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University of Scranton - MA - 106
Quantitative Methods I MATH 106 Spring 2009 Information. Instructor: Office: Office Hours: Office Phone: Electronic Mail: Web Address: Class Meetings: Dr. S. Muir St. Thomas (STT) 160 A MTR 2:00 - 3:00 p.m., F 10:00 - 10:50 a.m. 941-6580 muellers2@scranto
University of Scranton - MA - 103
MATH 103, Supplemental Homework December 1, 2008Directions: The following problems are suggested. 1. Solve each of the following. (a) 2x2 = (b) 1 5 1 32 = 125 = e2x .Name:x+1(c) ex2 3
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341 Homework Problems April 30, 2007Name:Directions: The following problem is due on Thursday, May 3 along with the other problems from the text. Unsupported answers and/or statements may receive no credit. Use integration by parts and a proof by i
University of Scranton - MA - 103
MATH 103, Supplemental Homework September 25, 2008Name:Directions: The following problems are to be completed and can appear on a quiz. 1. Find two positive numbers whose product is a maximum and the sum of the rst and three times the second is 105. 2.
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 11 April 29, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due no later than the start of class on Wednesday, May 7. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. 1. Consider the system dx = 2x dt dy = x2 + x + y dt (a) Sh
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 10 April 17, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due no later than the start of class on Thursday, April 24. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. 1. Section 4.1, Problem 12. 2. Section 4.1, Problem 26. 3
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 9 April 9, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due no later than the start of class on Thursday, April 17. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. 1. Section 3.5, Problem 4. You can use the software to do p
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 8 April 2, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due no later than the start of class on Wednesday, April 9. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. 1. Consider the two dimensional linear system dY/dt = AY. S
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 5 March 3, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due at the start of class on Wednesday, March 5. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. Use the technique appropriate to each section. 1. Section 2.1, Problem
N. Arizona - ENG - 328
Essay 2: Synthesis Essay RubricCriteria 4 3Either intro provides insufficient context for the rest of the paper, thesis is lacking in clarity, OR conclusion fails to recast thesis effectivelyWriter:Levels of Achievement2Intro provides little context
University of Scranton - MA - 341
MATH 341, Homework 4 February 20, 2008Name:Directions: Solutions to the following are due at the start of class on Tuesday, February 26. Remember unsupported answers may receive no credit. Use the technique appropriate to each section. 1. Section 1.8, P
N. Arizona - ENG - 328
401MLA Formatting and Style GuideThis resource was written by Dave Neyhart and Erin E. Karper. Last full revision by Karl Stolley. Last edited by Dana Lynn Driscoll on October 31st 2006 at 11:09AM Summary: MLA (Modern Language Association) style is most
N. Arizona - ENG - 328
How to Write a SummaryA summary is a fairly brief restatement-IN YOUR OWN WORDS-of the contents of a passage. Report back what the other writer has said. Do not make a value judgments about the "rightness" or "wrongness" of what (s)he says. (That would b
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 7.6 (p. 421)- Transforms of Discontinuous Functions) 3. Find the Laplace transform of a b a a bb a abb where a b ab a b Ans: OE Express the function using step function
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 7.5 (p. 409)- Solving Initial Value Problems 11. Solve the DE ab ab Let In terms of ab ab ab ab ab ab aba b a b ab ab a ba b a b a b a b a b aba b ab a b 23. Note: we
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 7.3 (p. 391)- Properties of Laplace Transforms 3. To find a b note that a b a b where ab a b a b a b To find a b note that a b a b where ab a b a b a b a b a b To find
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 7.4 (p. 400)- Inverse Laplace Transform 21. Find the inverse transform of ab a ba b a ba b a ba b a b a b a b ab Therefore a abb Determine a abb if ab ab aba b ab a
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 7.2 (p. 385)- Definition of Laplace Transform 1. ab ( " ( where a b ( " 3. assuming a b ( (abab 4. (ab where ab ab ab ab ( assuming a b a b 9. a b oe
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 4.10 (p. 246)- Forced Mechanical Vibrations 3. where ab and ab a b ab ab Ans: An 8-kg mass is attached to a spring hanging from the ceiling, thereby causing the spring
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 4.9 (p. 238)- Free Mechanical Vibrations 1. ab ab a b where is quadrant containing the point ^ which is 4. Therefore ab Ans: ^ 3. There are 4 parts. Part 1= where ab
bucks.edu - MATH - 250
Fundamentals of Differential Equations by Nagle, Saff, and Snider 7th edition) Section 1.1 (p. 5)- Background 1. ODE, 2nd order, linear, is dep. var. and is indep. var.3. a b a b ODE, 1st order, non-linear, is dep. var. and is indep. var. PDE, 2nd order
National Taiwan University - M - 150
3.4 Graphing Techniques; Transformations10 8g( x) = x + 226 4 2(2, 6) (1, 3) (2, 4) (1, 1) (0, 0)2 4f ( x) = x2(0, 2)0426(2, 4) (0, 0)1 5 3 1 1(1, 1) (2, 1)3 54(1, -2) (0, -3)Vertical Shifts c>0 The graph of f(x)+c is the same as the
National Taiwan University - M - 150
4.1 Power Functions and ModelsExamples of Power Functions: The graph is symmetric with respect to the y-axis, so f is even. The domain is the set of all real numbers. The range is the set of nonnegative numbers. The graph always contains the points (-1,
Grinnell College - CS - 195
CS195, Class 12: Representing RealsTopics:* Representing values other than integers* Simple techniques for representing reals* Standard mechanisms for representing reals* Variants* Play with JavaNotes:* b2d and d2b are due today (BEFORE midnight).
University of North Dakota - SOP - 800
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESIRB-REQUIRED INVESTIGATOR ACTIONSSOP #: 801 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR EXECUTING POLICY:
University of North Dakota - SOP - 700
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESINFORMED CONSENT - ASSENTSOP #: 704 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR EXECUTING POLICY: LAST RE
University of North Dakota - SOP - 700
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESINFORMED CONSENT WAIVERSSOP #: 702 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR EXECUTING POLICY: LAST REV
University of North Dakota - SOP - 300
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW AND DISTRIBUTION OF MATERIALSSOP #: 303 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR
University of North Dakota - SOP - 400
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESSTUDY COMPLETION OR TERMINATIONSOP #: 406 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR EXECUTING POLICY: L
University of North Dakota - SOP - 100
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA - INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD - STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURESCONFLICTS OF INTERESTSOP #: 106 VERSION #: 1 EFFECTIVE DATE: 5/1/09 SUPERSEDES DOCUMENT: / /THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO: RESPONSIBILITY FOR EXECUTING POLICY: LAST REVIEW
Berkeley - BIO ENG - 290
Getting started on your projects 1. Select a protein for analysis. Well call this protein the target. This protein should ideally meet all of the following criteria (listed in order of importance): a. Biological interest. Its best if a professor at Berkel
Sanford-Brown Institute - CS - 196
DNA sequencingSanger sequencing (dideoxy/enzymatic method) cyclic sequencing, PCR steps, one primer,dideoxy nucleotides stop the new strand (terminator) fluorecent labeled primer or ddNTPs fragments separated by gel or capillary electroforesisDNA sequ
Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet - CMNS - 425
Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 16(2&3), 138147Responding To Propaganda: An Ethical EnterpriseStanley B. Cunningham1University of Windsoro By virtue of its epistemic deficits, propaganda is very much an unethical phenomenon. Coping effectively with prop
Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet - CMNS - 425
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
Operating SystemsB. Randell EditorConcurrent Control with "Readers" and "Writers"P.J. Courtois,* F. Heymans, and D.L. Parnas* MBLE Research Laboratory Brussels, BelgiumThe problem of the mutual exclusion of several independent processes from simultane
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
#define _REENTRANT#include <stdio.h>#include <thread.h>/* Function prototypes for thread routines */void *my_sub(void *);thread_t thr_a, thr_b, thr_c;mutex_t my_mutex;void main()cfw_thread_t main_thr;int flag;main_thr = thr_self();fprintf(
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
An Axiomatic Basis for Computer ProgrammingC. A. R. HOAREof axioms it is possible to deduce such simple theorems as:x=x+yXO y<r ~r +y X q = (ry) + y X (1 + q )The proof of the second of these is:The Queen's University of Belfast,* Northern IrelandA5
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
Script started on Tue Apr 09 14:22:15 2002bxb57@mozart[~/eecs338/assn6]% ./server &[KMachine 129.22.241.95 connected.Machine 129.22.241.95 connected.Machine 129.22.241.95 connected.Machine 129.22.241.95 connected.Machine 129.22.241.95 connected.^C
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
Script started on Tue Apr 09 14:22:52 2002bxb57@megadeth[~/eecs338/assn6]% ./client mozart3 + 5 = 817 * 8 = 13612 - 9 = 3136 / 3 = 4545 + 1 = 46( 17 * (3 + 5) ) / ( 12 - 9) + 1 = 46bxb57@megadeth[~/eecs338/assn6]% [Kbxb57@megadeth[~/eecs338/assn6
Case Western Reserve University - ASG - 338
Script started on Tue 15 Feb 2000 12:40:05 PM ESTwhitesnake:~/eces338/ass2a$ ass2aEvan Markensohn ( erm6 )02/15/00ECES 338 - Assignment #2aRecitation section: Monday @ 4:30Operating System: SunOS 5.7Compiler: gcc 2.8.1 - "gcc ass2a.c -o ass2a"<Pid
Case Western Reserve University - ART - 338
EECS 338 Assignment #6: Sockets Due: Thursday, April 1stSpring 2004, G. Ozsoyoglu In this assignment you will implement your very own (simplified) connection-oriented RPC server and client. The client program should take a command-line argument specifyin
Georgia Tech - CS - 3500
%!PS-Adobe-3.0 %Title: Microsoft Word - 23chapter.doc %CreationDate: 12/10/2002 12:26:36 %BoundingBox: (atend) %Pages: (atend) %Orientation: Portrait %PageOrder: Special %DocumentNeededResources: (atend) %DocumentSuppliedResources: (atend) %DocumentData:
Allan Hancock College - PAGE - 146827
A review of Australian and international quality systems and indicators of learning and teachingAugust, 2007 V 1.2An initiative of the Australian Government Department ofDenise Chalmers Carrick Institute for Learning and Teaching in Higher Education L
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
International FinanceChapter 21McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Exchange Rates: The Global Link The exchange rate is the price of one country's currency expressed in terms of another's. It is the domestic pric
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
TransferPayments: WelfareandSocialSecurityChapter 19McGrawHill/Irwin2006TheMcGrawHillCompanies,Inc.,AllRightsReserved.MajorTransferPrograms Roughly 50 cents out of every dollar is devoted to transfer payments. Transfer payments Payment to individual
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Labor UnionsChapter 16McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.The Labor Market Labor supply is the willingness and ability to work specific amounts of time at alternative wage rates in a given time period, ceteris pa
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
(De)Regulation Of BusinessChapter 12McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Antitrust vs. Regulation Under ideal conditions, the market mechanism provides optimal outcomes: All producers must be perfect competitors.
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
OligopolyChapter 10McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Market Structure Most firms possess some market power.McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Degrees of Power We class
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Competitive MarketsChapter 8McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.The Market Supply Curve The market supply curve determines the equilibrium price faced by an individual producer. Equilibrium price The price at whi
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
MonopolyChapter 9McGrawHill/Irwin2006TheMcGrawHillCompanies,Inc.,AllRightsReserved.MarketPower Market power is the ability to alter the market price of a good or service.McGrawHill/Irwin2006TheMcGrawHillCompanies,Inc.,AllRightsReserved.TheDownward
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
The Competitive FirmChapter 7McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.The Profit Motive The basic incentive for producing goods and services is the expectation of profit. Profit is the difference between total revenue
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
The Demand for GoodsChapter 5McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Determinants of Demand What leads us to buy some goods while rejecting others?McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Re
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
The Public Sector Chapter 4McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Market Failure Our goal is to produce the optimal mix of output. An optimal mix of output is the most desirable combination of output attainable with
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Supply and DemandChapter 3McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.Market Participants Millions of people participate directly or indirectly in the U.S. economy.McGrawHill/Irwin 2006 The McGrawHill Companies, Inc.,
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Ch. 15: Introduction to ManagementWorking-Capital Managements Current Assetsx cash, marketable securities, inventory,accounts receivables Long-Term Assetsx equipment, buildings, lands Which earn higher rates of return? s Which help avoid risk of i
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Ch. 4 - Evaluating a Firms Financial Performance 2 0 0 0 , Prentice Hall, Inc.We will want to answer questions about the firmss Liquidity s Efficient use of Assets s Leverage (financing) s ProfitabilityFinancial RatiosTools that help us determine the
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Agricultural, Environmental, and Development Economics 403 "PRINCIPLES OF AGRIBUSINESS FINANCE"Spring 2004Homework Assignment #3 Due Monday, April 26, 2004 Complete the following problems: o Page 216 5-2, 5-9, 5-15, 5-17, 5-21 o Page 256 6-4, 6-7, 6-8,
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
9.5 Cost of Capital Initial Investment Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 NPV Accept or RejectTodd Eades 11-10-04 AEDE 403 HMWK 4 14% Project A Project B Project C Project D Project E 26000 500,000 170,000 950000 80000 Cash Inflows 4000 100000 20000 230000 0 4000
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
5.2 Investment A B C D E Cash flow during period ($100) $15,000 $7,000 $80 $1,500 Beginning of End of period period value value $800 $1,100 $120,000 $118,000 $45,000 $48,000 $600 $500 $12,500 $12,400 Rate of return 25.00% 10.83% 22.22% -3.33% 11.20%5.9 A
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
Hw #3 Answer key5.2 Cash flow Investment during period A ($100) B $15,000 C $7,000 D $80 E $1,500 5.9 Asset F j 1 2 3 4 5 Prj 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.2 0.1 Return, kj KjxPrj 40% 0.04 10% 0.02 0% 0 -5% -0.01 -10% -0.01 0.04 (ki-kbar) (ki-kbar)2 variance Stdev 0.360
National Taiwan University - AEDE - 403
AEDE 403, Winter 2005 In-class exercise #8 Name:_ TRUE/FALSE. Write `T' if the statement is true and `F' if the statement is false. _T_ 1). The cost of capital is the rate of return a firm must earn on investments in order to leave share price unchanged _