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Caley

M. T. Record, Jr., E. S. Courtenay, S. Caley, and H. J. Guttman, Biophysical compensation mechanisms buffering E. coli protein—nucleic acid interactions against changing environments,... [Pg.145]

Caley, Earle Radcliffe. The Leyden papyrus X an English translation with brief notes. JChemEduc 3, no. 10 (Oct 1926) 1149-1166. [Pg.13]

Caley, E. R. (1967), The origin and manufacture of orichalcum, in Levey, M. (ed.), Archaeological Chemistry, a Symposium, Univ. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, pp. 59-73. [Pg.563]

Caley, E. R. (1964), Analysis of Ancient Metals, Macmillan, New York. [Pg.563]

Caley, E. R. and D. T. Easby (1964), New evidence of tin smelting and the use of metallic tin in pre-Conquest Mexico, Adas del XXXV Congreso Internadonal de Ameri-canistas, Mexico, pp. 507-517. [Pg.564]

Percolation theory describes [32] the random growth of molecular clusters on a d-dimensional lattice. It was suggested to possibly give a better description of gelation than the classical statistical methods (which in fact are equivalent to percolation on a Bethe lattice or Caley tree, Fig. 7a) since the mean-field assumptions (unlimited mobility and accessibility of all groups) are avoided [16,33]. In contrast, immobility of all clusters is implied, which is unrealistic because of the translational diffusion of small clusters. An important fundamental feature of percolation is the existence of a critical value pc of p (bond formation probability in random bond percolation) beyond which the probability of finding a percolating cluster, i.e. a cluster which spans the whole sample, is non-zero. [Pg.181]

It applies for both formulations above that the expansion in principle contains an infinite number of terms. The convergence to a few lowest order terms relies on the ability to orderly separate influences of the dominant rf irradiation terms (through a suitable interaction frame) from the less dominant internal terms of the Hamiltonian. In principle, this may be overcome using the spectral theorem (or the Caley-Hamilton theorem [57]) providing a closed (i.e., exact) solution to the Baker-Campbell-Hausdorf problem with all dependencies included in n terms where n designates the dimension of the Hilbert-space matrix representation (e.g., 2 for a single spin-1/2, 4 for a two-spin-1/2 system) [58, 59]. [Pg.9]

Caley, E.R. (1949). Klaproth as a pioneer in the chemical investigation of antiquities. Journal of Chemical Education 26 242-247 268. [Pg.15]

Caley, E.R. (1967). The early history of chemistry in the service of archaeology. Journal of Chemical Education 44 120-123. [Pg.15]

Another reference, this time probably to the calamine process, appears in the works referred to as a pseudo-Aristotelian compilation called On Marvellous Things Heard , probably written in the 3rd Century BC. As translated by Caley (1967 67), the relevant passage runs ... [Pg.199]

Caley, E.R. (1964). Orichalcum and Related Ancient Alloys Origins, Composition and Manufacture with Special Reference to the Coinage Of The Roman Empire. Notes and Monographs No. 151, American Numismatic Society, New York. [Pg.230]

The Greek asbestos means inextinguishable, but it is apparent from early descriptive comments that the characteristic of incombustibility was implicit (Luschen, 1968). Old synonyms for asbestos, such as salamander stone, referring to a mythical animal that endured fire without harm encompass both meanings, as does the belief that tomb lamps with asbestos wicks burned indefinitely, or at least until all of the oil, but not the wick, was consumed (Theophrastus, brans, by Caley and Richards, 1956). [Pg.42]

Theophrastus (4th Century b.c.). On Stones (English Translation by Caley J. and F. C. Richards. Ohio State University Press, Columbus, OH, 1956). [Pg.101]

Caley, E. R The Stockholm papyrus. An English translation with brief... [Pg.68]

Caley, Earle R., Earliest known use of a material containing uranium, ... [Pg.281]


See other pages where Caley is mentioned: [Pg.369]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.458]    [Pg.563]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.433]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.264]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.99 , Pg.131 , Pg.145 ]




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Caley tree

Caley, Earle

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