Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Mailing Lists Astrophysics
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 105    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

41. The Cactus Code Server
Quick Subscription News mailing List. more mailing lists The development ofan astrophysics Simulation Collaboratory joins 5 institutions
http://www.cactuscode.org/Development/ASC.html
Welcome
Community

Documentation

Download
...
Links

Quick Subscription:
News Mailing List
more Mailing Lists
Search CactusCode:
Description
The development of an Astrophysics Simulation Collaboratory joins 5 institutions
  • Washington University
  • Rutgers University
  • National Center of Supercomputing Applications
  • University of Chicago
  • University of Illinois
in an NSF funded Knowledge and Distributed Intelligence program. The aims of the collaboratory are to develop tools for the collaborative research into problems of relativistic astrophysics. Central to the idea of the Collaboratory is the development of an Astrophysics Portal for the management and submission of large scale simulations using a wide range of computer resources. The portal is deployed on the ASC Grid , a testbed of supercomputing resources including machines at the NCSA, AHPCC, AEI, Washington University and SDSC.
ASC and Cactus
The development of the Astrophysics Simulation Collaboratory is being pursued with the involvement of the Cactus Team and collaborators. The ASC project will benefit Cactus mainly through the development of Simulation Portal The ASC portal is being built specifically around the Cactus code, although many of the components will be applicable to general simulation portals. This portal will not only bring new users to Cactus, but will help existing users make full and easy use of their available computing resources. We expect the ASC portal to serve as a prototype for a general Cactus Portal.

42. Mailing List Skepdig@pelicancrossing.net Message 4
HarvardSmithsonian Center for astrophysics (BBC); 12,13 Sunday Times; Further information and mailing list announcements available from
http://mail.pelicancrossing.net:8100/Lists/skepdig/Message/4.html
Mailing List skepdig@pelicancrossing.net Message #4 From: Subject: Skeptical Digest 17.2-3 (Summer and Autumn 2004) Date: Sun, 05 Dec 2004 17:33:17 +0000 To:
Please forward as widely as possible without spamming anyone
1. Amount Comcast pays per year for content to carry to TV cable
subscribers: $4 billion
2. Amount Comcast bid to acquire Disney on February 11: $66 billion
3. Percentage accuracy claimed by Seattle's Relationship Research
Institute in predicting the success of marriages: 94
4. Number of Barbie dolls sold worldwide every second: 3
5. Amount the typical British family spends raising a child: £140,000
6. Britain's rank in spending on children across Europe: 1
7. Percentage of prints lifted at crime scenes from knife hilts, guns, and windows panes that are palms, not fingers: at least 30 8. Average number of crimes committed per year per New York burglar: 300 to 400 9. Date on which a Bangladeshi tribalwoman was swallowed by a python: 21 November 2003 10. Number of priests accused by children of sexual abuse in the US between 1950 and 2002: 4,450

43. D&TZ Mailing List Archive: Re: Money = Ability
astrophysics to performance and interesting leap (excuse the pun) Todance-tech@lists.acs.ohio-state.edu Subject Re money = ability
http://www.art.net/resources/dtz/archive/DanceTech98/0021.html
Re: money = ability Lesley Wheeler ( artscom@infobahn.com.au
Mon, 5 Jan 1998 09:47:04 +0800

Astrophysics to performance - and interesting leap (excuse the pun)
It didn't all come from the Military - it may have begun there, but most of the really interesting
developments that techno-based artists are using these days actually came from the arts areas
themselves. I know Film is something of a "four-letter-word" in some places - but it has pushed the
development of some amazing software that provides artists with the ability to create electronic 3D
environments and all of the attendant uses - not to mention that Photoshop developments (and in
fact it's beginnings) have come from the Graphic arts industry and then photography (both now
recognised as being within the arts industry).
Some of the movement software that is and has been used by performance people may have had it's origins in the Military - but performance and display art has had a pretty damned huge part in shaping the way in which the direction has gone.

44. (IAAC) Astronomy-related Mailing Lists...
ASTRO General Astronomy amp; astrophysics mailing List Dr. Paul Rybsky -administrator rybskip@uwwvax.uww.edu ShallowSky - Lunar and Planetary
http://www.visualdeepsky.org/netastrocatalog-announce/msg01102.html
[Prev] [Next] [Index] [Thread]
(IAAC) Astronomy-related mailing lists...
http://www.shallowsky.com/shallow-sky.html MPList - The Minor Planets Mailing List http://www.bitnik.com/mp/ meteorite-list - Meteorite Mailing List http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing_list.html meteorite - Meteorite and Tektike Mailing List http://www.meteorite.com/ SeeSat - Satellite Observation Mailing List http://www2.satellite.eu.org/sat/vsohp/satintro.html MeteOptic - Meteorological Phenomena Mailing List http://www.funet.fi/astro/eng/obs/meteoptic/ CCNet - the Cambridge Conference Mailing List (PHAs, NEOs, etc.) http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/cccmenu.html Dark-Sky - Light-Pollution Issues Mailing List listserver@fpi-protostar.com IMO-NEWS - Official Maillist of International Meteor Organization http://www.imo.net

45. Xml-dev - Re: [xml-dev] XML For Astronomy/Astrophysics
if anyone had some good links / mailing lists for XML for Astronomy. Many of the other formats and lists are considerably older and language
http://lists.xml.org/archives/xml-dev/200302/msg00441.html
Re: [xml-dev] XML for Astronomy/Astrophysics
Lists Home
Date Index Thread Index http://xml.gsfc.nasa.gov/ which seems good, and at least recently updated. > Many of the other formats and lists are considerably older and language > dependent (e.g. in AIML there is type="java.lang.String"). I am looking for > something pretty generic I suppose, but if someone has a hot link for > marking up radio telescope output I am game for any language (even IDL). To > push the question a little further has anyone seen SVG used in conjunction > with such data? > Not quite what you asked for, but here is a link to some work on using topic maps to unify astronomical data bases. http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~aam/science/topicmaps/ucd.html Cheers, Tom P

46. Xml-dev - XML For Astronomy/Astrophysics
To xmldev@lists.xml.org ; Subject XML for Astronomy/astrophysics I waswondering if anyone had some good links / mailing lists for XML for Astronomy
http://lists.xml.org/archives/xml-dev/200302/msg00440.html
XML for Astronomy/Astrophysics
Lists Home
Date Index Thread Index I was wondering if anyone had some good links / mailing lists for XML for Astronomy. I spent some time on google and the Cover Pages (both having good results) but a lot of what I have run into has led back to http://xml.gsfc.nasa.gov/ which seems good, and at least recently updated. Many of the other formats and lists are considerably older and language dependent (e.g. in AIML there is type="java.lang.String"). I am looking for something pretty generic I suppose, but if someone has a hot link for marking up radio telescope output I am game for any language (even IDL). To push the question a little further has anyone seen SVG used in conjunction with such data? Thanks Jeff Rafter

47. Astronomy & Astrophysics
Create an account for Astronomy astrophysics Latest articles Please checkthis box if you do not wish to appear in our mailing lists. EDP Sciences
http://www.edpsciences.org/journal/index.cfm?edpsname=aa&niv1=free_for_individua

48. Astronomy & Astrophysics
Astronomy astrophysics. EAS Publications Series Please check this box ifyou do not wish to appear in our mailing lists. EDP Sciences
http://www.edpsciences.org/journal/index.cfm?edpsname=aa&niv1=subscription&niv2=

49. Astronomy: Mailing Lists
Astronomy and astrophysics koolish A mailing list for astronomical eventsand meeting announcements mostly in the Boston area.
http://www.bilkent.edu.tr/pub/DataSources/bySubject/astro/mailinglists.html
Astronomy and Astrophysics
This page is part of the WWW Virtual Library . New entries Up to WWW Virtual Library: Astronomy
Mailing Lists

50. The WWW Virtual Library: Astronomy And Astrophysics
Astronomy and astrophysics mailing lists. * Miscellaneous. * Newsgroups.* Observatories. * Other lists, Virtual Libraries and Search Engines
http://www.bilkent.edu.tr/pub/DataSources/bySubject/astro/astro-old.html
Astronomy and Astrophysics
This page is part of the WWW Virtual Library Information categorised by subject. New entries Up to WWW Virtual Library: Astronomy (AstroWeb Version)
Contents of The Astronomy Virtual Library:
URLs with problems
See also Space and Physics Additions for Astronomy here Maintainer: Sergio Paoli spaoli@fcaglp.fcaglp.unlp.edu.ar Coordination of the WWW Virtual Library Top Ten of the World-Wide Web Virtual Library Last updated May 28, 1996

51. Specialties For Mailing Lists
Mathematical Specialties for mailing lists 85, Astronomy and astrophysics,2336. 86, Geophysics, 1023. 90, Operations research, mathematical programming
http://www.ams.org/customers/specialties.html
Mathematical Specialties
Mathematical Specialties for Mailing Lists

General History and biography Mathematical logic and foundations Combinatorics Orders, lattices, ordered algebraic structures General mathematical systems Number theory Field theory and polynomials Commutative rings and algebras Algebraic geometry Linear and multilinear algebra; matrix theory Associative rings and algebras Nonassociative rings and algebras Category theory, homological algebra K-theory Group theory and generalizations Topological groups, Lie groups Real functions Measure and integration Functions of a complex variable Potential theory Several complex variables and analytic spaces Special functions Ordinary differential equations Partial differential equations Dynamical systems and ergodic theory Finite differences and functional equations Sequences, series, summability Approximations and expansions Fourier analysis Abstract harmonic analysis Integral transforms, operational calculus Integral equations Functional analysis Operator theory Calculus of variations and optimal control; optimization Geometry Convex sets and related geometric topics Differential geometry General topology Algebraic topology Manifolds and cell complexes Global analysis, analysis on manifolds

52. The Scout Report - March 15, 1996
However, everyone is welcome to subscribe to one of the mailing lists (plain text or and refereed journal in astronomy and astrophysics later this year.
http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/ScoutReport/1996/scout-960315.html
March 15, 1996
A Publication of Internet Scout
Provided by the InterNIC as a Service to the Internet Community The Scout Report is a weekly publication offering a selection of new and newly discovered Internet resources of interest to researchers and educators, the InterNIC's primary audience. However, everyone is welcome to subscribe to one of the mailing lists (plain text or HTML) or visit the Web version of the Scout Report. Subscription instructions are included at the end of each report.
http://rs.internic.net/scout/report
Send comments and contributions to: scout@cs.wisc.edu
Research and Education

Philosophy on the Net
Philosophy around the Web is a comprehensive page of links to all things philosophical. There are links to philosophy departments all over the world, a large selection of annotated and rated (see thumbs ups) links to individual philosophy pages, "living philosophers" pages, and mostly dead philosophers pages from Apollonius of Tyana to Arthur M. Young. Also provided are pointers to philosophy journals, Usenet news groups, discussion lists, IRC's, conference and seminar listings, world wide philosophy job openings, and several of the author's own writings. This is a well done resource, full of nicely designed and well organized content. Philosophy around the Web is produced by Dr Peter J. King St Hilda's College, Oxford, England.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~worc0337/phil_index.html

53. Historia Matematica Mailing List Archive: Re: [HM] Tukey
waveforms in fields from astrophysics to electrical engineering. literature andwas known for carrying publication lists with him and
http://sunsite.utk.edu/math_archives/.http/hypermail/historia/jul00/0167.html
Re: [HM] Tukey
Subject: Re: [HM] Tukey
From: Alfred Ross ( Alfred.Ross@eudoramail.com
Date: Sun Jul 30 2000 - 21:39:47 EDT News from PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Office of Communications
Stanhope Hall
Princeton, New Jersey 08544-5264
Telephone 609-258-3601; Fax 609-258-1301
Contacts:
Steven Schultz, Princeton University (609) 258-5729; sschultz@princeton.edu
Steve Eisenberg, Bell Labs (908) 582-7474; seisenberg@lucent.com
July 26, 2000 Statistician John W. Tukey dies PRINCETON, N.J. - John Wilder Tukey, an emeritus Princeton professor considered to be one of the most important contributors to modern statistics, died Wednesday. He was 85. Tukey developed many important tools of modern statistics and introduced concepts that were central to the creation of today's telecommunications technologies. In addition to his formidable research achievements, Tukey

54. [APML]: Astrophysics 1200 Vs. Paramount?
astrophoto@nightsky.com , SBIG sbiguser@lists.best.com ; Subject APMLastrophysics 1200 vs. Paramount? The Astro-Photography mailing List
http://astro.umsystem.edu/apml/ARCHIVES/MAY99/msg00121.html
Author Prev Author Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index
[APML]: Astrophysics 1200 vs. Paramount?
The Astro-Photography Mailing List I'm looking into upgrading my equipment now that I have an observatory and that weight and size are no longer issues. Currently I have a 10" LX200, but the tracking performance on this scope is not good enough for my increasing demand for quality. A goto mount is essential for my remote control, and for the CCD mosaics that I want to do. I am considering the AP 1200 GTO mount and either a C14 or a OGS 12.5" OTA. I would like to get some input from those on this list that have experience with this mount and it's tracking and pointing performance. The AP 1200 sells for $3000 less than the Software Bisque's Paramount which I am also considering. I'm willing to spend the extra money, if I would be getting a $3000 better mount. Does anyone have any experience with the Paramount and the AP 1200? Thanks, Chris Vedeler http://www.isomeida.com/homes/cvedeler/space.htm

55. ICPAQGP Conference At Jaipur, India (fwd)
announcement from the organisers of ICPAQGP in the PHENIX mailing list. on Physics and astrophysics of QuarkGluon Plasma (ICPAQGP-2001) will be
http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/WWW/lists/phenix-news-l/msg00919.html
Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index
ICPAQGP conference at Jaipur, India (fwd)

56. SETI Public Mailing List: SETI Public: Fw: AstroAlert: News From VSNET
VSNET provides a number of mailing lists, on which various news and topics arediscussed. a Guillermo Haro astrophysics Conference organized by INAOE
http://seti.sentry.net/archive/public/2003/Nov/0016.html
SETI public: Fw: AstroAlert: News from VSNET
New Message Reply Date view Thread view ... Attachment view From: LARRY KLAES ( ljk4_at_msn.com
Date: Mon Nov 03 2003 - 13:30:38 PST
  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI public: Fw: ...Gurnett Captures Sound of Solar Storm" - Original Message -
    From: Makoto Uemura
    Sent: Monday, November 03, 2003 1:45 PM
    To: AstroAlert
    Cc: vsnet-adm_at_ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp
    Subject: AstroAlert: News from VSNET
    *** News from VSNET ***
    Z Cam shows a clear indication of damping oscillations.
    For more detail information about these objects,
    see below, "VSNET Weekly Campaign Summary" of the last week. VSNET (Variable Star Network) is an international variable star observing network, covering various areas of novae, supernovae, cataclysmic variables (CVs), X-ray transients, and other classical eruptive, pulsating, and eclipsing variables. VSNET is one of invited contributing organizations to the SkyPub AstroAlert system.
  • 57. BIOASTRO Mailing List: SETI Bioastro: Re: [ASTRO] The Ages Of S
    To astro@lists.mindspring.com (astrolist) Date Fri, 21 Apr 2000 140136 0600 astrophysics. People have been working on them for many decades, and
    http://seti.sentry.net/archive/bioastro/2000/0077.html
    SETI bioastro: Re: [ASTRO] The Ages of Stars
    From: Larry Klaes ( lklaes@bbn.com
    Date: Fri Apr 21 2000 - 13:39:57 PDT kachun@CASA.COLORADO.EDU
    Subject: Re: [ASTRO] The Ages of Stars
    To: astro@lists.mindspring.com (astrolist)
    Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2000 14:01:36 -0600 (MDT)
    X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.5 PL2]
    Sender: owner-astro@lists.mindspring.com
    kachun@CASA.COLORADO.EDU

    Amalendra Anandaraj wrote:
    I am not an expert on this so my explanations probably could have
    been a little better. Let me try again in more detail. Basically if what spectral lines you see in a star depend on many different factors, of which abundance is only one. Temperature is of utmost importance since this determines the ionization level of any particular atom. The reason why iron lines are so prevalent in the Sun's photosphere is that the Sun's surface is cool enough that iron tends to be in the form of ions with a few electrons stripped off.

    58. AstroWeb: Astronomy/Astrophysics On The Internet
    Astronomy/astrophysics on the Internet. Welcome to AstroWeb a collection ofpointers mailing lists (astronomy-related), 18. Educational resources, 340
    http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/astroweb/astronomy.html
    AstroWeb:
    Astronomy/Astrophysics on the Internet
    Welcome to AstroWeb - a collection of pointers to astronomy-related information available on the Internet. The database is maintained by the AstroWeb Consortium , a collaboration involving 9 individuals at 7 institutions. In addition to classified lists of resource records, the Consortium also provides a utility to search the AstroWeb database: (WAIS search help) Most of the URLs in the database are tested three times a day to verify aliveness (see "AstroWeb Dead URLs" and "AstroWeb Unreliable URLs" ). The Consortium will be pleased to accept contributions of new resource records. You can use HTML forms to This NRAO version of AstroWeb is recomputed at about 09:10 UTC each day, if the master database has been changed. Neither the individuals involved in the AstroWeb Consortium, nor their affiliated institutions, accept any responsibility for the contents or availability of information located at other Internet sites. 1/27/2003 2:57:25 PM The AstroWeb master database currently contains 3074 distinct resource records: Category Records
    Observing resources Telescopes Astronomical survey projects Telescope observing schedules Metereological information
    Data Resources Data and Archive Centers Astronomy Information Systems
    Publication-related Resources Abstracts of Astronomical Publications Full-texts of Astronomical Publications Astronomical Bibliographical Services Astronomy-related Libraries ... Other library resources
    People-related Resources

    59. [no Subject]
    3 NASA astrophysics Data System Bibliographic Code . To unsubscribe fromthis mailing list (and be removed from the roster of the OASIS TC),
    http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/xri/200309/msg00046.html
    xri message
    Date Prev Thread Prev Thread Next Date Next ... List Home Subject [no subject] Am I correct? Best, =3DDrummond=20 -Original Message- From: Eamonn Neylon [ mailto:eneylon@manifestsolutions.com http://www.manifestsolutions.com/ -Original Message- From: Wachob, Gabe [ mailto:gwachob@visa.com ] Sent: 29 September 2003 18:51 To: 'Matthew J. Dovey'; xri@lists.oasis-open.org Subject: RE: [xri] FW: [Discuss-DOI] Announcement: The "info" URI scheme Matthew- I'm having a hard time understanding the value of this effort. I would think that if you wanted to create an identifier space for dewey decimal numbers, you'd create a URI scheme for it. With the "info" proposal, you've effectively replaced the IANA as registrar for URI-compatible identifier schemes with NISO. That is, instead of registering a "dd" (dewey decimal) URI scheme, you register a "dd" info namespace. Same basic process, except that you have a different registrar. Is *this* the motivation? Is the info URI scheme motivated by the IETF's strong bias towards resolvable URI schemes? Thanks for giving me the background. I have to think about how this relates to XRI work as well. -Gabe > -Original Message- > From: Matthew J. Dovey [ mailto:matthew.dovey@oucs.ox.ac.uk

    60. SciPy Scientific Tools For Python - Mailing Lists
    You are here Home » mailing lists » mailman Bojan Nikolic astrophysics Group408 King s College Cavendish Laboratory Cambridge CB2 1ST Cambridge
    http://www.scipy.org/mailinglists/mailman?fn=scipy-chaco/2003-May/000366.html

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 105    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter