14,343 research outputs found
An Interview With Albert W. Tucker
The mathematical career of Albert W. Tucker, Professor Emeritus at Princeton University, spans more than 50 years. Best known today for his work in mathematical programming and the theory of games (e.g., the Kuhn-Tucker theorem, Tucker tableaux, and the Prisoner\u27s Dilemma), he was also in his earlier years prominent in topology. Outstanding teacher, administrator and leader, he has been President of the MAA, Chairman of the Princeton Mathematics Department, and course instructor, thesis advisor or general mentor to scores of active mathematicians. He is also known for his views on mathematics education and the proper interplay between teaching and research. Tucker took an active interest in this interview, helping with both the planning and the editing. The interviewer, Professor Maurer, received his Ph.D. under Tucker in 1972 and teaches at Swarthmore College
Associations between EP-like lesions and pleuritis and post trimming carcass weights of finishing pigs in England
Herd health slaughter checks regularly identify enzootic pneumonia-like (EP-like) lesions and pleuritis. The aim of this paper is to determine the associations between these lesions and post-trimming carcass weight. Data were collected on the presence/absence and severity of EP-like lesions and presence/absence of pleuritis from pigs at the abattoir. Linear mixed models identified a significant association between an increase in EP-like lesion severity and a decrease in post-trimming carcass weight (P = 0.006) at the individual level. Each categorical increase in EP-like lesion severity (5 points step) was associated with a 0.37 kg reduction in post-trimming carcass weight. The presence of EP-like lesions in individual pigs, irrespective of severity (P = 0.034) and the presence of pleuritis (P = 0.038) were significantly associated with a reduction in post-trimming carcass weight of 1.26 kg and 1.25 kg respectively. The results confirm that the presence of these lesions at slaughter are associated with a significant decrease in production performance which can result in substantial economic implications for producers
Final data reduction and analysis of the AS and E OSO-4 grazing incidence X-ray telescope experiment
Final data analysis of grazing incidence of solar X ray telescope experiment of OSO- 4 satellit
A time‐dependent model of the lake‐averaged, vertical temperature distribution of lakes
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110029/1/lno19772240687.pd
Tensor distributions on signature-changing space-times
Irregularities in the metric tensor of a signature-changing space-time
suggest that field equations on such space-times might be regarded as
distributional. We review the formalism of tensor distributions on
differentiable manifolds, and examine to what extent rigorous meaning can be
given to field equations in the presence of signature-change, in particular
those involving covariant derivatives. We find that, for both continuous and
discontinuous signature-change, covariant differentiation can be defined on a
class of tensor distributions wide enough to be physically interesting.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX 2.0
Twisted Electromagnetic Modes and Sagnac Ring-Lasers
A new approximation scheme, designed to solve the covariant Maxwell equations
inside a rotating hollow slender conducting cavity (modelling a ring-laser), is
constructed. It is shown that for well-defined conditions there exist TE and TM
modes with respect to the longitudinal axis of the cavity. A twisted mode
spectrum is found to depend on the integrated Frenet torsion of the cavity and
this in turn may affect the Sagnac beat frequency induced by a non-zero
rotation of the cavity. The analysis is motivated by attempts to use
ring-lasers to measure terrestrial gravito-magnetism or the Lense-Thirring
effect produced by the rotation of the Earth.Comment: LaTeX 31 pages, 3 Figure
Local stability implies global stability for the 2-dimensional Ricker map
Consider the difference equation where
is a positive parameter and d is a non-negative integer. The case d =
0 was introduced by W.E. Ricker in 1954. For the delayed version d >= 1 of the
equation S. Levin and R. May conjectured in 1976 that local stability of the
nontrivial equilibrium implies its global stability. Based on rigorous,
computer aided calculations and analytical tools, we prove the conjecture for d
= 1.Comment: for associated C++ program, mathematica worksheet and output, see
http://www.math.u-szeged.hu/~krisztin/ricke
From Golden Spirals to Constant Slope Surfaces
In this paper, we find all constant slope surfaces in the Euclidean 3-space,
namely those surfaces for which the position vector of a point of the surface
makes constant angle with the normal at the surface in that point. These
surfaces could be thought as the bi-dimensional analogue of the generalized
helices. Some pictures are drawn by using the parametric equations we found.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
The GSFC Mark-2 three band hand-held radiometer
A self-contained, portable, hand-radiometer designed for field usage was constructed and tested. The device, consisting of a hand-held probe containing three sensors and a strap supported electronic module, weighs 4 1/2 kilograms. It is powered by flashlight and transistor radio batteries, utilizes two silicon and one lead sulfide detectors, has three liquid crystal displays, sample and hold radiometric sampling, and its spectral configuration corresponds to LANDSAT-D's thematic mapper bands. The device was designed to support thematic mapper ground-truth data collection efforts and to facilitate 'in situ' ground-based remote sensing studies of natural materials. Prototype instruments were extensively tested under laboratory and field conditions with excellent results
The Electrodynamics of Inhomogeneous Rotating Media and the Abraham and Minkowski Tensors II: Applications
Applications of the covariant theory of drive-forms are considered for a
class of perfectly insulating media. The distinction between the notions of
"classical photons" in homogeneous bounded and unbounded stationary media and
in stationary unbounded magneto-electric media is pointed out in the context of
the Abraham, Minkowski and symmetrized Minkowski electromagnetic
stress-energy-momentum tensors. Such notions have led to intense debate about
the role of these (and other) tensors in describing electromagnetic
interactions in moving media. In order to address some of these issues for
material subject to the Minkowski constitutive relations, the propagation of
harmonic waves through homogeneous and inhomogeneous, isotropic plane-faced
slabs at rest is first considered. To motivate the subsequent analysis on
accelerating media two classes of electromagnetic modes that solve Maxwell's
equations for uniformly rotating homogeneous polarizable media are enumerated.
Finally it is shown that, under the influence of an incident monochromatic,
circularly polarized, plane electromagnetic wave, the Abraham and symmetrized
Minkowski tensors induce different time-averaged torques on a uniformly
rotating materially inhomogeneous dielectric cylinder. We suggest that this
observation may offer new avenues to explore experimentally the covariant
electrodynamics of more general accelerating media.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Proc. Roy. Soc.
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