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On the Problem of three Bodies

S. Miyahara
- Vol. 6, pp 21
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The article was published on 1954-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 4 citations till now.

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Citations
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Recurrence studies of insect-sized flapping wings in inclined-stroke plane under gusty conditions

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of frontal gust on the force patterns of an insect-sized flapping wing in the inclined-stroke plane was assessed using global recurrence plots and windowed recurrence quantification analysis (WRQA).
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech and Music - Nonlinear Acoustical Decoding in Neurocognitive Scenario

TL;DR: In this article, the scaling behavior of amplitude-profile of music varies a lot from frequency to frequency whereas it's almost consistent for the speech signal, which has huge neurocognitive significance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reality or Locality? Proposed Test to Decide How Nature Breaks Bell's Inequality

TL;DR: A simple test is proposed, which for the first time may decide which alternative nature actually prefers on the fundamental, quantum level, if each microscopic event is truly random or deterministic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Recurrence studies of insect-sized flapping wings in inclined-stroke plane under gusty conditions

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of frontal gust on the force patterns of an insect-sized flapping wing in the inclined-stroke plane was assessed using global recurrence plots and windowed recurrence quantification analysis (WRQA).
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech and Music - Nonlinear Acoustical Decoding in Neurocognitive Scenario

TL;DR: In this article, the scaling behavior of amplitude-profile of music varies a lot from frequency to frequency whereas it's almost consistent for the speech signal, which has huge neurocognitive significance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reality or Locality? - Proposed test to decide \textit{how} Nature breaks Bell's inequality

TL;DR: In this article, a simple test is proposed, which for the first time may decide which alternative nature actually prefers on the fundamental, quantum level, if each microscopic event is truly random (e.g. as assumed in orthodox quantum mechanics) objective reality is not valid, whereas if each event is described by an unknown but deterministic mechanism ("hidden variables") locality is not invalid.