Showing 1 - 11 results of 11 for search 'Off spin', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    A 50-spin surface acoustic wave Ising machine by Artem Litvinenko, Roman Khymyn, Roman Ovcharov, Johan Åkerman

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Here, we demonstrate an all-to-all, fully programmable, 50-spin Ising machine using a surface acoustic wave delay line and off-the-shelf microwave components. …”
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    Article
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    Matching and positivity beyond minimal coupling in effective theories of photons and gravitons by Edoardo Alviani, Adam Falkowski

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Abstract We study the low-energy effective theories of photons and gravitons, matching them at one loop to a UV completion with a massive spinning matter particle. The matter is allowed to have non-minimal electromagnetic and gravitational interactions. …”
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    From byssus threads to Pinna nobilis sea-silk: a fiber characterization by Lorena C. Giannossa, Annarosa Mangone, Giovanni Lagioia, Gerardo Palazzo, Luigi Gentile

    Published 2023-11-01
    “…The fibers are carefully harvested by cutting them off the mussel, after which they undergo a series of processes including washing, drying, combing, and spinning. …”
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    Design and Fabrication of a Motorized Honey Extractor. by Hasahya, Caxton Joel

    Published 2024
    “…After the extraction process, the motor is switched off and the extractor is opened to remove the radially extracted frames and the tangentially extracted frames are flipped for re-spinning. …”
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    Thesis
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    Authority and Moral Conflicts in the Films of Adébáyọ Fálétí: Àfọ̀njá, Gáà, Ṣawo Ṣẹ̀gbẹ̀rì and the Yorùbá Cosmopolis by Olayinka Agbetuyi

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…In Àfọ̀njá and Gáà that context is provided by the empire phase of Yorùbá civilization in which Yorùbá civilization was the dominant point of reference; in Ṣawo Ṣẹgbẹ ̀ rì ̀ the drama is situated in the context of postcolonial Nigerian city, in a nation that boasts large ethnic nationalities of which the Yorùbá are only one and in which Yorùbá culture is mediated by the postcolonial state with its symbol of the English language as the means of communication and its cultural spin offs. Fálétí demonstrates the mastery of dramaturgy in Àfọ̀njá and Gáà by juxtaposing the dynamics of running a state originally built on a confederation of city state structure very much like the Greek city state structure, at the latter’s comparative stage of political evolution, with a new imperial structure and the conflicts generated by the flux of the two systems; whereas in Ṣawo Ṣẹ̀gbẹ̀rì moral conflict is generated by interpersonal amatorial clashes as well as models of expertise. …”
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