5,942 research outputs found

    COOPERATIVE MOVEMENTS SETTING EXAMPLE FOR CLASSIC TEAMWORKS OF COUNTRYSIDES IN TRANSYLVANIA

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    Cooperative movements assured economic welfare of villages, led them to the way of becoming real citizens in the first half of the XXth century. By that period we can say that for improving competitivity advancing coops, and their social role is necessary. In an active coop continuous modernization is needed. This is due to global challenges and multinational companies, and also smaller dominant ones. This is why Hangya cooperative organisations are to be remembered for being the first in the Carpatian basin from the late 19th century. Manufacturers can realize their interests by building their own organizations. This is the cooperation of separate farmers, today dealing with very complicated transnational organizations. Realizing these may be the way to improve livings in the countryside, especially in the agriculture. Joining the following forms of groups is a unique and necessary way to reach these. By this the conclusion is: there must be an integrated network system for production branches controlled by coops with cooperative tenets in Transylvania. For this historical examples of helping farmers remain separate, reach markets must be known and adopted into today’s circumstances.Cooperatives of Transylvania, Judiciary bases, Improving competitiveness, Integrated product channel, Security of income, Community/Rural/Urban Development, Industrial Organization,

    Less is More: Non-renormalization Theorems from Lower Dimensional Superspace

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    We discuss a new class of non-renormalization theorems in N=4 and N=2 Super-Yang-Mills theory, obtained by using a superspace which makes a lower dimensional subgroup of the full supersymmetry manifest. Certain Wilson loops (and Wilson lines) belong to the chiral ring of the lower dimensional supersymmetry algebra, and their expectation values can be computed exactly.Comment: 8 pages, based on talk given by Z. Guralnik at 8th Workshop on Non-perturbative QCD, Paris, June 200

    A closed curve is much more than an incomplete one: effect of closure in figure-ground segmentation.

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    Microstructures in Two Alkali Feldspar Megacrysts from the Papuk Mt., Croatia

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    Two types of megacrysts, one from Pakra Creek and the other from the Slobostina Creek locality proved to be low microcline in association with low albite and quartz. A sample from Pakra Creek is a vein filling megacryst characterised by the absence of twinning. The deduced crystallization temperature is below 460°C. The sample from Sloboština Creek is a pocket forming megacryst which shows tweed-like texture, with deduced crystallization temperature near to but above 460°C. Both samples are characterized by a continuously modulated lattice on the submicroscopic scale

    Műanyag fröccsöntő szerszámbetétek szinterezési technológiája

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    Az 1.3 fejezet a szelektív lézer szinterezés, ezen belül is a DMLS (Direct Metal Laser Sintering) technológiával foglalkozik, bemutatja az eljárás jellemzőit, előnyeit és korlátait formakövető hűtőcsatornával rendelkező fröccsöntő szerszámbetétek gyártásában

    Microstructures in Two Alkali Feldspar Megacrysts from the Papuk Mt., Croatia

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    Two types of megacrysts, one from Pakra Creek and the other from the Slobostina Creek locality proved to be low microcline in association with low albite and quartz. A sample from Pakra Creek is a vein filling megacryst characterised by the absence of twinning. The deduced crystallization temperature is below 460°C. The sample from Sloboština Creek is a pocket forming megacryst which shows tweed-like texture, with deduced crystallization temperature near to but above 460°C. Both samples are characterized by a continuously modulated lattice on the submicroscopic scale

    Near infrared and optical emission of WASP-5 b

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    CONTEXT: Thermal emission from extrasolar planets makes it possible to study important physical processes in their atmospheres and derive more precise orbital elements. AIMS: By using new near infrared and optical data, we examine how these data constrain the orbital eccentricity and the thermal properties of the planet atmosphere. METHODS: The full light curves acquired by the TESS satellite from two sectors are used to put upper limit on the amplitude of the planet's phase variation and estimate the occultation depth. Two, already published and one, yet unpublished followup observations in the 2MASS K (Ks) band are employed to derive a more precise occultation light curve in this near infrared waveband. RESULTS: The merged occultation light curve in the Ks band comprises 4515 data points. The data confirm the results of the earlier eccentricity estimates, suggesting circular orbit: e=0.005+/-0.015. The high value of the flux depression of (2.70+/-0.14) ppt in the Ks band excludes simple black body emission at the 10 sigma level and disagrees also with current atmospheric models at the (4-7) sigma level. From the analysis of the TESS data, in the visual band we found tentative evidence for a near noise level detection of the secondary eclipse, and placed constraints on the associated amplitude of the planet's phase variation. A formal box fit yields an occultation depth of (0.157+/-0.056) ppt. This implies a relatively high geometric albedo of Ag=0.43+/-0.15 for fully efficient atmospheric circulation and Ag=0.29+/-0.15 for no circulation at all. No preference can be seen either for the oxygen-enhanced, or for the carbon-enhanced atmosphere models.Comment: After the 2nd referee report. Wrong citation of e*cos(w) by Baskin et al. (2013) has been corrected. Appendix B is supplied by another figur
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