950 resultados para Berry skins
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Un sistema sottoposto ad una lenta evoluzione ciclica è descritto da un'Hamiltoniana H(X_1(t),...,X_n(t)) dipendente da un insieme di parametri {X_i} che descrivono una curva chiusa nello spazio di appartenenza. Sotto le opportune ipotesi, il teorema adiabatico ci garantisce che il sistema ritornerà nel suo stato di partenza, e l'equazione di Schrödinger prevede che esso acquisirà una fase decomponibile in due termini, dei quali uno è stato trascurato per lungo tempo. Questo lavoro di tesi va ad indagare principalmente questa fase, detta fase di Berry o, più in generale, fase geometrica, che mostra della caratteristiche uniche e ricche di conseguenze da esplorare: essa risulta indipendente dai dettagli della dinamica del sistema, ed è caratterizzata unicamente dal percorso descritto nello spazio dei parametri, da cui l'attributo geometrico. A partire da essa, e dalle sue generalizzazioni, è stata resa possibile l'interpretazione di nuovi e vecchi effetti, come l'effetto Aharonov-Bohm, che pare mettere sotto una nuova luce i potenziali dell'elettromagnetismo, e affidare loro un ruolo più centrale e fisico all'interno della teoria. Il tutto trova una rigorosa formalizzazione all'interno della teoria dei fibrati e delle connessioni su di essi, che verrà esposta, seppur in superficie, nella parte iniziale.
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Four papers, written in collaboration with the author’s graduate school advisor, are presented. In the first paper, uniform and non-uniform Berry-Esseen (BE) bounds on the convergence to normality of a general class of nonlinear statistics are provided; novel applications to specific statistics, including the non-central Student’s, Pearson’s, and the non-central Hotelling’s, are also stated. In the second paper, a BE bound on the rate of convergence of the F-statistic used in testing hypotheses from a general linear model is given. The third paper considers the asymptotic relative efficiency (ARE) between the Pearson, Spearman, and Kendall correlation statistics; conditions sufficient to ensure that the Spearman and Kendall statistics are equally (asymptotically) efficient are provided, and several models are considered which illustrate the use of such conditions. Lastly, the fourth paper proves that, in the bivariate normal model, the ARE between any of these correlation statistics possesses certain monotonicity properties; quadratic lower and upper bounds on the ARE are stated as direct applications of such monotonicity patterns.
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Das Attentat auf den Herzog von Berry bedeutete eine Zerreißprobe für das labile Gleichgewicht der französischen Restauration und ließ die virulenten politischen Gegensätze in offene Konflikte ausbrechen. Doch der Tod Berrys war auch eines der großen Medienereignisse der Epoche. Druckgraphiken, Oden und Zeitungsartikel schilderten das Sterben des Herzogs in einem melodramatischen Stil. Die These des Aufsatzes ist, dass diese auf emotionale Identifikation angelegte Darstellungsweise des Ereignisses nicht nur quer zu den politischen Kämpfen lag, sondern auch ein integratives Potential entfaltete, indem sie den Akt der Aggression gegen die Monarchie hinter die Gefühle der beteiligten Personen zurücktreten ließ. Die offizielle Repräsentation der Monarchie war in dem erinnerungspolitischen Dilemma gefangen, der königlichen Opfer revolutionär motivierter Verbrechen gedenken zu müssen, zugleich aber die politische Angreifbarkeit der Monarchie vergessen machen zu wollen. Demgegenüber zeigt die mediale Verarbeitung des Attentats, dass es andere Möglichkeiten monarchischer Selbstinszenierung gegeben hätte, welche dieses Dilemma in den Hintergrund zu drängen vermochten.
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We investigated how processing fluency and defamiliarization (the art of rendering familiar notions unfamiliar) contribute to the affective and esthetic processing of reading in an event-related functional magnetic-resonance-imaging experiment.We compared the neural correlates of processing (a) familiar German proverbs, (b) unfamiliar proverbs, (c) defamiliarized variations with altered content relative to the original proverb (proverb-variants), (d) defamiliarized versions with unexpected wording but the same content as the original proverb (proverb-substitutions), and (e) non-rhetorical sentences. Here, we demonstrate that defamiliarization is an effectiveway of guiding attention, but that the degree of affective involvement depends on the type of defamiliarization: enhanced activation in affect-related regions (orbito-frontal cortex, medPFC) was found only if defamiliarization altered the content of the original proverb. Defamiliarization on the level of wording was associated with attention processes and error monitoring. Although proverb-variants evoked activation in affect-related regions, familiar proverbs received the highest beauty ratings.
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This dissertation is an examination of the ideals and practices that have characterized Western culture's relationship to the natural world. The conventional approach, depicted by some of the most prominent ecological publications of recent years, criticizes the Western tradition for both its ideals and practices. The ideals are assumed to be best represented in Western philosophy and religion and both of these sources have been indicted. These ideals are coupled with the Western way of life that is equally indicted as exploitive and destructive. Author, professor and farmer, Wendell Berry, offers an alternative to these indictments. Berry insists that a theme, advocating ecological accountability, runs through some of the West's most significant literature and that Western tradition contains a practice that can support these ecological principles. ^
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Signatur des Originals: S 36/F03396
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Signatur des Originals: S 36/G00440
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Extreme weather events can have strong negative impacts on species survival and community structure when surpassing lethal thresholds. Extreme, short-lived, winter warming events in the Arctic rapidly melt snow and expose ecosystems to unseasonably warm air (for instance, 2-10 °C for 2-14 days) but upon return to normal winter climate exposes the ecosystem to much colder temperatures due to the loss of insulating snow. Single events have been shown to reduce plant reproduction and increase shoot mortality, but impacts of multiple events are little understood as are the broader impacts on community structure, growth, carbon balance, and nutrient cycling. To address these issues, we simulated week-long extreme winter warming events - using infrared heating lamps and soil warming cables - for 3 consecutive years in a sub-Arctic heathland dominated by the dwarf shrubs Empetrum hermaphroditum, Vaccinium vitis-idaea (both evergreen) and Vaccinium myrtillus (deciduous). During the growing seasons after the second and third winter event, spring bud burst was delayed by up to a week for E. hermaphroditum and V. myrtillus, and berry production reduced by 11-75% and 52-95% for E. hermaphroditum and V. myrtillus, respectively. Greater shoot mortality occurred in E. hermaphroditum (up to 52%), V. vitis-idaea (51%), and V. myrtillus (80%). Root growth was reduced by more than 25% but soil nutrient availability remained unaffected. Gross primary productivity was reduced by more than 50% in the summer following the third simulation. Overall, the extent of damage was considerable, and critically plant responses were opposite in direction to the increased growth seen in long-term summer warming simulations and the 'greening' seen for some arctic regions. Given the Arctic is warming more in winter than summer, and extreme events are predicted to become more frequent, this generates large uncertainty in our current understanding of arctic ecosystem responses to climate change.
Factors affecting berry composition of Tempranillo grapevines before the arrest of phloem transport.
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It is already known that berry ripening is determined by the leaf area/fruit ratio, as well as temperature and leaf physiology. The aim of this work was to assess the influence of these parameters on Tempranillo cultivar throughout stage III of berry development.
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Drawing on the work of Wendell Berry, among others, allows us to see through claims that science has on limits (scientism). Berry shows what follies scientism generates and provides his own guidelines to what the limits of science are or ought to be.