scholarly journals One dimensional global and local solution for ICRF heating

1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.Y. Wang ◽  
D.B. Batchelor ◽  
E.F. Jaeger ◽  
M.D. Carter
Wilmott ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (81) ◽  
pp. 28-51
Author(s):  
Daniel Bloch

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-33
Author(s):  
Oleksandr Kudin

The article is devoted to one of the most urgent problems of modern religious studies – the problem of mutual influence of religion and globalization processes. It is noted that the term "globalization" itself is not completely open in terms of methodology. The article substantiates the position on the interrelation of religious and globalization processes with their main aspects – axiological and ethical. We can talk about the distribution of non-traditional religions on global and local. Local are those whose impacts are spread in one or two regions, do not go beyond the country. As to the effects of globalization on such religious entities, they are minimal. In addition, such educations are, to a greater degree, totalitarian entities that are subject to a charismatic leader, they are isolated from society and, thus, from globalization. Unlike local, global non-traditional religions are a "product" of globalization processes. But, if in the economic, socio-cultural spheres globalization is unification, it is the destruction of borders and divisions, and then religious globalization includes a diversity of religious nature. Undeniably non-traditional religions, both local and global, are serious rivals for traditional religions and cause a negative reaction from the latter. The influence of economic, cultural, informational and religious globalization on a person is analyzed; special attention is paid to the emergence and spread of non-traditional religious movements and currents that may lead to the emergence of a "one-dimensional person". There is also a link between globalization with religious fundamentalism and its extreme manifestations – terrorism.


1973 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. Brown ◽  
N. Riley

An analysis is presented that is appropriate to three distinct phases in the temporal development of the flow past a semi-infinite vertical plate whose temperature is suddenly changed from that of the surrounding fluid. These are the initial stage when a one-dimensional solution describes the flow, then a local solution which describes the early stages of the departure from this, and finally an asymptotic solution which describes the manner in which the final steady state is achieved.


Author(s):  
Stein Andreas Bethuelsen ◽  
Gabriel Baptista da Silva ◽  
Daniel Valesin

AbstractWe construct graphs (trees of bounded degree) on which the contact process has critical rate (which will be the same for both global and local survival) equal to any prescribed value between zero and $$\lambda _c({\mathbb {Z}})$$ λ c ( Z ) , the critical rate of the one-dimensional contact process. We exhibit both graphs in which the process at this target critical value survives (locally) and graphs where it dies out (globally).


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexey Turchin ◽  
David Denkenberger ◽  
Brian Green

There are two types of artificial general intelligence (AGI) safety solutions: global and local. Most previously suggested solutions are local: they explain how to align or “box” a specific AI (Artificial Intelligence), but do not explain how to prevent the creation of dangerous AI in other places. Global solutions are those that ensure any AI on Earth is not dangerous. The number of suggested global solutions is much smaller than the number of proposed local solutions. Global solutions can be divided into four groups: 1. No AI: AGI technology is banned or its use is otherwise prevented; 2. One AI: the first superintelligent AI is used to prevent the creation of any others; 3. Net of AIs as AI police: a balance is created between many AIs, so they evolve as a net and can prevent any rogue AI from taking over the world; 4. Humans inside AI: humans are augmented or part of AI. We explore many ideas, both old and new, regarding global solutions for AI safety. They include changing the number of AI teams, different forms of “AI Nanny” (non-self-improving global control AI system able to prevent creation of dangerous AIs), selling AI safety solutions, and sending messages to future AI. Not every local solution scales to a global solution or does it ethically and safely. The choice of the best local solution should include understanding of the ways in which it will be scaled up. Human-AI teams or a superintelligent AI Service as suggested by Drexler may be examples of such ethically scalable local solutions, but the final choice depends on some unknown variables such as the speed of AI progress.


Patan Pragya ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-23
Author(s):  
Prem Bahadur Dhami

This paper explores the symbiotic bonding between land and human beings in the novel. Writer chooses Carther’sO Pioneers! being ecologically conscious text when it is read against the background of deep Ecology. Writer finds this text that expounds upon the symbiotic bonding between land and human beings to subvert anthropocentric notion and its constraints. Clinging with the ideas why many critics and writers focused this text against the grain of ecocritical perspective, writer here tries to bring the balance in literary components and ethics of the discipline with the perspective of Leopold’s deep ecology and its components. Overall, writer tries to analyse how this text show the eco-consciousness perspectives avoiding the one-dimensional approach that reads culture and nature to revitalize literary study and help address some of the pressing questions concerning our global and local ecology. The characters, setting, and the plot of the novel show the biorhythm with nature. This is argued on basis of various ecocritics; Aldo Leopold’s concept of The Land Ethic, Scott Russell Sanders, John Hannigan, Glotfelty Cheryll, David Pepper and Holmes Rolston III on the interplay between nature and human beings.


2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-80
Author(s):  
Giorgi Bogveradze ◽  
Sergo Kharibegashvili

Abstract We consider a multidimensional analogue of the Darboux problem for wave equations with power nonlinearity. Depending on the spatial dimension of an equation, a power nonlinearity exponent and the sign in front of a nonlinear term, it is proved that the Darboux problem is globally solvable in some cases, but has no global solution in other cases though the local solvability of this problem remains in force.


Geophysics ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 50 (10) ◽  
pp. 1548-1555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kou‐Yuan Huang ◽  
King‐sun Fu

Syntactic pattern recognition techniques are applied to the analysis of one‐dimensional seismic traces for classification of Ricker wavelets. The system for one‐dimensional seismic analysis includes a likelihood ratio test, optimal amplitude‐dependent encoding, probability of detecting the signal involved in the global and local detection, plus minimum‐distance and nearest‐neighbor classification rules. The relation between error probability and Levenshtein distance is proposed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-66
Author(s):  
Massimiliano Lucchesi ◽  
Barbara Pintucchi ◽  
Nicola Zani

Background: Some typologies of masonry constructions (e.g. towers or walls with openings) can be reasonably studied through simple beam or frame-like models. For these structures, shear mechanisms often play an important role inducing failure and collapse. Objective: The paper presents an enriched beam model for studying the in-plane response of masonry walls. Initially formulated for masonry columns, towers and masonry slender structures in general, the model is now modified in order to also capture the shear failure mechanisms, in addition to the flexural ones. Methods: Starting with a one-dimensional no-tension model, a strength domain in the plane of the axial and tangential stress of the beam has been added, which has been defined by limiting both the stress shear component with respect to any possible direction and the main compressive stress. Results: The model, implemented in the FEM computational code MADY, allows for short computational times in studying the response of single panels as well as walls with openings. Conclusion: Comparisons with some experimental results from literature and some numerical results from more refined 2D models show the effectiveness and accuracy of the model’s predictions in terms of global and local response.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document