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This book provides basic tools for learning how to model in
mathematical programming, from models without much complexity to
complex system models. It presents a unique methodology for the
building of an integral mathematical model, as well as new
techniques that help build under own criteria. It allows readers to
structure models from the elements and variables to the
constraints, a basic modelling guide for any system with a new
scheme of variables, a classification of constraints and also a set
of rules to model specifications stated as logical propositions,
helping to better understand models already existing in the
literature. It also presents the modelling of all possible
objectives that may arise in optimization problems regarding the
variables values. The book is structured to guide the reader in an
orderly manner, learning of the components that the methodology
establishes in an optimization problem. The system includes the
elements, which are all the actors that participate in the system,
decision activities that occur in the system, calculations based on
the decision activities, specifications such as regulations,
impositions or actions of defined value and objective criterion,
which guides the resolution of the system.
Cell Colonies: Fractal Growth and Morphological Change in Bacterial
Colony Formation; M. Matsushita, et al. Surfaces and Interfaces:
Dynamic Scaling in Surface Growth Phenomena; F. Family. Diffusion
Limited Aggregation, Viscous Fingering and Fracture: Ionic
Concentration and Electric Field in Fractal Electrodeposition; M.
Rosso, et al. Cellular Patterns: 2D Manifolds Arising from Local
Interactions; H. Terrones, et al. Dynamical Systems: Order, Pattern
Selection, and Noise in Low-Dimensional Systems; M. San Miguel.
Self-Replication: Molecular Quasi-Species in Hopfield Replication
Landscapes; P. Tarazona. Self-Organization: Effects of Noise on
Self-Organized Critical Phenomena; A. Diaz-Guilera. Measurement and
Characterization: The Practical Measurement of Fractal Parameters;
E.H. Dooijes, Z.R. Struzik. 36 additional articles. Index.
This book gathers the proceedings of the 12th instalment in the
bi-annual Workshop series on Direct and Large Eddy Simulation
(DLES), which began in 1994 and focuses on modern techniques used
to simulate turbulent flows based on the partial or full resolution
of the instantaneous turbulent flow structure. With the rapidly
expanding capacities of modern computers, this approach has
attracted more and more interest over the years and will
undoubtedly be further enhanced and applied in the future. Hybrid
modelling techniques based on a combination of LES and RANS
approaches also fall into this category and are covered as well.
The goal of the Workshop was to share the state of the art in DNS,
LES and related techniques for the computation and modelling of
turbulent and transitional flows. The respective papers highlight
the latest advances in the prediction, understanding and control of
turbulent flows in academic and industrial applications.
Sturgeons are considered living fossils, sharing many
morphological and biological features with ancestral fish.
Furthermore, sturgeons are of the utmost interest from an economic
perspective, not only for the caviar but for the flesh. However,
the wild populations of the majority of the species are at serious
risk of extinction all over the world. So, it is urgent to develop
strategies for both farming culture and conservation and recovery
in natural habitats.
This book provides a comprehensive view of the biology and
sustainable development of sturgeons putting emphasis on the
Southern Europe autochthonous species such as Acipenser nacarii and
Acipenser sturio that share geographical distribution. Other
relevant species (such as Huso huso, A. oxyrhinchus, A. ruthenus,
A. stellatus) and areas (Germany, Russia, North America) are also
considered. The contents are organised in three sections: Taxonomy
and Biogeography (including the morphological and genetic analyses
that clarify the taxonomy and phylogeny of sturgeons, focused on
those from Southern Europe), Biology and Aquaculture (where several
aspects of the developmental biology, feeding, and reproduction are
considered in relation to the improvement of sturgeon farming), and
Recovery and Conservation (that collates and analyses different
recovery research actions, the ecology of the rivers for
restoration as well as the problems related to the trade of
caviar)."
This textbook presents the principles and methods for the
measurement of radioactivity in the environment. In this regard,
specific low-level radiation counting and spectrometry or mass
spectrometry techniques are discussed, including sources,
distribution, levels and dynamics of radioactivity in nature. The
author gives an accurate description of the fundamental concepts
and laws of radioactivity as well as the different types of
detectors and mass spectrometers needed for detection. Special
attention is paid to scintillators, semiconductor detectors, and
gas ionization detectors. In order to explain radiochemistry, some
concepts about chemical separations are introduced as well. The
book is meant for graduate and advanced undergraduate students in
physics, chemistry or engineering oriented to environmental
sciences, and to other disciplines where monitoring of the
environment and its management is of great interest.
This book presents the construction and resolution of 50 practical
optimization problems and covers an exceptionally wide range,
including games-associated problems (Unblock Me, Sudokus),
logistical problems, and problems concerning plant distribution,
production, operations scheduling, management and resource
allocation. The problems are divided into 5 difficulty levels.
Problems in the first few levels are focused on learning the model
construction methodology, while those in the last level include
complex optimization environments. For each problem solution, the
specific steps are illustrated, promoting reader comprehension. In
addition, all the models are implemented in an optimization
library, LINGO, their solutions have been analyzed and their
correct construction has been verified. The book also includes a
simple guide to implementing models in LINGO in a straightforward
manner and in any input data format (text files, spreadsheets or
databases). As an ideal companion to the author's previously
published work Modelling in Mathematical Programming, the book is
intended as a basic tool for students of operations research, and
for researchers in any advanced area involving mathematical
programming.
In Together, Somehow, Luis Manuel Garcia-Mispireta examines how
people find ways to get along and share a dancefloor, a vibe, and a
sound. Drawing on time spent in the minimal techno and house music
subscenes in Chicago, Paris, and Berlin as the first decade of the
new millennium came to a close, Garcia-Mispireta explains this
bonding in terms of what he calls stranger-intimacy: the kind of
warmth, sharing, and vulnerability between people that happens
surprisingly often at popular electronic dance music parties. He
shows how affect lubricates the connections between music and the
dancers. Intense shared senses of sound and touch help support a
feeling of belonging to a larger social world. However, as
Garcia-Mispireta points out, this sense of belonging can be vague,
fluid, and may hide exclusions and injustices. By showing how
sharing a dancefloor involves feeling, touch, sound, sexuality, and
subculture, Garcia-Mispireta rethinks intimacy and belonging
through dancing crowds and the utopian vision of throbbing
dancefloors.
With chapters written by leading international scholars in the
field, this is an authoritative reference guide for researchers
working in the Philosophy of Language today. "The Continuum
Companion to Philosophy of Language" offers the definitive guide to
contemporary philosophy of language. The book covers all the
fundamental questions asked by the philosophy of language - areas
that have continued to attract interest historically as well as
topics that have emerged more recently as active areas of research.
Ten specially commissioned essays from an international team of
experts reveal where important work continues to be done in the
area and, most valuably, the exciting new directions the field is
taking. The Companion explores issues pertaining to the nature of
language, form semantics, theories of meaning, reference,
intensional contexts, context-dependence, pragmatics, the
normativity of language, analyticity, a priority and modality.
Featuring a series of indispensable research tools, including an A
to Z of key terms and concepts, a detailed list of resources and a
fully annotated bibliography, this is the essential reference tool
for anyone working in the philosophy of language. "The Continuum
Companions" series is a major series of single volume companions to
key research fields in the humanities aimed at postgraduate
students, scholars and libraries. Each companion offers a
comprehensive reference resource giving an overview of key topics,
research areas, new directions and a manageable guide to beginning
or developing research in the field. A distinctive feature of the
series is that each companion provides practical guidance on
advanced study and research in the field, including research
methods and subject-specific resources.
This volume addresses the intriguing issue of indirect reports from
an interdisciplinary perspective. The contributors include
philosophers, theoretical linguists, socio-pragmaticians, and
cognitive scientists. The book is divided into four sections
following the provenance of the authors. Combining the voices from
leading and emerging authors in the field, it offers a detailed
picture of indirect reports in the world's languages and their
significance for theoretical linguistics. Building on the previous
book on indirect reports in this series, this volume adds an
empirical and cross-linguistic approach that covers an impressive
range of languages, such as Cantonese, Japanese, Hebrew, Persian,
Dutch, Spanish, Catalan, Armenian, Italian, English, Hungarian,
German, Rumanian, and Basque.
According to two-dimensional semantics, the meaning of an
expression involves two different "dimensions": one dimension
involves reference and truth-conditions of a familiar sort, while
the other dimension involves the way that reference and
truth-conditions depend on the external world (for example,
reference and truth-conditions might be held to depend on which
individuals and substances are present in the world, or on which
linguistic conventions are in place). A number of different
two-dimensional frameworks have been developed, and these have been
applied to a number of fundamental problems in philosophy: the
nature of communication, the relation between the necessary and the
a priori, the role of context in assertion, Frege's distinction
between sense and reference, the contents of thought, and the
mind-body problem. Manuel Garcia-Carpintero and Josep Macia present
a selection of new essays by an outstanding international team,
shedding fresh light both on foundational issues regarding _
two-dimensional semantics and on its specific applications. The
volume will be the starting-point for future work on this approach
to issues in philosophy of language, _ epistemology, and
metaphysics. _
Accounting and Debt Markets: Four Pieces on the Role of Accounting
Information in Debt Markets provides novel and up-to-date evidence
on the role of accounting information in debt markets Companies and
organisations worldwide rely heavily on debt markets for short,
medium and long-term financing, and debt markets and financial
intermediaries have significant effects on the real economy.
Accounting information has various functions in debt markets,
including inter alia, informing pricing decisions and credit
ratings, determining the allocation of creditor control rights and
establishing bank capital adequacy requirements. The chapters in
this book provide illustrative discussion, analysis and evidence on
the importance of accounting information in credit markets. The
first of the four pieces reflects on how a conservative financial
reporting system helps firms obtain debt funds and with better
conditions, and why this is the case. The second examines the
effects of accounting disclosure on credit ratings of private
companies and shows that accounting information is useful for
credit rating agencies. The two final pieces reflect on how banks
should account for credit losses, and on how regulators are
tackling this issue. The chapters in this book were originally
published as a special issue of Accounting and Business Research.
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Planet Hulk: Worldbreaker
Greg Pak; Illustrated by Manuel Garcia, Geoffrey Shaw
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R334
Discovery Miles 3 340
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Cities play a major role in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic as many
measures are adopted at the scale of cities and involve adjustments
to the way urban areas operate. Drawing from case studies across
the globe, this book explores how the pandemic and the policies it
has prompted have caused changes in the ways cities function. The
contributors examine the advancing social inequality brought on by
the pandemic and suggest policies intended to contain contagion
whilst managing the economy in these circumstances. Offering
crucial insights for reforming cities to be more resilient to
future crises, this is an invaluable resource for scholars and
policy makers alike.
This book provides basic tools for learning how to model in
mathematical programming, from models without much complexity to
complex system models. It presents a unique methodology for the
building of an integral mathematical model, as well as new
techniques that help build under own criteria. It allows readers to
structure models from the elements and variables to the
constraints, a basic modelling guide for any system with a new
scheme of variables, a classification of constraints and also a set
of rules to model specifications stated as logical propositions,
helping to better understand models already existing in the
literature. It also presents the modelling of all possible
objectives that may arise in optimization problems regarding the
variables values. The book is structured to guide the reader in an
orderly manner, learning of the components that the methodology
establishes in an optimization problem. The system includes the
elements, which are all the actors that participate in the system,
decision activities that occur in the system, calculations based on
the decision activities, specifications such as regulations,
impositions or actions of defined value and objective criterion,
which guides the resolution of the system.
This book gathers the proceedings of the 12th instalment in the
bi-annual Workshop series on Direct and Large Eddy Simulation
(DLES), which began in 1994 and focuses on modern techniques used
to simulate turbulent flows based on the partial or full resolution
of the instantaneous turbulent flow structure. With the rapidly
expanding capacities of modern computers, this approach has
attracted more and more interest over the years and will
undoubtedly be further enhanced and applied in the future. Hybrid
modelling techniques based on a combination of LES and RANS
approaches also fall into this category and are covered as well.
The goal of the Workshop was to share the state of the art in DNS,
LES and related techniques for the computation and modelling of
turbulent and transitional flows. The respective papers highlight
the latest advances in the prediction, understanding and control of
turbulent flows in academic and industrial applications.
In Together, Somehow, Luis Manuel Garcia-Mispireta examines how
people find ways to get along and share a dancefloor, a vibe, and a
sound. Drawing on time spent in the minimal techno and house music
subscenes in Chicago, Paris, and Berlin as the first decade of the
new millennium came to a close, Garcia-Mispireta explains this
bonding in terms of what he calls stranger-intimacy: the kind of
warmth, sharing, and vulnerability between people that happens
surprisingly often at popular electronic dance music parties. He
shows how affect lubricates the connections between music and the
dancers. Intense shared senses of sound and touch help support a
feeling of belonging to a larger social world. However, as
Garcia-Mispireta points out, this sense of belonging can be vague,
fluid, and may hide exclusions and injustices. By showing how
sharing a dancefloor involves feeling, touch, sound, sexuality, and
subculture, Garcia-Mispireta rethinks intimacy and belonging
through dancing crowds and the utopian vision of throbbing
dancefloors.
The first Catalogue of Meteorites from South America includes
new specimens never previously reported, while doubtful cases and
pseudometeorites have been deliberately omitted.
The falling of these objects is a random event, but the sites
where old meteorites are found tend to be focused in certain areas,
e.g. in the deflation surfaces in Chile s Atacama Desert, due to
favorable climate conditions and ablation processes.
Our Catalogue provides basic information on each specimen like
its provenance and the place where it was discovered (in geographic
co-ordinates and with illustrative maps), its official name, its
classification type (class, and if applicable, weathering grade and
shock stage), if it was seen falling or was found by chance, its
total mass or weight, the institution where it is held, and the
most important bibliographic references about it.
"
During the past decade interest in the formation of complex
disorderly patterns far from equilibrium has grown rapidly. This
interest has been stim ulated by the development of new approaches
(based primarily on fractal geometry) to the quantitative
description of complex structures, increased understanding of
non-linear phenomena and the introduction of a variety of models
(such as the diffusion-limited aggregation model) that provide
paradigms for non-equilibrium growth phenomena. Advances in
computer technology have played a crucial role in both the
experimental and theoret ical aspects of this enterprise.
Substantial progress has been made towards the development of
comprehensive understanding of non-equilibrium growth phenomena but
most of our current understanding is based on simple com puter
models. Pattern formation processes are important in almost all
areas of science and technology, and, clearly, pattern growth
pervades biology. Very often remarkably similar patterns are found
in quite diverse systems. In some case (dielectric breakdown,
electrodeposition, fluid-fluid displacement in porous media,
dissolution patterns and random dendritic growth for example) the
underlying causes of this similarity is quite well understood. In
other cases (vascular trees, nerve cells and river networks for
example) we do not yet know if a fundamental relationship exists
between the mechanisms leading the formation of these structures.
Adult neurogenesis has been questioned for many years. In the
early 1900s, a dogma was established that denied new neuron
formation in the adult brain. In the last century however, new
discoveries have demonstrated the real existence of proliferation
in the adult brain, and in the last decade, these studies led to
the identification of neural stem cells in mammals. Adult neural
stem cells are undifferentiated cells that are present in the adult
brain and are capable of dividing and differentiating into glia and
new neurons. Newly formed neurons terminally differentiate into
mature neurons in the olfactory bulb and the dentate gyrus of the
hippocampus. Since then, a number of new research lines have
emerged whose common objective is the phenotypical and molecular
characterization of brain stem cells. As a result, new therapies
are successfully being applied to animal models for certain
neurodegenerative diseases or stroke. At present, and in years to
come, this finding extends to the adult human brain, and gives
reason and hope to all the previous studies.
The truth of an utterance depends on various factors. Usually these
factors are assumed to be: the meaning of the sentence uttered, the
context in which the utterance was made, and the way things are in
the world. Recently, however, a number of cases have been discussed
where there seems to be reason to think that the truth of an
utterance is not yet fully determined by these three factors, and
that truth must therefore depend on a further factor. The most
prominent examples include utterances about values, utterances
attributing knowledge, utterances that state that something is
probable or epistemically possible, and utterances about the
contingent future. In these cases, some have argued, the standard
picture needs to be modified to admit extra truth-determining
factors, and there is further controversy about the exact role of
any such extra factors. With contributions from some of the key
figures in the contemporary debate on relativism this book is about
a topic that is the focus of much traditional and current interest:
whether truth is relative to standards of taste, values, or
subjective informational states. It is an issue in the philosophy
of language, but one with important connections to other areas of
philosophy, such as meta-ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology.
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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