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Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# tmin tmax 4.83980 550.41460 [ksec];instrument XRT;exposure 105619.45;xunit kev;bintype counts0.000000 0.010000 0.000000 0.0000000.010000 0.020000 0.000000 0.0000000.020000 0.030000 0.000000 0.0000000.030000 0.040000 0.00000
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# tmin tmax 4.83561 10 [ksec];instrument XRT;exposure 413.73553;xunit kev;bintype counts0.000000 0.010000 0.000000 0.0000000.010000 0.020000 0.000000 0.0000000.020000 0.030000 0.000000 0.0000000.030000 0.040000 0.000000 0.0000
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# tmin tmax 4.83561 10 [ksec];instrument XRT;exposure 413.73553;xunit kev;bintype counts0.000000 0.010000 0.000000 0.0000000.010000 0.020000 0.000000 0.0000000.020000 0.030000 0.000000 0.0000000.030000 0.040000 0.000000 0.0000
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
Wavdetect Sources with S/N>3: # ra dec err ["] signif counts steady? -log10(Prob_steady) 0350.870016-31.5530170.24745.9263.3 1-0.6 1350.813316-31.5495370.27438.2225.7 1-0.6 2350.953412-31.5231400.36231.6172.0 0-28.7 3
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
output00157870000_999/sw00157870000xwtw2po_cl.evtoutput00157870001_999/sw00157870001xwtw2po_cl.evtoutput00157870003_999/sw00157870003xwtw2po_cl.evtoutput00157870004_999/sw00157870004xwtw2po_cl.evtoutput00157870005_999/sw00157870005xwtw2po_cl.evt
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
SIMPLE = T / file does conform to FITS standardBITPIX = 8 / number of bits per data pixelNAXIS = 0 / number of data axesEXTEND = T / FITS dataset may contain extensio
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# Ep dEp lprob lEiso dlEiso42.738 0.034 -1.64e-04 -10.923 0.10342.773 0.038 1.34e-03 -10.923 0.09742.813 0.043 2.99e-03 -10.923 0.09342.860 0.049 4.80e-03 -10.923 0.09042.913 0.057 6.74e-03 -10.923 0.08942.973 0.065 8.82e-03 -10.923 0.08843.04
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# Ep lEiso1.192 -9.9381.423 -9.9823.820 -9.8766.923 -9.9229.481 -10.01318.543 -10.27222.670 -10.19224.668 -10.11926.572 -10.30626.628 -10.30627.630 -10.10728.793 -10.40129.204 -10.65329.783 -10.76830.298 -10.73030.511 -10.70931.191 -
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# Ep dEp lprob lNiso dlNiso42.738 0.034 -1.64e-04 6.764 0.25242.773 0.038 1.27e-03 6.764 0.24942.813 0.043 2.99e-03 6.764 0.24942.860 0.049 4.80e-03 6.764 0.24942.913 0.057 6.74e-03 6.764 0.24942.973 0.065 8.82e-03 6.764 0.24943.043 0.074 1.10
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# Ep lNiso1.192 8.1731.423 8.1053.822 8.1726.937 7.9239.505 7.69418.552 7.00922.673 7.61924.669 7.68826.573 6.75826.629 6.76627.631 6.99728.793 6.85629.205 7.29429.783 7.09430.298 7.32030.511 7.45031.192 7.04131.284 7.31431.506 7.4
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
Spectra Extracted from tstart=-27.175 tstop=255.575(Trigger Time, GPS=812200309.000000, Redshift, z=0.0)Power-Law Model FitNorm@15keV 8.4662e-03 (7.1721e-03 9.8873e-03)alpha -2.0820 (-2.2560 -1.9161)Energy Fluence (15-350 keV) 2.3957e-06 (2.20
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# S/N T1 T2 T90 T50# Estimated T100 Interval: -27.175 255.575 T90= 231.400 27.5 107.375 172.375 54.600 26.000 9.6 -25.875 53.425 71.500 33.150 5.5 173.025 202.275
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
;instrument XRT;exposure 104273.80;xunit kev;bintype counts 0.0000000 0.0049999999 13.975399 1.00000 0.0049999999 0.0099999998 14.025261 1.00000 0.0099999998 0.015000000 14.075123 1.0
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# tmin tmax 10.0000 550.41460 [ksec];instrument XRT;exposure 103866.53;xunit kev;bintype counts0.000000 0.010000 0.000000 0.0000000.010000 0.020000 0.000000 0.0000000.020000 0.030000 0.000000 0.0000000.030000 0.040000 0.00000
Berkeley - ASTRO - 00157870
# tmin tmax 10.0000 550.41460 [ksec];instrument XRT;exposure 103866.53;xunit kev;bintype counts0.000000 0.010000 0.000000 0.0000000.010000 0.020000 0.000000 0.0000000.020000 0.030000 0.000000 0.0000000.030000 0.040000 0.00000
Delaware - PROJECT - 103
<html><head><title>Creating Paragraphs.</title></head><body>White space is an important element of design, and one that we often take for granted when working with word-processing or page-layout programs. With those types of programs, if we w
Delaware - CIS - 103
09.15.txt Notes for 09/15/05, CISC103NOTE TO SELF: link to http:/www.ecl.udel.edu/~acm from Conrad's web site.Association for Computing Machinery,Student Chapter gen. interest meeting:7:30PM next wed Gore 104(1) Review of "Scripts"We saw
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-5 Congestion Management and Router QueuesFair Queuing? Fair Queuing ? Core-stateless Fair queuing ? Assigned reading? CDKS90H Analysis and Simulation of a Fair Queueing Algorithm, Internetworking: Research and Exper
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-9 WirelessWireless Intro TCP on wireless links Wireless MAC Assigned reading [BPSK97] A Comparison of Mechanism for Improving TCP Performance over Wireless Links [BDS+94] MACAW: A Media Access Protocol for Wirele
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-11 Ad Hoc NetworksMobile Routing Mobile IP Ad-hoc network routing Assigned reading Performance Comparison of Multi-Hop Wireless Ad Hoc Routing Protocols A High Throughput Path Metric for MultiHop Wireless Routing
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-14 Network TopologySensor Networks Structural generators Power laws HOT graphs Graph generators Assigned reading On Power-Law Relationships of the Internet Topology A First Principles Approach to Understanding
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-16 P2POverview P2P Lookup Overview Centralized/Flooded Lookups Routed Lookups Chord Comparison of DHTs2Peer-to-Peer Networks Typically each member stores/provides access to content Has quickly grown in popu
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-17 DNS and the WebDNS and the Web DNS CDNs Readings DNS Performance and the Effectiveness of Caching Development of the Domain Name System2Naming How do we efficiently locate resources? DNS: name IP addres
Berkeley - CS - 268
CS 268: Computer NetworkingL-17 DNS and the WebDNS and the Web DNS CDNs Readings DNS Performance and the Effectiveness of Caching Development of the Domain Name System2Naming How do we efficiently locate resources? DNS: name IP addres
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
CS 3724: Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction!Professor John M. Carroll- 636 McBryde, x8453, carroll@cs.vt.edu - office hours Tues/Thurs 9:30-10:30 and 12:30-1:30!GTA is Beth Yost, beyost@vt.edu- office hours TBA!Web: http:/courses
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
HCI and Usability: History and Concepts!What is human-computer interaction (HCI)?- Where did it come from? How has it developed?!What is usability?- Origins and development!Usability engineering- Scenario-based usability engineering1
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
From Requirements to DesignGoal: work from problems and opportunities of problem domain to envision new activities!requirements analysis describes what people do- including prerequisites, needs, problems, opportunities, and possibilities!des
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
Interaction Design!Specifying the action sequences for planning and achieving one or more task goalsconveying what system goals are possible, plans for accomplishing them, physical actions to execute!Usability engineering of an interaction de
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
ANALYZEanalysis of stakeholders, field studiesProblem scenariosclaims about current practiceDESIGNmetaphors, information technology, HCI theory, guidelinesActivity scenarios Information scenarios Interaction scenariositerative analysis of
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
Goals of Usability EvaluationFormative Evaluation:What and how to re-design?DesignConstructionSummative Evaluation:How well did we do?1Formative and Summative GoalsFormative: during development, guides process Summative: after developmen
Virginia Tech - CS - 3724
Usability Specifications!Quality objectives for final system usability- like any specification, must be precise - managed in parallel with other design specifications!In SBD, these come from scenarios & claims- - - - scenarios are analyzed a
Berkeley - NEEI - 6341
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA College of Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Lab #1: Schematic Entry and Simulation Walden NEEI 63411CAD Tool InstallationThis lab assumes use of the Electric CAD system (v8.02), whi
Berkeley - NEEI - 6341
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA College of Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Lab #2: Layout and Simulation Walden NEEI 63411Assumed KnowledgeThis lab assumes use of the Electric CAD system (v8.02), which is a free
Idaho - CORE - 171
Indian Aesthetics: Art and Expressive Culture (Chapter Seven, Kidwell, Velie)"There is no word for art in our language" What does this mean? Beyond the familiar phrase? The intent is to deny that anything is done simply to be beautiful. The truth
Idaho - CORE - 171
1 Jeanette Weaskus Never Dirty, Mostly CleanI got the job my junior year in 1987 to earn free lunch. And what I would hand out the window would bring a treasure into the farthest reaches of my memory. It was a friendship uncomplicated by the adult
Idaho - CORE - 171
Louise Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Chippewa) DEAR JOHN WAYNE August and the drive-in picture is packed. We lounge on the hood of the Pontiac surrounded by the slow-burning spirals they sell at the window, to vanquish the hordes of mosquitoes. Nothing wo
Purdue - AGEC - 424
AGEC $424$ EXAM 2 (122 points) October 30/31, 2008Name_ Show your work for all questions. Logically correct work, including calculator inputs and outputs when appropriate, must be shown to receive credit for your answers. I did not write "show your
Purdue - AGEC - 424
AGEC $424$ EXAM 1 (146 points) September 25/26, 2008 Name_KEY_ Show your work for all questions (even if I forgot to put a reminder on the question). Logically correct work must be shown to receive credit for your answers. I. Computron Industries: Ba
UC Riverside - CS - 179
Project proposal guidelinesProject proposal consists of the two parts: a written proposal and a Microsoft PowerPoint or OpenOffice Impress presentation. Initial project proposals are due on Wednesday, October 20, 2004, in class.Written proposal:
UC Riverside - CS - 179
# # $! !" "%& ' $ & ( !! "!" ) *%""'+#" " ) .!", " "#/ 0 0$1 & " & " / 2 0 2 " " , ! 0
East Los Angeles College - CIVE - 2599
Lecture programme Engineering Maths 1.21 Contents of lectures1. General introductions. Scalars and vectors. Cartesian components. Direction cosines. Geometric representation. Modulus of a vector. Unit vectors. Parallel vectors. 2. Addition of vect
East Los Angeles College - CIVE - 2599
CIVE2599: Engineering Mathematics 2.2 Example Sheet 1 Solutions Dr P.A Sleigh Email: P.A.Sleigh@leeds.ac.uk(1) (i) (ii) Moduli = 74 , 3 10 , 2 46 Direction cosines 3 7 l= m= n= 74 74 1 -5 l= m= n= 3 10 3 10 -1 3 l= m= n= 46 46 Sum = (10,0,0), Modul
East Los Angeles College - CIVE - 2599
CIVE2599: Engineering Mathematics 2.2 Example Sheet 2 Solutions Dr P.A Sleigh Email: P.A.Sleigh@leeds.ac.uk 1) (i)(a b ) = ab cos (a b )2 = a 2 b 2 cos 2 (a b ) = ab sin (a b )2 = a 2 b 2 cos 2 (a b )2 = a 2 b 2 sin 2 (a b )2 + a b 2 = a
East Los Angeles College - CIVE - 2400
Sheet1 Integration of the backwater function Wetted Mean Depth Mean Area Perimeter Depth (y) (ym) A(ym) (Pm) 1.1 1.17 1.25 1.32 1.4 1.47 1.55 1.62 1.7 1.77 1.85 Flow Bottom Width Side Slope 1 in Bed slope Manning's n 1 in 1.13 1.21 1.28 1.36 1.43 1.5
East Los Angeles College - CIVE - 2400
This is an example of using the standard step method to do a backwater calculation for a rectangular channel Standard step method Backwater integrationValues in yellow boxes are required for each different problem Enter the values and press the but
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
1A guide to punctuation in academic writingWhy this guide to punctuation? The aim of this guide is to explain the aspects of punctuation that seem to cause most difficulties to students in their written academic work. Punctuation is used to organi
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
1Footnotes, endnotes and Harvard citations(Extract from Essay Writing for Students, Brigid Ballard, Longman, South Melbourne, Appendix 14)References Footnotes and endnotes Included references (Harvard, In-text, Author:Date) Comparison of referen
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Sample references listNote: some variations in formatting and punctuation may be appropriate, depending on your Department/Faculty. Always check with course guides or other relevant handouts.References Barthel, A. (1993) Academic literacy: issues,
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
1Using Harvard: basic principlesIn your essays, reports and other assignments, you will need to acknowledge that ideas and information in your work are taken from other sources i.e. the books, journal articles and other materials that you have con
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Writing your thesisBefore you startMake a timeline for the period you have allocated to writing Be realistic in your assessment of the time you will need Think carefully BEFORE you begin to write Assume that you will need sufficient time for two dr
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & Techniques ENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgResearch papers: their structure and intentionsA research paper is intended toReport the findings of an individual or members of a group to the wider scientific world Identify you as t
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & TechniquesENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgDivision of your research project into its partsYour project has a beginning a middle and an end The beginning is when you decide the project's title The end is when it is written and s
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & Techniques ENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgThe Literature Review (i)How to approach this document and what it should include: All investigations require evidence of reading and understanding A Review should include ONLY evidence
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & TechniquesENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgTony Flynn Dept. of Engineering Room E210, Building 32 Phone: 61258536 Email: tony.flynn@anu.edu.au Internal phone 58536Who am I?I am particularly interested in the education of stude
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & Techniques ENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgDeveloping a framework for a Literature Review paperThe shape and order of a research paper Title List of authors Abstract Introduction Experimental details Experimental results
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & TechniquesENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgWhat is a Gantt chart? Why use it? Who was Richard Gantt? Lived in USA, 1861-1919 Chart described first in "Work, Wages and Profit" H L Gantt, The Engineering Magazine, NY, 1910 Show
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Wednesday 21st FebruaryWhat is research? Why write it up? Why write a formal report? ConclusionWhat is research?Research reported by others is the basis of everything we know Research is collected and stored in public and private libraries It is
Allan Hancock College - ENGN - 8103
Research Methods & Techniques ENGN8103 Room 221, Ian Ross BldgDevising and presenting a seminarThe time allocated for your seminar is 20 minutes. 15 minutes for your delivery, 5 minutes for questions at the end. Assume that you will take 1-2 minut
Iowa State - MAT - 265
Math 265-B2 Solutions to Homework #1: Sec. 13.1 #9: a.)b.) Not simple; not closed. x t3 4t x x2 c.) Notice that = 2 = t. Plug t = into y = t2 4 and get y = 2 4. y t 4 y y So the equation of the curve in Cartesian coordinates is y 3 = x2 4y 2 .
Iowa State - MAT - 265
Math 265-B2 Solutions to Homework #2: Sec. 13.3 #4: a.) a b = 12(-5) + 0(0) = -60. a = 12, b = 5. Using the formula a b = a b cos , we get -60 = 60 cos -1 = cos = 180 . b.) a b = 4(-8) + 3(-6) = -50. a = 42 + 32 = 25 = 5, b = (-8)2 + (-6)2
Iowa State - MAT - 265
Math 265-B2 Solutions to Homework #3: 1 Sec. 13.5 #2: s(t) = (3t2 )i + (3t)j, t1 = . Then v(t) = (6t)i + 3j, and 3 v(t) = (6t)2 + 32 = 36t2 + 9 = 3 4t2 + 1. Therefore, 6t)i + 3j 2t 1 T (t) = = i+ j. Then 2+1 2+1 3 4t 4t 4t2 + 1 1 1 2 3 2 3 2/3 T