Nehw Ot Un, Woh Ot Nur
Nehw Ot Un kcarb the tub ro fling keep an blotto gnas the gniw nrocs Woh Ot Nur same dna tuc os eruc os ocnam ísa et saguynoc John M. Bennett __ Dr. John M. Bennett Curator, Avant Writing Collection Rare Books Manuscripts Library The Ohio State University Libraries 1858 Neil Av Mall Columbus, OH 43210 USA (614) 292-3029 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.johnmbennett.net ___
Physics News Update 730 (fwd)
-- Forwarded message -- Date: Thu, 5 May 2005 11:46:33 -0400 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Physics News Update 730 PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News Number 730 May 5, 2005 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein ROOM TEMPERATURE LIQUID SODIUM can occur but only under pressures of a million atmospheres. Melting is a mystery. It happens when the thermal agitation among atoms in a solid overcomes the inter-atom bonds. Applying pressure to a solid sample usually helps to negate the effect of thermal agitation and so the melting temperature usually goes up with pressure. In a few materials, such as water, above a certain pressure the melting point begins to drop. Now, the most dramatic case yet seen of such a negative melting curve has been studied by scientists at the Carnegie Institution of Washington looking at one of the simplest metals known, sodium. What happens is this: With zero pressure applied, sodium melts at a temperature of 371 K. As pressure is added, the melting temperature goes up too, up to 1000 K at a pressure of 30 giga-pascals (30 GPa), or about 300,000 atm. Then strange things happen. As the pressure is taken up further, the melting point starts to drop, reaching a low of 300 K (below its ambient melting point) at pressures of 118 GPa (see graph at www.aip.org/png). All previous materials exhibiting negative melting curves have gone negative very reluctantly, over pressure ranges of a few GPa or temperature ranges of a few K. Sodium, by contrast, goes negative over a range of 700 K and 80 GPa. According to Carnegie researcher Eugene Gregoryanz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]), at a pressure of a million atmospheres his sodium sample melts at room temperature. The liquid is denser than the solid (water shares this trait), and might have strange plastic or mechanical properties. It might even be superconducting under some circumstances, he says. (Gregoryanz et al., Physical Review Letters, upcoming article) AN OPTICAL CONVEYOR BELT for moving sub-micron objects has been achieved by collaborating physicists at the Institute of Scientific Instruments in Brno, Czech Republic and at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Their set-up used a special type of non-diffracting laser light that forms a very narrow beam existing over long distance without changing its width. Two such counter-propagating laser beams establish up a lace-like standing wave pattern which can suspend and hold tiny polystyrene spheres of just the right size. The balls, which range in size from 400 nm to one micron, have a density comparable to water. Previously, scientists have used such non-diffracting optical lace beams to move particles with the force of radiation pressure, but without the ability to stop them using only a single beam. The Czech and Scottish researchers, by contrast, set up a light lace pattern with numerous knots, corresponding to intensity maxima (antinodes) of the standing wave. Furthermore a particle can be confined near a knot and all the knots can then be moved simultaneously over large distances by changing the relative phases of the counter-propagating laser beams. Moreover thanks to the self-healing property of the non-diffracting beams, many particles can be confined simultaneously in the standing wave structure (near the knots) without significantly spoiling the beam properties. The positioning accuracy, related to the precision of the phase shift and the optical trap depth (the size of the knots), is at the micron level and will get better. Pavel Zemanek ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) says that possible applications for his device include the delivery of biological or colloidal microparticles or even ultracold atoms. (Cizmar et al., Applied Physics Letters, 25 April 2005; lab site at http://www.isibrno.cz/omitec/index.php?swt.html ) (A few years we wrote about a different kind of photon conveyor belt: http://www.aip.org/pnu/1997/split/pnu321-1.htm ) CORRECTION: In the item on pyrofusion (Update 729, Item 1), the tungsten tip is actually positively charged, so that it and the pyroelectric crystal both repel the positive deuterium ions towards a solid deuterium-containing target. *** PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE is a digest of physics news items arising from physics meetings, physics journals, newspapers and magazines, and other news sources. It is provided free of charge as a way of broadly disseminating information about physics and physicists. For that reason, you are free to post it, if you like, where others can read it, providing only that you credit AIP. Physics News Update appears approximately once a week. AUTO-SUBSCRIPTION OR DELETION: By using the expression subscribe physnews in your e-mail message, you will have automatically added the address from which your message was sent to the distribution list for Physics News Update. If you use the signoff physnews expression in your e-mail message, the address
Re: libertad
I don't think there's any need to say whose image the 'original was'. I was curious. By the way, everyone should go to your website - the work is wonderful - could you provide a brief description possibly? - Alan ( URLs/DVDs/CDroms/books/etc. see http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt )
Re: your mail
If you slow them up, hit pause, they're readable. I've been shooting on a silvered roof in the neighborhood; it's the same arena Foofwa and Azure used for the dancework - Alan, and thanks On Thu, 5 May 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: this is real cool Alan the oscillation and the bulge in the texture maps (?) looks like its synthesizing a wild breathing / heaving. what are the images then? jUStin On 5/5/05, Alan Sondheim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: when everyday life analog collapses to the digital frame http://www.asondheim.org/performance.mov oh this is too easy! forget it! _ ( URLs/DVDs/CDroms/books/etc. see http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt )
Seyhan Erozcelik
Seyhan Erozcelik (written for Murat Nemer-Nejat in relation to his EDA: An Anthology of Contemporary Turkish Poetry, Talisman, 2004) $ look. for you : look!: not found $ i don't understand and i so want to! $ more than ever than: No such file or directory ever: No such file or directory $ i don't understand and more than ever $ i want to! Seyhan Erozcelik, Cezai Ersiz, Turgay Fi i, Hamd Gedik, Tarik Gunersel, Ayd n Hatipoglu, G nseli nal, ozdemir nce, ... gore ve yayinevine gore duzenlendi. seyhan, er elik, SEYHAN, ER K, seyhan, erozcelik, SEYHAN, EROZCELIK,. ... (grimak, 11.02.2003 12:27). hafiften de il, a r ar adamlardand r seyhan. seyhan alkol biraktiysa, hayatin dengesi bozulmustur; olmaz, olmamali... 19:22 ~ 19:29). nahid firatli. -$airlerin miknatisi topraga kari$ti...- / seyhan erozcelik ic. radikal 21.05.2002 edebiyat ogretmeni ... sira $ekli alfa-beta, r. yeni-eski, gudik. tarih araligi $urdan bir vakte kadar bir avuc yazar ile uc avuc okuru bulusturacak, yaz metnini sayginligiyla orantili bir yalinlik icinde ihtiyaci olanlara ta iyacak eski usul ... (1962- ). SEYHAN ER K. XVII./ A beni k r melek, g lgeli yerlerinde u urdu, parmak u titredim ... Seyhan Er elik City/Date : Istanbul City/Date : Istanbul City/Date : Istanbul ISTANBUL Her yil sair Behcet Necatigilin dogum gununde verilen Necatigil Siir Odulu bu yil duzenlenen torenle sair Seyhan Erozcelike verildi. Seyhan Seyhan Eroezcelik 'false' false 0 false 0 Seyhan Erozchelik 'false' false 0 false 0 $ wait a minute i'm drinking i'll have someone or something just for a minute /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: a: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: minute: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: im drinking ill: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: have: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: someone: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: or: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: something: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: just: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: for: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: a: argument must be %job or process id /usr/local/bin/ksh: wait: minute: argument must be %job or process id $ hold on give it a second $ just a second now just a minute hold: not found $ coffee keeps me going in these dark times just a second coffee: not found $ just a second now just a minute ksh: just: not found $ just a second now just a minute $ just a second now just a minute $ just a second now just a minute $ i want to!
[public-news-alert] Census Bureau News -- Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Moving Up and Down the Income Ladder, 1998 to 1999 (fwd)
-- Forwarded message -- Date: Thu, 5 May 2005 10:49:59 -0400 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [public-news-alert] Census Bureau News -- Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Moving Up and Down the Income Ladder, 1998 to 1999 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2005 P70-100 Dynamics of Economic Well-Being: Moving Up and Down the Income Ladder, 1998 to 1999 No news release associated with this report -- Tip Sheet Only item National survey information on the large majority of the population that experiences either an increase or a decline in their income ratio of at least 5 percent or more from one year to the next. The report can be found at http://www.census.gov/prod/2005pubs/p70-100.pdf ___ public-news-alert mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.census.gov/mailman/listinfo/public-news-alert
Woh Ot Hype
Woh Ot Hype guj taem flam sore drut lace marc lut nehw tas John M. Bennett __ Dr. John M. Bennett Curator, Avant Writing Collection Rare Books Manuscripts Library The Ohio State University Libraries 1858 Neil Av Mall Columbus, OH 43210 USA (614) 292-3029 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.johnmbennett.net ___
noemata p
Does anybody have the most recent password to noemata's ftp site? I tried emailing him privately a few days ago, but he hasn't responded. I used to have the password in an email he posted publicly to the list, but it got deleted from my box. You may send the info to me privately, if you like. thanks, m
Re: Providence
Alan, is that the the John Hay Libraryat Brown? -Peter C. ARTIST'S BLOG - http://invisiblenotes.blogspot.com/PHOTOGRAPHS - http://uncommonvision.blogspot.com/ -Original Message-From: Alan Sondheim [EMAIL PROTECTED]To: WRYTING-L@LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CASent: Thu, 5 May 2005 15:36:42 -0400Subject: Re: Providence ...part of which was shot in Providence, at the old Brown University(octagonal) library, always a prefiguring/configuration red-brickedbuilding I'd pass I'd would on the way home from another dreary gradschool dai alanOn Thu, 5 May 2005, lquarles wrote: "sod the moon- there's no poetry there anymore {uhnn} nothing but a stabbing pain right up the bowells and another stinger coming right down the spine to meet the one from the backside out there in the icy universe there's nothing" excerpted from John Gielgud's Clive Langham in Alain Resnais' film&! gt; _Providence_. another good one Clive voices is: "now let science soothe the troubled rectum" excellent film.( URLs/DVDs/CDroms/books/etc. see http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt )
Dr. Barnes
Dr. Barnes Alpha-Mail down the stairs where a lamp is placed and decoration has equal meaning a proliferation of, still lives amidst the squalor of, the violent classes with a triangle, inverted this yantra bends the sound of the bija falling to the microphone "drinking milk with its penis" now a larva feeds for free where the clouds are parting to reveal a tiny upturned mouth or some such sigil about to be erased: /the eccentric dead are gods/
Re: Providence
so do you remember them making this film? its an anglo french production, it didnt seem to be made in America at all.. lq - Original Message - From: Alan Sondheim [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: WRYTING-L@listserv.utoronto.ca Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2005 7:29 PM Subject: Re: Providence No, the John Hay is the neoclassical thing on the quad if I remember? or wait - that might be the John Carter Brown library - it probably is the John Hay! - Alan On Thu, 5 May 2005, Peter Ciccariello wrote: Alan, is that the the John Hay Library at Brown? -Peter C. ARTIST'S BLOG - http://invisiblenotes.blogspot.com/ PHOTOGRAPHS - http://uncommonvision.blogspot.com/ -Original Message- From: Alan Sondheim [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: WRYTING-L@LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CA Sent: Thu, 5 May 2005 15:36:42 -0400 Subject: Re: Providence ...part of which was shot in Providence, at the old Brown University (octagonal) library, always a prefiguring/configuration red-bricked building I'd pass I'd would on the way home from another dreary grad school dai alan On Thu, 5 May 2005, lquarles wrote: sod the moon- there's no poetry there anymore {uhnn} nothing but a stabbing pain right up the bowells and another stinger coming right down the spine to meet the one from the backside out there in the icy universe there's nothing excerpted from John Gielgud's Clive Langham in Alain Resnais' film _Providence_. another good one Clive voices is: now let science soothe the troubled rectum excellent film. ( URLs/DVDs/CDroms/books/etc. see http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt ) ( URLs/DVDs/CDroms/books/etc. see http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt )