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Archive entry

The other major properties computed by a frequency job are the polarizability and hyperpolarizability tensors. Normally, the polarizability is printed at the end of the output, just before the archive entry ... [Pg.69]

In a normal Hartree-Fock job, the hyperpolarizability tensor is given only in the archive entry, in the section beginning HyperPolar=. This tensor is also in lower tetrahedral order, but expressed in the input (Z-matrix) orientation. (This is also true of the polarizability tensor within the archive entry.)... [Pg.69]

The title section consists of one or more lines of descriptive information about the job. It is included in the output and in the archive entry but is not otherwise used by Gaussian. This section is terminated by a blank line. [Pg.286]

This new line forms the title section for the job, which provides a description of the calculation for the job output and archive entry. It is not otherwise used by the program. [Pg.323]

As already stated above, the database has been developed using ISIS software. The program operation is very simple, and about 30 min to learn the particular commands of this structure-searching program. ISIS provides both storage and retrieval of chemical structures. It is also possible to store text and numeric data into database entries. Because molecular structures are searchable in many ways, ISIS software is an excellent tool for exploiting data, and not simply archiving it. [Pg.98]

The "Query Result Archive" function provides tables of results from recent analyses so that the user can readily see differences between closely related specimens. The "Load Calibration Function" entry in the Data Handling Menu allows the user to change calibration functions to suit his particular needs. [Pg.133]

The minutes of this and subsequent meetings of the committee on noxious gases are in the Records of the Bureau of Mines, Record Group 70, Entry 2, National Archives. [Pg.193]

Arneson, R. 2002. Egalitarianism. In The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by E. Zalta. Available at http //plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2002/entries/egalitarianism/ [Accessed April 7, 2005]. [Pg.96]

Controlled Access. Access to the physical archives (e.g., file cabinets and freezers) is controlled by locks and the archive management. Access to electronic files is controlled by secret user identification (ID) numbers. Well designed electronic data storage software records or stores the ID number of any user that enters or changes data and when that entry or change occurred. [Pg.64]

A useful method of reconstructing potential worker exposure to agents can be to correlate data from records of shift duty, hazardous operations, toxic area entries, and area airborne agent concentrations. These correlations are only practical if the records are electronically archived and centrally searchable. [Pg.45]

Also see F.O. Schmitt, Interim Progress Report, 25 October 1943, United States National Archives Record Group 227, Entry 29, box 95, folder OEMcmr-286. [Pg.226]

The nerve sheaths were first requested and tried to especially good effect by Paul Weiss, then of University of Chicago. See F.O. Schmitt, Final Report, Contract OEMcmr-286, 7 January 1942, United States National Archives Record Group 227, Entry 29, box 95, folder OEMcmr-286 also E.L. Howes, Experimental wound healing," in E.C. Andrus (ed.), Advances in Military Medicine (Boston, 1948), 111-122. [Pg.226]

Databases are electronic filing cabinets that serve as a convenient and efficient means of storing vast amounts of information. An important distinction exists between primary (archival) and secondary (curated) databases. The primary databases represent experimental results with some interpretation. Their record is the sequence as it was experimentally derived. The DNA, RNA, or protein sequences are the items to be computed on and worked with as the valuable components of the primary databases. The secondary databases contain the fruits of analyses of the sequences in the primary sources such as patterns, motifs, functional sites, and so on. Most biochemical and/or molecular biology databases in the public domains are flat-file databases. Each entry of a database is given a unique identifier (i.e., an entry name and/or accession number) so that it can be retrieved uniformly by the combination of the database name and the identifier. [Pg.48]

The original analytical data submitted by Member States to the OPCW Laboratory are archived. The original analytical data is assigned unique OPCW codes at the OPCW Laboratory before archiving. This code comprises the identification number of the laboratory that contributed data, a number that corresponds to the type of analytical technique, a number corresponding to the data entry into the OCAD, and letters that distinguish vapor phase IR (v) from condensed phase and other types of IR spectra, diastereoisomers (a, b, c, etc.) and resubmitted data (r, s, t, etc.) (see Figure 3). [Pg.138]

The Common Place Book is a thick folio notebook, bound in vellum, with entries covering the period 1782-1812, Archives of Soho, MS3219/4/171. [Pg.201]


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Archival

Archiving

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