Results 201 to 210 of about 136,010 (238)
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Popular Humor and “The Black Dwarf”

Journal of British Studies, 1976
In 1819 Viscount Castlereagh, England's Foreign Secretary and perhaps the most hated member of the Government, complained in parliament that the journalist, T. J. Wooler (1786?-1853), had become “the fugleman of the Radicals.” His weekly journal The Black Dwarf was circulating from radical Westminster to northern colliery districts, where it could be ...
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Genome-Wide Association Study on Resistance to Rice Black-Streaked Dwarf Disease Caused by Rice black-streaked dwarf virus

Plant Disease, 2021
Rice black-streaked dwarf disease caused by Rice black-streaked dwarf virus (RBSDV) is one of the most destructive viral diseases of rice. Thus, it is imperative that resistant rice germplasms are screened for novel RBSDV-resistant genes. RBSDV resistance of a diverse global collection comprising 1,953 rice accessions was evaluated under natural ...
Qing Liu   +8 more
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Black Halos and Dwarf Galaxies

1984
Dissipation of infalling gas into a preexisting dark halo of nondissipative matter provides an attractive scenario for the formation of disk galaxies. Tidal torquing of gas against the gravitationally dominant dark halo can account for the observed angular momentum (Fall and Efstathiou, 1980), if halos form by hierarchical clustering in the expanding ...
Colin Norman, Joseph Silk
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Identification of rice black-streaked dwarf fijivirus in maize with rough dwarf disease in China

Archives of Virology, 2001
Three virus isolates from maize with rough dwarf in different provinces in China were analyzed at the molecular level. When compared to an isolate from diseased rice plants in Hubei Province, all four isolates had identical genomic RNA electrophoretic profiles, which were composed of ten double-stranded (ds) RNAs.
Dawei Li   +5 more
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Satiric Performance in The Black Dwarf

2000
In 1815 the Napoleonic wars ended and a new round of the culture wars began. One year after Coleridge published Sibylline leaves including the revised Rime of the Ancient Mariner and the same year the Biographia Literaria appeared (1817), a very different series of publications, of more material and immediate national concern, occupied the public.
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Compact Stars: From Dwarfs to Black Holes

1997
Clouds of interstellar gas consisting mostly of molecular hydrogen and a little dust are the incubators of stars. The Horsehead Nebula in Orion is an especially beautiful example. Besides the primordial elements made in the first few minutes in the life of the universe, the clouds contain dust—agglomeration of molecules—that have been spewed from the ...
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Very low mass stars, black dwarfs and planets

Astrophysics and Space Science, 1994
Hydrogen-rich stars of very low mass (M ≲ 0.08 M⊙) never go through hydrogenburning thermonuclear reactions and, in a time scale much shorter than the age of the Galaxy, become completely degenerate objects or black dwarfs. The number of the very-low-mass (VLM) black dwarfs is expected to be very large and they are likely to make a significant ...
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A Jovian analogue orbiting a white dwarf star

Nature, 2021
J W Blackman   +2 more
exaly  

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