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George Mason - M - 322
Homework # 2Hand-in (Due Monday, Feb. 16 at 3pm): Sec. 1.6 - 15, 34a Sec. 2.1 - 14a, 15 Additional Problems: Sec. 1.6 - 1, 2,3,5, 6, 10a, 11, 12, 13,14,17 Sec. 2.1 - 1,2,3,5,9,10,16,17,18
George Mason - M - 322
Homework # 1Hand-in (Due Monday, Feb. 2 at 3pm): Sec. 1.2 - 18 Sec. 1.3 - 12 Sec. 1.4 - 10 Sec. 1.5 - 14Additional Problems: Sec. 1.2 - 1, 11, 12, 13,14,17, 21 Sec. 1.3 - 1, 2, 5, 8, 9,19, 20 Sec. 1.4 - 1,2,7,8 Sec. 1.5 - 1, 2,4,6,8, 11,
Bellarmine - CS - 699810
Venti: a new approach to archival storageSean Quinlan and Sean Dorward Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies AbstractThis paper describes a network storage system, called Venti, intended for archival data. In this system, a unique hash of a blocks contents act
Grinnell College - CS - 151
Today in 151: Symbols and ListsOverview:* What is a symbol?* What is a list?* Lab* ReflectionAdministrivia:* Eschew obfuscation* Any thoughts on the Eboards?* Do you mind visitors from other classes? (Other 151, 153, 195)* Homework 1 due + Th
Langston - CS - 699810
NFS Version 3 Design and ImplementationBrian Pawlowski Chet Juszczak Peter Staubach Carl Smith Diane Lebel David Hitz AbstractThis paper describes a new version of the Network File System (NFS) that supports access to files larger than 4GB and increases
UNL - PSYCH - 941
Power, Effect Size & Sample Size* r? ? power .20 .30 .40 .50 .60 .70 .80 .90 .10 124 208 .15 32 93 .20 21 53 74 95 143 167 191 255 .25 15 34 47 60 90 105 120 160 .30 14 24 33 42 62 72 82 109 .35 13 18 24 30 45 52 59 78 .40 11 14 19 23 34 39 44 58 .45 9 11
CSB-SJU - BIOL - 106
Grading Rubric for Class Leadername_ date _General _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Arrives five minutes before class (1 pt) Music selected & started (1 pt) Greeting of the day selected on overhead (1 pt) Ready as time-keeper; i.e., has gong (1 pt) Checks that the atten
CSB-SJU - BIOL - 106
Plants and Human Affairs Biology 106name _Plant Portrait1. Scientific Name: _ 2. Common Name: _ 3. Family name (technical):_ 4. Family Name (common): _ 5. Growth habit: tree 6. Part(s) of plant used: 7. Description of economic uses: shrub herb vine8.
Syracuse - CSE - 681
Architecture of the Ultimate Extensible Distributed SystemJim Fawcett CSE681 Software Modeling and Analysis Fall 2006Your Assignment Your supervisor just handed you a spec forimplementation of: Distributed system with universal connectability using
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Stellar DeathLecture ElevenFate of StarsSalisbury UniversityThe Fate of StarsIf you recall from our discussion about the birth of modern astronomy, Tycho observed a bright new star in the heavens that lasted for Luminosity a few weeks in 1572 A.D. th
Harvey Mudd College - PHYSICS - 516
Genetic Algorithms and the Traveling Salesman ProblembyKylie Bryant Arthur Benjamin, AdvisorAdvisor:Second Reader: (Lisette de Pillis)December 2000 Department of MathematicsAbstractGenetic Algorithms and the Traveling Salesman Problem by Kylie Brya
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Stellar FormationThe Fate of the SunThe Main SequenceAt the core, main-sequence stars are all very much alike. All main-sequence stars convert hydrogen into helium by the nuclear fusion processes of PP Chain (lower mass stars) or the CNO Cycle. This is
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Stellar FormationLecture NineThe Stellar BirthSalisbury UniversityThe Formation of StarsStars are born in regions of high-density interstellar clouds. (I.S.M.)I.S.M. (Inter-Stellar Medium)Two phases: Gaseous 99% of ISM 1. Largely Hydrogen (~73%) 2.
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
The StarsLecture EightThe Heavenly StarsSalisbury UniversityThe Properties of StarsEven with the naked-eye, the night sky is strung with bright pinpoints of light we call "stars." Along with a dark night sky the unaided eye can easily pick out a few
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
The SunLecture SevenThe SunSalisbury UniversityThe SunThe PhotosphereThe visible surface of the sun. Thin layer of gas (less than 500km deep) from which we receive the majority of the Suns light. Average surface temperature ~ 6000K The photosphere i
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Atoms & StarlightLecture SixAtoms & StarlightSalisbury UniversityAtoms and StarlightWe have already concluded that stars are very much distant objects. The great gulf of distance between the stars and our own solar system makes the study of stars, th
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Light & TelescopesLecture FiveLight & TelescopesSalisbury UniversityThe most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the most discoveries, is not "Eureka!," but "That's funny." - Isaac AsimovThe Electromagnetic SpectrumIn the 1860s,
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Ancient AstronomyLecture FourAncient AstronomySalisbury University"Eppur Si Muove" -"(And, yet it moves!")Some Early Cosmologies: "Models of the Universe" - A History BriefPlato & Aristotle: (around 350 B.C.)Plato remains the best known of all the
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Patterns in the SkyLecture TwoPatterns in the SkySalisbury UniversityThe Sky: .Naked Eye Stars: "naked eye" = without a telescope ~ 6000 stars ~ 88 Constellations: - mesopotamia >1 1 - latin & modern < 2 2In the past these were taken very seriously
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
Tides & EclipsesLecture ThreeTides & EclipsesSalisbury UniversityTides & EclipsesTIDES: Stated simply, tides are the vertical movement of water, specifically the alternate rise (flood) and fall (ebb) of water in the ocean. The word tide derives from
Salisbury - ASTRO - 108
IntroductionLecture OneThe Beckoning SkySalisbury UniversityIntroductionFirst Quiz: Are there more stars in the visible universe than grains of sand on all the beaches of Earth? Heavy elements in your body formed long ago deep inside stars? Is the u
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville - ECE - 482
FINALCOML: H-5/7/10/15/25, Q-10/15/25 IND: H-10/15/25, Q-20/25PALCE16V8 FamilyEE CMOS 20-Pin Universal Programmable Array LogicDISTINCTIVE CHARACTERISTICSs Pin and function compatible with all 20-pin GAL devices s Electrically erasable CMOS technolog
USC - A - 100
ASTRONOMY 100 Dr. Werner Dppen 2 pm, 12 December 1997 FINAL EXAM _ Exam Number Name (Please Print)1.One of the principal lessons of this course has been that _ . a) b) c) d) e) we are at the center of the Universe our Sun is a very special star the plan
East Los Angeles College - COURSE - 200
Unsupervised LearningZoubin GhahramaniGatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit University College London, UK zoubin@gatsby.ucl.ac.uk http:/www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~zoubinSeptember 16, 2004Abstract We give a tutorial and overview of the eld of unsupervised
University of Florida - STAT - 6127
Multivariate Relationships Goal: Show a causal relationship between two variables (X Y) Elements of a cause-and-effect relationship: Association between variables (based on methods weve covered this semester) Correct time order (X occurs before Y) Elimi
University of Toronto - CS - 236
%!PS-Adobe-2.0 %Creator: dvipsk 5.58f Copyright 1986, 1994 Radical Eye Software %Title: midterm-98.dvi %Pages: 9 %PageOrder: Ascend %BoundingBox: 0 0 612 792 %EndComments %DVIPSCommandLine: dvips midterm-98 %DVIPSParameters: dpi=300, comments removed %DVI
University of Toronto - CS - 236
%!PS-Adobe-2.0 %Creator: dvipsk 5.58f Copyright 1986, 1994 Radical Eye Software %Title: midterm.dvi %Pages: 7 %PageOrder: Ascend %BoundingBox: 0 0 612 792 %EndComments %DVIPSCommandLine: dvips midterm %DVIPSParameters: dpi=300, comments removed %DVIPSSour
University of Toronto - CS - 236
%!PS-Adobe-2.0 %Creator: dvipsk 5.58f Copyright 1986, 1994 Radical Eye Software %Title: midterm.dvi %Pages: 9 %PageOrder: Ascend %BoundingBox: 0 0 612 792 %EndComments %DVIPSCommandLine: dvips midterm -o %DVIPSParameters: dpi=300, comments removed %DVIPSS
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
SyllabusThe course will consist of lectures and hands-on computational labs. There will be one midterm (worth 21%), 5 on-line quizzes (15%), 5 computational assignments (30%), 3 reviews of papers from the scientific literature (9%) and a major computatio
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Newton-Raphson minimization stepTaylor expansion of a 1 dimensional energy surface: dE 1 d 2E ( x - x0 ) + ( x - x0 ) 2 = E0 + g 0 x + 1/ 2 H 0 x 2 E ( x) = E ( x0 ) + 2 2 dx 0 dx 0 displacement x = ( x - x0 ) gradient Hessian g ( x) = g ( x) = H ( x) =
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Chemistry 6440 / 7440One Electron PropertiesMolecular Orbital Plots i (r ) = ci (r ) plot a surface where | i(r)|2 = c i(r) can have positive and negative values shade in different colors only the change in sign matters, not the absolute signPopulati
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Chemistry 6440 / 7440Computational Chemistry and Molecular ModelingCourse Goals To provide an introduction to some current methods in molecular modeling To provide hands-on experience with various molecular modeling software packages To provide some ba
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
Analysis of 2 vs. 5 Bonding of the Pentazolato Ligand to ManganeseMonika Wiedmann April 25, 2005 IntroductionExperimentally, the pentazolate anion is unknown. Pentazolate vs. Cyclopentadienyl Ion The Pentazolato Ligand on MnIs it 5?Or is i
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
A look at the dissociation pathways of Acetone and Trifluoro AcetoneBy Smriti Anand and Muhannad Zamari OutlineIntroduction Systems Studied Calculations Results and Discussions Future Work Acknowledgements IntroductionPrevious WorkDissociation of
Wayne State University - CHM - 6440
CHM 7440COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY PROJECTA Look at the Dissociation Pathways of Acetone and Tri-fluoroacetoneBy Smriti Anand & Muhannad Zamari April 26th/ 2001.Introduction:One of the papers that was recently submitted by Dr.Leviss group1 discussed th
Caltech - GE - 214
Ammonia with non-Cartesian basis vectorsH3 N H2 H11 0 0 E = 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 C32 = 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 v = 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 v = 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 v = 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 C3 2 = 0 0 1 2 = 3 3 1 0 0 3 1 Note that these matrices are not block-diag
Oregon State University - ENGR - 534
Sequential Supervised LearningMany Application Problems Require Sequential LearningPart-of-speech Tagging Information Extraction from the Web Text-to-Speech MappingPart-of-Speech TaggingGiven an English sentence, can we assign a part of speech to each
BU - SAK - 0232
COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2005 LINEAR ALGEBRA: CAS MA242, Section A1 Lecture: MWF 1-2pm in MCS 148 Discussion: W 3-4pm in PSY B37 Instructor: Steve KunecMCS 239 111 Cummington Street Phone: (617)353-1493 Email: kunec@bu.edu Webpage: http:/math.bu.edu/people
National Radio Astronomy Observatory - N - 4038
The Antennae Galaxies: Archetype for Colliding GalaxiesJohn E. Hibbard National Radio Astronomy ObservatoryTalk Outline: Historical Background The Antennae as merger archetype Previous modeling efforts New dynamical model Constructed with Josh Barnes,
Georgia Tech - CS - 8803
Appears in the Proceedings of the Third Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation, New Orleans, USA, February 1999Practical Byzantine Fault ToleranceMiguel Castro and Barbara Liskov Laboratory for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute
Drew - ECON - 118
ECON 118 INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION AND PUBLIC POLICY TOWARD BUSINESS Prof: Jennifer Olmsted Office: Lewis 201 Web page: http:/www.users.drew.edu/jolmsted/ Office Hours: M 1:15 pm - 2:15 pm Tu 4:30 pm - 6: 30 pm W 12:15 1:15 pm or by appointment Drew Univers
Drew - ECON - 118
Homework 1 Economics 118 Industrial Organization Due Feb. 14, 2005 Note: All homeworks are due at the beginning of class. Homework instructions: SHOW YOUR WORK. Indicate which formulas you are using and do not simply report single numbers. Where relevant,
UPenn - EC - 71402
V20429 'HEAD 91 WAGES ' TLOC= 262- 267 1992 Head's Income from Wages and Salaries in 1991 (Questions G13 and G24) % nonzero = 68.3 mean nonzero = 28,746.5 The values for this variable in the range 000001-999998 represent the wage income in whole
pix - CS - 519
The RenderMan InterfaceVersion 3.2.1 November, 2005Copyright c 2005 Pixar. All rights reserved.No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopyin
Columbia - MW - 2230
Aggregate Fluctuations from Independent Sectoral Shocks: Self-Organized Criticality in a Model of Production and Inventory DynamicsPer Bak, Kan Chen Brookhaven National Laboratory Jos Scheinkman and Michael Woodford e Department of Economics, University
Columbia - MW - 2230
Optimal Monetary and Fiscal Policy: A Linear-Quadratic ApproachPierpaolo Benigno New York University Michael Woodford Princeton UniversityJuly 18, 2003Abstract We propose an integrated treatment of the problems of optimal monetary and fiscal policy, fo
Columbia - MW - 2230
n e w s l e t t e r newsletterINTERWIEW WITH MICHAEL WOODFORDTHE THEORY OF MONETARY POLICY Referring to growth theory, Robert Lucas wrote that, once one has started thinking about it, it is hard to think about anything else. Does the same apply to the t