Chapter V

Sybil ◽  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Disraeli
Keyword(s):  

The beam of the declining sun, softened by the stained panes of a small gothic window, suffused the chamber of the Lady Superior of the convent of Mowbray. The vaulted room, of very moderate dimensions, was furnished with great simplicity and opened into a...

Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 2168
Author(s):  
Samir M. Ahmad ◽  
Oriana C. Gonçalves ◽  
Mariana N. Oliveira ◽  
Nuno R. Neng ◽  
José M. F. Nogueira

The analysis of controlled drugs in forensic matrices, i.e., urine, blood, plasma, saliva, and hair, is one of the current hot topics in the clinical and toxicological context. The use of microextraction-based approaches has gained considerable notoriety, mainly due to the great simplicity, cost-benefit, and environmental sustainability. For this reason, the application of these innovative techniques has become more relevant than ever in programs for monitoring priority substances such as the main illicit drugs, e.g., opioids, stimulants, cannabinoids, hallucinogens, dissociative drugs, and related compounds. The present contribution aims to make a comprehensive review on the state-of-the art advantages and future trends on the application of microextraction-based techniques for screening-controlled drugs in the forensic context.


Author(s):  
J. N. Carruthers

In July–August of three different years common surface-floating bottles were set adrift at International Station E2 (49° 27' N.—4° 42' W.). With them, various types of drag-fitted bottles were also put out. The journeys accomplished are discussed, and the striking differences as between year and year in the case of the common surface floaters, and as between the different types in the same year, are commented upon in the light of the prevailing winds. An inter-relationship of great simplicity is deduced between wind speed and the rate of travel of simple surface floating bottles up-Channel and across the North Sea from the results of experiments carried out in four different summers.


During the last few years of his life Prof. Simon Newcomb was keenly interested in the problem of periodicities, and devised a new method for their investigation. This method is explained, and to some extent applied, in a paper entitled "A Search for Fluctuations in the Sun's Thermal Radiation through their Influence on Terrestrial Temperature." The importance of the question justifies a critical examination of the relationship of the older methods to that of Newcomb, and though I do not agree with his contention that his process gives us more than can be obtained from Fourier's analysis, it has the advantage of great simplicity in its numerical work, and should prove useful in a certain, though I am afraid, very limited field. Let f ( t ) represent a function of a variable which we may take to be the time, and let the average value of the function be zero. Newcomb examines the sum of the series f ( t 1 ) f ( t 1 + τ) + f ( t 2 ) f ( t 2 + τ) + f ( t 3 ) f ( t 3 + τ) + ..., where t 1 , t 2 , etc., are definite values of the variable which are taken to lie at equal distances from each other. If the function be periodic so as to repeat itself after an interval τ, the products are all squares and each term is positive. If, on the other hand, the periodic time be 2τ, each product will be negative and the sum itself therefore negative. It is easy to see that if τ be varied continuously the sum of the series passes through maxima and minima, and the maxima will indicated the periodic time, or any of its multiples.


2002 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-136
Author(s):  
V. Lomadze

Abstract Linear dynamical systems are introduced in a general axiomatic way, and their development is carried out in great simplicity. The approach is closely related both with the classical transfer function approach and with the Willems behavioral approach.


1962 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 465-465
Author(s):  
O. W. Neumark

Over a decade ago there was some controversy about the selection of an international standard airfield approach lighting system. At a very late stage, the R.A.E. produced a visual simulator of great simplicity on which any administrator could fly approaches using any of the rival systems. His performance could be checked but, what is far more important, he obtained personal and realistic visual experience. If this simulator had been available in 1945 it might have saved many millions spent on the flight evaluations of the rival systems and years of international conferences.In the present controversy on collision avoidance regulations in the air and at sea, time and wealth could be saved by the creation of a visual and dynamic simulator in which all persons attending symposiums on collision problems could obtain synthetic visual experience of the present day avoidance regulations and of the new conventions proposed by E. S. Calvert and S. H. Hollingdale.Curiously enough, such a simulator would not be very costly. It would consist of a very large hangar and a number of small electric two-seater cars somewhat similar to those known as ‘Dodgems’ often seen at Funfairs.It would be used quite effectively for simulating air traffic as a high percentage of all near-misses occur in the horizontal plane but it would be desirable to gimbal the cars so that they can bank when turning.Simulation of nocturnal traffic requires only black-out and navigation lights.


1992 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 537-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Mateo Castro ◽  
M Jiménez Escamilla ◽  
F Bosch Reig

Abstract The color of 7 types of Spanish unifloral honey from rosemary, orange blossom, lavender, eucalyptus, sunflower, heather, and honeydew was Investigated for Its potential use as a characterization parameter. Colors were estimated by visual comparison with a Lovlbond 1000 Instrument, the readings of which were transformed Into Pfund units. As an alternative method, the transmittances of liquid samples at selected wavelengths were measured, trlstlmulus values were calculated, and chromatic coordinates In the CIE-1931 (x,y,L) and CIE-1976 (L*a*b*) color spaces were determined. The correlation coefficient between x and the Pfund grading was 0.958, but visual comparisons proved to be less objective and precise than CIE parameters; yet, analysis by visual comparison can be used by unskilled dealers and beekeepers because of Its great simplicity. A stepwise discriminant analysis revealed that CIE-1976 (L*a*b*) coordinates yield an overall proportion of accurately classified samples slightly better than that afforded by CIE-1931 coordinates (76 vs 71%). However, rosemary and lavender honeys were more accurately classed by using the CIE-1931 system. The results show that color determinations make a useful tool for helping to classify honeys.


1963 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 443-446
Author(s):  
M. Annunciata Burbach

Conic sections are curves of great simplicity. Just as simplicity is indicative of great worth in human endeavors, these curves are of tremendous value to mathematicians, engineers, navigators, architects, astronomers, and physicists. The extensive usefulness of conic sections, which remained totally dormant for centuries, has been unfolded to us by scientists since the beginning of the seventeenth century.


A simple model of the low temperature phases of the diatomic molecular solids is examined. The model consists of molecules, interacting via a Lennard-Jones atom-atom potential and quadrupole-quadrupole interactions. The internal energy of any crystallographic structure (excluding thermal effects) can then be given in terms of two dimensionless parameters, which describe the deviation of the molecular shape from a sphere and the relative importance of the quadrupole energy. The minimum energies and optimum molecular configurations in several structures are computed, for values of these dimensionless variables which span the values appropriate to the actual homonuclear diatomic molecular solids, H 2 , N 2 , O 2 , F 2 , Cl 2 , Br 2 and I 2 . Despite its great simplicity, the model is able to explain several features of these structures. These are (i) o -H 2 and N 2 have the optimum quadrupole structure, Pa3; (ii) β-O 2 is one of the optimum van der Waals’ structures, R3 ¯ m; (iii) the monoclinic α-F 2 structure is the most stable structure for parameter values very close to those appropriate to F 2 ; (iv) the ortho-rhombic Cmca structure (observed for Cl 2 , Br 2 and I 2 ) is the most stable structure for a large range of quadrupole moments which may be appropriate to these molecules. The model, is, of course, unable to take into account intermolecular bonding or spin-dependent interatomic forces. The former is important for the halogens and the latter for the (magnetic) oxygen molecule. The case of α-O 2 is treated in the following paper.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 9-14 ◽  

Among the several stages which mark the development of the industry of coal-tar colours, the discovery of the transformation of aniliue-red into aniline-blue will always hold a prominent position. This transition, for the first time observed by MM. Girard and De Laire, two young French chemists of M. Pelouze’s Laboratory, and subsequently matured by M. Persoz, De Laynes, and Salvetat, has become the foundation of an enormous industrial production, which, having received a powerful impulse by MM. Renard Brothers and Franc in France, and more recently by Messrs. Simpson, Maule, and Nicholson in this country, has rapidly attained to proportions of colossal magnitude. The transformation of aniline-red into aniline-blue is accomplished by a process of great simplicity, and consists, briefly expressed, in the treatment at a high temperature of rosaniline with an excess of aniline. The mode of this treatment is by no means indifferent. Rosaniline itself cannot in this manner conveniently be converted into the blue colouring matter; the transformation is, however, easily accomplished by heating rosaniline salts with aniline, or, vice versâ , rosaniline with salts of aniline. Again, the nature of the acids with which the bases are combined is by no means without influence upon the result of the operation; manufacturers give a decided preference to organic acids, such as acetic or benzoic acids.


1889 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 59-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Lapworth

Next to the metamorphic region of the Northern Highlands there is perhaps no area in Britain where the strata have been so contorted and convulsed as in the great Lower Palæozoic region of the Southern Uplands of Scotland, and it is only by the zonal method of stratigraphy that these complexities can ever be successfully unravelled. So far as the present results of the application of that method enable us to judge, it appears that, underlying all these stratigraphical complexities, there is, in reality, a broad tectonic structure of great simplicity. For, if we make exception, on the one hand, of the lowest strata (the Ballantrae or Arenig rocks), which, as we have seen, only rise to the surface within the limits of the Ballantrae district; and on the other hand of the highest formations (Wenlock-Ludlow), which merely skirt the Upland plateau upon its north-west and south-west flanks, we find that almost the whole of the Lower Palæozoic strata of the Uplands are naturally grouped in two grand lithological terranes, viz. (I.) a Lower Terrane (Moffat Terrane), including strata ranging from the Upper Llandeilo to the Upper Llandovery; and (II.) an Upper Terrane (Gala or Queensberry Terrane), embracing strata generally of Tarannon age.


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