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midterm1_key_sp09

Course: CH 402, Spring 2009
School: Washington University...
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Washington University in St. Louis - CH - 465
Homework Set #1 - DUE 27 January 2009 Solid-State and Materials Chemistry - Chem. 465 (assigned 15 January 2009) 1. Copper metal crystallizes with a cubic close packed (ccp or fcc) structure having a lattice parameter a = 3.6147 . Please calculate th
Washington University in St. Louis - CH - 252
Washington University in St. Louis - CH - 252
Washington University in St. Louis - CH - 252
Washington University in St. Louis - CH - 402
Chapter 6Chemical Equilibrium6.16.1.1Equilibrium CriteriaDenitionsA distinction must be made between stable and unstable equilibrium conditions. The statement of equilibrium is that the local derivative = 0. (The term local is redundant, but
Washington University in St. Louis - MATH - 128
Washington University in St. Louis - MATH - 128
Washington University in St. Louis - MATH - 128
Washington University in St. Louis - MATH - 128
Washington University in St. Louis - MATH - 128
Washington University in St. Louis - BIOC - 2
How To Filter GenesOctober 3, 2007IntroductionThe genefilter package can be used to filter (select) genes from a microarray experiment according to a wide variety of different filtering mechanisms. To be concrete we will consider the artificial e
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Problem 2.15 Two six-sided (balanced) dice are thrown. Find the probabilities of each of the following events: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) only 2,3,or 4 appears on both dice; the value of the second roll subtracted from the value of the first roll is 2; the
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 7 SolutionProblem 1. Consider an M/M/1 queue with an arrival rate of 60 customers per hour and a mean service time of 45 seconds. (i) What is the steady state distribution of the queue length? Sol: = 1 and = 60/45 = 4/3. Therefore / = 3/4
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 4b SolutionProblem 1. Given a matrix C= (i) Find the adjugate matrix of C. Sol: Adj(C) = (ii) Find C -1 . Sol: C -1 = 1 1 Adj(C) = det C 2 2 -2 -2 3 = 1 -1 -1 1.5 2 -2 -2 3 3 2 2 2(iii) Use MATLAB to find the eigenvalues and eigenvectors
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 3aAssignment: 4.17; 4.27 (a) (plus extra MATLAB part below); 4.28; 4.31. Hint for Problem 4.28 Note that you do not need to evaluate the integral since the question is about writing the characteristic function of aX + b in terms of X (). Ex
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 1 Solution: MATLAB Part2.33. Write the MATLAB code to produce a randomly generated number that is equally likely from the set {0, 1, 2, ., 9}. Sol: floor(10*rand(1)2.34. Write the MATLAB code to produce a randomly generated number that fo
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Quiz 2 SolutionProblem 1 A random variable X has PDF: (i) Find Pr(X > 1)fX (x) = e-x u(x)Sol:Pr(X > 1) =1e-x dx = -e-x | = e-1 1(ii) Find Pr(X < 3|X > 1) Sol:Pr(X < 3|X > 1) = Pr(X < 3, X > 1) = Pr(X > 1)3 -x e dx 1 e-1=e-1 - e-3 =
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 5Assignment: 7.1; 7.5; 7.11; 8.1; 8.3; 8.7; 8.9 (Note: 8.5 is changed to 8.7) Problem 7.12 In this problem, X = 5, X = 1 (unit variance)In (a) and (b), the sample mean denotes = x1 + x2 + . . . + x10 10nIn (c), the unbiased sample
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Discrete probability distributionX is called a discrete random variable ifas u runs through the set with finite or countably infinite possible values of X.ExampleThe probability of {1, 3, 5} is respectively {0.2, 0.5, 0.3}. A set not containin
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 4aAssignment: 5.15; 5.22; 5.28. Comments on Problem 5.15 To get the PDF of the conditional distributions, use fX|Y (x|y) = and fY |X (y|x) = fX,Y (x, y) fY (y) fX,Y (x, y) fX (x)where fX,Y and the two marginal PDFs fX (x), fY (y) are in F
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Homework 3 SolutionProblem 4.28 Note that you do not need to evaluate the integral since the question is about writing the characteristic function of aX + b in terms of X (). The characteristic function of aX + b: aX+b () = E[ejw(aX+b) ] = -ejw(a
Washington University in St. Louis - ESE - 520
Example 3.1: Cumulative Distribution Function (CDF)(a) Yes(b) YesExample 3.1: Cumulative Distribution Function (CDF)(a) No(b) NoCDF of a discrete RV is a step functionExample of the CDF of Bernoulli distribution1 p1 pp101PMF
Washington University in St. Louis - JTB - 1
Justin Brown CSE 543T: Algorithms for Nonlinear Optimization December 5, 2006GoalGiven two images that are related by an affine transformation, estimate how one image transforms into the other.What Is an Affine Transform?A linear transformati
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Dimensionality Reduction of Arabidopsis Microarray DataJustin Brown CSE 515A OverviewApply dimensionality reduction techniques to find underlying patterns in gene data. Based on Fundamental patterns underlying gene expression, Holter et
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VOLUNTEER APPLICATIONINSTRUCTIONSThank you for your interest in serving as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Should you become a Peace Corps Volunteer, you will be undertaking an exciting and life-changing experience. The Peace Corps needs Volunteers with
Washington University in St. Louis - JPM - 2
Juan Pablo MrquezBiotechnology and Bioengineering Center Medical College of Wisconsin 8701 Watertown Plank Rd Milwaukee, WI 53226 PO Box 26509 Phone: (456) 456-4160 Advanced Degrees Ph. D. in Mechanical Engineering, Washington University in St. Loui
Washington University in St. Louis - EAZ - 1
THE ANATOMICAL RECORD 259:248 262 (2000)Cardiac Looping in the Chick Embryo: A Morphological Review With Special Reference to Terminological and Biomechanical Aspects of the Looping Process JORG MANNER* Department of Embryology, Georg-August-Univ
Washington University in St. Louis - CS - 126
CSE 126 Introduction to Computer ProgrammingInstructor: Ezekiel Maier Email: zmaier@cse.wustl.edu Office: Jolley 526 Office Hours: MWF 10-11 AM or by appointment Lecture Time: MWF 9-10 AM Class Room: Lopata 101 Lab Hours: W 1-2:30, 2:30-4, 4-5:30 P
Washington University in St. Louis - CS - 126
Introduction to Computer ProgrammingCS 126 Lecture 5 Zeke MaierPlan for Today Questions Administrivia Lab Questions Review Methods & Instance Variables AssignmentQuestionsAdministrivia http:/students.cec.wustl.edu/~ejm3/ Lab Section C
Washington University in St. Louis - CS - 126
Introduction to Computer ProgrammingCS 126 Lecture 1 Zeke MaierPlan for Today Introduction Course Syllabus Course Calendar Questions? Programming Introduction AssignmentWho am I 2nd year PhD student Computational Genomics research Sport
Washington University in St. Louis - AMB - 6
Andrew M. BermanContact Information 728 Interdrive Avenue, Apt. 3E University City, MO 63130, USA Phone: (571) 213-2122 Email: amb1022@ese.wustl.eduResearch Interests My research interests include nonlinear control analysis, optimization, and geom
Washington University in St. Louis - JAT - 2
CS456 Group G Robot SimulatorFinal PresentationPresented byJoseph Tucek Olcan Sercinoglu Jeff EngelOverview (Joe)Design Progress NetworkCommunication Simulator CoreImplementation Progress NetworkCommunication (Demo) Object Structu
Washington University in St. Louis - BMW - 3
CS535 Final Project:ATAPI (aka IDE) Interface within an FPX ModuleNovember 28, 2001Benjamin WestComputer Communications Research Center (CCRC)Qiong ZhangMagnetic Information Sciences Center (MISC)http:/students.cec.wustl.edu/~bmw3/hwdb/cs5
Washington University in St. Louis - TEAMA - 436
Vandal 1.0CS436: Team AAmy Fan Brian Kelly Brandon Harris Christopher Baker Dave Franco Kris Georgiev Kory Postma This Week System Operations and Interfaces System Testing and Validation Current Progress Update System Operations an
Washington University in St. Louis - TEAMA - 436
Vandal 1.0CS436: Team A Amy Fan Brian Kelly Brandon Harris Christopher Baker Dave Franco Kris Georgiev Kory Postma This Week: System Architecture & System Analysis Key Design Drivers Key Decisions System Architecture (updates) UseCases
Washington University in St. Louis - TEAMA - 436
Vandal 1.0CS436: Team AAmy Fan Brian Kelly Brandon Harris Christopher Baker Dave Franco Kris Georgiev Kory Postma This Week: System Architecture & System Analysis Key Design Drivers Key Decisions Concept of Operations UseCases Scenarios
Washington University in St. Louis - AJM - 2
RubixWashUs Online Community Drew MarekThe IdeaFriendster Create a profile Linking friends togetherYOU -> JOHN -> JESSICAApply to the services students want/needProfileName Address Email School, major, year Interests books, movies, music
Washington University in St. Louis - DMW - 2
Automating the Sciatic Function Index Data Collection ProcessProgress Report Group #33 October 29, 2007 Presenter: Dave WorkingGroup Structure Dave Working Kyle Mairose Kenny Dike Mentor: Matt Wood For Use in Dr. Sakiyama-Elbert's LabOverv
Washington University in St. Louis - DMW - 2
Finding Sciatic Function Index after nerve injuryGroup #33 Final PresentationrdFinding SFI after nerve injuryGroupmembers: Kyle Mairose Dave Working Kenny DikeMentors Matt Wood Dr. Sakiyama-ElbertPresentation OverviewSFIBackground
Washington University in St. Louis - BCS - 2
An Image Guided Endoscopy ApplicationGroup 31 Mentor: Dr. Parag Parikh Group Members: Brian Stowe, Robbie Sutkay, Monica VajaniLung CancerLeading cause of death from cancer in 2003, more than breast, prostate, and colon cancers combined1
Washington University in St. Louis - BB - 7
SUMMARYGraduatingcomputersciencestudentwithoverthreesemestersofcomputerscienceresearchexperienceandstrongtechnical skillsseeksfulltimepositioninresearchornewapplicationdevelopment.Strengthsincludestrongteaching,communication, andartisticskillsaswell
Washington University in St. Louis - JAT - 2
LoneStarLanyards*1337LonePineDrive*MellowWaterTX,77477October 17, 2002 Mr. Nathan Pace, CEO Lone Star Lanyards 1337 Lone Pine Drive Mellow Water, TX 77477 Dear Mr. Pace: As you know, for the past three weeks we have been working on your request for
Washington University in St. Louis - LLM - 1
Executive Summary: Virtual Private NetworkT82-331 Lisa McCormick December 4, 2002 After firewalls, the VPN market is probably the fastest growing information security market segment. 1 Approximately 81% of U.S. companies currently have or are planni
Washington University in St. Louis - LMS - 2
Adult Stem Cells as an Alternative to Human Embryonic Stem Cells in Tissue EngineeringLaura M. Seger Washington University BME 140 Term Paper December 11, 2000iAbstract Life in the future certainly looks promising because of stem cells unspeci
Washington University in St. Louis - TMB - 1
Timothy M. Blakely 6843 Kingsbury Blvd Apt. 1W University City, MO 63130 Telephone Contact Number: (314)4408800 Email: tmb1@wustl.edu Education: Washington University in St. Louis, MO 2002 Current Currently pursuing two separate undergraduate degree
Washington University in St. Louis - CSE - 545
c Example CNF format file (larger)cp cnf 20 1616 14 13 9 19 8 7 0-2 5 -7 9 -17 03 4 -5 7 9 -8 01 2 3 04 5 6 7 -8 -9 -10 013 16 -18 020 19 18 17 16 15 04 5 6 0-9 -17 -20 -3 014 -5 -7 -8 -10 020 -10 03 -16 -19 4 3 16 02 3 4 5 0 16 -17 -2
Washington University in St. Louis - CSE - 545
c Example CNF format filecp cnf 4 31 3 0-1 3 0 2 -3
Washington University in St. Louis - DGW - 333
* Distributed Algorithms* Mutual Exclusion Problem* Dining Philosophers Problem* Generalized Dining Philosophers* Drinking Philosophers* Tutorial RequirementsGeneralized Dining Philosophers=Each node has four possible states: _
Washington University in St. Louis - AJM - 2
Random number seed initialized to 1062391632Opening run_data.About to read.Completed index 0/70Completed index 1/70Completed index 2/70Completed index 3/70Completed index 4/70Completed index 5/70Completed index 6/70Completed index 7/70Comp
Washington University in St. Louis - AJM - 2
Random number seed initialized to 1062391446Opening run_data.About to read.Completed index 0/70Completed index 1/70Completed index 2/70Completed index 3/70Completed index 4/70Completed index 5/70Completed index 6/70Completed index 7/70Comp
Washington University in St. Louis - MMH - 2
Disclaimer:The code pertaining to rubberband, box, or the SGE is from David Geary. His code was used to get the basis of the program running. The arrow part of the programming was coded by myself, using the box code as a guide.In the drawing a
Washington University in St. Louis - NDB - 2
NATHAN D. BAYLESS2315 W. Forrest Hill Ave.Peoria, IL 61604Email: nathanbayless@msn.com(309) 682-1884(314) 518-6535 (cell)SUMMARYGraduating Mechanical Engineering student with industry experience and leadership skills seeks a full-time p
Washington University in St. Louis - ECON - 413
YOUR ECONOMETRICS PAPER BASIC TIPS There are a couple of websites that you can browse to give you some ideas for topics and data. Think about what you want to do with this paper. Econometrics is a great tool to market when looking for jobs. A well-wr
Washington University in St. Louis - BIO - 5495
BIO5495 Computational Molecular Biology HW7: Seeded AlignmentAll provided code and data can be found at http:/bio5495.wustl.edu/Assignments/AlignmentAll submitted code will be tested on warlord.wustl.edu.Due: 3PM Monday, Oct. 23In this lab, you
Washington University in St. Louis - BIO - 5495
CSE 587 Lecture 3Jeremy Buhler October 24 20061Scoring SubstitutionsDon't we already know how to do this? Simple: look at a bunch of example alignments infer frequencies of substitutions from examples this is how we set the emission probs i
Washington University in St. Louis - BIO - 5495
Bio5495 11/1/07 Multiple Alignment Lecture 2Improvements to CLUSTAL W Faster More accurateAlternative scoring systems Position-specific scoring, HMMs Consistency scoring See review by Edgar and BatzoglouFaster methods MAFFT Alphabet of aa pr
Washington University in St. Louis - BIO - 5495
Bio 5495 10/30/07 Multiple Alignment Why is a multiple alignment useful? Extending optimum pair-wise alignment methods to work on multiple sequences Scoring systems, computational complexity Good heuristic methods, fast and reasonably accurate
Penn State - ASTRO - 534
The Early Asymptotic Giant Branch (E-AGB) Because of mass loss during their evolution, stars with initial mass M < 8M will end up with degenerate carbon-oxygen cores that are under the Chandrasekhar mass limit. These stars will evolve up the asympto
Penn State - ASTRO - 534
The Carbon Flash Because of the strong electrostatic repulsion of carbon and oxygen, and because of the plasma cooling processes that take place in a degenerate carbon-oxygen core, it is extremely difficult to fuse carbon. As long as the core remains
Penn State - ASTRO - 534
The Helium Flash When the temperature of a stellar core reaches T 108 K, the star ignites helium. The mass of the core at this time (at least, for stars in the mass range between 0.8 and 2.3M ) is Mc 0.476 0.221(Y 0.3) 0.009(3 + log Z) 0.023(M
Penn State - ASTRO - 485
THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 514 : 16, 1999 March 20( 1999. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.WHERE ARE THE BARYONS ? RENYUE CEN AND JEREMIAH P. OSTRIKERPrinceton University Observatory, Princeton University,