Academic literature on the topic 'Pole Discovery'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pole Discovery"

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Brown, M. E., A. L. Smith, C. Chen, and M. Ádámkovics. "DISCOVERY OF FOG AT THE SOUTH POLE OF TITAN." Astrophysical Journal 706, no. 1 (November 2, 2009): L110—L113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/706/1/l110.

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Robinson, Michael. "Manliness and Exploration: The Discovery of the North Pole." Osiris 30, no. 1 (January 2015): 89–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/682968.

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Osczevski, Randall J. "Frederick Cook's polar journey: a reconstruction." Polar Record 26, no. 158 (July 1990): 225–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400011475.

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AbstractThe data used by Dr Frederick A. Cook in support of his claim to have reached the North Pole on 21 April 1908 are reinterpreted to support a hypothesis that Cook did not reach the Pole, that his journey towards the Pole lasted only one week, and thathe subsequently discovered and visited Meighen Island. This reconstruction explains how Dr Cook could have made observations of ice conditions and drift, and of an ice island, without having travelled far out on the Arctic Ocean. A possible reason for his failure to announce discovery of Meighen Island is also offered.
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Fiennes, Ranulph, and Wally Herbert. "The Noose of Laurels: The Discovery of the North Pole." Geographical Journal 156, no. 2 (July 1990): 231. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/635363.

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Peacock, T., M. Cropper, J. Bailey, J. H. Hough, and D. T. Wickramasinghe. "Polarimetry of ST LMi: discovery of a second accreting pole." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 259, no. 3 (December 1, 1992): 583–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/259.3.583.

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Caldwell, Douglas A., William J. Borucki, Robert L. Showen, Jon M. Jenkins, Laurance Doyle, Zoran Ninkov, and Michael Ashley. "Detecting Extrasolar Planet Transits from the South Pole." Symposium - International Astronomical Union 213 (2004): 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0074180900193052.

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We have developed and tested a wide-field photometer to detect extrasolar planet transits from the South Pole. The discovery of transiting planets for which masses can be measured by radial velocity is vital to constrain the models of planet formation and evolution. Short of going to space, the South Pole is the best site from which to carry out a such a survey. Based on results from the Doppler velocity surveys and the Vulcan transit search, we expect to detect 10 to 15 transiting planets in two years of operation at the South Pole.
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Benson, Bradford. "The South Pole Telescope: Latest Results and Future Prospects." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 8, S288 (August 2012): 76–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921312016705.

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AbstractThe South Pole Telescope is a 10 meter telescope optimized for sensitive, high-resolution measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy and millimeter-wavelength sky. In November 2011, the SPT completed the 2500 deg2 SPT-SZ survey. The survey has led to several major cosmological results, derived from measurements of the fine angular scale primary and secondary CMB anisotropies, the discovery of galaxy clusters via the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect and the resulting mass-limited cluster catalog, and the discovery of a population of distant, dusty star forming galaxies (DSFGs). In January 2012, the SPT was equipped with a new polarization sensitive camera, SPTpol, which will enable detection of the contribution to the CMB polarization power spectrum from lensing by large scale structure (the so-called “lensing B-modes”) and, on larger angular scales, a detection or improved upper limit on the primordial inflationary signal (“gravitational-wave B-modes”), thereby constraining the energy scale of Inflation. Development is underway for SPT-3G, the third-generation camera for SPT. The SPT-3G survey will cross the threshold from statistical detection of B-mode CMB lensing to imaging the fluctuations at high signal-to-noise; enabling the separation of lensing and inflationary B-modes and improving the constraint on the sum of the neutrino masses Σmν to a level relevant for exploring the neutrino mass hierarchy.
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Landi, Sofia M., Pooja Viswanathan, Stephen Serene, and Winrich A. Freiwald. "A fast link between face perception and memory in the temporal pole." Science 373, no. 6554 (July 1, 2021): 581–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.abi6671.

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The question of how the brain recognizes the faces of familiar individuals has been important throughout the history of neuroscience. Cells linking visual processing to person memory have been proposed but not found. Here, we report the discovery of such cells through recordings from an area in the macaque temporal pole identified with functional magnetic resonance imaging. These cells responded to faces that were personally familiar. They responded nonlinearly to stepwise changes in face visibility and detail and holistically to face parts, reflecting key signatures of familiar face recognition. They discriminated between familiar identities, as fast as a general face identity area. The discovery of these cells establishes a new pathway for the fast recognition of familiar individuals.
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Williams, Isobel. "Dr Edward Wilson (1872-1912): Antarctic Hero." Journal of Medical Biography 17, no. 2 (April 28, 2009): 111–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/jmb.2009.009009.

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Edward Wilson was an artist, doctor, naturalist and explorer. He was on both Scott's Antarctic expeditions of the early 1900s, as Junior Surgeon and Zoologist on the Discovery expedition of 1901 and as Chief of Scientific Staff on the Terra Nova expedition of 1910. He reached the Pole with Scott in 1912 and died with him on their ill-fated return from the Pole.
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Jing, Chun Guo, and Jun Wei Wang. "Simulation of Street Light Pole Controller Routing with OMNeT++." Applied Mechanics and Materials 401-403 (September 2013): 1976–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.401-403.1976.

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In street lighting system, the light pole controllers were used to monitoring and control each street light. The controller nodes were installed at each lighting pole and make up a network with RTUs. In this paper, a randomly forwarding routing strategy was proposed based on the controller network features. The controller nodes were divided many clusters according to the substation power scope. In one cluster, the controller nodes topology is mainly star structure. When a controller node received a packet, it randomly delays a period of time and decides forwarding packet instead of immediately forwarding. The decision is based on the packet propagation direction and other nodes whether sending or not. The randomly forwarding routing protocol were simulated in OMNeT++ environment and compared with the flooding protocol. The results show that the delay of proposed protocol is lower than that of flooding. The proposed protocol also has some special features such as simple, not need to maintain net topology and complex path discovery algorithms.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pole Discovery"

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Chin, Gregory R. "The World-Pole: A Journey into the Imagination of a Discoverer." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73159.

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This thesis is an investigation of a tower known only from the ancient works of a discoverer. The discoverer, who holds witness to the wondrous composition of the monument, documents the tower through illustrative and literary terms as a record of the findings for the reader.
Master of Architecture
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Staniszewski, Zachary K. "First Galaxy Clusters Discovered Via the Sunyaev Zel-D'ovich Effect /." Cleveland, Ohio : Case Western Reserve University, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=case1271698482.

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Thesis (Doctor of Philosophy)--Case Western Reserve University, 2010
Department of Physics Title from PDF (viewed on 2010-05-25) Includes abstract Includes bibliographical references and appendices Available online via the OhioLINK ETD Center
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De, Preter Caitlynn. "Poly ADP-Ribose Protein (PARP) Inhibition Alleviates Behavioral Endophenotypes Due to Stress in a Rodent Double-Hit Model of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2017. https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/412.

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Research has revealed that current antidepressant treatment is less than adequate at alleviating behavioral endophenotypes associated with major depressive disorder (MDD) and there is a need for appropriate animal models to validate novel antidepressant pharmacological targets. In the present study, we wished to establish an ethologically relevant social defeat stress model in combination with a chronic unpredictable stress model, to more accurately mimic severe stress that is common in MDD. Before each day of the introduction of the stressor, animals were given saline or a 40 mg/kg dose of 3-aminobenzamide (3-AB), a poly ADP-ribose (PARP) inhibitor. PARP is a DNA repair enzyme that is increased in activity in response to DNA oxidation, which is elevated in the prefrontal cortical white matter in MDD post-mortem donors. One stressed group was given the common antidepressant fluoxetine (10mg/kg) to serve as a positive control. Results of this study demonstrated that 3-AB alleviated decreases in sucrose preference, a natural reward, along with avoidance on a social interaction test given at the end of social defeat. Preliminary telemetry readings indicated 3-AB was able to significantly decrease heart rate and blood pressure in response to SDS as compared to saline treated rats. Therefore, it appears that PARP inhibition alleviated behavioral endophenotypes associated with stress and represents a new pharmacological treatment for MDD in humans.
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Guo, Pei. "Interpretable Fine-Grained Visual Categorization." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2021. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/9119.

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Not all categories are created equal in object recognition. Fine-grained visual categorization (FGVC) is a branch of visual object recognition that aims to distinguish subordinate categories within a basic-level category. Examples include classifying an image of a bird into specific species like "Western Gull" or "California Gull". Such subordinate categories exhibit characteristics like small inter-category variation and large intra-class variation, making distinguishing them extremely difficult. To address such challenges, an algorithm should be able to focus on object parts and be invariant to object pose. Like many other computer vision tasks, FGVC has witnessed phenomenal advancement following the resurgence of deep neural networks. However, the proposed deep models are usually treated as black boxes. Network interpretation and understanding aims to unveil the features learned by neural networks and explain the reason behind network decisions. It is not only a necessary component for building trust between humans and algorithms, but also an essential step towards continuous improvement in this field. This dissertation is a collection of papers that contribute to FGVC and neural network interpretation and understanding. Our first contribution is an algorithm named Pose and Appearance Integration for Recognizing Subcategories (PAIRS) which performs pose estimation and generates a unified object representation as the concatenation of pose-aligned region features. As the second contribution, we propose the task of semantic network interpretation. For filter interpretation, we represent the concepts a filter detects using an attribute probability density function. We propose the task of semantic attribution using textual summarization that generates an explanatory sentence consisting of the most important visual attributes for decision-making, as found by a general Bayesian inference algorithm. Pooling has been a key component in convolutional neural networks and is of special interest in FGVC. Our third contribution is an empirical and experimental study towards a thorough yet intuitive understanding and extensive benchmark of popular pooling approaches. Our fourth contribution is a novel LMPNet for weakly-supervised keypoint discovery. A novel leaky max pooling layer is proposed to explicitly encourages sparse feature maps to be learned. A learnable clustering layer is proposed to group the keypoint proposals into final keypoint predictions. 2020 marks the 10th year since the beginning of fine-grained visual categorization. It is of great importance to summarize the representative works in this domain. Our last contribution is a comprehensive survey of FGVC containing nearly 200 relevant papers that cover 7 common themes.
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Ignatov, Ivan Ivanovich. "Eastward Voyages and the Late Medieval European Worldview." Thesis, University of Canterbury. School of Humanities and Creative Arts, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/9187.

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This thesis explores the nature of the late medieval European worldview in the context of the thirteenth- and fourteenth-century European journeys to Asia. It aims to determine the precise influence of these journeys on the wider European Weltbild. In lending equal weight to the accounts of the eastward travellers and the sources authored by their counterparts in Europe, who did not travel to Asia, the present study draws together two related strands in medieval historiography: the study of medieval European cosmology and worldview, and the study of medieval travel and travel literature. This thesis treats the journeys as medieval Europe’s interaction with Asia, outlining how travellers formed their perceptions of ‘the East’ through their encounters with Asian people and places. It also explores the transmission of information and ideas from travellers to their European contemporaries, suggesting that the peculiar textual culture of the Middle Ages complicated this process greatly and so minimised the transfer of ‘intact’ perceptions as the travellers originally formed them. The study contends instead that the eastward journeys shaped the late medieval European world picture in a different way, without overturning the concepts that underpinned it. Rather, this thesis argues, thirteenth- and fourteenth-century eastward voyages subtly altered how Europeans were inclined to understand these underpinning concepts. It suggests that the journeys intensified and made the concepts more immediate in Europeans’ minds and that they ‘normalised’ travel itself to the point where it became an essential part of the way Europeans could most readily make sense of the vast and kaleidoscopic world around them.
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Mukherjee, Parijat 1985. "Automatic Stability Checking for Large Analog Circuits." Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148461.

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Small signal stability has always been an important concern for analog designers. Recent advances such as the Loop Finder algorithm allows designers to detect and identify local, potentially unstable return loops without the need to identify and add breakpoints. However, this method suffers from extremely high time and memory complexity and thus cannot be scaled to very large analog circuits. In this research work, we first take an in-depth look at the loop finder algorithm so as to identify certain key enhancements that can be made to overcome these shortcomings. We next propose pole discovery and impedance computation methods that address these shortcomings by exploring only a certain region of interest in the s-plane. The reduced time and memory complexity obtained via the new methodology allows us to extend automatic stability checking to much larger circuits than was previously possible.
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Payet, Nadia. "From shape-based object recognition and discovery to 3D scene interpretation." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1957/21316.

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This dissertation addresses a number of inter-related and fundamental problems in computer vision. Specifically, we address object discovery, recognition, segmentation, and 3D pose estimation in images, as well as 3D scene reconstruction and scene interpretation. The key ideas behind our approaches include using shape as a basic object feature, and using structured prediction modeling paradigms for representing objects and scenes. In this work, we make a number of new contributions both in computer vision and machine learning. We address the vision problems of shape matching, shape-based mining of objects in arbitrary image collections, context-aware object recognition, monocular estimation of 3D object poses, and monocular 3D scene reconstruction using shape from texture. Our work on shape-based object discovery is the first to show that meaningful objects can be extracted from a collection of arbitrary images, without any human supervision, by shape matching. We also show that a spatial repetition of objects in images (e.g., windows on a building facade, or cars lined up along a street) can be used for 3D scene reconstruction from a single image. The aforementioned topics have never been addressed in the literature. The dissertation also presents new algorithms and object representations for the aforementioned vision problems. We fuse two traditionally different modeling paradigms Conditional Random Fields (CRF) and Random Forests (RF) into a unified framework, referred to as (RF)^2. We also derive theoretical error bounds of estimating distribution ratios by a two-class RF, which is then used to derive the theoretical performance bounds of a two-class (RF)^2. Thorough experimental evaluation of individual aspects of all our approaches is presented. In general, the experiments demonstrate that we outperform the state of the art on the benchmark datasets, without increasing complexity and supervision in training.
Graduation date: 2011
Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from May 12, 2011 - May 12, 2012
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Books on the topic "Pole Discovery"

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Steger, Will. North to the Pole. New York: Times Books, 1987.

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Paul, Schurke, ed. North to the Pole. London: Macmillan, 1988.

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Imbert, Bertrand. North Pole, South Pole: Journeys to theends of the earth. London: Thames & Hudson, 1992.

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The South Pole. Chicago, Ill: Raintree, 2013.

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Ben, Dunn, ed. Reaching the North Pole. Edina, Minn: Magic Wagon, 2009.

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North Pole, South Pole: Journeys to the ends of the earth. New York: H.N. Abrams, 1992.

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Bodden, Valerie. To the South Pole. Mankato, MN: Creative Education, 2011.

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The South Pole. London: Raintree, 2013.

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From pole to pole: The life of Quintin Riley, 1905-1980. 2nd ed. [Huntingdon]: J.P. Riley, 1998.

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The race to the south pole. New York: Gareth Stevens Publishing, 2015.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pole Discovery"

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Yuan, Robert. "Marco Polo Technologies." In Drug Discovery and Traditional Chinese Medicine, 191–200. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1455-8_20.

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Fouillade, Charles, Alexis Fouquin, Mohammed-Tayyib Boudra, Vincent Favaudon, Vincent Pennaneach, and Janet Hall. "Radiosensitisation by Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibition." In Cancer Drug Discovery and Development, 275–97. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-14151-0_11.

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Sugimura, Takashi, and Sydney Shall. "History of the Discovery of Poly (ADP-ribose)." In Cancer Drug Discovery and Development, 3–13. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-14151-0_1.

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Mangerich, Aswin, and Alexander Bürkle. "Multitasking Roles for Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in Aging and Longevity." In Cancer Drug Discovery and Development, 125–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-14151-0_6.

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Reindl, Wolfgang, Klaus Strebhardt, and Thorsten Berg. "A Fluorescence Polarization Assay for the Discovery of Inhibitors of the Polo-Box Domain of Polo-Like Kinase 1." In Methods in Molecular Biology, 69–81. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-337-0_5.

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Hsia, R. Po-Chia. "From Marco Polo to Matteo Ricci: Sino-Islamic Knowledge and the European Discovery of Cathay." In Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, 99–122. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.asmar-eb.5.117195.

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Li, Zhenlong, Zhipeng Gui, Barbara Hofer, Yan Li, Simon Scheider, and Shashi Shekhar. "Geospatial Information Processing Technologies." In Manual of Digital Earth, 191–227. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9915-3_6.

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Abstract The increasing availability of geospatial data offers great opportunities for advancing scientific discovery and practices in society. Effective and efficient processing of geospatial data is essential for a wide range of Digital Earth applications such as climate change, natural hazard prediction and mitigation, and public health. However, the massive volume, heterogeneous, and distributed nature of global geospatial data pose challenges in geospatial information processing and computing. This chapter introduces three technologies for geospatial data processing: high-performance computing, online geoprocessing, and distributed geoprocessing, with each technology addressing one aspect of the challenges. The fundamental concepts, principles, and key techniques of the three technologies are elaborated in detail, followed by examples of applications and research directions in the context of Digital Earth. Lastly, a Digital Earth reference framework called discrete global grid system (DGGS) is discussed.
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"The Discovery of the South Magnetic Pole." In A Geological Miscellany, 11–18. Princeton University Press, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400857913.11.

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Rayfuse, Rosemary. "Russian Flag at the North Pole." In International Law's Objects, 410–18. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798200.003.0035.

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Russia’s planting of a flag on the seabed at the North Pole in 2007 set off a flurry of concern about its maritime and territorial ambitions and the potential for international conflict in the Arctic. However, the law of the sea now renders moot traditional rules of the doctrine of discovery and occupation as manifestations of sovereignty. Thus, the Russian flag at the North Pole is meaningless in the legal sense. Nevertheless, it is not irrelevant. On the one hand, it has catalyzed the development of a ‘law habit’ among the Arctic states now reflected in cooperation on scientific and technical work to support their overlapping outer continental-shelf claims to the Arctic seabed and on other Arctic Ocean matters. On the other hand, it has clearly signalled a claim to an advantageous negotiating position. The flag is thus a physical manifestation of both the power and pretence of international law.
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Lecky, Katarzyna. "Jonson’s Broken Compasses and Bit Parts." In Pocket Maps and Public Poetry in the English Renaissance, 109–50. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198834694.003.0003.

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Chapter 3 turns to Ben Jonson’s first laureate chapbook, His Part (1604), written for James I’s first royal entrance into London. Here, Jonson imagines the Inns of Court as a lodestone that disrupts the imperial compass marking the king as the pole star of the state. Instead, Jonson points to the ordinary people at the center of the king’s newly conjoined realm. Jonson’s poems measure the commonwealth according to the standards of civic identity in ways that anticipate the practicality of the numeric distance tables in Norden’s Intended Guyde (1624). An archival discovery of King James’s personal copy of the Guyde also shows the presence of popular cartography at the highest spheres of British governance, and offers a fresh perspective on the kinds of geographical knowledge shaping the intersections of space, place, and national identity in the early seventeenth century.
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Conference papers on the topic "Pole Discovery"

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Lu, Jun-qiang, Xiao-dong Ju, and Bai-yong Men. "Design of test platform for receiver mandrel of Multi-pole array acoustic logging tool." In 2012 9th International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (FSKD). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2012.6233984.

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Yang, Yang, Qixin Cao, Charles Lo, and Zhen Zhang. "Pose Estimation Based on Four Coplanar Point Correspondences." In 2009 Sixth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2009.310.

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Ling, Wang, Chao Xing, and Jie Yan. "Aircraft pose estimation based on polar function descriptor." In 2012 9th International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (FSKD). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2012.6234157.

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Chen, Xipeng, Kwan-Yee Lin, Wentao Liu, Chen Qian, and Liang Lin. "Weakly-Supervised Discovery of Geometry-Aware Representation for 3D Human Pose Estimation." In 2019 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2019.01115.

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Fei, Lanying. "Combining pictorial structure and image features to estimate human pose." In 2012 9th International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (FSKD). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2012.6234351.

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Ryabinkina, N. N., and O. V. Valyaeva. "Oil potential of the Asselian-Sakmarian reefogenic buildups of the Varandey-Adzva zone of the Timan-Pechora Province." In All-Russia Lithological Meeting «Geology of reefs». Institute of Geology FRC Komi SC UB RAS, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19110/98491-013-106-107.

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Massive deposits in reef were discovered in separate fields of Varandey-Adzva zone (Naulskoye, Labaganskoye, etc.). These bodies are represented by organogenic-detrital limestones, fractured with porosity of 8-10%. They have the form of separate buildings, developed locally, wedging out along the strike within the same area. The deposits are confined to the secondary reservoirs of the pore and pore-fracture type.
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Yang, Bo, Chao Liu, and Wenfeng Zheng. "PCA-based 3D pose modeling for beating heart tracking." In 2017 13th International Conference on Natural Computation, Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (ICNC-FSKD). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2017.8393335.

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Ling, Wang, Xing Chao, and Yan Jie. "Aircraft pose estimation based on mathematical morphological algorithm and Radon transform." In 2011 Eighth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (FSKD 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2011.6019888.

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Fikri, R. "Successful Geological Strategy for Setting Intermediate Casing Prior Approaching Kujung Carbonate in Jambaran Field, Cepu Block." In Digital Technical Conference. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa20-e-268.

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Jambaran Field was discovered in 2001 by J-1ST1 exploration well. The discovery well encountered steep-flanked carbonate build-up structure (Kujung Fm) that contain thick gas column and thin oil rim. To date six more wells have been drilled to unravel the geometry of the carbonate build up reservoir type. The carbonate build up which is up to 10 km length and 1 km width was deposited during Oligo-Early Miocene and sealed cap by very thick Tuban shale. This stratigraphic configuration has caused several drilling risks. First, there is a huge drop in pore pressure value between Tuban Shale and Kujung Carbonate; of up to 12.6 ppg in Tuban Shale and 8.1-11 ppg in Kujung Carbonate. Second, shale instability commonly happened during drilling Tuban shale. Third, total loss circulation, which can lead to H2S gas kick, potentially happened once penetrating Kujung Carbonate. To reduce those drilling risks, the casing ought to cover as much as Tuban Shale and as close as possible to Kujung Carbonate. During the exploration wells drilling, conventional methods such as; cutting observation, wetness-balance gas ratio, calcimetry, and mud losses have been applied to hunt the casing point as close as possible to Kujung Carbonate. Those conventional methods were successful in several well but also failed in the others. There are many other sophisticated tools developed by Service Company to serve the purpose of set casing, such as resistivity at bit. However, in our ongoing development wells drilling campaign, we utilized the combination of those conventional methods successfully to set 9-5/8” casing point as close as possible without entering Kujung Carbonate.
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Su, Ya, and Zhe Liu. "Position Detection for Badminton Tactical Analysis based on Multi-person Pose Estimation." In 2018 14th International Conference on Natural Computation, Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (ICNC-FSKD). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fskd.2018.8686917.

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