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1

Iversen, Hans Raun, and Hans Raun Iversen. "Ydre mission som dansk kulturhistorie." Dansk Teologisk Tidsskrift 82, no. 3-4 (August 17, 2020): 173–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/dtt.v82i3-4.121705.

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In his new book, Daniel Henschen studies the foreign mission movement in Denmark as a case of an “empathic globalization” before modern globalization began to be developed at full scale from around 1960. The book is innovative in viewing the mission movement in Denmark as an integrated part of contemporary culture, contributing to the general cultural and political development in its time. At the same time, Henschen develops a new track in mission studies.
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2

Pedersen, Kim Arne. "Hans Raun Iversen, Grundtvig, folkekirke og mission." Grundtvig-Studier 60, no. 1 (January 1, 2009): 254–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/grs.v60i1.16557.

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3

Kim, Kee Yong. "Shepping’s Inner Mission: Contextualization in Mission and Churches of South Korea." Mission and Theology 50 (February 29, 2020): 131–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.17778/mat.2020.02.50.131.

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4

Gallagher, Robert L. "Mission from the inside Out: An Integrative Analysis of Selected Latin American Protestant “Writings” in Spirituality and Mission." Missiology: An International Review 40, no. 1 (January 2012): 9–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009182961204000103.

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Contemporary mission is still struggling with how to connect the contemplative inward journey of the spiritual practices, the outward actions of social justice, and the proclamation of the good news in the ongoing activities of the church today and specifically in its missional task. While the Protestant church is divided over the issue, this paper proposes that there is a possibility of significant convergence of the inner and outer lives of the church, which results in an inner spiritual liberation of mission. This article examines the correlation of spirituality and mission from the “writings” of selected Protestant Latin American scholar-practitioners focusing on the relationship between the inner and outer dimensions of Christian mission, wholeness and integrity of mission, spiritual practices and mission, and worship and mission. In their integration, these emphases provide insights that answer the ecclesiastical question that exists in mission today and provides renovated foundations for the continuing development of the global missional force.
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5

NI, WEI-TOU, JIN ZHU, XIANG-PING WU, GUEY-BO CHU, BIN YANG, JIAN GAO, MIN GUAN, et al. "Mini-ASTROD: Mission Concept." International Journal of Modern Physics D 11, no. 07 (August 2002): 1035–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218271802002542.

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Advances in laser physics and its applications triggered the proposition and development of Laser Astrodynamics. Mini-ASTROD is a down-scaled version of ASTROD (Astro-dynamical Space Test of Relativity using Optical Devices). This mission concept has one spacecraft carrying a payload of a telescope, six lasers, and a clock together with ground stations (ODSN: Optical Deep Space Network) to test the optical scheme and yet give important scientific results. These scientific results include a better measurement of the relativistic parameters (γ to 1 ppm, β to a few ppm and others with improvement), a better sensitivity (several times better) in using the optical Doppler tracking method for detecting gravitational waves, a potential of measuring the solar angular momentum via the Lense-Thirring effect and measurement of many solar system parameters more precisely. These enable us to build a more precise ephemeris and astrodynamics. The weight of this spacecraft is estimated to be about 300–350 kg with a payload of about 100–120 kg. The spacecraft goes into an inner solar orbit with several options. One option is with period 304 days as for the inner spacecraft of the standard two-spacecraft ASTROD mission concept and it takes about 900 days to reach the other side of the Sum relative to the Earth. Another option is to launch with initial period about 290 days and to pass by Venus twice to receive gravity-assistance for achieving shorter periods. For a launch on November 15, 2008, after two encounters with Venus, the orbital period can be shortened to 165 days. After about 400 days from launch, the spacecraft will arrive at the other side of the Sun and the relativistic parameter γ can be determined to 1 ppm. We discuss the payload configuration and outlook for technological developments to reach the mission goals, and summarize the conclusions and recommendations of the first and second organizational meeting for the Mini-ASTROD study.
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6

Vincent, John J. "Outworkings: Urban Mission in Mark 4." Expository Times 122, no. 11 (September 2011): 531–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014524611409633.

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Gospel Practice Interpretation continues in the early chapters of Mark's Gospel in reflections by contemporary inner city urban ministers and community workers on the variety of ways in which their Gospel practice and witness are received in their experience. Such varied “reception” seems to be like the early disciples' experiences, and even to suggest proper and expected ways in which faithful gospel embodiment produces “results”, as Jesus experienced.
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7

Muthuraj, J. Gnanaseelan. "A Survey of Tamil Christian writings in European libraries." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 117, no. 2 (April 1985): 181–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0035869x00138407.

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What are the primary sources for the early history of the Tranquebar mission? One depends on Danish, German and English sources, in that order of priority, because the mission was initiated by the King of Denmark, executed by German missionaries and financially supported by the English. The history of Christianity in India, however, is not equivalent to the history of mission boards and missionaries, though these are necessary components of a true understanding of the history of the Church. To be fair, equal importance should be given to the Tamil sources which have been underestimated by historians. The first step must be to collect them, for there is evidence that they were neglected from the very beginning of the mission in Tamilnadu
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8

Christensen, Tina Wilchen. "Med troen som fællesnævner – fællesskab blandt unge i Indre Mission." Kulturstudier 1, no. 2 (December 20, 2010): 38. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/ks.v1i2.3899.

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<div>Artiklen vil belyse de mekanismer, der ligger til grund for et velfungerende f&aelig;llesskab&nbsp;i en af Indre Missions ungdomsforeninger i &Aring;rhus. Troen har p&aring; forskellige&nbsp;m&aring;der en central position i f&aelig;llesskabet, og denne artikel vil argumentere for de&nbsp;unges tro som en social identitet, idet deres habitus synes at have en afg&oslash;rende&nbsp;betydning for den og deres oplevelse af det religi&oslash;st funderede f&aelig;llesskab. Artiklenvil ogs&aring; belyse, hvordan Biblen og dens fort&aelig;llinger udg&oslash;r den fortolkningsramme,&nbsp;som de unge er opvokset med og forst&aring;r livet igennem. Artiklen viser&nbsp;desuden den rolle, det kollektive samv&aelig;r spiller i de unges konstruktion af Gud&nbsp;og egen identitet som kristen.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>Faith as common ground- community feeling among young evangelicals in Denmark</div><div><br /></div><div>The aim of this article is to demonstrate the mechanisms that underlie a youth association in the so-called Home Mission, a branch of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Denmark. It is the result of anthropological research focusing on the sense of community among members aged between 15 and 27. In a number of ways faith plays a central role in the community, and the main argument of the article is that the young people's faith constitutes a social identity, since their habitus seems to have a decisive impact on their experience of the faith-based community. The article further demonstrates how the Bible and its narratives form the framework of interpretation with which the young people have grown up, and which, in their present life as adults, continues to mould their understanding and view of life, as well as the role that collective interaction plays in the young people's construction of God and their own identity as Christians. A core argument in the article is that faith is a socialization into a structure which results in all participants having the same frame of reference and therefore experiencing a strong feeling of community with one another within this particular wing of the Church of Denmark.&nbsp;<br /> <br /></div>
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9

Johnson, Charles L. "Inner Magnetosphere Imager mission: a new window on the plasma universe." Optical Engineering 33, no. 2 (February 1, 1994): 329. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.157722.

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10

Nash, Philip. "AMERICA’S FIRST FEMALE CHIEF OF MISSION: RUTH BRYAN OWEN, MINISTER TO DENMARK, 1933–36." Diplomacy and Statecraft 16, no. 1 (March 9, 2005): 57–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09592290590916130.

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11

Ruf, Christopher S., Robert Atlas, Paul S. Chang, Maria Paola Clarizia, James L. Garrison, Scott Gleason, Stephen J. Katzberg, et al. "New Ocean Winds Satellite Mission to Probe Hurricanes and Tropical Convection." Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 97, no. 3 (March 1, 2016): 385–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/bams-d-14-00218.1.

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Abstract The Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) is a new NASA earth science mission scheduled to be launched in 2016 that focuses on tropical cyclones (TCs) and tropical convection. The mission’s two primary objectives are the measurement of ocean surface wind speed with sufficient temporal resolution to resolve short-time-scale processes such as the rapid intensification phase of TC development and the ability of the surface measurements to penetrate through the extremely high precipitation rates typically encountered in the TC inner core. The mission’s goal is to support significant improvements in our ability to forecast TC track, intensity, and storm surge through better observations and, ultimately, better understanding of inner-core processes. CYGNSS meets its temporal sampling objective by deploying a constellation of eight satellites. Its ability to see through heavy precipitation is enabled by its operation as a bistatic radar using low-frequency GPS signals. The mission will deploy an eight-spacecraft constellation in a low-inclination (35°) circular orbit to maximize coverage and sampling in the tropics. Each CYGNSS spacecraft carries a four-channel radar receiver that measures GPS navigation signals scattered by the ocean surface. The mission will measure inner-core surface winds with high temporal resolution and spatial coverage, under all precipitating conditions, and over the full dynamic range of TC wind speeds.
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12

Taylor, M. G. G. T., N. Altobelli, B. J. Buratti, and M. Choukroun. "The Rosetta mission orbiter science overview: the comet phase." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 375, no. 2097 (May 29, 2017): 20160262. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2016.0262.

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The international Rosetta mission was launched in 2004 and consists of the orbiter spacecraft Rosetta and the lander Philae. The aim of the mission is to map the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko by remote sensing, and to examine its environment in situ and its evolution in the inner Solar System. Rosetta was the first spacecraft to rendezvous with and orbit a comet, accompanying it as it passes through the inner Solar System, and to deploy a lander, Philae, and perform in situ science on the comet's surface. The primary goals of the mission were to: characterize the comet's nucleus; examine the chemical, mineralogical and isotopic composition of volatiles and refractories; examine the physical properties and interrelation of volatiles and refractories in a cometary nucleus; study the development of cometary activity and the processes in the surface layer of the nucleus and in the coma; detail the origin of comets, the relationship between cometary and interstellar material and the implications for the origin of the Solar System; and characterize asteroids 2867 Steins and 21 Lutetia. This paper presents a summary of mission operations and science, focusing on the Rosetta orbiter component of the mission during its comet phase, from early 2014 up to September 2016. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Cometary science after Rosetta’.
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13

Marsch, E., E. Antonucci, P. Bochsler, J. L. Bougeret, B. Fleck, R. Harrison, R. Marsden, R. Schwenn, and J. C. Vial. "Solar Orbiter, a High-Resolution Mission to the Sun and Inner Heliosphere." Symposium - International Astronomical Union 203 (2001): 565–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0074180900220019.

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Solar Orbiter will provide, at very high spatial (35 km pixel size) and temporal resolution, novel observations of the solar atmosphere and unexplored inner heliosphere, which will be made in the heliosynchronous segments of the orbits at heliocentric distances near 45 solar radii and out of the ecliptic plane at high heliographic latitudes up to 38°. The Solar Orbiter will achieve its wide-ranging scientific aims with a suite of sophisticated instruments through an innovative orbit design.
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14

Axford, W. I., E. Marsch, V. N. Oraevsky, V. D. Kuznetsov, T. K. Breus, R. Scwenn, W. H. Ip, et al. "Space mission for exploration of the Sun Mercury and inner Heliosphere (“InterHelios”)." Advances in Space Research 21, no. 1-2 (January 1998): 275–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0273-1177(97)00984-8.

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15

Marsch, E., E. Antonucci, P. Bochsler, J. L. Bougeret, B. Fleck, R. Harrison, Y. Langevin, et al. "Solar orbiter, a high-resolution mission to the sun and inner heliosphere." Advances in Space Research 29, no. 12 (June 2002): 2027–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0273-1177(02)00148-5.

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16

Bok, Jared. "Inner-worldly and other-worldly outreach: organizational repertoires of protestant mission agencies." Journal of Management, Spirituality & Religion 17, no. 2 (October 12, 2019): 159–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14766086.2019.1676296.

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17

Price, T. Douglas, Karin Margarita Frei, Andres Siegfried Dobat, Niels Lynnerup, and Pia Bennike. "Who was in Harold Bluetooth's army? Strontium isotope investigation of the cemetery at the Viking Age fortress at Trelleborg, Denmark." Antiquity 85, no. 328 (May 2011): 476–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00067880.

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The circular fortress of Trelleborg on Zealand in Denmark is well known as a military camp with a key role in the formation of the Danish state under Harald Bluetooth in the tenth century AD. Taking a sample of 48 burials from the fort, strontium isotope analysis once again demonstrates its ability to eavesdrop on a community: at Trelleborg, the young men in its cemetery were largely recruited from outside Denmark, perhaps from Norway or the Slavic regions. Even persons buried together proved to have different origins, and the three females sampled were all from overseas, including a wealthy woman with a silver casket. Trelleborg, home of Harald Bluetooth's army, was a fortress of foreigners with vivid implications for the nature of his political mission.
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18

Krueger, Karl. "The Politics of Anxiety: Prussian Protestants and Their Mazurian Parishioners." Church History 73, no. 2 (June 2004): 346–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009640700109308.

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Friedrich Oldenberg (1820–94), the Managing Director of the Central Committee for Inner Missions, toured the southern districts of East Prussia in the autumn of 1865. He made the trip at the request of the Inner Mission Society and the Senior Consistory in Berlin because officials had received some disturbing information about the pastors serving in the United Prussian Church. According to the reports, the clergy in the eastern districts were so insensitive and lazy that Protestant parishioners were turning to Catholic priests for pastoral care and then converting to Catholicism. Members of the Senior Consistory and the Minister for Education and Ecclesiastical Affairs, Heinrich von Mühler (1813–74), were concerned and wanted a trustworthy individual to inspect the region and submit a report on the East Prussian churchscape. They chose Friedrich Oldenberg, a Jewish convert and native of Königsberg (East Prussia), as well as a longtime member of the Inner Mission Society. He toured the districts for two months and organized his findings in a lengthy report of 173 pages that he submitted in January 1866 to officials in Berlin.
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19

Kørnøv, Lone, Per Christensen, and Eskild Holm Nielsen. "Mission impossible: does environmental impact assessment in Denmark secure a holistic approach to the environment?" Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal 23, no. 4 (December 2005): 303–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.3152/147154605781765427.

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20

Kousgård Sørensen, John. "The change of religion and the names." Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis 13 (January 1, 1990): 394–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67188.

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What actually happened at the time when Denmark was christianized? An important viewpoint to the topic is the nomenclature, both personal names and place-names. What happened to these in the missionary period? Can they be exploited as evidence about the change of religion? What happened to these and to the naming practices in connection with the introduction of Christianity? These questions are relevant, because several pre-Christian cultic words entered into the personal nomenclature which the Christian mission found in use on its arrival. The fate of the nomenclature in the period does suggest that the change in religion took place reasonably peacefully and gradually. There are, however, certain features about the place-names suggesting that there were local differences in the conduct of the mission.
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21

Koutchmy, S., and P. L. Lamy. "A Coronascanner for a Sun Oriented Space Mission." International Astronomical Union Colloquium 85 (1985): 141. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0252921100084517.

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AbstractThe quantitative study of the solar corona between 3 and 20 R⊙ is still a challenging task. Inherent difficulties are the proximity of the Sun and the still bright inner corona (< 3 R⊙), the low brightness of the outer corona and the low contrast of possible structures. A spinning, externally-occulted coronograph having its field-of-view limited to a sector of the corona presents several advantages over conventional coronographs for this study such as higher rejection of stray light and azimuthal uniformity over the whole field-of-view. Such an instrument could address the following aspects of the F-corona:– photopolarimetry and colorimetry– ellipticity, axis of symmetry– temporal/spatial variations– equatorial enhancements (rings)– local component.
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22

Ventola, Mauro, and JIM GARRISON. "Building the Institutions of the Future: a Conversation with Jim Garrison." Integral Transpersonal Journal 12, no. 12 (March 2019): 54. http://dx.doi.org/10.32031/itibte_itj_12-vm-gj4.

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This first contribution to the Integral Transpersonal Journal is the transcript of a conversation held in June 2015 at Pettenasco (Novara) during the “Feeding the Soul” International Festival organized by the Integral Transpersonal Institute in collaboration with EUROTAS. The core of the conversation with Jim Garrison concerns the identification of the nature of what philosopher Ortega Y Gasset has defined “the mission of our time”, and how to take part in it fully. In the conversation several angles of this mission are explored: the gap between inner powers and outer powers (R. Assagioli; A. Korzybski) and the importance of filling this ontological gap as well as the challenge that the nature of this mission presents to the young generations (creating the institutions of the future) the necessary qualities to do one’s part (integrity, responsibility, authenticity, commitment), the worldviews to overcome in order to build a new human civilization (capitalism, patriarchy, conventional religions), the call to education for a new form of humanity and the decisive role of hyper-complexity and the importance of taking the resolution of being our future and to discover the personal myth which is guiding our lives. KEYWORDS Inner powers, outer progression, hyper-complexity, technology, ontological deficit, mission of our time, generations, business, project, paradigm, capitalism, Abrahamic religions, patriarchy, revolution, cosmic consciousness, Gaia, structure, future, courage, commitment, responsibility, authenticity, context, integrity, hyper-complexity, impact, personal myth.
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23

Cheremnykh, О. К., Yu M. Yampolski, A. V. Agapitov, A. V. Zalizovski, V. N. Ivchenko, L. V. Kozak, А. S. Parnovski, et al. "Studies of MHD oscillations of the Earth’s inner magnetosphere in the RESONANCE mission." Kosmìčna nauka ì tehnologìâ 19, no. 2(81) (March 30, 2013): 5–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/knit2013.02.005.

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24

Kim, Kee-Yong. "Exploring the Subjective Autonomy of Joseon People as a Motive for Inner Mission." Korean Journal of Christian Studies 114 (October 31, 2019): 423–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.18708/kjcs.2019.10.114.1.423.

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25

Bykov, N. Yu, V. V. Zakharov, and S. V. Kozyrev. "MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF INNER DUSTY-GAS COMETARY ATMOSPHERES (IN APPLICATION TO ROSETTA MISSION)." Proceedings of Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, no. 517 (June 2015): 87–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.5862/proc.516.6.

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26

Shiokawa, K., K. Seki, Y. Miyoshi, A. Ieda, T. Ono, M. Iizima, T. Nagatsuma, et al. "ERG – A small-satellite mission to investigate the dynamics of the inner magnetosphere." Advances in Space Research 38, no. 8 (January 2006): 1861–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2005.05.089.

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27

Gao, Song, Rui Song, and Yibin Li. "Coordinated Control of Multiple Euler–Lagrange Systems for Escorting Missions with Obstacle Avoidance." Applied Sciences 9, no. 19 (October 3, 2019): 4144. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app9194144.

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This study investigates the coordinated control problem of Euler–Lagrange systems with model uncertainties in environments containing obstacles when escorting a target. Using an outer–inner loop control structure, a null-space-based behavioral (NSB) control architecture was proposed in the outer loop considering obstacles. This architecture generates the desired velocity for the inner loop. The adaptive proportional derivative sliding mode control (APD-SMC) law was applied to the inner loop to ensure fast convergence and robustness. All the robots were distributed around the target evenly and escorted the target at a specified distance while avoiding obstacles in a p − dimensional space (where p ≥ 2 is a positive integer). Stability and convergence analyses were conducted rigorously using a Lyapunov-based approach. The simulation results of three scenarios verified the effectiveness and high-precision performance of the proposed control algorithm compared to that of the adaptive sliding mode control (ASMC) in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional space. It is shown that all the robots can move into appropriate positions on the surface of a sphere/circle during an escort mission and reconfigure the formation automatically when an obstacle avoidance mission is active.
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28

de Lucas, Aline, Rainer Schwenn, Eckart Marsch, Alisson Dal Lago, Alicia L. Clúa de Gonzalez, Ezequiel Echer, Walter D. Gonzalez, and Marlos R. da Silva. "Multi-spacecraft observations to study the shock extension in the inner heliosphere." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 4, S257 (September 2008): 481–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921309029743.

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AbstractThe two Helios probes traveled at variable longitudinal and radial separations through the inner heliosphere. They collected most valuable high resolution plasma and magnetic field data for an entire solar cycle. The mission is still so successful that no other missions will collect the same kind of data in the next 20 years. One of the subjects studied after the success of the Helios mission was the identification of more than 390 shock waves driven by Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejections (ICMEs). Combining the data from both probes, we make a statistical study for the extension of the shock waves in the interplanetary medium. For longitudinal separations of 90° we found a cutoff value at this angular separation. A shock has 50% of chance to be observed by both probes and the same probability for not being observed by two spacecrafts at the same time, when the angle between them is around 90°. We describe the dependence of the probability for shocks to be observed by both probes with decreasing spacecraft separation. Including plasma data from the ISEE-3 and IMP-8 spacecrafts improves our statistical evaluation substantially.
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29

Sen, Satadru. "Imperial Childhoods and Christian Mission: Education and Emotions in South India and Denmark by Karen Vallgårda." Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 9, no. 2 (2016): 327–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hcy.2016.0050.

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30

Nordblad, Julia. "Review: Karen Vallgårda, Imperial Childhoods and Christian Mission: Education and Emotions in South India and Denmark." Nordic Journal of Educational History 2, no. 2 (November 30, 2015): 84–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v2i2.63.

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31

Langevin, Yves. "The Rosetta Mission to Primitive Bodies of the Solar System." Symposium - International Astronomical Union 160 (1994): 381–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0074180900046660.

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The European Space Agency (ESA) has selected Rosetta as the next cornerstone mission, to be launched in 2003. The goal is to perfom one or more fly-bys to main belt asteroids, followed by a rendez-vous with an active comet. Advanced in situ analysis, both in the coma and on the surfaces of the nucleus, will be possible, as well as monitoring by remote sensing instruments of the nucleus and of the inner coma for a time span of more than one year, until perihelion. This paper outlines the scientific and technological choices done in the definition of the mission.
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32

Yu, Liangli, Denys J. Charles, Amots Hetzroni, and James E. Simon. "Volatile Constituents of Muskmelon (Cucumis melo cv. Mission)." HortScience 31, no. 4 (August 1996): 643e—643. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.31.4.643e.

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The volatiles of muskmelon (Cucumis melo L. reticulatis cv. Mission) were sampled by dichloromethane extraction and dynamic headspace methods and analyzed by gas chromatography (GC) and GC–mass spectroscopy (MS). A total of 34 constituents were identified, with esters contributing 8%–92% of the total volatiles. Butyl propionate, ethyl 3-methylpentanoate, hexadecanoic acid, methyl (methylthio)acetate, propyl butyrate, phenylpropyl alcohol, and vanillin, were recovered only by solvent extraction, while hexanal was only detected using dynamic headspace sampling. Methyl butyrate 35.2%, ethyl acetate 17.1%, butyl acetate 11.6%, ethyl propionate 8.3%, and 3-methylbutyl acetate 6.3% were the major constituents by solvent extraction sampling method. Butyl acetate 35.5%, 3-methylbutyl acetate 20.9%, ethyl acetate 7.3%, 2-butyl acetate 5.6%, and hexyl acetate 3.8% were the major constituents recovered by headspace sampling. Fruit tissue was also separated into five layers (exocarp, outer mesocarp, middle mesocarp, inner mesocarp, and seed cavity) and the volatile constituents differed significantly in content and composition by tissue.
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Hibbert, Richard. "Book Review: Clemens Sedmak. The Capacity to be Displaced: Resilience, Mission, and Inner Strength." Missiology: An International Review 46, no. 4 (October 2018): 432–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0091829618798321e.

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34

Ostaszewski, Katharina, Karl-Heinz Glassmeier, Charlotte Goetz, Philip Heinisch, Pierre Henri, Sang A. Park, Hendrik Ranocha, Ingo Richter, Martin Rubin, and Bruce Tsurutani. "Steepening of magnetosonic waves in the inner coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko." Annales Geophysicae 39, no. 4 (July 29, 2021): 721–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/angeo-39-721-2021.

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Abstract. We present a statistical survey of large-amplitude, asymmetric plasma and magnetic field enhancements detected outside the diamagnetic cavity at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko from December 2014 to June 2016. Based on the concurrent observations of plasma and magnetic field enhancements, we interpret them to be magnetosonic waves. The aim is to provide a general overview of these waves' properties over the mission duration. As the first mission of its kind, the ESA Rosetta mission was able to study the plasma properties of the inner coma for a prolonged time and during different stages of activity. This enables us to study the temporal evolution of these waves and their characteristics. In total, we identified ∼ 70 000 steepened waves in the magnetic field data by means of machine learning. We observe that the occurrence of these steepened waves is linked to the activity of the comet, where steepened waves are primarily observed at high outgassing rates. No clear indications of a relationship between the occurrence rate and solar wind conditions were found. The waves are found to propagate predominantly perpendicular to the background magnetic field, which indicates their compressional nature. Characteristics like amplitude, skewness, and width of the waves were extracted by fitting a skew normal distribution to the magnetic field magnitude of individual steepened waves. With increasing mass loading, the average amplitude of the waves decreases, while the skewness increases. Using a modified 1D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model, we investigated if the waves can be described by the combination of nonlinear and dissipative effects. By combining the model with observations of amplitude, width and skewness, we obtain an estimate of the effective plasma diffusivity in the comet–solar wind interaction region and compare it with suitable reference values as a consistency check. At 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, these steepened waves are of particular importance as they dominate the innermost interaction region for intermediate to high activity.
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35

Guenther, Karl, Todd Swanstrom, and Thomas F. George. "Pursuing the Anchor Mission in a Fragmented Suburban Setting." Metropolitan Universities 30, no. 4 (December 6, 2019): 42–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.18060/23364.

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Increasingly, suburban universities find themselves in communities facing challenges that inner cities have had to deal with for decades, including concentrated poverty, housing vacancy, and underperforming school districts. While the problems are similar, the institutional context is different. Compared to central cities, suburban municipal governments generally lack the resources necessary to sustain robust community economic development initiatives. Further, suburbs often lack the rich landscape of nonprofit organizations that were built up over many decades in central cities. This article reflects on the experience of the University of Missouri-St. Louis as a case study of a suburban anchor institution. This experience suggests that anchor institutions in suburban settings need to focus on asset-based community development, support collective action among fragmented institutions, and build the civic capacity of local governments, nonprofits, and businesses.
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36

Abrams, Lesley. "The Anglo-Saxons and the Christianization of Scandinavia." Anglo-Saxon England 24 (December 1995): 213–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263675100004701.

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St Anskar, a monk of Corbie and Corvey, is often referred to as the ‘Apostle of the North’. In 826 he was attached to the retinue of Harald, king of Denmark, upon the king's baptism at the court of Louis the Pious; Anskar was sent to evangelize first the Danes, who were an increasing threat to the northern border of the Empire, and then the Swedes of the Mälar region, whose rulers may have hoped for imperial favour. If the mission of Anskar and his immediate successors had significant and enduring effects beyond his death in 865, however, they have so far failed to make themselves known to historians. The see of Hamburg-Bremen, of which Anskar was the first archbishop, had indeed been given responsibility for the northern mission-field, and successive popes renewed their theoretical support for this goal; but activity, let alone success, was not conspicuous for many years thereafter. The conversion of the Scandinavian peoples had to wait, and when it came the impetus was not from Hamburg-Bremen alone. Rather, the story of the Christianization of Denmark, Norway and Sweden from the later tenth century through the eleventh is one with a significantly English cast and an English script, although the German church – and maybe others – never quite withdrew from the stage. Scandinavian historians have long been concerned with this missionary activity of Anglo-Saxon churchmen, but it has attracted undeservedly less interest and attention on this side of the North Sea.
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37

Anderson, Elijah. "The Devolution of the Inner-City High School." ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 673, no. 1 (September 2017): 60–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002716217724395.

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Over the past century, the inner-city high school has devolved from a place that was indicative of progress and social betterment to an institution that is severely challenged by structural poverty and racial inequality. Exploring the connections between education and the process of demographic, economic, and political change in Philadelphia, this article considers white resistance to the presence of black people in white neighborhoods and black students in their public schools and, ultimately, the white workplace itself. The typical inner-city high school is no longer widely perceived as a “cathedral of learning,” an engine of upward mobility, and a center of civic pride; it now symbolizes many of the ills of the ghetto. As black and increasingly impoverished students replaced those who were white and middle and working class, public investment in the school declined; it lost the moral authority, political power, and finances so vital to fulfilling its educational mission.
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38

Jensen, Jens Peter. "Lateral accretion features ( epsilon cross-bedding) and point bars in the weichselian Køge Esker, East­Sjælland, Denmark." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark 37 (October 14, 1988): 11–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.37570/bgsd-1988-37-02.

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In the Køge Esker, Spanager lateral accretion features ( epsilon cross-bedding) were produced by complex point bar growth. The point bar genesis is based upon the presence of epsilon cross-bedding, the channel side attached nature of the bar (inner accretionary bank) and the paleoflow pattern. The Spanager sequence is divided into three flow discharge cycles ("megavarvic" sedimentation units).
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39

Hamre, Bjørn, and Christian Ydesen. "The Ascent of Educational Psychology in Denmark in the Interwar Years." Nordic Journal of Educational History 1, no. 2 (November 24, 2014): 87–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v1i2.40.

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In this article, we argue that an understanding of the interwar years and the ascent of educational psychology contribute valuable knowledge about the inner workings of modern-day education with regard to the links between society and education in general and the boundary between normality and deviation in particular. The establishment of the educational psychologist’s office at Frederiksberg in Denmark, the introduction of IQ testing, and the related psychological files of students provide an image of a period of measurement in schools during which IQ testing was decisive in decisions to transfer students to the remedial school. The testing and filing were the foremost important technologies of the period. We draw on sources that allow us to view educational psychology and testing in their local, national, and political context. The sources applied are primarily obtained from Frederiksberg City Archive that contains archives from the Educational Psychology Office.
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40

Igenbergs, E., A. Hüdepohl, K. Uesugi, T. Hayashi, H. Svedhem, H. Iglseder, G. Koller, et al. "The Present Status of the Munich Dust Counter Experiment on Board of the Hiten Spacecraft." International Astronomical Union Colloquium 126 (1991): 15–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0252921100066392.

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AbstractThe Munich Dust Counter (MDC) is a scientific experiment on board the MUSES-A mission of Japan measuring cosmic dust. The satellite HITEN of this mission has been launched on January 24th, 1990 from Kagoshima Space Center. Here the present status of the MDC experiment is summarized. The number of dust particles measured so far is presented together with first and preliminary results of flux calculations and spatial as well as directional distributions of cosmic dust particles measured until July 25, 1990. A clear evidence of particles coming from the inner solar system (beta-meteoroids) already has been found. These are compared to particles coming from the apex direction.
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41

Jayaprasad, G., P. P. Dhanlakshmi, and S. Hemachandran. "Analysis of electrical discontinuity problem in MLB using Ishikawa model." Circuit World 42, no. 4 (November 7, 2016): 201–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/cw-08-2016-0036.

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Purpose The purpose of this study/paper is regarding analysis of electrical discontinuity in penultimate layer of a few batches of Multilayer Boards (MLB) fabricated and supplied by a vendor. The ever-increasing demand of miniaturization in launch vehicle and spacecraft electronics systems has led to the usage of multilayer printed circuit boards (PCBs) for realizing high-performance electronics circuitry. Multilayer boards (MLBs) fabricated by qualified agencies based on the customer requirement are being used in the critical launch vehicle/spacecraft systems after evaluating the preliminary test results supplied by the vendor. However, a few batches of MLBs fabricated and supplied by a particular vendor (“A”) showed a discontinuity problem in a few PCB tracks connected by soldering pads. As these MLBs are part of Flight critical systems of both launch vehicle and spacecraft, a malfunction in the board may lead to fatal errors during fight or on-orbit, thereby jeopardizing the mission. Design/methodology/approach A systematic approach was followed to have a thorough understanding of the problem, and major tests such as inspection, continuity measurement, microsection of the plated through hole (PTH) and Scanning Electron Microscopy–Energy Dispersive X-ray Analysis tests were conducted on identified test boards based on Ishikawa model. Emphasis was given for horizontal microsection, as it has got a clear edge in detecting defects at any point of PTH barrel to inner-layer copper interface. Findings Systematic testing and evaluation on specimen revealed the presence of unwanted material at the bonding area of inner-layer copper and PTH copper due to inadequate fabrication process. The un-cleaned epoxy materials present at the bonding area creates a weak bond between barrel and inner-layer copper. Electrical strength of the MLB is the strength of this link. This weaker interconnection leads to electrical discontinuity of inner-layer tracks. Originality/value MLBs are part of Flight critical systems of both Launch Vehicle and Spacecraft; a malfunction in the board may lead to fatal errors during fight or on-orbit, thereby jeopardizing the mission. Case study of an original failure observed in MLBs helped to achieve normal functioning of systems and avoided failures at later stage of mission.
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42

Schatten, Heide, and Marian Lewis. "The Efects of Spaceflight on Mitochondria in Human Lymphocytes (Jurkat)." Microscopy and Microanalysis 5, S2 (August 1999): 1118–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1431927600018912.

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Spaceflight induced mitochondrial alterations have been reported for muscle and may be associated with altered physiological functions in space. Mitochondrial alterations are also indicative of preapoptotic events which are seen in greater amounts in cells exposed to spaceflight when compared with cells cultured at 1 g. Preapoptotic mitochondrial changes include alterations of processes at the inner mitochondrial membrane and can result in changes in mitochondrial volume. Higher amounts of oxidative stress during space flight may be one of the causes for changes which lead to apoptosis. Jurkat cells flown on the STS-76 space shuttle mission showed an increase in the number of cells with apoptotic bodies early in the mission and a time-dependent, microgravity-related increase in the Fas/APO-1 cell death factor. Here we investigated the morphology of mitochondria in Jurkat cells exposed to spaceflight during the STS-76 mission.
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43

Hinze, Bradford E. "Book Review: The Capacity to Be Displaced: Resilience, Mission, and Inner Strength. By Clemens Sedmak." Theological Studies 79, no. 3 (August 22, 2018): 699–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0040563918786811l.

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44

Kim, Eun-Ho. "Mission Strategies for the Restoration of Worship for Inner Growth of Mongolian Church of Mongolia." Theology and Praxis 72 (November 30, 2020): 623–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.14387/jkspth.2020.72.623.

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45

Barkin, Yu, A. Gusev, and N. Petrova. "The study of the spin–orbit and inner dynamics of the Moon: Lunar mission applications." Advances in Space Research 37, no. 1 (January 2006): 72–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2005.06.050.

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46

Carnegie, Elizabeth, and Andreana Drencheva. "Mission-driven arts organisations and initiatives." Arts and the Market 9, no. 2 (December 9, 2019): 178–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/aam-10-2019-0031.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine how mission-driven arts organisations respond to the complex set of economic and social conditions that the authors here term as a significant point of rupture. Drawing on the papers that form a part of the special section of this issue, the authors critically examine how the intersection of globalisation and neoliberalism creates multidimensional uncertainty that shapes the opportunities, responsibilities, work arrangements, and lived experiences of artists and artist-led initiatives and organisations. Design/methodology/approach In this introduction to the symposium on mission-driven arts organisations and initiatives, the authors explore how the included articles question and introduce key concerns that govern, limit and support mission-driven arts organisations. Findings Drawing on the papers in this set, the authors note that mission-driven arts organisations are diverse and employ numerous organising forms. However, at their core is the pursuit of social objectives, which also requires the management of often conflicting artistic, economic, cultural and social demands. The authors explicate how mission-driven arts organisations respond to local agendas and work best at the community level. As such, they may not play a key role in tourism or large-scale cultural regeneration of spaces, but rather seek to make creative use of sunken and redundant, often inner city spaces to address local needs. Yet, the uncertainty that these organisations face shapes temporary solutions that may enhance the precariaty and pressures for artists and creative producers with likely impact on wellbeing. Originality/value This paper brings together original insights into how mission-drive organisations seek to overcome and indeed flourish in a time of rupture. It moves beyond the notion of cultural regeneration as an instrument of tourism, and tourism as a focus of regeneration, to consider the value such organisations bring to localities evidenced in both creative practices and as local cultural engagement beyond economic impact. In doing so, mission-driven arts organisations play a vital role in a time of rapid change.
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47

Ilo, Stan Chu. "The Church of the Poor." Ecclesiology 10, no. 2 (May 5, 2014): 229–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17455316-01002006.

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This article takes Pope Francis’ call for ‘a poor church’ in Evangelii Gaudium as a starting point for an ecclesiology of vulnerable mission for the church. Drawing from biblical, patristic, and theological sources, the article proposes two theses on the church of the poor, and links these theses with a new model of a vulnerable mission which reflects a humble, servant church which embodies in her teachings and in her inner life and external activities the priorities and practices of Christ in walking with the poor. The paper uses a biblical analysis of the first proclamation of the Lord in the Synoptic Gospels to show that an ecclesiology of vulnerable mission is a way of being church which can help transform the social context. It advances some theological steps which the theologian and the faith communities can take in becoming actively and prophetically involved in co-operating with God in bringing about in particular and group histories the eschatological fruits of God’s kingdom.
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48

Stansby, D., and T. S. Horbury. "Number density structures in the inner heliosphere." Astronomy & Astrophysics 613 (May 2018): A62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201732567.

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Aims. The origins and generation mechanisms of the slow solar wind are still unclear. Part of the slow solar wind is populated by number density structures, discrete patches of increased number density that are frozen in to and move with the bulk solar wind. In this paper we aimed to provide the first in-situ statistical study of number density structures in the inner heliosphere. Methods. We reprocessed in-situ ion distribution functions measured by Helios in the inner heliosphere to provide a new reliable set of proton plasma moments for the entire mission. From this new data set we looked for number density structures measured within 0.5 AU of the Sun and studied their properties. Results. We identified 140 discrete areas of enhanced number density. The structures occurred exclusively in the slow solar wind and spanned a wide range of length scales from 50 Mm to 2000 Mm, which includes smaller scales than have been previously observed. They were also consistently denser and hotter that the surrounding plasma, but had lower magnetic field strengths, and therefore remained in pressure balance. Conclusions. Our observations show that these structures are present in the slow solar wind at a wide range of scales, some of which are too small to be detected by remote sensing instruments. These structures are rare, accounting for only 1% of the slow solar wind measured by Helios, and are not a significant contribution to the mass flux of the solar wind.
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49

IAN DICKSON, J. N. "Evangelical Religion and Victorian Women: The Belfast Female Mission, 1859–1903." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55, no. 4 (October 2004): 700–725. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046904001460.

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In 1859, following the evangelical revival in Ulster, a Female Mission was founded in Belfast as an evangelistic agency and philanthropic enterprise. It was one of many voluntary societies. Upper-class evangelical women employed the services of lower-class women of similar religious energy to work among the poor of the city. This article explores the surviving documentation of the mission to assess its work, and, more important, to ascertain if involvement in this limited public sphere was a catalyst in the broader liberation of evangelical women. The issues go beyond the relationship of inner faith and public expression in popular religion to the notion that evangelicalism, as a heightened form of Christian belief and action, was a trajectory as well as a boundary in nineteenth-century society.
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50

Hence, Deanna A., and Robert A. Houze. "Vertical Structure of Tropical Cyclones with Concentric Eyewalls as Seen by the TRMM Precipitation Radar." Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 69, no. 3 (March 1, 2012): 1021–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jas-d-11-0119.1.

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Abstract Ten years of data from the Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission satellite’s Precipitation Radar are analyzed to determine the typical vertical structure of the concentric eyewalls of tropical cyclones undergoing eyewall replacement. The vertical structure of the secondary (outer) eyewall is different from the primary (inner) eyewall and also different from the eyewall of single eyewall storms. The upper-troposphere portions of the outer eyewalls are like the rainbands from which they evolve. Their lower-tropospheric portions are more intense and more uniform than rainbands of single eyewall storms, suggesting that these secondary eyewalls are forming from rainbands undergoing axisymmetrization and building from below. The inner concentric eyewalls are more strongly affected by shear than are the eyewalls of single eyewall storms, while the outer eyewalls are relatively unaffected by shear, which suggests the outer eyewall is amplifying the shear-induced asymmetry of the inner eyewall.
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