Academic literature on the topic 'Ghost resonance'

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Journal articles on the topic "Ghost resonance"

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Abirami, K., S. Rajasekar, and M. A. F. Sanjuan. "Vibrational and Ghost-Vibrational Resonances in a Modified Chua's Circuit Model Equation." International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos 24, no. 11 (November 2014): 1430031. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218127414300316.

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The role of the number of breakpoints N in the sawtooth form of the characteristic function in the modified Chua's circuit model equation on vibrational and ghost-vibrational resonances is investigated in this paper. To observe vibrational resonance, the system should be driven by two periodic forces of frequencies ω and Ω, with Ω ≫ ω. Resonance occurs at the frequency ω when the amplitude of the high-frequency force is varied. When the system is subjected to an input signal containing multifrequencies which are of higher-order than a certain (missing) fundamental frequency, then a resonance at the missing fundamental frequency is induced by the high-frequency input signal and is called ghost-vibrational resonance. In both types of resonances, the number of resonances is N and hysteresis occurs in each resonance region. There are some similarities and differences in these two resonance phenomena. We report in detail the influence of the role of number of breakpoints N on the features of vibrational and ghost-vibrational resonances.
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Rajamani, S., S. Rajasekar, and M. A. F. Sanjuán. "Ghost-vibrational resonance." Communications in Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation 19, no. 11 (November 2014): 4003–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cnsns.2014.04.006.

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Koktzoglou, Ioannis, and Robert R. Edelman. "Ghost magnetic resonance angiography." Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 61, no. 6 (June 2009): 1515–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.21943.

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Karkazis, Katrina, and Rebecca Jordan-Young. "Sensing Race as a Ghost Variable in Science, Technology, and Medicine." Science, Technology, & Human Values 45, no. 5 (July 27, 2020): 763–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0162243920939306.

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Ghost variables are variables in program languages that do not correspond to physical entities. This special issue, based on a panel on “Race as a Ghost Variable” at the 2017 Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, traces ideas of “race” in particular niches of science, technology, and medicine where it is submerged and disavowed, yet wields power. Each paper is a case study exploring ghosts that emerge through the resonance among things as heterogeneous as hair patterns, hormone levels, food tastes, drug use, clinic locations, proximity to disaster, job classifications, and social belonging and suspicion, all of which vibrate with meanings accumulated over long racial histories. Together, the papers further elaborate methods and analytic models for identifying the operations of race—the relations and processes that make it, the effects that it has. A chief appeal of the metaphor of the ghost is that it brings the importance of history to the fore. Ghosts are simultaneously history and the present, not just an accretion of earlier experiences, but the palimpsest left when one tries to erase them. Sometimes faint and hard to discern, sometimes rambunctious and disruptive, ghosts refuse our attempts to simply move on.
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CALVO, OSCAR, and DANTE R. CHIALVO. "GHOST STOCHASTIC RESONANCE IN AN ELECTRONIC CIRCUIT." International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos 16, no. 03 (March 2006): 731–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218127406015106.

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We demonstrate experimentally the regime of ghost stochastic resonance in the response of a Monostable Schmit Trigger electronic circuit driven by noise and signals with N frequency components: kf0+Δf, (k+1)f0+Δf,…, k+nf0+Δf where k is an integer greater than one. It is verified that stochastic resonance occurs at the frequency fr = f0 + (Δf/(k+(N-1)/2)), as predicted in the theory. At the frequency for which the resonance is maximum there is no input energy, and thus this form is called "ghost" stochastic resonance.
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Bordet, M., S. Morfu, and P. Marquié. "Ghost stochastic resonance in FitzHugh–Nagumo circuit." Electronics Letters 50, no. 12 (June 2014): 861–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/el.2014.0638.

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Johnson, Stephanie L. "CHRISTINA ROSSETTI'S GHOSTS, SOUL-SLEEP, AND VICTORIAN DEATH CULTURE." Victorian Literature and Culture 46, no. 2 (May 16, 2018): 381–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150318000062.

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Ghosts haunt Christina Rossetti's poetry. Amidst the lyrics, devotional poems, and children's verse, poems about ghosts and hauntings recur as material evidence of Rossetti's fascination with spectral presences. That fascination poses a particular interpretive puzzle in light of her religious convictions and piety. We might be tempted to identify the recurring ghosts as just another nineteenth-century flirtation with spiritualism – the spiritualism by which her brothers William and Gabriel were intrigued, attending séances and testing the validity of communications from the dead. Rossetti, however, clearly dismissed spiritualism as false belief and a means to sin. We might also be tempted to divide Rossetti's poetry into the secular and the sacred and to categorize the ghost poems as the former, yet much recent criticism on Rossetti has argued successfully for the pervasiveness of her religious voice even in works that seem not to be religious. Finally, in seeking to hear a religious resonance, we might be tempted to interpret her ghosts as representative of the Holy Ghost, yet that interpretation could only be asserted at the expense of the poems themselves; as narrative poems, most of them involve ghosts of dead lovers, desired by the living for themselves – not as experiences of God's presence. Rossetti's use of ghosts within short narrative or dialogic poems of the late 1850s and 60s concerning human desire for lost love invites closer inspection, especially when such poems overtly treat her religious beliefs.
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Tala, A. F. Moyo, Y. J. Wadop Ngouongo, G. Djuidjé Kenmoé, and T. C. Kofané. "Ghost stochastic resonance in an asymmetric Duffing oscillator." Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 582 (November 2021): 126247. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physa.2021.126247.

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Balenzuela, Pablo, Holger Braun, and Dante R. Chialvo. "The ghost of stochastic resonance: an introductory review." Contemporary Physics 53, no. 1 (January 2012): 17–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00107514.2011.639605.

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Buldú, Javier M., C. M. González, J. Trull, M. C. Torrent, and J. García-Ojalvo. "Coupling-mediated ghost resonance in mutually injected lasers." Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science 15, no. 1 (March 2005): 013103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1827412.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Ghost resonance"

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Bordet, Maxime. "Contribution du bruit aux phénomènes de résonance et à la propagation de l'information dans les réseaux électroniques non linéaires." Thesis, Dijon, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015DIJOS051/document.

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Les possibles effets bénéfiques de perturbations déterministes ou stochastiques sur la réponse de différents systèmes non linéaires sont étudiés. À cet effet, des études numériques et expérimentales sont conjointement proposées sur deux structures distinctes : un oscillateur électronique de type FitzHugh-Nagumo et une ligne électrique constituée de 45 de ces oscillateurs couplés résistivement. La caractérisation de l’oscillateur élémentaire est d’abord réalisée en régime déterministe. En présence d’une excitation bichromatique, il est notamment montré que lorsque la composante de fréquence la plus faible est subliminale, sa détection en sortie du système peut être maximisée pour une amplitude particulière de la seconde composante, qui agit alors comme une perturbation haute fréquence. Par la suite, il est établi que ce phénomène de résonance vibrationnelle peut être amélioré pour quelques fréquences spécifiques de cette perturbation déterministe. Par ailleurs, en introduisant une composante stochastique dans l’excitation, l’attention est ensuite portée sur le phénomène de résonance stochastique fantôme. Celui-ci se distingue par le fait que la fréquence d’intérêt en sortie du système ne fait désormais plus partie du signal excitateur. La dernière partie est consacrée à l’étude de la structure couplée. Il est montré que la propagation d’une information à travers les cellules de la ligne peut être améliorée via les phénomènes de propagation vibrationnelle et de propagation assistée par le bruit. Ceux-ci se produisent sous certaines conditions, lorsque le système est respectivement sous l’influence d’une perturbation déterministe haute fréquence ou d’une source de bruit
This manuscript presents research aiming to show possible positive effects of deterministic and stochastic perturbations on the responses of different nonlinear systems. To that end, both numerical and experimental studies were carried out on two kinds of structures : an elementary electronic FitzHugh-Nagumo oscillator and an electrical line developed by resistively coupling 45 elementary cells. In the first section, the elementary cell characterization was undertaken in a deterministic regime. In the presence of a bichromatic stimulus, it is shown that when the low frequency component is subthreshold, its detection can be maximized for an optimal magnitude of the second component thanks to vibrational resonance. Next, it is established that this resonance may be enhanced for specific frequencies of the second component ; this phenomenon is referred to as frequency resonance. Furthermore, white and colored noise sources effects on vibrational resonance are reported. Then, for any other bichromatic excitation configuration, attention was focused on ghost stochastic resonance. Contrary to the other phenomena introduced in this manuscript, this one differs in the fact that the frequency of interest in the system output is here not applied on the input. Finally, the last part of the manuscript is devoted to the study of the coupled structure. It is shown that information propagation through line cells can be enhanced by vibrational propagation and noise assisted propagation phenomena. These nonlinear effects respectively occur when the system is under a high frequency deterministic perturbation or a random noise source
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Baillié, Kévin. "Interactions Disque-Satellites dans les Anneaux de Saturne." Phd thesis, Université Paris-Diderot - Paris VII, 2011. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00649872.

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La mission Cassini fourmille d'outils de haute précision pour l'exploration de Saturne, de ses satellites et de son système d'anneaux. L'instrument UVIS permet d'analyser la structure des anneaux par l'observation d'occultations stellaires. Il dispose pour cela de la meilleure résolution spatiale disponible (de l'ordre de la dizaine de mètres, variable avec la géométrie de l'occultation et la navigation de la sonde), ce qui permet de mieux comprendre la physique inhérente aux anneaux. En particulier, nous avons été à même d'observer, disséquer, modéliser et valider les interactions entre les anneaux et les satellites. Nous nous sommes intéressés dans un premier temps à des structures larges de quelques kilomètres, créées par des résonances avec des satellites extérieurs aux anneaux principaux. L'observation de telles structures dans l'anneau C, ainsi que l'association de certaines avec des résonances nous a permis de contraindre les paramètres physiques des anneaux. Cependant, la plupart des structures observées ne peuvent être expliquées par de simples résonances avec des satellites extérieurs, même si nous ne connaissons pas les autres mécanismes pouvant générer de telles signatures. Nous avons identifié 4 ondes de densité associées aux résonances de Linblad interne 4:1 avec Mimas, 2:1 avec Atlas, 6:2 avec Mimas ou 4:2 avec Pandore, ainsi qu'une onde verticale nodale, la Titan -1:0. En modélisant la relation de dispersion de ces ondes, nous avons pu déterminer la densité de masse surfacique (entre $0.22 ~(\pm 0.03)~$ to $1.42 ~(\pm 0.21)~\mathrm{g~cm^{-2}}$) et les coefficients d'extinction massique (entre $0.13~(\pm 0.03)$ et $0.28~(\pm 0.06)~\mathrm{cm^{2}~g^{-1}}$). Ces valeurs, plus grandes que dans l'anneau A et la Division de Cassini où Colwell et al., 2009 avait déterminé des coefficients d'extinction massiques de 0.01 -- 0.02 $\mathrm{cm^{2}~g^{-1}}$ dans l'anneau C et 0.07 -- 0.12 $\mathrm{cm^{2}~g^{-1}}$ dans la Division de Cassini, indiqueraient des particules plus petites dans l'anneau C. On peut alors emettre l'hypothèse que soit les particules des différents anneaux ont différentes origines, soit les présentes distributions ne sont pas primordiales et ont subi des évolutions différentes. La masse de l'anneau C est estimée équivalente à celle d'un satellite d'une trentaine de kilomètres de rayon, avec une densité proche de celle de Pan ou Atlas tandis que son épaisseur serait comprise entre 2 et 6 mètres. En appliquant une analyse similaire aux autres anneaux principaux, nous avons pu également déterminer leurs masses, en accord avec les précédentes études. L'étude des sillages de satellites tels que Pan ou Daphnis nous a permis d'invalider la presence de lune suffisament grosse dans la division de Huygens pour créer des sillages dans l'annelet Huygens. Cependant, nous avons observé une population de trous nets dans l'anneau C et la Division de Cassini. Nous interprétons ces "ghosts" comme les zones de vide créées autour de petites lunes au sein des anneaux (ces signatures, en forme de "S", sont appelées "propellers"). Plus petits que les propellers observés dans l'anneau A, ceux-là seraient larges de quelques dizaines de centimètres à quelques dizaines de mètres. Au moyen de simulations numériques et d'algorithmes de Monte-Carlo, nous avons montré que ces propellers définissent une seconde population de particules, ne pouvant être interprétée comme une prolongation des distributions de particules proposées par Zebker et al., 1985: nous estimons des indices de lois de puissance pour ces distributions cumulatives de taille de particules autour de 0.8 pour la Division de Cassini et 0.6 pour l'anneau C (au lieu de respectivmeent 1.75 et 2.1). La question de l'âge et de la durée de vie de ces propellers rejoint celle de leur formation: ont-ils été formés par accrétion ou ont-ils migré dans les anneaux après fragmentation d'un corps plus massif? Espérons que la prolongation de la mission Cassini pourra apporter des élements pour trancher sur l'origine des ces lunes.
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Books on the topic "Ghost resonance"

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Chivers, Matthew. Resonance, Vol. I (Approaching the Dark Age Series). United Kingdom: Matthew Chivers, 2009.

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Toop, David. Sinister Resonance. The Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501382864.

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Sinister Resonance begins with the premise that sound is a haunting, a ghost, a presence whose location is ambiguous and whose existence is transitory. The intangibility of sound is uncanny – a phenomenal presence in the head, at its point of source and all around. The close listener is like a medium who draws out substance from that which is not entirely there. The history of listening must be constructed from the narratives of myth and fiction, ‘silent’ arts such as painting, the resonance of architecture, auditory artefacts and nature. In such contexts, sound often functions as a metaphor for mystical revelation, forbidden desires, formlessness, the unknown, and the unconscious. As if reading a map of hitherto unexplored territory, Sinister Resonance deciphers sounds and silences buried within the ghostly horrors of Arthur Machen, Shirley Jackson, Charles Dickens, M.R. James and Edgar Allen Poe, Dutch genre painting from Rembrandt to Vermeer, artists as diverse as Francis Bacon and Juan Munoz, and the writing of many modernist authors including Virginia Woolf, Samuel Beckett, and James Joyce.
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Cooper, Loren W. Chain of Ghosts: Resonance in Language, Story, and the Brain. Independently Published, 2017.

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Clasen, Mathias. Haunted Houses, Haunted Minds. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190666507.003.0011.

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Stephen King’s The Shining (1977) is one of the most popular horror novels of all time. It tells the story of a family snowed in at a haunted hotel. The father, Jack Torrance, dreams of literary success and succumbs to the evil ghosts and supernatural forces of the hotel, eventually attacking his own family. This chapter argues that the central conflicts of the novel have their roots in human nature, reflecting evolutionarily recurrent adaptive problems of balancing conflicting evolved motives, most crucially motives for dominance versus motives for prosociality, and of surviving the hostile forces of nature. Moreover, the supernatural elements of the novel resonate with evolved cognitive dispositions for magical thinking and metaphysical dualism. The Shining effectively evokes and explores biologically salient conflicts and fears, offering a compellingly hard-nosed but ultimately optimistic perspective on those conflicts and fears.
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Church, David. Post-Horror. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474475884.001.0001.

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Horror’s longstanding reputation as a popular but culturally denigrated genre has been challenged by a new wave of films mixing arthouse minimalism with established genre conventions. Variously dubbed “elevated horror” and “post-horror” in popular film criticism, texts such as The Babadook, It Follows, The Witch, It Comes at Night, Get Out, The Invitation, Hereditary, Midsommar, A Ghost Story, and mother! represent an emerging nexus of taste, politics, and style that has often earned outsized acclaim from high-minded critics and populist rejection by wider audiences. Post-Horror is the first full-length study of one of the most important and divisive movements in twenty-first-century horror cinema. It argues that the affect produced by these films’ minimalist aesthetic has fueled taste-based disagreements between professional film critics, genre fans, and more casual viewers about whether the horror genre can or should be upheld as more than a populist entertainment form, especially as the genre turned away from the post-9/11 debates about graphic violence that consumed the first decade of the twenty-first century. The book thus explores the aesthetic qualities, historical precursors, affective resonances, and thematic concerns of this emerging cycle by situating these texts within revived debates between over the genre’s larger artistic, cultural, and entertainment value. Chapters include thematic analyses of trauma, gaslighting, landscape, existential dread, and political identity across a range of films straddling the line between art-horror and multiplex fare since approximately 2013.
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Book chapters on the topic "Ghost resonance"

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Rajasekar, Shanmuganathan, and Miguel A. F. Sanjuan. "Ghost Resonances." In Springer Series in Synergetics, 241–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24886-8_9.

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Hofkosh, Sonia. "Dancing with Ghosts in ‘Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil’." In Material Transgressions, 191–212. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621778.003.0009.

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This essay reads the intimacy between persons and things dramatized in Keats’s poem as a haunting that at once enacts and acts against normative states of being or orders of experience. Drawing on Hazlitt’s invocation of the past as “alive and stirring with objects” in conjunction with the political resonance of the ghost dance Gayatri Spivak summons in her response to Derrida’s Spectres of Marx, this reading aims to depathologize Isabella’s intense attachment to the pot of basil by reflecting on the potential for resistance or transformation within the practices of everyday life, including within the repetitions and returns that constitute our own everyday practices as readers of Keats’s poem.
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Lake, Peter. "Contemporary resonances." In Hamlet's Choice, 164–78. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300247817.003.0009.

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This chapter argues that through the figure of the ghost, William Shakespeare deliberately inserted the issue of confessional politics into his plays. It explains Hamlet's relation to Catholicism and whether he, by the end of the play, has been converted or even saved by Christianity. It also points out how Hamlet is suffused throughout with the language, practices and images of the old religion. Within the Catholic context evoked so carefully by the play, the chapter explores Hamlet that comes across as an orthodox believer. It describes Hamlet's belief in purgatory, which has been confirmed or strengthened by his encounter with the ghost and experiences the dread of something after life.
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GODDARD, P., and C. B. THORN. "COMPATIBILITY OF THE DUAL POMERON WITH UNITARITY AND THE ABSENCE OF GHOSTS IN THE DUAL RESONANCE MODEL." In Superstrings, 112–15. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814542456_0009.

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Dasgupta, Ranita Chakraborty. "Bangla Translations of Latin American Poetry: A Critical Study." In Contemporary Translation Studies, 47–108. CSMFL Publications, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46679/978819484830103.

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The aim of this study is to map the reception of Latin American Poetry within the corpus of the Bangla world of letters for three decades, from 1980 to 2010. In the 1970s and the 1980s, the influence and reception of Latin American Literatures in Bangla was reflected primarily in the introductions to translations, preludes, and conclusions of translations. During the late 1960s and the early 1970s Latin American poets like Pablo Neruda, Victoria Ocampo, Octavio Paz, and Jorge Luis Borges had caught the attention of eminent Bangla poets like Bishnu Dey, Shakti Chattopadhyay, and Shankha Ghosh who started taking interest in their works. This interest soon got reflected in the form of translations being produced in Bangla from the English versions available. The next two decades saw the corpus of Latin American Literatures make a widespread entry into the world of academic essays, journals, and articles published in little magazines along with translations of novels, short stories and poetry collections by leading Bangla publication houses like Dey’s Publishing, Radical Impressions, etc. This period was marked by a proliferation of scholarship in Bangla on Latin American Literatures. By the 21st century, critical thinking in Latin American Literatures had established itself in the Bangla world of letters. This chapter in particular studies the translations of Latin American poetry by Bengali poets like Shakti Chattopadhyay, Subhas Mukhopadhyay, Bishnu Dey, Buddhadeb Bhattacharya, Shankha Ghosh, Biplab Majhi among many others. The analysis relates to issues they focus on including themes like self, modernity, extension of time and space, political and poetic resonances, and untranslatability. Through a step by step research of the various stages of translation activities in Bengal and Bangla, it traces how translations of Latin American Literatures begin to take place on literary grounds that had already become sites of engagement with these issues. The chapter further explores the ways in which all these poet-translators situate their translations in relation to the issues of concern. In addition, it also addresses the question of what they hence contribute to Bangla literature at large. I first chose to explore the ways in which these issues are framed in the reflections and debates on translation in India and Bengal in the 20th century. Thereon I have tried to show how these translations of Latin American poetry developed their own thrust in relation to these issues and concerns.
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Conference papers on the topic "Ghost resonance"

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Khan, Emroz, Sanjay Debnath, and Evgenii E. Narimanov. "Ghost Resonance Spectroscopy." In CLEO: Science and Innovations. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/cleo_si.2021.sm3o.6.

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Debnath, Sanjay, and Evgenii E. Narimanov. "Ghost Resonance in Optical Scattering." In Frontiers in Optics. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/fio.2017.jw3a.105.

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Buldú, Javier M. "Ghost resonance in coupled lasers." In EXPERIMENTAL CHAOS: 8th Experimental Chaos Conference. AIP, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1846483.

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Debnath, Sanjay, and Evgenii E. Narimanov. "Ghost Resonance in Light Scattering." In CLEO: Applications and Technology. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/cleo_at.2018.jw2a.89.

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Baysal, Veli. "Ghost Resonance in Hodgkin-Huxley Neurons." In 2020 Medical Technologies Congress (TIPTEKNO). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tiptekno50054.2020.9299258.

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Stockli, Martin P. "Ghost Signals In Allison Emittance Scanners." In ELECTRON CYCLOTRON RESONANCE ION SOURCES: 16th International Workshop on ECR Ion Sources ECRIS'04. AIP, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1893377.

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Ushakov, Yu V., E. S. Karandasov, and A. A. Dubkov. "Ghost stochastic resonance in the model of neural auditory system." In 2011 21st International Conference on Noise and Fluctuations (ICNF). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icnf.2011.5994378.

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Mirasso, Claudio R., Javier M. Buldu, Dante R. Chialvo, M. C. Torrent, and Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo. "Ghost resonance in a semiconductor laser operating in an excitable regime." In SPIE's First International Symposium on Fluctuations and Noise, edited by Derek Abbott, Jeffrey H. Shapiro, and Yoshihisa Yamamoto. SPIE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.488333.

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Khasanov, Ildus Sh, Lydia A. Zykova, Alexey K. Nikitin, Boris A. Knyazev, Vasily V. Gerasimov, and Ta Thu Trang. "Terahertz surface plasmon resonance microscopy based on ghost imaging with pseudo-thermal speckle light." In 2020 45th International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/irmmw-thz46771.2020.9370795.

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Khasanov, Ildus, and Lidia Zykova. "Terahertz ghost imaging and surface plasmon resonance microscopy: analysis of factors affecting the image quality." In Fourth International Conference on Terahertz and Microwave Radiation: Generation, Detection, and Applications, edited by Oleg A. Romanovskii and Yurii V. Kistenev. SPIE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2580599.

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