German scientist gains freedom with help from US colleagues

1985 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Bales
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
A. V Cherepkov ◽  
I. V. Konoshin

Grain before feeding to animals exposed to grinding with the purpose of increasing its digestibility. As a result of this increases the area of interaction of the feed with the gastric juice and decreases the conversion coefficient. Surface theory formulated by German scientist Rittinger, suggests that the work of AR required for the grinding process is directly proportional to newly formed surface. The purpose of this paper is a theoretical evaluation of the intensity of grinding with the use of sieves with rectangular and circular shape holes. When getting groats with the same grinding module by the use of sieves with holes of rectangular shape, one should expect the decrease of specific energy intensity. By reducing the content of dust-like fractions and reduce the total surface feed should be expected to reduce the energy intensity of pneumo transportation.


Author(s):  
Bagomed Gadaevich ALIEV

The article is devoted to the historiographical analysis of the information about Tabasaran of the German scientist - doctor of medicine Jacob Reineggs, who published in 1796 a work devoted to the historical and topographic description of the Caucasus, having the material collected by him in Daghestan, which he visited twice.


Author(s):  
Mahmudov Yusup G’anievich ◽  
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History of great discoveries in physics french scientist AA Beckerel, german physicist VK Rentgen, english physicist, founder of nuclear physics, polish scientists E. Rutherford, french physicists Maria and Pierre Curie, german scientist G. Schmut, Russian chemist D.I. Mendeleev, english physicist and chemist F. Simple, romanian chemist and physicist G.Heveshi, austrian radiochemist and chemist F.Panet, english physicist J.D.Cockroft, Irish physicist E.T.S. Walton, the english physicist-experimenter J. Chedwick, is directly and indirectly associated with the names of the italian scientist E. Fermi.


Author(s):  
Jerrold Winter

Albert Schweitzer called pain “a more terrible lord of mankind than even death.” Thus, it is not surprising that humans have from the earliest times attempted to identify plants which might provide pain relief. The Odyssey by Homer provides a mythic account of the use of one such agent. . . . Then Helen, daughter of Zeus, took other counsel. Straightaway she cast into the wine of which they were drinking a drug to quit all pain and strife, and bring forgetfulness of every ill. Whoso should drink this down, when it is mingled in the bowl, would not in the course of that day let a tear fall down over his cheeks, no, not though his mother and father should lie there dead . . . Such cunning drugs had the daughter of Zeus, drugs of healing, which Polydamna, the wife of Thor, had given her, a woman of Egypt, for there the earth, the giver of grain, bears the greatest store of drugs . . . . . . More than a century ago, it was suggested by Oswald Schmiedeberg, a German scientist regarded by many as the father of modern pharmacology, that the drug to which Homer refers is opium for “no other natural product on the whole earth calls forth in man such a psychical blunting as the one described.” When today, in the fields of Afghanistan or Turkey or India, the seed capsule of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, is pierced, a milky fluid oozes from it which, when dried, is opium. Virginia Berridge, in her elegant history of opium in England, tells us that the effects of opium on the human mind have probably been known for about 6,000 years and that opium had an honored place in Greek, Roman, and Arabic medicine. I will not dwell on that ancient history but will instead jump ahead to the 17th century by which time opium had gained wide use in European medicine.


Menotyra ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalia Vasiliūnienė

The newly identified goldsmiths’ works of East Prussia are presented in the article: a chalice from Kaunas St. Cross Church forged by Otto Schwerdfeger, a master in Königsberg, in 1704 (?), a ciborium from Vilnius St. Apostles Peter and Paul Church made by goldsmith Johann Kownatzky in Tilsit in the 1760–80s, and a monstrance from Valakbūdis Church made by Michael Greiffenhagen II, a master from Tilsit, in 1795 (?). After the World War II, East Prussia was annexed by the Soviet Union. Destruction of the region and its historical memory and enormous losses of the cultural heritage partly resulted in knowledge gaps in Lithuania about the goldsmithing in this region. For the knowledge of goldsmith history in East Prussia, works by Eugen von Czihak, a German scientist, based on the information collected before the First and Second World Wars are very important. The goldsmithing of Eastern Prussia is pretty seldom mentioned in the Lithuanian historiography. Only sparsely survived works by Königsberg, Tilsit and Klaipėda (Memel) masters from the 17th – 19th century have been published. On the contrary, the context of Lithuanian goldsmith history is described based on data provided by the German writings. According to our knowledge, the goldsmith heritage from Königsberg predominates in Lithuania. Not a few goldsmith works from Tilsit were also identified in Lithuania. The works of Eastern Prussian goldsmiths are of particular value. Because of the dramatic fate of Königsberg region, the survived number of goldsmith works throughout Europe is relatively low.


This paper convenes checking patient's prosperity and giving a liberal disapproving of system using quick data trade advancement which is Li-Fi development. Light Fidelity as in the explained structure for Li-Fi was introduced and proposed by German scientist and physicist Harold Hass amied the Ted Global Talks, Edinburgh, Scotland. Li-Fi tackles the standard of clear light correspondence where LED is the wellspring of lighting up for trading the data. Li-Fi goes about as bidirectional, versatile, genuine and a complete organized remote advancement. The proposed model is used to develop a therapeutic administrations watching structure reliant on the thoughts of Li-Fi advancement, which can be an exceedingly convincing variable in crisis facilities and focuses. Li-Fi development is set to endure and override its past advancement which is Wireless Fidelity. Wi-Fi development is certain to have constrainments which are repeat impedances, multipath inciting, etc., which can cause defenselessness in the course of the last results (data)


2002 ◽  
Vol 01 (02) ◽  
pp. A02
Author(s):  
Ivan Pupolizio

According to Einstein's renowned declaration, for those who believe in physics ­ or, more precisely, in its capability to offer a "scientific" representation of the world ­ the distinction between present, past and future is just "an illusion, though obstinate". If we consider an effective analogy by Mauro Dorato, we can state that those who agree with the famous German scientist will recognize in the present, past and future a relationship very similar to that between "here" and "somewhere else" ­ in other words, the present is just a located moment and has no privileged status.


Author(s):  
Eduard Sukiasyan

The work by Ingetraut Dahlberg, PhD, an outstanding German scientist, founder of the International Society for Knowledge Organization (ISKO) is discussed. The content of her new book and other publications is reviewed. Dahlberg’s contribution to international cooperation in library and information studies is emphasized.


2019 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 352-373
Author(s):  
Roman V. Zaitsev

The article studies two years of the life of the famous German scientist, geographer and the so-called “father of geopolitics” Karl Haushofer (1869-1946). The article is concerned with his business trip to Japan in 1909–1910 as a representative of the Bavarian General Staff. It was this official trip that to a large extent laid the foundations for his further scientific activity and shaped his geopolitical ideas. In this sense, we are interested in tracing his activities, trips, formal and informal meetings with representatives of the Japanese civilian and military elites. Of particular note are the diary and letters of his wife Martha (1877–1946), that not only reveal unknown facts about the life of Haushofer, but also recount the details of the meetings with famous Japanese statesmen, the daily lives of the military and the impressions of the Haushofers about their trips to East Asia. The majority of these documents is published for the first time in Russian and will undoubtedly contribute to the deeper understanding and study of the contacts between the West and the East.


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