9,007 research outputs found
Pairwise Well-Formed Modes and Transformations
One of the most significant attitudinal shifts in the history of music
occurred in the Renaissance, when an emerging triadic consciousness moved
musicians towards a new scalar formation that placed major thirds on a par with
perfect fifths. In this paper we revisit the confrontation between the two
idealized scalar and modal conceptions, that of the ancient and medieval world
and that of the early modern world, associated especially with Zarlino. We do
this at an abstract level, in the language of algebraic combinatorics on words.
In scale theory the juxtaposition is between well-formed and pairwise
well-formed scales and modes, expressed in terms of Christoffel words or
standard words and their conjugates, and the special Sturmian morphisms that
generate them. Pairwise well-formed scales are encoded by words over a
three-letter alphabet, and in our generalization we introduce special positive
automorphisms of , the free group over three letters.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, paper presented at the MCM2017 at UNAM in Mexico
City on June 27, 2017, keywords: pairwise well-formed scales and modes,
well-formed scales and modes, well-formed words, Christoffel words, standard
words, central words, algebraic combinatorics on words, special Sturmian
morphism
Performance of Laying Hens Fed Increasing Amounts of Lysine in Low Protein Diets
The current N.R.C. (1977) recommendations for lysine content of laying hen rations is 0.60%. This level of lysine is recommended along with 15% protein. The influence of protein level or protein quality on this requirement is not known. This experiment examined laying hen performance over a range (0.55% to 0.80%) of lysine levels in 10% and 12% protein diets to determine optimum lysine intake. Also, the influence of the addition of the amino acids isoleucine and tryptophan to the 10% protein diet was studied
Strain Differential in Amino Acid Requirements for Laying Hens
This study involved the effects of amino acid supplementation of a low protein layer diet on egg production of two strains of chickens
L^2 torsion without the determinant class condition and extended L^2 cohomology
We associate determinant lines to objects of the extended abelian category
built out of a von Neumann category with a trace. Using this we suggest
constructions of the combinatorial and the analytic L^2 torsions which, unlike
the work of the previous authors, requires no additional assumptions; in
particular we do not impose the determinant class condition. The resulting
torsions are elements of the determinant line of the extended L^2 cohomology.
Under the determinant class assumption the L^2 torsions of this paper
specialize to the invariants studied in our previous work. Applying a recent
theorem of D. Burghelea, L. Friedlander and T. Kappeler we obtain a Cheeger -
Muller type theorem stating the equality between the combinatorial and the
analytic L^2 torsions.Comment: 39 page
Comparison of Algorithms and Parameterisations for Infiltration into Organic-Covered Permafrost Soils
Infiltration into frozen and unfrozen soils is critical in hydrology, controlling active layer soil water dynamics and influencing runoff. Few Land Surface Models (LSMs) and Hydrological Models (HMs) have been developed, adapted or tested for frozen conditions and permafrost soils. Considering the vast geographical area influenced by freeze/thaw processes and permafrost, and the rapid environmental change observed worldwide in these regions, a need exists to improve models to better represent their hydrology.
In this study, various infiltration algorithms and parameterisation methods, which are commonly employed in current LSMs and HMs were tested against detailed measurements at three sites in Canada’s discontinuous permafrost region with organic soil depths ranging from 0.02 to 3 m. Field data from two consecutive years were used to calibrate and evaluate the infiltration algorithms and parameterisations. Important conclusions include: (1) the single most important factor that controls the infiltration at permafrost sites is ground thaw depth, (2) differences among the simulated infiltration by different algorithms and parameterisations were only found when the ground was frozen or during the initial fast thawing stages, but not after ground thaw reaches a critical depth of 15 to 30 cm, (3) despite similarities in simulated total infiltration after ground thaw reaches the critical depth, the choice of algorithm influenced the distribution of water among the soil layers, and (4) the ice impedance factor for hydraulic conductivity, which is commonly used in LSMs and HMs, may not be necessary once the water potential driven frozen soil parameterisation is employed. Results from this work provide guidelines that can be directly implemented in LSMs and HMs to improve their application in organic covered permafrost soils
Radar cross calibration investigation TAMU radar polarimeter calibration measurements
A short pulse, 20 MHz bandwidth, three frequency radar polarimeter system (RPS) operates at center frequencies of 10.003 GHz, 4.75 GHz, and 1.6 GHz and utilizes dual polarized transmit and receive antennas for each frequency. The basic lay-out of the RPS is different from other truck mounted systems in that it uses a pulse compression IF section common to all three RF heads. Separate transmit and receive antennas are used to improve the cross-polarization isolation at each particular frequency. The receive is a digitally controlled gain modulated subsystem and is interfaced directly with a microprocesser computer for control and data manipulation. Antenna focusing distance, focusing each antenna pair, rf head stability, and polarization characteristics of RPS antennas are discussed. Platform and data acquisition procedures are described
Spitzer's mid-infrared view on an outer Galaxy Infrared Dark Cloud candidate toward NGC 7538
Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs) represent the earliest observed stages of
clustered star formation, characterized by large column densities of cold and
dense molecular material observed in silhouette against a bright background of
mid-IR emission. Up to now, IRDCs were predominantly known toward the inner
Galaxy where background infrared emission levels are high. We present Spitzer
observations with the Infrared Camera Array toward object G111.80+0.58 (G111)
in the outer Galactic Plane, located at a distance of ~3 kpc from us and ~10
kpc from the Galactic center. Earlier results show that G111 is a massive, cold
molecular clump very similar to IRDCs. The mid-IR Spitzer observations
unambiguously detect object G111 in absorption. We have identified for the
first time an IRDC in the outer Galaxy, which confirms the suggestion that
cluster-forming clumps are present throughout the Galactic Plane. However,
against a low mid-IR back ground such as the outer Galaxy it takes some effort
to find them.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL -- 11 pages, 2 figures (1 colour
Technology, creativity and the media in engineering China’s future
Political, economic and intellectual elites in China have for some time been in the grip of ‘futurology’ as they reflect on thirty years’ of extraordinary economic development and ask ‘what next’? China has a dream, in fact it has many visions of what it may become, reflecting robust debate and competition to define the nation’s future course of reform and development (Callahan, 2013). On assuming the top party and state positions in October 2012 Xi Jinping quickly unveiled the China Dream (Zhonguomeng) as the maxim for his leadership. Although specification of what the dream will entail is yet to be fully explicated, one thing is certain: low-cost production and outsourcing more advanced economies’ dirty jobs is neither the subject of China’s dream nor is it any longer considered the means to delivering it. The ‘world’s factory’ model that facilitated China’s remarkable economic growth has come under pressure from all sides, as the party acknowledges its unsustainability and people deal with the consequences. Party elites and policymakers have taken significant steps toward a different and more sustainable model to secure long term growth and it is hoped that low-end manufacturing will give way to a service based economy and consumer culture facilitated by urbanization, migration and developing greater creative capacity. These plans are underpinned by the ambition to become an ‘innovative nation’ (chuangxinxing de guojia), to develop soft power resources to go with economic might, and to raise the ‘quality’ (suzhi) of the people. As the three books covered in this review essay demonstrate, technology, culture and the media are closely implicated, and closely controlled, in the Chinese state’s quest for development
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