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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Local Magnetic Properties Of Antiferromagnetic Febr2, J. Peloth, R. A. Brand, Takele Seda, M. M. Pereira De Azevedo, W. Kleeman, Ch. Binek, J. Kushauer, D. Bertrand Dec 1995

Local Magnetic Properties Of Antiferromagnetic Febr2, J. Peloth, R. A. Brand, Takele Seda, M. M. Pereira De Azevedo, W. Kleeman, Ch. Binek, J. Kushauer, D. Bertrand

Physics & Astronomy

The antiferromagnet FeBr2 has been studied by Mössbauer spectroscopy in external fields both in the metamagnetic region below the multicritical temperature TMCP and in the second-order transition region above. The local magnetization shows that the metamagnetic transition occurs by spin flips, as in simple models. However, in the second-order transition region, the local magnetization of the sublattice oriented antiparallel to the external field varies continuously but remains parallel to the c axis. This can only be understood if the external magnetic field induces strong transversal spin precession of the moments on the antiparallel sublattice. This shows that the …


Huxley Hotline, 1995, October 17, Traci Edge, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Oct 1995

Huxley Hotline, 1995, October 17, Traci Edge, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

Historical Collection of Huxley Newsletters

No abstract provided.


The Planet, 1995, Fall, Deanna Woolston, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Oct 1995

The Planet, 1995, Fall, Deanna Woolston, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

The Planet

No abstract provided.


An Introduction To Using Modflow The Usgs Modular Finite-Difference Ground-Water Computer Modeling System, Jessica N. Pfundt Jul 1995

An Introduction To Using Modflow The Usgs Modular Finite-Difference Ground-Water Computer Modeling System, Jessica N. Pfundt

Geology Graduate and Undergraduate Student Scholarship

MODFLOW is the U.S. Geological Survey (U.S.G.S.) Modular Finite-Difference Ground-Water computer modeling system. This program incorporates basic concepts derived from previous computer groundwater modeling programs. MODFLOW improves upon these programs because it is easy to modify, simple to use and maintain, can be executed on a variety of computers with minimal changes, and is relatively efficient with respect to computer memory and execution time (McDonald and Harbaugh, 1988).


Spatial Variation Of Naticid Gastropod Predation In The Eocene Of North-America, Thor A. Hansen, Patricia H. Kelley Jun 1995

Spatial Variation Of Naticid Gastropod Predation In The Eocene Of North-America, Thor A. Hansen, Patricia H. Kelley

Geology Faculty Publications

Although, the fossil record of naticid gastropod drilling has played an important role in the controversy over predator-prey evolution, little is known about variation of drilling frequencies within single horizons or how predation patterns are influenced by environmental variables. Without an understanding of spatial variation in drilling, temporal patterns in drilling are difficult to interpret. We surveyed 27,554 specimens of molluscs from the Cook Mountain interval (upper middle Eocene) and Jackson Group (late Eocene) of the U.S. Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plain to document spatial variation in naticid drilling frequencies. The Jackson Group assemblages from the Moodys Branch and Yazoo …


The Operator (Sgn X) D²/Dx² Is Similar To A Selfadjoint Operator In L² (R), Branko Ćurgus, Branko Najman Apr 1995

The Operator (Sgn X) D²/Dx² Is Similar To A Selfadjoint Operator In L² (R), Branko Ćurgus, Branko Najman

Mathematics Faculty Publications

Krein space operator-theoretic methods are used to prove that the operator (sgn x) d²/dx² is similar to a selfadjoint operator in the Hilbert space (R).


The Planet, 1995, Spring, Darren Nienaber, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Apr 1995

The Planet, 1995, Spring, Darren Nienaber, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

The Planet

No abstract provided.


Huxley College Alumni News, 1995, April, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Apr 1995

Huxley College Alumni News, 1995, April, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

Historical Collection of Huxley Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Huxley Hotline, 1995, March 29, Traci Edge, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Mar 1995

Huxley Hotline, 1995, March 29, Traci Edge, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

Historical Collection of Huxley Newsletters

No abstract provided.


Lake Whatcom Monitoring Project 1993/1994 Report, Robin A. Matthews, Geoffrey B. Matthews Mar 1995

Lake Whatcom Monitoring Project 1993/1994 Report, Robin A. Matthews, Geoffrey B. Matthews

Lake Whatcom Annual Reports

This report is part of an on-going series of annual reports and special project reports that document the Lake Whatcom monitoring program.

This work is conducted by the Institute for Watershed Studies and other departments at Western Washington University. The major objective of this program is to provide long-term baseline water quality monitoring in Lake Whatcom and selected tributaries. Each section contains brief explanations about the water quality data, along with discussions of patterns observed in Lake Whatcom.


Lazutkin Coordinates And Invariant Curves For Outer Billiards, Edoh Y. Amiran Mar 1995

Lazutkin Coordinates And Invariant Curves For Outer Billiards, Edoh Y. Amiran

Mathematics Faculty Publications

The outer billiard ball map (OBM) is defined from and to the exterior of a domain, Ω, in the plane as taking a point, q, to another point, q 1, when the line segment with endpoints q and q 1 is tangent to the boundary, ∂Ω (with a chosen orientation), and the point of tangency with the boundary divides the segment in half. Let C be an invariant circle for the OBM on Ω, with ∂Ω smooth with positive curvature. After computing the loss of derivatives between ∂Ω and C, it is shown via KAM theory that …


Historical Development Of The Newton-Raphson Method, Tjalling Ypma Jan 1995

Historical Development Of The Newton-Raphson Method, Tjalling Ypma

Mathematics Faculty Publications

This expository paper traces the development of the Newton-Raphson method for solving nonlinear algebraic equations through the extant notes, letters, and publications of Isaac Newton, Joseph Raphson, and Thomas Simpson. It is shown how Newton's formulation differed from the iterative process of Raphson, and that Simpson was the first to give a general formulation, in terms of fluxional calculus, applicable to nonpolynomial equations. Simpson's extension of the method to systems of equations is exhibited.


The Planet, 1995, Winter, Darren Nienaber, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University Jan 1995

The Planet, 1995, Winter, Darren Nienaber, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University

The Planet

No abstract provided.


Magnetic Anisotropy Fabrics From The Cascadia Accretionary Prism, Bernard A. Housen, Takaharu Sato Jan 1995

Magnetic Anisotropy Fabrics From The Cascadia Accretionary Prism, Bernard A. Housen, Takaharu Sato

Geology Faculty Publications

Magnetic anisotropy fabrics were measured in 495 specimens collected from the Cascadia accretionary prism to characterize the development of mineral preferred orientation fabrics during deformation. Comparison of high-field and low-field susceptibilities was used to determine the relative contributions of the paramagnetic clay minerals and the ferrimagnetic trace minerals (magnetite, greigite, pyrrhotite) to the magnetic susceptibility fabrics. Sites 888 and 891 have anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) fabrics that are controlled primarily by the ferrimagnetic minerals. Sites 889/890 and 892 have AMS fab­rics that are controlled, to varying degrees, by both paramagnetic clays and the ferrimagnetic minerals. Rock magnetic experi­ments indicate …


Net Shore-Drift And Artificial Structures Within Grays Harbor, Willapa Bay, And Mouth Of The Columbia River, Washington, B. Patrice (Berenthine Patrice) Thomas Jan 1995

Net Shore-Drift And Artificial Structures Within Grays Harbor, Willapa Bay, And Mouth Of The Columbia River, Washington, B. Patrice (Berenthine Patrice) Thomas

WWU Graduate School Collection

Net shore-drift, the overall result of sediment transport in the littoral zone, was studied along the shore within Grays Harbor, Willapa Bay, and mouth of the Columbia River, Washington. The length and direction of drift cells, which are discrete sediment compartments, was delineated using geomorphologic and sedimentologic indicators. Eight drift cells were identified in Grays Harbor, seven within Willapa Bay, and three along the section of the Columbia River shore studied. Drift cell lengths range from 200 m to approximately 6 km with an average of 1.5 km. Net shore-drift directions vary considerably with maximum fetch identified as the most …


Kinematic Implications Of Paleomagnetic Data From Lago Verde And Northern Isla Chiloe, Southern Chile, Brian C. (Brian Christopher) Steele Jan 1995

Kinematic Implications Of Paleomagnetic Data From Lago Verde And Northern Isla Chiloe, Southern Chile, Brian C. (Brian Christopher) Steele

WWU Graduate School Collection

Paleomagnetic techniques were used to determine crustal rotations at two locations along the Liquine Ofqui fault zone (LOFZ) in southern Chile, South America. East of the fault zone, near the town of Lago Verde, twelve sites drilled in intermediate volcanic rocks and diorite yielded a paleomagnetic pole at 82°S, 210.8°E (A95=8.3°), which, when compared to a Late Cretaceous reference pole (the mean of Butler et al. (1991) and Somoza (1994) poles) implies 17.7° ± 11.1° of in situ, clockwise rotation. At Cocotue Beach, west of the fault zone on Isla Chiloe, seven sites drilled in middle Tertiary …


Sediment Production And Delivery In The Upper South Fork Nooksack River, Northwest Washington, 1940-1991, Jeffrey A. Kirtland Jan 1995

Sediment Production And Delivery In The Upper South Fork Nooksack River, Northwest Washington, 1940-1991, Jeffrey A. Kirtland

WWU Graduate School Collection

Identifying sources and timing of sediment production and delivery provides information useful to understanding the geomorphology of a forested mountainous watershed in the western Cascade Range of Washington State. Sediment production and delivery is studied by constructing a partial sediment budget for the upper South Fork of the Nooksack River drainage (South Fork drainage). The period of the partial sediment budget extends from 1940 through 1991 and encompasses the pre- and post-management history of the watershed.

Four major sediment production and delivery sources - landsliding, streambank erosion, sheet and rill erosion and road-related erosion - were identified in the South …