDIES : a quarterly journal devoted to the study of African cultures, government, and languages, volume 26, number 3, 1967. Published by the Witwatersrand University Pres

    Africans in South African Industry: the Human Dimension

    Get PDF
    African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented March, 197

    Using {\sc top-c} for Commodity Parallel Computing in Cosmic Ray Physics Simulations

    Get PDF
    {\sc top-c} (Task Oriented Parallel C) is a freely available package for parallel computing. It is designed to be easy to learn and to have good tolerance for the high latencies that are common in commodity networks of computers. It has been successfully used in a wide range of examples, providing linear speedup with the number of computers. A brief overview of {\sc top-c} is provided, along with recent experience with cosmic ray physics simulations.Comment: Talk to be presented at the XI International Symposium on Very High Energy Cosmic Ray Interaction

    Urban-industrialisation among the ‘Bantu’ in the Republic of South Africa

    Get PDF
    African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented 196

    Development of an inexpensive tire softening agent from readily available materials to improve traction in race car tires

    Get PDF
    Developing inexpensive tire softeners can prolong the life of tires and save people money that would be spent on new replacement tires. We have conducted two tests on the treated and untreated tires: the hardness test and the grip test. First, tire hardness was measured with a durometer on a tire that was treated with hot lap and a tire that was not. The tire that was treated with hot lap was slightly softer than the untreated tire substantiating the tire softener\u27s claim. Next, we will be cutting pieces out of the tire (also called omegas) and running them through an instron machine. This machine stretches the omegas at a certain frequency and reports back the hysteresis. The higher the hysteresis, the better the grip. Testing is ongoing, but initial results show that the tire softners did make the tires softer

    Unification of Gauge Couplings in the E(6)SSM

    Full text link
    We argue that in the two-loop approximation gauge coupling unification in the exceptional supersymmetric standard model can be achieved for any phenomenologically reasonable value of strong gauge coupling at the electroweak scale consistent with the experimentally measured central value.Comment: Parallel talk at SUSY09, Boston, USA, June 2009, 5 page

    Phylogenetic Relationships of Malvatheca (Bombacoideae and Malvoideae; Malvaceae sensu lato) as Inferred from Plastid DNA Sequences

    Get PDF
    Previous molecular phylogenetic analyses have revealed that elements of the former families Malvaceae sensu stricto and Bombacaceae together form a well-supported clade that has been named Malvatheca. Within Malvatheca, two major lineages have been observed; one, Bombacoideae, corresponds approximately to the palmate-leaved Bombacaceae, and the other, Malvoideae, includes the traditional Malvaceae (the mallows or Eumalvoideae). However, the composition of these two groups and their relationships to other elements of Malvatheca remain a source of uncertainty. Sequence data from two plastid regions, ndhF and trnK/matK, from 34 exemplars of Malvatheca and six outgroups were analyzed. Parsimony, likelihood, and Bayesian analyses of the sequence data provided a well-resolved phylogeny except that relationships among five lineages at the base of Malvatheca are poorly resolved. Nonetheless, a 6-bp insertion in matK suggests that Fremontodendreae is sister to the remainder of Malvatheca. Our results suggest that the Malvoideae originated in the Neotropics and that a mangrove taxon dispersed across the Pacific from South America to Australasia and later radiated out of Australasia to give rise to the ca. 1,700 living species of Eumalvoideae. Local clock analyses imply that the plastid genome underwent accelerated molecular evolution coincident with the dispersal out of the Americas and again with the radiation into the three major clades of Eumalvoideae

    A GLOBAL QCD STUDY OF DIRECT PHOTON PRODUCTION

    Get PDF
    A global QCD analysis of the direct photon production process from both fixed target and collider experiments is presented. These data sets now completely cover the parton xx range from 0.01 to 0.6, thereby providing a stringent test of perturbative QCD and parton distributions. Previous detailed studies of direct photons emphasized fixed target data. We find most data sets have a steeper ptp_t distribution than the QCD prediction. Neither global fits with new parton distributions nor improved photon fragmentation functions can resolve this problem since the deviation occurs at different xx values for experiments at different energies. A more likely explanation is the need for additional broadening of the ktk_t of the initial state partons. The magnitude and the possible physical origin of this effect are investigated and discussed.Comment: 8 page Latex file using epsf.sty for figures. 6 eps figures submitted separately in uuencoded file

    Static Partitioning vs Dynamic Sharing of Resources in Simultaneous MultiThreading Microarchitectures

    Full text link
    Simultaneous MultiThreading (SMT) achieves better system resource utilization and higher performance because it exploits Thread-Level Parallelism (TLP) in addition to "conventional" Instruction-Level Parallelism (ILP). Theoretically, system resources in every pipeline stage of an SMT microarchitecture can be dynamically shared. However, in commercial applications, all the major queues are statically partitioned. From an implementation point of view, static partitioning of resources is easier to implement and has a lower hardware overhead and power consumption. In this paper, we strive to quantitatively determine the trade-off between static partitioning and dynamic sharing. We find that static partitioning of either the instruction fetch queue (IFQ) or the reorder buffer (ROB) is not sufficient if implemented alone (3% and 9% performance decrease respectively in the worst case comparing with dynamic sharing), while statically partitioning both the IFQ and the ROB could achieve an average performance gain of 9% at least, and even reach 148% when running with floating-point benchmarks, when compared with dynamic sharing. We varied the number of functional units in our efforts to isolate the reason for this performance improvement. We found that static partitioning both queues outperformed all the other partitioning mechanisms under the same system configuration. This demonstrates that the performance gain has been achieved by moving from dynamic sharing to static partitioning of the system resources
    corecore