Now showing items 31-40 of 313
Beyond the Fractal
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 1990-06-21)
Use of fractal geometry in diffusion.
Visualizing a Map of Walter Christaller, Poland 1941: Part II, Interpolation of the Benchmarked Map
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 2006-12-21)
Christaller's 1941 map of a plan for the settlement of western and central Poland was brought into Google Earth® in Part I. That map was aligned with the globe using a set of benchmarks on the three highest levels of ...
3D Atlas of Ann Arbor: The Google Earth Approach, Part I
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 2006-06-21)
The virtual reality files in the first edition of the 3D Atlas of Ann Arbor were all made using a strategy involving Geographic Information System (GIS) software coupled with 3D graphic design software. The process was ...
Photo Essay: Water Rustlers?
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 2001-06-21)
Water Rustlers in Arizona:
Detecting Possible Illegal Water Use in Arid Lands using Remote Sensing and GIS Methods
The Greening of Detroit, 1975-1992: Physical Effects of Decline
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 1996-06-21)
The number of ways to label a structure
(Springer-Verlag; Psychometric Society, 1967-06)
It has been observed that the number of different ways in which a graph with p points can be labelled is p ! divided by the number of symmetries, and that this holds regardless of the species of structure at hand. In this ...
What's at Home? Shelter for the Poor in Low Income Cities
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 2001-12-21)
Finding shelter for the poor in low-income cities is a problem for now and for the future. The twentieth century saw huge growth in human population. This population is now entering the twenty-first century with enormous ...
The Hedetniemi matrix sum: A real-world application
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 1990-12-21)
Test of an existing algorithm on a real-world situation: commuting times in relation to the closing of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.
Elements of Spatial Planning: Theory. Part I.
(Institute of Mathematical Geography, 1995-12-21)
One reason that planning of any sort is a difficult process is that it involves altering natural boundaries to fit human needs and desires. While it may not be "nice to fool Moother Nature" the act of planning may be ...