This article evaluates once more the historiographic and literary images of John of Bohemia and his son Charles IV in Italian texts from the 14th and early 15th centuries. What we find is a peculiar mixture of criticism and apotheosis, sometimes stated by the same authors, depending on the point in time they were writing, and of course the expectations of their potential readers. While John of Bohemia faced overwhelming expectations from Dante after the death of his father, he was branded a naïve yet greedy papal mercenary from the beginning of his Italian Expedition in the early 1330s. His son was more successful in avoiding negative stereotypes and harsh criticisms during his Italian expeditions in his youth, as well as in 1354/55 and 1368/69. In the end, however, even chroniclers that are traditionally considered to have had a positive view of the Luxemburg king and emperor harshly rejected his political actions in Italy. Most of the time, this is connected with the financial interests all foreign monarchs had when establishing temporary rulerships in Italian cities, and the monetary pressures this bore on their citizens; the worn-out cliché, both of contemporaries and historical researchers, that labelled foreign, Central European monarchs as barbaric intruders, could hardly be confirmed. Charles and his father are blamed for being unable to solve the structural problems of Italian and Imperial politics.
Under normal conditions, electrons are accelerated by electric fields and decelerated by collision processes. After some time, a stable equilibrium between these two processes is achieved and electrons drift with constant speed against the field direction. Such a scheme is called the ohmic regime. At higher speeds or electric fields, the situation may be completely different. Collisions may not be able to compensate for electron acceleration and electrons attain the so called runaway mode. Runaway electrons are detected in the Earth’s magnetosphere during storms, in the solar plasma, and also in laboratory plasmas and in many plasma technologies., Petr Kulhánek., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Výzkum fyziky ubíhajících elektronů se v posledních letech stal jednou z prioritních oblastí výzkumu na tokamacích. V rámci konsorcia EUROfusion, které koordinuje výzkum termojaderné fúze v Evropě, byl náš tým na tokamatu COMPASS v Ústavu fyziky plazmatu AV ČR, v. v. i., před šesti lety vyzván k zařazení studia ubíhajících elektronů do experimentálního programu. Tento článek shrnuje fyzikální motivaci k uvedenému výzkumu, dosažené znalosti a také hlavní výsledky, kterými v tomto směru náš tým přispívá k jistějšímu zvládnutí termojaderného provozu prvních fúzních reaktorů, včetně zařízení ITER., Research in the physics of runaway electrons has become one of the most important fields in current tokamak science. In the framework of the EUROfusion consortium, which coordinates thermonuclear fusion research in Europe, the Institute of Plasma Physics of the CAS was invited, from 2014, to introduce a runaway electron study into the experimental programme of the COMPASS tokamak. This article summarises the motivation for runaway electron research, the achieved knowledge, and also the main results of our team, which may contribute to yet safer thermonuclear operation of the first fusion reactors, including the ITER facility., Jan Mlynář, Jakub Čaloud, Ondřej Ficker, Eva Macúšová, Jaroslav Čeřovský., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy
This article is focused on opinions that the literary historian and Custodian of the Prague Imperial-Royal University Library (now the National Library of the Czech Republic) Josef Truhlář (1840-1914) had on Manuscripts of Dvůr Králové and Zelená Hora. Initially, he had been convinced of the authenticity of the Manuscripts, but after Gebauer´s groundbreaking article questioning their authenticity published in the Athenaeum journal in February 1886, he re-evaluated his older opinions and published a series of articles in this journal denying the authenticity of the Manuscripts. These articles were focused on suspicious finding circumstances of these allegedly old monuments, parallels in their texts with literary works from the early 19th century and on other contemporary forged manuscripts.