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This volume provides an overview of modern acoustical techniques
for the measurement of mechanical properties. Chapters include
Fundamentals of Elastic Constants; Point Source/Point Receiver
Methods; Laser Controlled Surface Acoustic Waves; Quantitative
Acoustical Microscopy of Solids; Resonant Ultrasound Spectroscopy;
Elastic Properties and Thermodynamics; Sound Speed as a
Thermodynamic Property of Fluids; Noninvasive Determination of
Sound Speed in Liquids; Introduction to the Elastic Constants of
Gases; and Acoustic Measurement in Gases.
Written by an interdisciplinary group of experts from both industry
and academia, Acoustic Wave Sensors provides an in-depth look at
the current state of acoustic wave devices and the scope of their
use in chemical, biochemical, and physical measurements, as well as
in engineering applications. Because of the inherent
interdisciplinary applications of these devices, this book will be
useful for the chemist and biochemist interested in the use and
development ofthese sensors for specific applications; the
electrical engineer involved in the design and improvement of these
devices; the chemical engineer and the biotechnologist interested
in using these devices for process monitoring and control; and the
sensor community at large.
Key Features
* Provides in-depth comparison and analyses of different types of
acoustic wave devices
* Discusses operating principles and design considerations
* Includes table of relevant material constants for quick
reference
* Presents an extensive review of current uses of these devices for
chemical, biochemical, and physical measurements, and engineering
applications
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) have developed rapidly in
recent years and now provide powerful tools for the capture,
manipulation, integration, interrogation, modelling, analysis and
visualisation of data - tools that are already used for policy
support in a wide range of areas at almost all geographic and
administrative levels. This holds especially for emergency
preparedness and health risk reduction, which are all essentially
spatial problems. To date, however, many initiatives have remained
disconnected and uncoordinated, leading to less powerful, less
compatible and less widely implemented systems than might otherwise
have been the case.
The important matters discussed here include the probabilistic
nature of most environmental hazards and the semi-random factors
that influence interactions between these and human exposures; the
effects of temporal and spatial scales on hazard assessment and
imputed risk; the effects of measurement error in risk estimation
and the stratification of risks and their impacts according to
socioeconomic characteristics; and the quantification of
socioeconomic differences in vulnerability and susceptibility to
environmental hazards.
GIS are powerful analytical tools in their own right, but what is
needed is much more effective communication between the many
disciplines, professions and stakeholders concerned - something
which this book helps to achieve.
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) have developed rapidly in
recent years and now provide powerful tools for the capture,
manipulation, integration, interrogation, modelling, analysis and
visualisation of data - tools that are already used for policy
support in a wide range of areas at almost all geographic and
administrative levels. This holds especially for emergency
preparedness and health risk reduction, which are all essentially
spatial problems. To date, however, many initiatives have remained
disconnected and uncoordinated, leading to less powerful, less
compatible and less widely implemented systems than might otherwise
have been the case.
The important matters discussed here include the probabilistic
nature of most environmental hazards and the semi-random factors
that influence interactions between these and human exposures; the
effects of temporal and spatial scales on hazard assessment and
imputed risk; the effects of measurement error in risk estimation
and the stratification of risks and their impacts according to
socioeconomic characteristics; and the quantification of
socioeconomic differences in vulnerability and susceptibility to
environmental hazards.
GIS are powerful analytical tools in their own right, but what is
needed is much more effective communication between the many
disciplines, professions and stakeholders concerned - something
which this book helps to achieve.
Cy Riemer--fifty-ish, divorced, and father of four--surveys the
dispersal of his family with a mixture of anxiety, humor, sadness,
and pride. In this wry, moving, and wise novel, Richard Stern
offers his masterful portrait of Cy as the quintessential caring
yet controlling parent, a relentless seeker of self-knowledge whose
search is intensified through conflicts with his brilliant,
ne'er-do-well son Jack. The manipulation of a smart, sane,
self-justifying narrator . . . is not the least of Stern's
achievements in this delicate fabrication of tough prose and tender
adjustment of sentiment.--Geoffrey Wolff, Los Angeles Times Richard
Stern's novels are robustly intelligent, very funny, and
beguilingly humane. He knows as much as anyone writing American
prose about family mischief, intellectual shenanigans, love
blunders--and about writing American prose.--Philip Roth A
delectable rhetorical display. . . . --The New Yorker Anyone who
has read Richard Stern's previous novels won't need to be told he
is an unusually crisp and intelligent writer, with a sharp edge to
his wit; and in A Father's Words he runs true to form. Many of the
book's pleasures are incidental: jokes, intellectual cadenzas,
agile turns of phrase . . . The author's powers of farcical
invention climax in a brilliant, bitter episode where . . . the
younger man proclaims his final failure . . . Mr. Stern has written
an excellent novel.--John Gross, New York Times Richard Stern is
American letters' unsung comic writer about serious matters . . .
[A Father's Words] produced in this reviewer an apostolic desire to
convince a wider audience to try Stern, especially the vintage
Stern.--Doris Grumbach, Chicago Tribune
"What Is What Was," Richard Stern's fifth "orderly miscellany," is
the first to meaningfully combine his fiction and nonfiction.
Stories, such as the already well-known "My Ex, the Moral
Philosopher," appear among portraits (of the sort Hugh Kenner
praised as "almost the invention of a new genre"): Auden, Pound,
Ellison, Terkel, W. C. Fields, Bertrand Russell, Walter Benjamin
(in both essay and story), Jung and Freud, Hannah Arendt and Martin
Heidegger.
In the book's seven sections are analyses of the Wimbledon tennis
tournament as an Anglification machine, of Silicon Valley at its
shaky peak, of James and Dante as travel writers, a Lucretian look
at today's cosmology, American fiction in detail and depth, a
"thought experiment" for Clarence Thomas, a salvation scheme for
Ross Perot, a semi-confession of the writer.
The book contains but isn't philosophy, criticism, opinion,
reportage, or autobiography (although the author says it is as much
of this as he plans to write). There is a recurrent theme, the ways
in which actuality is made and remade in description, argument and
narration, fictional and nonfictional, but above all, "What Is What
Was" is a provocative entertainment by a writer who, as Philip Roth
once said, "knows as much as anyone writing American prose about
family mischief, intellectual shenanigans, love blunders--and about
writing American prose."
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Golk (Paperback)
Richard Stern
bundle available
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R726
Discovery Miles 7 260
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In midcentury America, the golden age of television, a man named
Golk is wreaking havoc with the medium. Through a devastating
series of exposures-"You're on Camera"-Golk manipulates the high
and mighty, the lowdown and dirty, and the outrageous weird; all
are within the compass of Richard Stern in this early novel, a
comedy with as many inspired maneuvers as its rambunctious
protagonist has for taking the measure of a profligate world. "Golk
is a rich and marvelously detailed novel by a man with a cultivated
intelligence; it is also the first really good book I have read
about television."-Norman Mailer "An original: sharp, funny,
intelligent, rare. . . . Working in a clean, oblique style
reminiscent of Nathanael West, Mr. Stern has written in Golk a
first-rate comic novel, a piece of fiction that is at once about
and loaded with that kind of recognition that junkies call the
flash."-Joan Didion, National Review "Golk is fantastic, funny,
bitter, intelligent without weariness. Best of all Golk is
pure-that is to say necessary. Without hokum."-Saul Bellow "Golk
(like Golk himself) is a wonderous conception. Its world responds
to personification, not analysis, and personify it Mr. Stern has
done. A book in a thousand."-Hugh Kenner "What I like about Mr.
Stern's fantasy is that it has been conceived and written with so
much gaiety. Far from a political melodrama, it reminds me of a
Rene Clair movie, and even the surrealist touches needed to bring
out the power and pretense of the television industry are funny
rather than symbolically grim."-Alfred Kazin, Reporter "A mighty
good book, altogether alive, full of beans and none of them
spilled."-Flannery O'Connor
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