#2304: JavaScript error in Replace dialog
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Reporter: martinkou | Owner:
Type: Bug | Status: new
Priority: Normal | Milestone:
Component: General | Version: SVN
Keywords: Confirmed Firefox |
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To reproduce the bug:
1. Open sample01.html in Firefox.
1. Switch to source mode.
1. Paste the following HTML into FCKeditor:
{{{
<h3>Faculty and Fields of Interest</h3>
<p><b>Bisagni, James J</b> Professor of Physics and Marine Science and
Technology (1997<span><span> </span>)</span><span> </span>, BS
1972 University of New York at Stony Brook, MS 1976, PhD 1991
University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography.
<i>Specializations:</i> Physical oceanography, satellite
oceanography.</p>
<p><b>Crawford, Renate</b> (Chairperson, Department of Physics)
Associate Professor of Physics (1996), BS 1990, MA 1991, PhD 1993 Kent
State University. <i>Specializations:</i> Experimental liquid crystals,
condensed matter, physics education and outreach.</p>
<p><b>Gangopadhyay, Avijit</b> Associate Professor of Physics and Marine
Science and Technology (1997), BTech 1979 Indian Institute of
Technology, Kharagpur, MTech 1982 Indian Institute of Technology, New
Delhi, PhD 1990 University of Rhode Island. <i>Specializations:</i>
Physical oceanography, numerical modeling, climate studies.</p>
<p><b>Hirshfeld, Alan</b> Professor of Physics (1978), BA 1973 Princeton
University, MS 1975, PhD 1978 Yale University. <i>Specializations:</i>
Astrophysics, observational astronomy.</p>
<p><b>Horch, Elliott</b> (Graduate Program Director) Assistant Professor
of Physics (2002), BA 1987 University of Chicago, MS 1989 Yale
University, PhD 1994 Stanford University. <i>Specializations:</i>
Observational astronomy, astrophysics, astronomical imaging systems.<br
/>
<br />
<b>Hsu, Jong-Ping</b> Chancellor Professor of Physics (1978), BS 1962
National Taiwan University, MS 1965 National Tsing-Hwa University, PhD
1969 University of Rochester. <i>Specializations:</i> Symmetry
principles and gauge field theories. <b><br />
</b><b><br />
Gaurav Khanna</b> Assistant Professor of Physics (2003), BTech 1995
Indian Institute of Technology, PhD 2003 Penn State University.
<i>Specializations:</i> Theoretical and computational astrophysics,
black hole astrophysics, gravitational waves, quantum gravity, high
performance computing, control and dynamical system theory.</p>
<p><b>O’Reilly, Grant</b> Assistant Professor of Physics (2002),
BS 1986 University of Melbourne, PhD 1997 University of Melbourne.
<i>Specializations:</i> Photonuclear physics at intermediate energies,
few-body systems, pion photo productions, fundamental nuclear
symmetries.<br />
<br />
<b>Tandon, Amit</b> Associate Professor of Physics and Marine Science
and technology (1999), BTech 1987 Indian Institute of Technology, PhD
1992 Cornell University. <i>Specializations:</i> Fluid dynamics,
physical oceanography, environmental and computational physics.</p>
<p><b>Wang, Jay (Jianyi)</b> Associate Professor of Physics (1998), BSc
1983 Lanzhou University, China, PhD 1992 University of Tennessee,
Knoxville. <i>Specializations:</i> Theory and simulations of electronic,
atomic and optical processes, ion-solids and ion-surface interactions,
computational physics.</p>
<p><b>Zarrillo, Marguerite</b> Associate Professor of Physics (1998), BS
1978 Purdue University, MS 1981 University of Illinois, PhD 1998
University of Central Florida. <i>Specializations:</i> Traffic flow
modeling, intelligent transportation systems, highway capacity.<br />
<br />
The Physics Master of Science program is open to full-time as well as
part-time students who are planning to pursue careers in physics
research or teaching, or in applied areas of industrial research and
development. The part-time option is attractive for students who are
already professionally active as physics teachers. In addition, the
university offers an international exchange program for a year of study
abroad at universities in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.</p>
<p>The program is designed to advance students’ understanding of
the concepts of modern and classical physics as well as their mastery of
applying these concepts to solve practical problems. Under the guidance
of a graduate advisor, all students follow a course of study that is in
harmony with their background and individual goals. The size of the
fosters close and informal contact between students and faculty active
in research. These personal contacts enable graduate students to keep
abreast of current problems in physics and offers them the opportunity
to participate in original research.</p>
<p>The Physics Department offers a range of graduate courses in
classical mechanics, electrodynamics, quantum mechanics, physical
oceanography, condensed matter physics, and advanced mathematical
physics. The department also offers courses emphasizing research
including thesis research as well as independent study courses on
special topics. There is also advanced laboratory instruction in
experimental techniques, including electronic instrumentation, computer
interfacing and data analysis. Graduate students are encouraged to
participate in ongoing faculty research program s in theoretical
physics, physical oceanography, optics, liquid crystals, and astronomy.
In addition, research projects in physics education are available for
students pursuing a teaching career. Students interested in applied
areas of physics or in closely related fields such as computer science
or electrical and computer engineering can take graduate courses and
obtain research projects in those areas as well.</p>
<p>The physics background and expertise acquired by students at UMass
Dartmouth has enabled many to continue their studies at premier research
universities in the US and abroad. Others have embarked on careers in
teaching or in applied areas like nuclear power, communications,
materials science, computer or electrical engineering, and computer
software.</p>
<p>Careers of our graduates as professional physicists are remarkably
broad in scope. The majority of physics students who obtained their MS
degree at UMass Dartmouth in recent years have continued their studies
at the Ph.D. level at other universities including Brandeis, City
University of New York at Brooklyn, Illinois, Johns Hopkins, Kentucky,
Maryland, MIT., Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Rensselaer,
Rice, Rutgers, State University of New York at Stony Brook and Wesleyan.
Our graduates are employed at computer software companies, high schools,
industrial concerns, national laboratories, nuclear power plants and
universities. They work in fields as varied as astrophysics, biophysics,
computer programming, electrical engineering, experimental high energy
physics, liquid crystals, materials science, mathematical statistics,
nuclear engineering, nuclear theory and satellite communications.</p>
<h3>Faculty and Student Research</h3>
<p>Research activities in the Physics Department span a very diverse
range within the field, but may be grouped into three main focus areas:
Ocean Physics, Computational and Theoretical Physics, and Experimental
Physics. Student participation is highly valued in all of these
areas, and opportunities include research assistantships and summer
internships along with tuition waivers. Current research efforts in the
department are supported by grants from several federal agencies.<br />
<br />
The world’s oceans play a critical role in modulating both weather
and climate. Current research projects in Ocean Physics cover physical
scales from micrometers to thousands of kilometers using several
different techniques. Satellite-derived data is used to study a variety
of physical and physical-biological interactions concerning the
relationship between ocean circulation and plankton. Numerical and
analytical techniques are used to study many different aspects of
both coastal and open ocean circulation, as well as upper ocean
conditions and circulation. Specific projects include studies of feature
oriented regional modeling systems and multivariate synthesis of
biophysical data sets in different world oceans, biophysical modeling in
the northern Humboldt Current, basin-scale simulations of the North
Atlantic, upper-ocean mixing in the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean,
interaction of mesoscale eddies with mixed layers, ageostrophic
circulation near fronts in the upper ocean, and experimental fluid
physics. Research is carried out at both the UMass Dartmouth main campus
in North Dartmouth and the UMass Dartmouth Marine Campus located on
Clark Cove in southern New Bedford, and conducted in collaboration with
a variety of both national and international researchers located at
other federal laboratories and major universities.</p>
<p>Theoretical and computational research is pursued in a number of
areas. Atomic, molecular and optical (AMO) physics research focuses on
electronic and optical properties of matter in interaction with charged
particles, photons and laser pulses. Electron correlation effects and
exotic properties of Rydberg atoms and molecules are areas of current
interest. Research in gravitational physics is also represented in the
theory area in several projects. One of the most significant of these
involves studying the coalescence of binary black holes using
perturbation theory and estimating properties of the gravitational waves
produced in this process. This research is relevant to the various
gravity wave observatories being constructed (e.g. LIGO, LISA) that will
soon detect this radiation from astrophysical sources. Other areas of
faculty interest in theoretical research include studies of the broad
view of Lorentz and Poincare invariance and spacetime symmetry,
spacetime transformations for non-inertial frames with limiting
4-dimensional symmetry and field theory in non-inertial frames, and
translation gauge symmetry for gravity.</p>
<p>Research in experimental physics at UMass Dartmouth includes nuclear
physics, condensed matter physics, traffic engineering, and
observational astronomy. The nuclear physics research currently involves
a series of measurements to investigate pion photoproduction near
threshold from the proton and (eventually) the neutron. This project is
a collaborative effort involving researchers from the U.S. and Sweden,
and will be undertaken using the MAX-lab facility at Lund University in
Lund, Sweden. Research into the physical phenomena of liquid crystals
and polymers, a sub-discipline of condensed matter physics, currently
includes working toward the development of electronically switchable
diffraction gratings, which can steer and manage impinging light. An
area that uses both modeling and experimental data is transportation
engineering: specifically, transportation modeling, queuing,
optimization and car following theory. This work involves the Florida
Department of Transportation and the Center for Advanced Transportation
Systems Simulation, CATSS, in Orlando, Florida. Observational astronomy
research is focused on stellar and galactic studies of binary stars.
<i>Hubble</i> Space Telescope data of extremely old binary stars are now
being analyzed, and a ground-based effort using speckle imaging at the
WIYN 3.5-m Telescope at Kitt Peak, Arizona is underway in collaboration
with Yale University to develop comprehensive information of binaries in
the solar neighborhood.</p>
<p>For further information on these and other research activities,
please visit the department web page at <a
href="http://www.umassd.edu/engineering/physics/">www.umassd.edu/engineering/physics/</a></p>
<h3>Admission Requirements</h3>
<p>Applicants must submit the required application materials to the
Graduate Office. The following aspects are related specifically to the
graduate physics program.</p>
<p>Admission to the graduate physics program may be either for the fall
or the spring semester. Admission is competitive and requires the
completion of an undergraduate degree in physics or a closely related
field with a grade point average that attests to the student’s
ability for graduate level study. The General Record Examination (GRE)
is not required for admission, but the selection of candidates for
financial support includes consideration of GRE scores as well as Test
of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores for international
students whose native language is not English.</p>
<h3>Financial Assistance</h3>
<p>A limited number of teaching and research assistantships are
available. They are awarded on a competitive basis. The selection of
candidates is based on academic transcripts from the student’s
home institution, three letters of recommendation from professors or
other senior scientists well acquainted with the qualifications of the
candidate, the GRE scores and, where applicable, the TOEFL scores.
Assistantships are awarded either on a full-time or a partial basis. The
number of applicants for financial support has traditionally far
exceeded the number of assistantships available.</p>
<p>Other assistance, such as loans or work study, may be available to
you. Please consult the chapter on “Expenses and Financial
Assistance.”</p>
<h3>Contact</h3>
<p>Dr Elliott Horch<br />
Graduate Program Director, Physics<br />
Assistant Professor of Physics<br />
508 999-8360<br />
<a href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</a><br />
<br />
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth<br />
285 Old Westport Road<br />
North Dartmouth, MA 02747-2300</p>
}}}
4. Switch back to WYSIWYG.
5. Open the Replace dialog.
6. Try to replace ")" with "***", do them one-by-one.
7. A JavaScript error occurs in the middle of the replacement, but the
replace operation itself seems undisrupted.
This bug was reported by dshafik form the IRC channel.
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