Modelling and Analysis of Permutation Admissibility with CP-nets
6 pages
English

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Modelling and Analysis of Permutation Admissibility with CP-nets

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6 pages
English
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Description

  • mémoire - matière potentielle : consumption to significant degree
  • mémoire - matière potentielle : overflow
  • mémoire
Modelling and Analysis of Permutation Admissibility with CP-nets Hüseyin Lort Submitted to the Institute of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science Eastern Mediterranean University December 2008, Gazimağusa North Cyprus
  • communication stage
  • state equation
  • requirements as a thesis for the degree
  • interconnection networks
  • reachability analysis
  • permutation admissibility problem
  • için bir araştırma yapılmıştır
  • petri nets
  • experimental results

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Nombre de lectures 20
Langue English

Extrait

First Awakenings and Fibonacci: The Dark Ages refers to the period ca.4501050 in Europe.Originally it was applied to the period after the fall of Rome and before the Italian Renaissance (ca.1400) but present usage refers to the period ca 10501400 as the Middle Ages to acknowledge a somewhat more enlightened period.After the fall of Rome, the only unifying force was the Christian Church.The Church did support education of the clergy and there were monastic schools where the trivium (rhetoric, grammar and logic) was taught and “logic” was little emphasized.Later the quadrivium (arithmetic, astrology, harmonia and geometry) was also taught and lay people might hire teachers.The books available were few:It was the fall of Toledo in 1085 and of Sicily in 1091 to the Christians that gave Europe access to the learning and the libraries of the Arab world and marked the end of the Dark ages.Cordoba’s library had 600,000 volumes The Dark Ages were marked by invasions:the first ones helped undermine the Roman empire; later invasions were by Magyars, Saracens and especially the Vikings.There was great insecurity and little political unity.One exception was the Carolingian dynasty in France.The grandfather of Charlemagne (Charles Martel) had helped to stop the advance of the Moors at the Battle of Tours in 732.On Christmas Day 800 AD, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne the first Holy Roman Emperor.There was a brief period, the “Carolingian Enlightenment” when education and learning were encouraged.Alcuin of York was recruited to oversee the education and he decided every abbey was to have its own school and the curriculum was to include the quadrivium and trivium both.At first it was the church educating clergy but slowly interest in education grew. Read about Gerard of Cremona (11141187) and Adelard of Bath who translated some of the great works into Latin and made them available to Europeans.Some of the translations of Greek works were of Arabic translations and some were of the original Greek. Graduallythe a great heritage of learning trickled into Europe. Leonardo of Pisa (Fibonacci) (11751250) wroteLiber AbaciandLiber Quadratorum. In the former he was roughly the first to introduce “arabic” numbers into Europe.This work clearly demonstrated the superiority of the new number system over Roman nu merals although Gerard of Cremona (11141187) introduced them to Toledo (Spain) in his many translations.In this work Fibonacci also introduced the practise of expressing fractions as one number witten over another.He however wrote in the reversed order of the Arab authors: 1 77 1 5 = 5 ++ 3 1010 30 Although Fibonacci did transmit Arabic mathematics to Europe he also was an original mathematician in his own right. Read how Fibonacci solved a problem proposed by John of Palermo who was a 2 member the retinue of Emperor Frederick II (Holy Roman Emperor 11941250)x=+ 5 2 22 uandx5 =v(x= 41/lead him to write12). ThisLiber Quadratorumwhere he solved systems like 2 2 x+x=u 2 2 xx=v
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