995 resultados para 177-1092C
Resumo:
Contenido: La prudencia (III) / Octavio Nicolás Derisi – El tránsito de la existencia al ser / Carlos R. Kelz – Arte y conocimiento / Raúl Echauri – Contemplación y Dios en Aristóteles / Beatriz Bossi de Kirchner – Breves notas acerca de la “Política” de Aristóteles / Margarita Mauri Álvarez – La teoría de la ciencia de Guillermo de Ockham: una imagen prospectiva / Olga E. Larre ; J. E. Bolzán – Notas y comentarios -- Bibliografía
Resumo:
The vertical zoning of the planktonic Crustacea in a lake is the expression of a complex set of different factors. Besides the measurable, external influences such as light, temperature, acid and C02 stratification, a particularly large part is played by internal factors, which co-ordinate a specific reaction in each species depending on state of development, age and sex. Supporting this extensive, predictable, annual course of diurnal depths and the daily vertical migrations, whose extent is again dependent on external conditions, primarily of course on the amount of light. The individual factors mentioned, however, are here also of great significance. Within the scope of a long-term study of the planktonic Copepoda of Lake Constance, some day and night series were in 1963 also carried out in the Obersee, in order to obtain at least volumetric data on the extent of the daily migrations of these creatures.
Resumo:
Pulses of 177 fs and 1035 nm, with average power of 1.2 mW, have been generated directly from a passively mode-locked Yb-doped figure-of-eight fiber laser, with a nonlinear optical loop mirror for mode-locking and pairs of diffraction gratings for intracavity dispersion compensation. To our knowledge, these are the shortest pulses ever to come from a passively mode-locked Yb-doped figure-of-eight fiber laser. This represents a 5-fold reduction in pulse duration compared with that of previously reported passively mode-locked Yb-doped figure-of-eight fiber lasers. Stable pulse trains are produced at the fundamental repetition rate of the resonator, 24.0 MHz. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.