Academic literature on the topic 'Australian Port Adelaide'

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Journal articles on the topic "Australian Port Adelaide"

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Middleton, Craig. "Savants and Surgeons." Transfers 5, no. 2 (June 1, 2015): 135–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2015.050210.

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South Australian Maritime Museum 126 Lipson Street, Port Adelaide, SA 5015, Australia http://samaritimemuseum.com.au/ Admission: AUD 10/8/5 The South Australian Maritime Museum cares for one of South Australia’s oldest cultural heritage collections.2 The core collection, inherited from the Port Adelaide Institute (one of the legion of nineteenth-century mechanics’ institutes providing learning resources to working men), began in 1872. Visiting seafarers spent time in the ins titute’s library, leaving behind crafts or souvenirs picked up in exotic ports of call as a token of thanks. In the 1930s, honorary curator Vernon Smith refi ned the collection to focus solely on nautical material and searched for artifacts to enhance it. Th e collection now comprises over twenty thousand objects.
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Evenden, A. R. "Sea water reverse osmosis - energy efficiency & recovery." Water Practice and Technology 10, no. 1 (March 1, 2015): 187–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wpt.2015.023.

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The Adelaide desalination plant, located in South Australia, was designed and built by the AdelaideAqua construction consortium for the South Australian Water Corporation (SA Water), a wholly owned public utility. Construction commenced in 2009 at a green field site (Port Stanvac) south of Adelaide, with drinking water production from October 2011 and full production capability and handover to the plant operator on 12 December 2012. The facility uses 100% renewable energy and provides the people of South Australia with one of the most energy efficient sea water desalination plants in the World. This paper examines the performance of the Adelaide desalination plant in terms of energy efficiency. Specific energy saving technologies and innovations are described, including assessment of design and actual performance. The Adelaide desalination plant has achieved 8% lower energy consumption compared to the project's initial design requirements and the specific energy consumption of 3.48 kWh/m3 compares well with industry benchmark efficiencies.
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Potter, Emily. "Contesting imaginaries in the Australian city: Urban planning, public storytelling and the implications for climate change." Urban Studies 57, no. 7 (March 11, 2019): 1536–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098018821304.

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In Australia, environmental degradation goes hand in hand with exclusionary and mono-vocal tactics of place-making. This article argues that dominant cultural imaginaries inform material and discursive practices of place-making with significant consequence for diverse, inclusive and climate change-responsive urban environments. Urban planning in the modern global city commonly deploys imaginaries in line with neoliberal logics, and this article takes a particular interest in the impact of this on Indigenous Australians, whose original dispossession connects through to current Indigenous urban experiences of exclusion which are set to intensify in the face of increasing climate change. The article explores what urban resilience means in this context, focusing on a case study of urban development in Port Adelaide, South Australia, and broadens the question of dispossession through the forces of global capital to potentially all of humanity in the Anthropocene.
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Murray, M. K., and D. Parrott. "James Henry Michael 1920–2001." Historical Records of Australian Science 25, no. 1 (2014): 84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/hr14001.

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Professor James Henry ('Jim') Michael 1920–2001 was elected to the Australian Academy of Science in 1973. Born in Port Augusta, Jim saw active service during the Second World War. Returning to Adelaide, he completed a PhD in pure mathematics and began a distinguished career as an international expert in mathematical analysis. As well as being a mathematician, Jim was a keen golfer and shooter. Jim is remembered as a quiet, gentle man of few words but great integrity. A devoted family man, he is survived by his wife Pat, his daughter Mary Jane, his son Philip and his two grandchildren Ian and Tim Michael.
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Lindoy, L. F. "Retirement of Dr John Zdysiewicz - An Appreciation." Australian Journal of Chemistry 53, no. 12 (2000): 893. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ch01e1.

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After 25 years with the Australian Journal of Chemistry, our editor, Dr Jan R. Zdysiewicz (known far and wide as John Z.), has recently retired. During his initial ten year period with the journal, John served as assistant editor under Bob Schoenfeld who, like John, was also very widely known throughout the Australian and New Zealand chemistry community. In 1985, John took up the editorship and under his editorial management the journal has continued to prosper. John has been an exceptionally talented editor who, despite increasing pressures over more recent times, has managed to maintain the journal’s very high editorial standard – a task aided by his wide understanding of chemistry and his truly exceptional knowledge of English usage. John had an eventful early life – details of which may be of interest to his many friends and acquaintances. He was born in Laukischken in East Prussia to parents from Mosty in eastern Poland. His parents had been taken to Germany during World War II for forced labour. After the war, the family was transferred, endlessly it seemed, from DP (displaced persons) camp to DP camp in Germany, until final acceptance for migration to Australia. After a long sea voyage on the Skaugum, the family arrived at Port Melbourne in December 1950. Then followed being shuffled between widely spread immigration holding centres in South-East Australia, finally ending up in Adelaide, where the family settled. After some difficulty in gaining enrolment, John attended Adelaide Boys High School. In 1962 at age 19, he lost his alien status and became an Australian citizen. Even during this early period, John Z. made a name for himself. He became somewhat of a celebrity for his virtuosity in playing the accordion. In 1961, he became Grand Australian Accordion Champion. On occasions, he still plays for friends and private audiences. John Z. obtained his tertiary education at the University of Adelaide. His Ph.D. research in the Department of Physical and Inorganic Chemistry was concerned with physical chemical studies on naturally occurring and synthetic polymers. He then held Post Doctoral appointments in England at the University of Lancaster (preparation and e.s.r. characterisation of radical anions), Australia at the Division of Protein Chemistry, CSIRO, Parkville (on the interactions of fluorescent compounds with protein components by photophysical techniques) and Canada at the University of Western Ontario (construction of a microsecond flash photolysis apparatus in connection with photochemical reactions involving radical ions). In 1975 he returned to Australia as the assistant editor of Aust. J. Chem. John Z. has served as the national representative on IUPAC’s Commission III.2 (on Physical Organic Chemistry) and is currently an associate member of this commission. In 1998, the Royal Australian Chemical Institute awarded him a citation for his contributions to the promotion of Australian chemistry nationally and internationally, principally through his role as editor of the journal. Finally, John is of a distinctly independent nature – perhaps a reflection of his Polish antecedents? While his management style might be said to be unique, it has always been characterised by an overriding commitment to quality. Clearly, John Zdysiewicz ranks as an exceptional individual. On behalf of my fellow advisory committee members and, indeed, also for the wider chemistry community, I thank John for a job exceedingly well done. We wish him well in his retirement.
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Shaughnessy, Peter D., Mike Bossley, and A. O. Nicholls. "Fur seals and sea lions (family Otariidae) on the breakwaters at Adelaide." Australian Mammalogy 40, no. 2 (2018): 157. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am17001.

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Long-nosed fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri) and Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) on the breakwaters at the mouth of the Port River estuary at Adelaide’s Outer Harbor were counted from 2004 to 2015. Observed counts were modelled using a generalised linear model. Fur seal numbers have been increasing since 2011; for sea lions there was a small discernible annual trend in counts. Counts of fur seals varied seasonally; most annual maxima were in August or September with modelled peak numbers around 9–11 September. The maximum count of fur seals was 79 in September 2015. For sea lions, the model predicts annual peaks in the period 28 August to 19 September. The maximum count of sea lions was nine in September 2009. The haulout sites on the Outer Harbor breakwaters are easily accessible by boats, including pleasure craft. In particular, the seaward end of the outer breakwater is a popular spot with recreational anglers whose lines are often within a few metres of the seals. We propose that a management plan should be developed involving a study of the effect of boat approaches on seals utilising the Outer Harbor area followed by education coupled with enforcement.
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Szili, Gertrude, and Matthew W. Rofe. "Greening Port Misery: Marketing the Green Face of Waterfront Redevelopment in Port Adelaide, South Australia." Urban Policy and Research 25, no. 3 (September 2007): 363–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08111140701540695.

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CHISHOLM, LESLIE A., VANESSA GLENNON, and IAN D. WHITTINGTON. "Dendromonocotyle bradsmithi n. sp. (Monogenea: Monocotylidae) from the skin of Myliobatis australis (Elasmobranchii: Myliobatidae) off Adelaide and Perth, Australia: description of adult and larva." Zootaxa 951, no. 1 (April 22, 2005): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.951.1.1.

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Dendromonocotyle bradsmithi n. sp. (Monogenea: Monocotylidae) is described from the dorsal skin surface of the southern eagle ray, Myliobatis australis Macleay, 1881, collected from the mouth of the Port Adelaide River, Adelaide, South Australia. Specimens of D. bradsmithi were also found on 2 M. australis specimens collected off Mandurah, Western Australia (WA) and on 1 M. australis kept in a public aquarium in Perth (AQWA),WA. Dendromonocotyle bradsmithi is distinguished most easily from the other 12 species in the genus by the morphology of the distal portion of the male copulatory organ. The anatomy of the oncomiracidium determined by examining live larvae and the distribution of the ciliated epidermal cells and sensilla revealed by silver staining are also provided.
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Davies, Kerrie, Faerlie Bartholomaeus, Weimin Ye, Natsumi Kanzaki, and Robin Giblin-Davis. "Schistonchus (Aphelenchoididae) from Ficus (Moraceae) in Australia, with description of S. aculeata sp. n." Nematology 12, no. 6 (2010): 935–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/138855410x498932.

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Abstract A checklist of Schistonchus collected from Ficus spp. in Australia and stored in the Waite Nematode Collection at the University of Adelaide is presented. Within Australia, Schistonchus contains 12 morphospecies and four nominal species, based on a combination of the following characters: body shape when heat-relaxed, position of excretory pore, length of post-uterine sac, spicule form, and number and position of caudal papillae. Up to four morphospecies of Schistonchus have been collected from one species of Ficus and, in several cases, one morphospecies of Schistonchus has been collected from more than one host fig species. A phylogenetic tree based on D2/D3 sequences showed that Australian collections of Schistonchus fall into two clades, suggestive of endemic and introduced lineages with host switching. Schistonchus aculeata sp. n. is described from F. aculeata and F. opposita and differentiated from other species of Schistonchus by having the excretory pore opening near the lips, a short post-uterine sac, rosethorn-shaped spicules, arcuate gubernaculum or thickening of dorsal wall, amoeboid sperm, and three pairs of caudal papillae (one pair adcloacal, one just posterior to mid-tail, and one near the tail tip), association with Kradibia spp. pollinating wasps and apparent biogeographical range. A key to the known species and morphospecies of Schistonchus from Australia is presented.
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ROFE, MATTHEW W., and SUSAN OAKLEY. "Constructing the Port: External Perceptions and Interventions in the Making of Place in Port Adelaide, South Australia." Geographical Research 44, no. 3 (September 2006): 272–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2006.00389.x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Australian Port Adelaide"

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L, Potter Yvonne. "Progress, pubs and piety : Port Adelaide 1836-1915." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1999. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09php869.pdf.

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Includes bibliographical references (leaves 504-529) Argues that social tensions evolved at Port Adelaide, South Australia, between the stable, traditional environment both the working and middle class settlers were trying to create for their families, and the wharfside activities of brawls, bars and brothels which were a common way of life for many transient seafarers after long periods at sea.
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Potter, Yvonne L. "Progress, pubs and piety : Port Adelaide, 1836-1915 / Yvonne L. Potter." 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/19645.

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Bibliography: leaves 504-529.
v, 529 leaves : ill., maps ; 30 cm.
Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library.
Argues that social tensions evolved at Port Adelaide, South Australia, between the stable, traditional environment both the working and middle class settlers were trying to create for their families, and the wharfside activities of brawls, bars and brothels which were a common way of life for many transient seafarers after long periods at sea.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 2000?
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Potter, Yvonne L. "Progress, pubs and piety : Port Adelaide, 1836-1915 / Yvonne L. Potter." Thesis, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/19645.

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Bibliography: leaves 504-529.
v, 529 leaves : ill., maps ; 30 cm.
Argues that social tensions evolved at Port Adelaide, South Australia, between the stable, traditional environment both the working and middle class settlers were trying to create for their families, and the wharfside activities of brawls, bars and brothels which were a common way of life for many transient seafarers after long periods at sea.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 2000
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Hunter, Andrew Sloan. "Port Adelaide Football Club in China: a case for an intercultural approach to public diplomacy?" Thesis, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/113438.

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This paper examines the potential effectiveness of an intercultural approach to public diplomacy which is now considered the principal vehicle through which cultural expressions are used in international relations. Most counties use public diplomacy to project a positive external image, often with a strong economic objective. The main focus of this paper is the bi-lateral relationship between Australia and China, and draws on Port Adelaide Football Club’s engagement in China. It found that China’s public diplomacy is viewed cynically, and Australian public diplomacy has a strong focus on economic outcomes. An intercultural approach, designed to enhance popular intercultural understanding in both domestic and foreign audiences, would make for more effective foreign policy. Particularly in Australia, sport holds great potential for an intercultural approach to public diplomacy.
Thesis (M.Phil.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, 2018
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Books on the topic "Australian Port Adelaide"

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Williams, Foster Neil. Dynasty: A legend, a family, and the Port Adelaide Football Club : the story of the Williams family. Norwood, S. Aust: Peacock Publications, 1999.

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Porter, Ashley. The pride of South Australia: A Crows' decade. Kent Town, S. Aust: Wakefield Press, 2001.

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Hahn, Dirk M. Die Reise mit Auswanderern von Altona nach Port Adelaide Süd-Australien 1838. Zürich: Pendo, 1988.

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Hahn, Dirk M. Kapitan der Zebra: Die Reise mit Auswanderen von Altona nach Port Adelaide Sud-Australien 1838. Zurich: Pendo-Verlag, 1988.

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Hahn, Dirk Meinerts. Emigrants to Hahndorf: A remarkable voyage from Altona, Denmark to Port Adelaide, South Australia : Captain Hahn of the Zebra 1838. Adlaide, South Australia: Lutheran Publishing House, 1989.

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Takos, Wendy. Nurses & Hospitals in Port Adelaide. Primedia eLaunch LLC, 2021.

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Takos, Wendy. Nurses & Hospitals in Port Adelaide. Primedia eLaunch LLC, 2021.

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Leopardi: Poet for today : proceedings of the commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the death of Giacomo Leopardi : Adelaide, South Australia, 19-26 June 1988. Italian Discipline, Flinders University of South Australia, 1989.

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1798-1837, Leopardi Giacomo, Comin Antonio, and O'Connor Desmond, eds. Leopardi: Poet for today : proceedings of the commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the death of Giacomo Leopardi : Adelaide, South Australia, 19-26 June 1988. Adelaide: Italian Discipline, Flinders University of South Australia, 1989.

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Book chapters on the topic "Australian Port Adelaide"

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Archer, Robyn. "A View from Australia." In Focus On Festivals. Goodfellow Publishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/978-1-910158-15-9-2642.

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Dragan Klaić’s faith in festivals as a uniting cultural force seems to have had much in common with the altruistic beginnings of the Edinburgh Festival. While it is true that post-war Edinburgh desperately needed new economic drivers, there is no reason to doubt the founders’ desires for a cultural framework that might help to pull Europe together again. Klaić’s desire was to deconstruct the silos of national identity and construct in their place platforms on which the differences in language and practice could be better understood and shared. While Melina Mercuri’s desires for better understanding between the different cultures of Europe resulted in many positive collaborations and much-needed sources of mobility for artists through the European Capital of Culture programme, the programme has also bred a kind of necessary civic bragging that I doubt Klaić would have found productive. This account of international arts festivals in Australia is less one of bragging (though that too has had its place) and more one of early ignorance, gradual evolution and a happy present. International arts festivals in Australia were first built entirely on the Edinburgh model. When first Perth in Western Australia, and then Adelaide in South Australia, cloned that model to their relatively isolated cities, the core desire was to bring ‘culture’ to those cities. Not that Perth and Adelaide lacked artists and performances, but those who had been to Edinburgh felt that Australian audiences were rarely exposed to the ‘best’ of culture. The significantly named Elizabethan Theatre Trust and entrepreneurs such as Ken Brodziak, already toured international shows and artists: I myself was taken by our science teacher, along with a few fellow students, to see Vivien Leigh play Portia in The Merchant of Venice, in 1962.
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Conference papers on the topic "Australian Port Adelaide"

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Moulis, Antony. "Architecture in Translation: Le Corbusier’s influence in Australia." In LC2015 - Le Corbusier, 50 years later. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/lc2015.2015.752.

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Abstract: While there is an abundance of commentary and criticism on Le Corbusier’s effect upon architecture and planning globally – in Europe, Northern Africa, the Americas and the Indian sub-continent – there is very little dealing with other contexts such as Australia. The paper will offer a first appraisal of Le Corbusier’s relationship with Australia, providing example of the significant international reach of his ideas to places he was never to set foot. It draws attention to Le Corbusier's contacts with architects who practiced in Australia and little known instances of his connections - his drawing of the City of Adelaide plan (1950) and his commission for art at Jorn Utzon's Sydney Opera House (1958). The paper also considers the ways that Le Corbusier’s work underwent translation into Australian architecture and urbanism in the mid to late 20th century through the influence his work exerted on others, identifying further possibilities for research on the topic. Keywords: Le Corbusier; post-war architecture; international modernism; Australian architecture, 20th century architecture. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/LC2015.2015.752
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Raxworthy, Julian. "A Story of Two Titles: The Torrens System and Parcel 702, Adelaide." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4023p41ye.

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Although the catchment - the topographically defined edge where “all rainfall… drains naturally … or is directed to by human intervention towards … the catchment outlet [which may be immediately a creek, but ultimately is the ocean] ” – is the most significant boundary for ecological function of landscapes, Raxworthy has argued that property boundaries and land tenure make it such that “landscape pattern is as much an emergent quality of capitalism as it is propensity[y] of [the landscape.” Despite its role in establishing the pattern of the landscape, landscape architects tend to treat property boundary as a given that is almost invisible when every act they do reacts to it in some way, necessitating, Raxworthy continues, a theorising of land tenure in landscape architecture. I hope to continue Raxworthy’s project in this paper by examining the celebrated model of contemporary land titling – the Torrens System – in its place of origination – Adelaide – and explore the relationship between landscape, people and land titling. Two of the things Adelaide is most famous for might seem complimentary but are actually contradictory: the Torrens System of title (which Atkinson, quoting Greg Taylor, calls ““South Australia’s most successful intellectual export.”” ) and the first successful determination Native Title in a capital city of Australia. Developed by Robert Richard Torrens, the “Real Property Act (1858)” (which subsequently became known as Torrens Title, or the Torrens System) and “simplify[ied] the Laws relating to the transfer and encumbrance of freehold and other interests in land,” by creating a centralised registration system of actual land ownership, rather than simply deeds, removing potentials for contestation. In the developing world the Torrens System has been a very important tool in helping secure land title in post-colonial countries “[becoming] the norm in both Anglophone and Francophone colonial Africa,” yet, as Leonie Kelleher has argued, the Torrens System effectively eclipsed the previous sovereignty of Aboriginal people in the very place of its creation.
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Richardson, Daniel, Sean Kearney, and Daniel Guildenbecher. "Post-Detonation Fireball Thermometry via Femtosecond-Picosecond Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (CARS)." In Proposed for presentation at the 38th International Symposium on Combustion held January 24-29, 2021 in Adelaide, Australia. US DOE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1832682.

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