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Peter A. Robinson

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  495
Citations -  17549

Peter A. Robinson is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasma oscillation & Wave packet. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 489 publications receiving 16034 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter A. Robinson include NASA Headquarters & University of Colorado Boulder.

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First-order thermal correction to the quadratic response tensor and rate for second harmonic plasma emission

TL;DR: In this article, the first-order thermal correction (FOTC) to the cold-plasma QRT is derived for interactions between three fast waves in a warm unmagnetized collisionless plasma, whose particles have an arbitrary isotropic distribution function.
Journal Article

Species diversity, tooth size, and shape of Haplomylus (Condylarthra, Hyopsodontidae) from the Powder River basin, northeastern Wyoming

TL;DR: The co-occurrence of two closely related species with total overlap in metric characteristics shows the need for caution in using an exclusively measurement-based stratophenetic approach to lineage evaluation through time.
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Towards a quantitative theory for 2–3 kHz radio emission from beyond the heliopause

TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine this theory with a recent theory for type II solar radio bursts, resulting in an analytic quantitative theory for the 2-3 kHz radiation, which treats electron reflection and acceleration at the global merged interaction regions (GMIR) shock, formation of electron beams in the foreshock, generation of Langmuir waves, and conversion of Langevin energy into radiation at the fundamental and harmonic of the electron plasma frequency.
Journal Article

Type III radio bursts observed by ULYSSES pole to pole, and simultaneously by wind.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider 555 type III bursts observed by Ulysses and/or Wind while traversing a large range of longitude and latitude and find that the percentage of bursts seen by both spacecraft was 59.5%.
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Unified analysis of global and focal aspects of absence epilepsy via neural field theory of the corticothalamic system.

TL;DR: The emergence of the spatiotemporal dynamics corresponding to focal seizures provides a biophysical explanation of the temporally higher frequency but spatially more localized cortical waves observed in genetic rat models that display characteristics of human absence epilepsy.