Isotopy classification of plane seventh degree curves with the only singular point Ƶ15

Author(s):  
A. B. Korchagin
Keyword(s):  
1983 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-100
Author(s):  
Tibor Bisztriczky

The problem of describing a surface of order three can be said to originate in the mid-nineteenth century when A. Cayley discovered that a non-ruled cubic (algebraic surface of order three) may contain up to twenty-seven lines. Besides a classification of cubics, not much progress was made on the problem until A. Marchaud introduced his theory of synthetic surfaces of order three in [9]. While his theory resulted in a partial classification of a now larger class of surfaces, it was too general to permit a global description. In [1], we added a differentiability condition to Marchaud's definition. This resulted in a partial classification and description of surfaces of order three with exactly one singular point in [2]-[5]. In the present paper, we examine C-nodal surfaces and thus complete this survey.


1966 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 21-23
Author(s):  
Y. Fujita

We have investigated the spectrograms (dispersion: 8Å/mm) in the photographic infrared region fromλ7500 toλ9000 of some carbon stars obtained by the coudé spectrograph of the 74-inch reflector attached to the Okayama Astrophysical Observatory. The names of the stars investigated are listed in Table 1.


Author(s):  
Gerald Fine ◽  
Azorides R. Morales

For years the separation of carcinoma and sarcoma and the subclassification of sarcomas has been based on the appearance of the tumor cells and their microscopic growth pattern and information derived from certain histochemical and special stains. Although this method of study has produced good agreement among pathologists in the separation of carcinoma from sarcoma, it has given less uniform results in the subclassification of sarcomas. There remain examples of neoplasms of different histogenesis, the classification of which is questionable because of similar cytologic and growth patterns at the light microscopic level; i.e. amelanotic melanoma versus carcinoma and occasionally sarcoma, sarcomas with an epithelial pattern of growth simulating carcinoma, histologically similar mesenchymal tumors of different histogenesis (histiocytoma versus rhabdomyosarcoma, lytic osteogenic sarcoma versus rhabdomyosarcoma), and myxomatous mesenchymal tumors of diverse histogenesis (myxoid rhabdo and liposarcomas, cardiac myxoma, myxoid neurofibroma, etc.)


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