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Hartley and R
* Hartley, R. V. L.
An alternate method of generation known as a Hartley modulator, named after R. V. L. Hartley, uses phasing to suppress the unwanted sideband.
By taking information per pulse N in bit / pulse to be the base-2-logarithm of the number of distinct messages M that could be sent, Hartley constructed a measure of the gross bitrate R as:
Many of Church's doctoral students have led distinguished careers, including C. Anthony Anderson, Peter B. Andrews, George A. Barnard, William W. Boone, Martin Davis, Alfred L. Foster, Leon Henkin, John G. Kemeny, Stephen C. Kleene, Simon B. Kochen, Maurice L ' Abbé, Isaac Malitz, Gary R. Mar, Michael O. Rabin, Nicholas Rescher, Hartley Rogers, Jr., J. Barkley Rosser, Dana Scott, Raymond Smullyan, and Alan Turing.
During that same year, Hartley formulated a way to quantify information and its line rate ( also known as data signalling rate or gross bitrate inclusive of error-correcting code ' R ' across a communications channel ).
By taking information per pulse in bit / pulse to be the base-2-logarithm of the number of distinct messages M that could be sent, Hartley constructed a measure of the line rate R as:
The borough hall and the train station were donated to the community by Geraldine R. Dodge and Marcellus Hartley Dodge, Sr. as a memorial to their son who died in an automobile crash shortly after his graduation from Princeton University.
* J. R. Hartley – author of another fictitious book, written after it became famous.
Just as the DFT is the discrete analogue of the continuous Fourier transform, the DHT is the discrete analogue of the continuous Hartley transform, introduced by R. V. L. Hartley in 1942.
Formally, the discrete Hartley transform is a linear, invertible function H: R < sup > n </ sup > < tt >-></ tt > R < sup > n </ sup > ( where R denotes the set of real numbers ).
* R. N. Bracewell, " Discrete Hartley transform ," J. Opt.
* R. N. Bracewell, " The fast Hartley transform ," Proc.
* R. N. Bracewell, The Hartley Transform ( Oxford Univ.
* R. N. Bracewell, " Computing with the Hartley Transform ," Computers in Physics 9 ( 4 ), 373 – 379 ( 1995 ).
* R. V. L. Hartley, " A more symmetrical Fourier analysis applied to transmission problems ," Proc.
* In 1983 the British commercial telephone directory company Yellow Pages filmed their famous Fly Fishing by J. R. Hartley in Cecil Court.
J. R. Hartley is both the name of a fictional character and an author's pseudonym inspired by it.
The advertisement shows an elderly man asking in several second-hand bookshops ( which are recognisably real shops in London's Cecil Court ) for " Fly Fishing by J. R. Hartley ".
When Lumsden died on 28 November 2001 at the age of 95, despite his numerous other roles and distinguished career as an opera singer, the death of the man who played J. R. Hartley was in the national headlines, and the advertisement was broadcast again in his memory, nearly 20 years after its first appearance.
Michael Russell, an author who had brought out a book about fly fishing in 1991, noted how much of a cult figure the fictional Hartley had become, and published it under the pseudonym J. R. Hartley with the title Fly Fishing: Memories of Angling Days.

Hartley and .
Joanne Curry, daughter of the Ellsworth Currys, to James Hartley Gregg, and Valerie Smith to James McAlister Duque.
Hartley.
* 1705 – David Hartley, English philosopher ( d. 1757 )
However, the game system was reviewed in 1990 in Dragon # 155 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in " The Role of Computers " column.
Ralph Hartley suggested the use of a logarithmic measure of information in 1928.
In communication systems, in calculations of the Shannon – Hartley channel capacity, bandwidth refers to the 3dB-bandwidth.
In calculations of the maximum symbol rate, the Nyquist sampling rate, and maximum bit rate according to the Hartley formula, the bandwidth refers to the frequency range within which the gain is non-zero, or the gain in dB is below a very large value.
He also worked on the show with his friend, movie actress Mariette Hartley, who would later star with Bixby in his final series, Goodnight, Beantown in 1983.
Hartley appears in the memorable double-length episode " Married " ( in which David finds another source of help with whom he falls in love and marries ), and subsequently won an Emmy Award for her guest appearance.
As early as 1946 the Attorney-General Sir Hartley Shawcross attacked " the campaign of calumny and misrepresentation which the Tory Party and the Tory stooge press has directed at the Labour government.
After a forty-five minutes or so of jokes and music, the procession then moves out to the lawn in front of Hartley, Wallach and John Jay residence halls to entertain the residents there.
In the reworked version of the book in 1955, Philip Hershkovitz and Hartley Jackson led him to drop Thos both as an available scientific term and as a viable subgenus of Canis.
For real inputs, the real part of is none other than the discrete Hartley transform, which is also involutary.
* L. P. Hartley, ' Emily Bronte In Gondal And Galdine ', in L. P. Hartley, The Novelist's Responsibility ( 1967 ), p. 35-53
Typical LC oscillator circuits are the Hartley, Colpitts and Clapp circuits.
In 1961, an EDSAC 2 version of Autocode, an ALGOL-like high-level programming language for scientists and engineers, was developed by David Hartley.

Hartley and V
* H. V. Sorensen, D. L. Jones, C. S. Burrus, and M. T. Heideman, " On computing the discrete Hartley transform ," IEEE Trans.
The Hartley oscillator was invented by Ralph V. L.
It was proposed as an alternative to the Fourier transform by R. V. L. Hartley in 1942, and is one of many known Fourier-related transforms.
* Hartley, R. V. L., A more symmetrical Fourier analysis applied to transmission problems, Proc.

Hartley and L
The region also figures in works by L. P. Hartley, Arthur Ransome and Dorothy L. Sayers, among many others.
The Go-Between is a novel by L. P. Hartley ( 1895 – 1972 ), published in London in 1953.
L. P. Hartley knew Hunstanton and the surrounding area well from childhood holidays and he used it as a setting for The Shrimp and the Anemone ( 1944-the first novel in his trilogy ).
Over 4, 000 persons are buried here, including many area Civil War veterans, including Thomas J. Cartwright, Enoch B. Hartley, Aaron W. Letts, Simon P. Morrow, Albert Pugh, Stephen B. H. Shanks, Aaron L. Somers, Jacob Walker, and Morris C. Ward.
* David Hartley by Victor L. Nuovo, in " The Dictionary of Eighteenth-Century British Philosophers ", Thoemmes Press.
Though an outstanding student, Bowra was very sociable, and his circle as an undergraduate included Cyril Radcliffe ( with whom he shared lodgings ), Roy Harrod, Robert Boothby, L. P. Hartley, Lord David Cecil, J.
* James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: L. P. Hartley, Eustace and Hilda
* December 13 – L. P. Hartley, novelist
* Hartley, D., Observations on Man: His Frame, His Duty, and His Expectations, S. Richardson, ( London ), 1749. reproduction ( two volumes in one, with an introduction by Huguelet, T. L.
In 1920, with Stieglitz's support, he organized the first exhibition of modern art in L. A., " The Exhibition of American Modernists " at the Los Angeles County Museum of History, Science, and Art, showing his own large-scale abstract synchromies as well as works by John Marin, Arthur Dove, and Marsden Hartley.

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