Profile of Andrew R. Marks
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Context and Computer Composition - Andrew R. Brown
Ê The composer, as creative artist, is an interesting case for the study of computer usage. They typically work deliberately against the grain of convention, are renowned for persisting with awkward and tedious tasks, and produce works not so much with the intent of stabilising data or a situation but, instead, structuring sound to perturb or surprise the recipients expectations to some degree....
متن کاملAndrew R . Neureuther : Set 3 201 - 275 from 1995 - 2001
Focus shift and process latitude of contact holes on attenuated phase-shifting masks, " Proc. Reaction diffusion in deep-UV positive tone resist systems, " Proc. Three-dimensional reflective-notching simulation using multipole accelerated physical-optics approximation, " Proc. Extracting solid conductors from a single triangulated surface representation for interconnect analysis, " IEEE Trans.
متن کاملTABLE OF MARKS OF FINITE GROUPS
Let G be a finite group and C(G) be the family of representative conjugacy classes of subgroups of G. The matrix whose H;K-entry is the number of fixed points of the set G=K under the action of H is called the table of marks of G where H;K run through all elements in C(G). In this paper, we compute the table of marks and the markaracter table of groups of order pqr where p, q, r are prime numbers.
متن کاملUniversal equivalence relations on X N generated by permutation actions of countable subgroups of S ∞ Andrew Marks and
Let S∞ be the group of all permutations of N and X be a standard Borel space. Then the space XN of functions from N to X is a standard Borel space, and S∞ acts on this space by permutation where given x ∈ XN and g ∈ S∞, g · x(n) = x(g−1(n)). Given any countable subgroup G of S∞, we can likewise restrict this action to G and consider the induced orbit equivalence relation on XN, which we will no...
متن کاملProfile of Christian R. H. Raetz.
D NA may carry all of the instructions, and proteins may do most of the work, but a cell would not be a cell without lipids. These molecules, which number in the thousands, include important natural products such as fatty acids, phospholipids, and sterols (1) and work at jobs as varied as forming the protective membranes that shelter cells from the outside world to acting as targets for recepto...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
سال: 2006
ISSN: 0027-8424,1091-6490
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0600503103