Search results for "Wide gap"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Pragmatic aspects of the translation of slang and four‐letter words

1994

Abstract The article discusses linguistic and societal attitudes to slang in Latvia and their relevance to its rendition in Latvian translations. For historical reasons, there is a wide gap between spoken and written colloquial layers in Latvian. Slang, and especially four‐letter words, function differently in Latvian compared to English, where they are used much more frequently and have lost their disturbing connotations. Accordingly, in Latvian translations they must be softened to achieve ‘similar effect’. Today, however, there is a clear‐cut tendency to liberalize the attitude towards slang and taboos, which can be explained by the recent radical changes in Latvian society. Direct trans…

Linguistics and LanguageHigher educationbusiness.industrySocietal attitudesmedia_common.quotation_subjectLatvianlanguage.human_languageLinguisticsSlanglanguageRelevance (law)businessPsychologyFunction (engineering)Wide gapmedia_commonPerspectives
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Growth, structural and optical properties of GaN/AlN and GaN/GaInN nanowire heterostructures

2012

Abstract After discussing the GaN NW nucleation issue, we will present the structural properties of axial and radial (i.e. core/shell) GaN/AlN NW heterostructures and adress the issue of critical thickness during the growth of such heterostructures. Next, we will present the growth of InGaN NWs on a GaN NW base. It will be shown that the morphology and structural properties of the InGaN NW sections depend on the In content: for high In content a flat top is observed and plastic relaxation is occuring, with mismatch dislocations formed at the InGaN/GaN interface. By contrast, for In content below 25% InGaN NWs exhibit a pencil-like shape assigned to a purely elastic strain relaxation process…

Materials sciencePhotoluminescencebusiness.industryRelaxation (NMR)NucleationNanowireShell (structure)HeterojunctionPhysics and Astronomy(all)Xrays diffractionsymbols.namesakenanowiresmolecular beam epitaxyRaman spectroscopysymbolsIII nitride wide gap semiconductorsOptoelectronicsphotoluminescencebusinessRaman spectroscopyhigh resolution electron microscopyMolecular beam epitaxyPhysics Procedia
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Progress in development of a new luminescence setup at the FinEstBeAMS beamline of the MAX IV laboratory

2019

The main funding for the FinEstBeAMS beamline has been obtained from the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (project “Estonian beamline to MAX-IV synchrotron”, granted to the University of Tartu) and from the Academy of Finland through the Finnish Research Infrastructure funding projects ( FIRI2010 , FIRI2013 , FIRI2014 ). The authors also acknowledge the funding contributions of the University of Oulu , University of Turku , Tampere University of Technology , the Estonian Research Council ( IUT 2-25 , IUT 2-26 , PRG-111 ), as well as the Estonian Centre of Excellence in Research “Advanced materials and high-technology devices for sustainable energetics, sensorics…

Materials sciencemedicine.disease_cause7. Clean energy01 natural sciences030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaginglaw.inventionLuminescence spectroscopy03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOpticslaw0103 physical sciences:NATURAL SCIENCES:Physics [Research Subject Categories]medicineSpectroscopyta216Instrumentation010302 applied physicsRadiationSynchrotron radiationta114business.industryVUVUndulatorSynchrotronWide gap compoundsXUV photoexcitationBeamlineLuminescencebusinessUltravioletStorage ringExcitationRadiation Measurements
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Galileo, God and Mathematics

2005

This chapter explores the relationship between God and the mathematics of Galileo. In the early modern era, the mathematical sciences began to produce potential instruments of power and to supply technically and socially valuable knowledge—for use in engineering, administration, and social control. This ability to produce useful knowledge and potential instruments of power became the critical basis for the existence of the mathematical sciences. In discussing Galileo's thoughts about mathematics and the mathematical sciences, it is necessary to keep in mind that he did not codify them and that he worked—as did many early modern scholars—with conflicting epistemologies. Furthermore, there is…

Power (social and political)symbols.namesakeMathematical sciencesGalileo (satellite navigation)symbolsWide gapSocial controlEpistemology
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