77
77
Nov 19, 2015
11/15
by
Florentin Smarandache
texts
eye 77
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In this paper we consider two entangled particles and study all the possibilities: when both are immobile, or one of them is immobile, or both are moving in different directions, or one of them is moving in a different direction. Then we study the causality between them and the paradoxes, which are generated. We define the Causality Threshold of a particle A with respect to another particle B.
Topics: entangled particles, causality, causality threshold, quantum paradoxes
17
17
Aug 8, 2019
08/19
by
Dowe, Phil
texts
eye 17
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ix, 224 p. : 24 cm
Topic: Causality (Physics)
Source: removedNEL
4
4.0
Jul 13, 2021
07/21
by
Pringle, D. G. (Dennis Graham)
texts
eye 4
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comment 0
36, [1] p. : 21 cm
Topics: Geography -- Mathematics, Causality (Physics)
137
137
Jul 16, 2019
07/19
by
Cassirer, Ernst, 1874-1945
texts
eye 137
favorite 8
comment 0
xxiv, 227 p. 24 cm
Topics: Causality (Physics), Physics -- Philosophy
Now-a-days Science and Technology have made the human world so easy but still some physically and visually challenged people suffer from communication with others. In this project, we are going to propose a new system prototype called communication among Blind, deaf and dumb people .This will helps the disabled people to overcome their difficulties in communicating with some other people with disabilities or normal people. The blind people will communicate through the speakers, the deaf and...
Topics: Social interaction, blindness, Granger causality.
6
6.0
Feb 10, 2021
02/21
by
Harkavy, Allan Abraham, 1925-
texts
eye 6
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viii, 132 p. : 24 cm
Topics: Will, Mind and body, Causality (Physics)
4
4.0
Jan 25, 2022
01/22
by
Nussenzveig, H. M. (Herch Moyses)
texts
eye 4
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xii, 435 p. 24 cm
Topics: Dispersion relations, Causality (Physics), Potential scattering
Since December 2019, the world has been facing the advance of coronavirus. As of early April, over two million people have been infected and almost 80 thousand died.As we are dealing with a pandemic, it is expected that people seek information on different themes related to the disease. One of the most usual ways to seek information is through the Google search engine. Using time series econometric procedures, the aim of this paper is to analyze the existence of causality between the number of...
Topics: coronavirus, google trends, causality, time series.
The BP Texas City Oil Refinery disaster in 2005 shocked the world. With safe-guards in place and lost-time injury rates so low, how could so many people be killed in a wholly preventable disaster?
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The largest nuclear incident in human history released an estimated 400 times the radioactive material compared to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It all happened because of a test that was delayed by one shift, or was it the ultimate inevitability of a flawed reactor design?
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 1952 a fog in London left 4,000 dead in just 4 days but many more would die before the causes could be rectified. Worse than that, it had happened before and it's happening again right now, somewhere else.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
On the 27th of June, 1988 in central Paris a runaway train collided with a stationary train in Gare De Lyon station, claiming 56 lives and injuring 60 more. Whilst the court found the driver guilty and sent him to jail, was he solely to blame? We look at how poor design decisions made Gare De Lyon inevitable.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The Comet was the worlds first commercial jet aeroplane and those that flew aboard it formed the so-called JetSet. When they started to crash, the world of aviation changed forever.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
5
5.0
Apr 16, 2020
04/20
by
Blazer, Dan G. (Dan German), 1944-
texts
eye 5
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x, 237 p. : 24 cm
Topics: Psychiatry -- Research -- Methodology, Evaluation Studies, Psychiatry, Causality
The Challenger Space Shuttle was directed to launch on the coldest day on record in Florida and 73 seconds after launch it exploded but the engineers saw it coming.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In December, 1984 in the city of Bhopal in central India, a Union Carbide Pesticide plant would fail and release tonnes of toxic gas into the city, killing thousands of people. It was the worst industrial disaster in human history. We follow the threads and trace back the root causes behind the incident at Bhopal.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 1977 on the small island of Tenerife two 747 Jumbo Jets collided on the runway in poor visibility. A miscommunication clearly occurred, but even today, the same elements still exist and it could happen again.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
Roll cages in cars are supposed to improve safety but do they actually cause the problem they're trying to protect you from?
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
6
6.0
Dec 15, 2021
12/21
by
Salmon, Wesley C
texts
eye 6
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xiv, 434 p. : 24 cm
Topics: Science -- Philosophy, Science -- Methodology, Causality (Physics), Explanation
The Sampoong Department Store in South Korea collapsed in 1995 killing over 500 people. The investigators were shocked to find just how many rules had been broken but the true root cause might have been something more innocuous.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The Mont Blanc tunnel cut hours off the journey between Italy and France and in 1999 in a fire emergency services were unable to save 38 lives. We look at why.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
What went wrong with Fukushima 1 Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in 2011.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 2010 an Oil Drilling Rig suffered a catastrophic well blowout, killing 11 people, destroying the rig and leading to the worst maritime oil spill in history. It all happened a few hours after the well was declared safe and ready for handover. We look at the human and financial factors that led to the incident at Macondo.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The Amagasaki rail crash was entirely caused by human error but was it a fear of punishment by the company that was ultimately the cause.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 1986 an unremarkable building in Singapore collapsed killing dozens of people. We look at how the supervision of the construction and the design itself resulted in a structure that was at best critically stable, and ultimately one that could only ever fail.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
A turning point in control systems user interface design and alarm management happened in an unlikely place that few have ever heard of. We look at what went wrong at Milford Haven.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
For decades Flint Michigan derived safe drinking water from Detroit. When the supply was switched to save money a series of events unfolded and their supply became undrinkable. How could this happen?
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 2003 the Space Shuttle Columbia launched successfully but after its mission was completed burned up on re-entry with the loss of all onboard. We look at how normalisation of deviation blinded many at NASA to a risk that had existed since 1981.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
On the 19th of July, 1985 in Tesero, Northern Italy, a tailings dam gave way and killed 268 people. With the most common tailings dam design in the world, what went wrong and how widespread are the risks?
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The largest airship ever constructed burst into flames when trying to land in 1937 in New Jersey in what has become one of the most striking disasters of modern times.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The Piper Oil field in the North Sea became the site of one of the worst Offshore Oil Rig disasters in history when Piper Platform Alpha went up in flames.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
On March 28, 1979 Unit 2 of the Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant in the United States of America an incident would lead to a partial reactor core meltdown. Many blamed the operators for stopping the reactor cooling system but the real root causes showed a known flaw in the design and alarm flooding had blinded the operators to what was actually happening.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
A near-new modern cruise liner with all the navigational aids and maps struck rocks and sank killing over 30 people and the man most responsible still walks free today.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
In 2015 at Alton Towers in the UK, The Smiler Rollercoaster experienced a major incident leading to severe injuries for multiple riders. We look at how pressure to get the ride running again and mis-communication defeated the system designed to protect the riders.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The 15th Maccabiah Games in 1997 had a temporary bridge for the opening ceremony. The world was shocked when it failed and it did so on every level.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
As part of Rio's preparations for the Olympics in 2016 a cycling pathway was built adjacent to a narrow, congested roadway along a picturesque shoreline. When a section collapsed only months before the opening ceremony killing two people, the world looked on with growing concerns about the imminent Olympics.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
The Titanic famously sank on her maiden voyage with a huge loss of life. No ship is unsinkable.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
When two trains collided head on at Kipton, Ohio in 1891, it was a wake up call for the railroad industry in North America whose impacts would be far-reaching and would lead to a new timekeeping standard that was unprecedented.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
408
408
Sep 29, 2011
09/11
by
Bohm, David
texts
eye 408
favorite 6
comment 0
Includes bibliographical references
Topics: Causality (Physics), Quantum theory, Natural law, Physics
The aim of the research is to test the causal relationship between stock prices and the demand for m oney in Saudi Arabia during (1985-2019). The ARDL method was used to test the existence of a relationship between variables in the long run, in addition to testing the existence of causality between variables using Granger causality. The results showed a positive relationship between stock prices and the demand for money in Saudi Arabia. Granger's causality showed that there is no causality...
Topics: Stock, Demand for Money, ARDL & Granger Causality
In 2009 an AirBus A320 departing LaGuardia Airport in New York suffered a dual engine failure due to a bird strike during takeoff. In a highly improbable event an equally highly improbable landing in the Hudson River shocked and amazed the world. We look at what went right on Flight 1549.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
146 p
Topics: las rgyu 'bras/, phyogs bsgrigs/, Karmic causality
204
204
Dec 8, 2013
12/13
by
Raghavendra R. H & Velmurugan P. S
texts
eye 204
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The short term association between spot return and future return of Great Britain Pound /Indian National Rupee (GBP/INR) currency pair traded in India is the subject of present study. With the objective of examine the short term relationship, we examined the short term causal relationship between Spot return and Future return of GBP/INR traded in India from the period of February 2010 to December 2012 through Granger causality test. Before the investigation of causality, the descriptive...
Topics: Short Term Relationship, GBP, Granger Causality Test
The Concorde was the first commercially successful supersonic aeroplane that flew for nearly 25 years without a fatality and was considered the safest aeroplane in the world at the time until it crashed. The incident ended the lives of 113 people and it ultimately ended the Concorde itself.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignCausality
12
12
Aug 22, 2021
08/21
by
Buchanan, Mark
texts
eye 12
favorite 1
comment 0
235 p. : 24 cm
Topics: Causality (Physics), Social networks, Pattern formation (Physical sciences)
Statistics And Causality Methods For Applied Empirical Research
Topic: Statistics And Causality Methods For Applied Empirical Research
In 1977, a commuter train from the Blue Mountains, destined for Sydney central station would derail just before Granville Station, causing a bridge to collapse and crush many aboard. It remains Australia's worst ever rail disaster that was predicted by 11 engineering department heads just a year earlier. We look at how management decisions led to a completely avoidable disaster.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignRail, Mechanical
3 v
Topics: las rgyu 'bras/, mdo/, gtam rgyud/, Karmic causality
In Beirut in August of 2020, an explosion at the Port of Beirut destroyed a huge part of the city. We look into how an oxidising agent, improperly handled can become an explosive and attempt to comprehend how something so dangerous was ignored repeatedly by key people, despite many warnings of an imminent disaster.
Topics: Podcast, Causality, Engineering, Cause and Effect, DesignExplosion, Civil
146P
Topics: zhal gdams/, las rgyu 'bras/, Instruction Karmic causality