959 resultados para Newton Principia fondamenti meccanica classica
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2011
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Esta publicação apresenta considerações sobee a adoção de sistemas silvipastoris, como alternativa sustentável para as pastagens de Rondônia. Está dividida em: Produção e composição química da forragem e Sistemas de manejo e produção animal.
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http://www.archive.org/details/poorloearlyindia00wyetiala
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http://www.archive.org/details/isaacmccoycarlyi012072mbp
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Neoplastic tissue is typically highly vascularized, contains abnormal concentrations of extracellular proteins (e.g. collagen, proteoglycans) and has a high interstitial fluid pres- sure compared to most normal tissues. These changes result in an overall stiffening typical of most solid tumors. Elasticity Imaging (EI) is a technique which uses imaging systems to measure relative tissue deformation and thus noninvasively infer its mechanical stiffness. Stiffness is recovered from measured deformation by using an appropriate mathematical model and solving an inverse problem. The integration of EI with existing imaging modal- ities can improve their diagnostic and research capabilities. The aim of this work is to develop and evaluate techniques to image and quantify the mechanical properties of soft tissues in three dimensions (3D). To that end, this thesis presents and validates a method by which three dimensional ultrasound images can be used to image and quantify the shear modulus distribution of tissue mimicking phantoms. This work is presented to motivate and justify the use of this elasticity imaging technique in a clinical breast cancer screening study. The imaging methodologies discussed are intended to improve the specificity of mammography practices in general. During the development of these techniques, several issues concerning the accuracy and uniqueness of the result were elucidated. Two new algorithms for 3D EI are designed and characterized in this thesis. The first provides three dimensional motion estimates from ultrasound images of the deforming ma- terial. The novel features include finite element interpolation of the displacement field, inclusion of prior information and the ability to enforce physical constraints. The roles of regularization, mesh resolution and an incompressibility constraint on the accuracy of the measured deformation is quantified. The estimated signal to noise ratio of the measured displacement fields are approximately 1800, 21 and 41 for the axial, lateral and eleva- tional components, respectively. The second algorithm recovers the shear elastic modulus distribution of the deforming material by efficiently solving the three dimensional inverse problem as an optimization problem. This method utilizes finite element interpolations, the adjoint method to evaluate the gradient and a quasi-Newton BFGS method for optimiza- tion. Its novel features include the use of the adjoint method and TVD regularization with piece-wise constant interpolation. A source of non-uniqueness in this inverse problem is identified theoretically, demonstrated computationally, explained physically and overcome practically. Both algorithms were test on ultrasound data of independently characterized tissue mimicking phantoms. The recovered elastic modulus was in all cases within 35% of the reference elastic contrast. Finally, the preliminary application of these techniques to tomosynthesis images showed the feasiblity of imaging an elastic inclusion.
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Gemstone Team Juiced
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Soluciones a los Problemas de los abuelos, estudio de las respuestas a uno de los problemas planteados en el Torneo de Matemáticas para 2º de la ESO de la Sociedad Canaria Isaac Newton de profesores de matemáticas. Actividad de resolución de problemas en una clase de 6º de Primaria.
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La intención de la ponencia está en la dirección de presentar un estudio de las prácticas que ejercen los actores en un diseño de aprendizaje puesto en escena en el aula de matemáticas. El diseño referido se centra, no en los contenidos matemáticos en sí o en las producciones de los participantes, sino en las prácticas sociales ejercidas por los participantes utilizando herramientas y situadas en un contexto social; en este caso las prácticas sociales de modelación del enfriamiento de un líquido. Reportamos la narración de la puesta en escena en el aula de matemáticas de un diseño de aprendizaje basado en prácticas sociales de modelación de fenómenos: “Lo exponencial: la ley de enfriamiento de Newton”. Aquí narramos como los participantes construyen lo exponencial como herramienta al intentar comprender y predecir lo que sucede al enfriarse un líquido.
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El pasado 15 de abril se cumplían 300 años del nacimiento de uno de los cuatro matemáticos más geniales de la historia, Leonhard Euler. Para mí, los otros tres, y que cada cual elija su orden, son Arquímedes, Newton y Gauss. Si la calificación la hiciésemos atendiendo a la cantidad de los trabajos de primer orden realizados por cada uno de ellos, sin duda Euler ocuparía el primer lugar. A lo largo de su extensa vida Euler produjo más de ochocientos libros y miles de artículos y trabajos. Sus obras completas Opera Omnia ocupan más de 80 volúmenes. Sin lugar a dudas es el matemático más prolífico de la Historia. Pero, con ser importante la cantidad de trabajos, el aprecio de los matemáticos contemporáneos y posteriores a él se debe más a la riqueza, originalidad, belleza y genial agudeza de su obra que a su volumen.
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A defect equation for the coupling of nonlinear subproblems defined in nonoverlapped subdomains arise in domain decomposition methods is presented. Numerical solutions of defect equations by means of quasi-Newton methods are considered.
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Zinkin's lucid challenge to Jung makes perfect sense. Indeed, it is the implications of this `making sense' that this paper addresses. For Zinkin's characterization of the `self' takes it as a `concept' requiring coherence; a variety of abstract non-contextual knowledge that itself has a mythical heritage. Moreover, Zinkin's refinement of Jung seeks to make his work fit for the scientific paradigm of modernity. In turn, modernity's paradigm owes much to Newton's notion of knowledge via reductionism. Here knowledge or investigation is divided up into the smallest possible units with the aim of eventually putting it all together into `one' picture of scientific truth. Unfortunately, `reductionism' does not do justice to the resonant possibilities of Jung's writing. These look forward to a new scientific paradigm of the twenty-first century, of the interactive `field', emergence and complexity theory. The paper works paradoxically by discovering Zinkin's `intersubjective self' after all, in two undervalued narratives by Jung, his doctoral thesis and a short late ghost story. However, in the ambivalences and radical fictional experimentation of these fascinating texts can be discerned an-Other self, one both created and found. [From the Publisher]
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Pollen, microscopic charcoal, palaeohydrological and dendrochronological analyses are applied to a radiocarbon and tephrochronologically dated mid Holocene (ca. 8500–3000 cal B.P.) peat sequence with abundant fossil Pinus (pine) wood. The Pinus populations on peat fluctuated considerably over the period in question. Colonisation by Pinus from ca. 7900–7600 cal B.P. appears to have had no specific environmental trigger; it was probably determined by the rate of migration from particular populations. The second phase, at ca. 5000–4400 cal B.P., was facilitated by anthropogenic interference that reduced competition from other trees. The pollen record shows two Pinus declines. The first at ca. 6200–5500 cal B.P. was caused by a series of rapid and frequent climatic shifts. The second, the so-called pine decline, was very gradual (ca. 4200–3300 cal B.P.) at Loch Farlary and may not have been related to climate change as is often supposed. Low intensity but sustained grazing pressures were more important. Throughout the mid Holocene, the frequency and intensity of burning in these open Pinus–Calluna woods were probably highly sensitive to hydrological (climatic) change. Axe marks on several trees are related to the mid to late Bronze Age, i.e., long after the trees had died.
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First paragraph: In 1993, a peat-cutter, Bruce Field, working on the blanket peat bank he rented from the Sutherland Estate by Loch Farlary, above Golspie in Sutherland (fig 1), reported to Scottish Natural Heritage and Historic Scotland several pieces of pine wood bearing axe marks. Their depth in the peat suggested the cut marks to be prehistoric. This paper summarizes the work undertaken to understand the age and archaeological significance of this find (see also Tipping et al 2001 in press). The pine trees were initially thought to be part of a population that flourished briefly across northern Scotland in the middle of the Holocene period from c 4800 cal BP (Huntley, Daniell & Allen 1997). The subsequent collapse across northernmost Scotland of this population, the pine decline, at around 4200-4000 cal BP is unexplained: climate change has been widely assumed (Dubois & Ferguson 1985; Bridge, Haggart & Lowe 1990; Gear & Huntley 1991) but anthropogenic activity has not been disproved (Birks 1975; Bennett 1995). It was hypothesized that the Farlary find would allow for the first time the direct link between human woodland clearance and the Early Bronze Age pine decline.