add numerical recipes library
This commit is contained in:
18
lib/nr/ansi/data/dates1.dat
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18
lib/nr/ansi/data/dates1.dat
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List of dates for testing routines in Chapter 1
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16 entries
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12 31 -1 End of millennium
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01 01 1 One day later
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10 04 1582 Day before Gregorian calendar
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10 15 1582 Gregorian calendar adopted
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01 17 1706 Benjamin Franklin born
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04 14 1865 Abraham Lincoln shot
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04 18 1906 San Francisco earthquake
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05 07 1915 Sinking of the Lusitania
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07 20 1923 Pancho Villa assassinated
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05 23 1934 Bonnie and Clyde eliminated
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07 22 1934 John Dillinger shot
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04 03 1936 Bruno Hauptman electrocuted
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05 06 1937 Hindenburg disaster
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07 26 1956 Sinking of the Andrea Doria
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06 05 1976 Teton dam collapse
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05 23 1968 Julian Day 2440000
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668
lib/nr/ansi/data/fncval.dat
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668
lib/nr/ansi/data/fncval.dat
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@@ -0,0 +1,668 @@
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Values of Special Functions in format x,F(x) or x,y,F(x,y)
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Dawson integral
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4 Values
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0.04 0.0399573606
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0.16 0.1572970920
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1.6 0.3999398943
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10.0 0.0502538471
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Ordinary Bessel Functions nu,x,jnu(x),ynu(x),jnup(x),ynup(x)
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20 Values
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2.0 1.0 1.149034849E-01 -1.650682607E+00 2.102436159E-01 2.520152392E+00
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2.0 2.0 3.528340286E-01 -6.174081042E-01 2.238907791E-01 5.103756726E-01
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2.0 5.0 4.656511628E-02 3.676628826E-01 -3.462051841E-01 7.979903490E-04
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2.0 10.0 2.546303137E-01 -5.868082442E-03 -7.453316568E-03 2.501890407E-01
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2.0 50.0 -5.971280079E-02 9.579316873E-02 -9.512331609E-02 -6.062739531E-02
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5.0 1.0 2.497577302E-04 -2.604058666E+02 1.227850313E-03 1.268750910E+03
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5.0 2.0 7.039629756E-03 -9.935989128E+00 1.639664542E-02 2.207402959E+01
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5.0 5.0 2.611405461E-01 -4.536948225E-01 1.300918143E-01 2.615525351E-01
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5.0 10.0 -2.340615282E-01 1.354030477E-01 -1.025719220E-01 -2.126510357E-01
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5.0 50.0 -8.140024770E-02 -7.854841391E-02 7.898100205E-02 -8.020323269E-02
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10.0 1.0 2.630615124E-10 -1.216180143E+08 2.618635056E-09 1.209399938E+09
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10.0 2.0 2.515386283E-07 -1.291845422E+05 1.234650294E-06 6.313628817E+05
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10.0 5.0 1.467802647E-03 -2.512911010E+01 2.584677845E-03 4.249433700E+01
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10.0 10.0 2.074861066E-01 -3.598141522E-01 8.436957863E-02 1.605148864E-01
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10.0 50.0 -1.138478491E-01 5.723897182E-03 -4.422891214E-03 -1.116145748E-01
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20.0 1.0 3.873503009E-25 -4.113970315E+22 7.737778395E-24 8.217106466E+23
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20.0 2.0 3.918972805E-19 -4.081651389E+16 3.900270468E-18 4.060105807E+17
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20.0 5.0 2.770330052E-11 -5.933965297E+08 1.074693821E-10 2.294022549E+09
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20.0 10.0 1.151336925E-05 -1.597483848E+03 2.011953903E-05 2.737803151E+03
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20.0 50.0 -1.167043528E-01 1.644263395E-02 -1.368329398E-02 -1.071717186E-01
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Modified Bessel Functions nu,x,inu(x),knu(x),inup(x),knup(x)
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28 Values
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2.0 0.2 5.016687514E-03 4.951242929E+01 5.033395889E-02 -4.999002654E+02
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2.0 1.0 1.357476698E-01 1.624838899E+00 2.936637645E-01 -3.851585027E+00
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2.0 2.0 6.889484477E-01 2.537597546E-01 9.016884069E-01 -3.936256364E-01
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2.0 2.5 1.276466148E+00 1.214602063E-01 1.495543327E+00 -1.710589814E-01
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2.0 3.0 2.245212441E+00 6.151045847E-02 2.456561923E+00 -8.116340344E-02
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2.0 5.0 1.750561497E+01 5.308943712E-03 1.733339616E+01 -6.168190930E-03
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2.0 10.0 2.281518968E+03 2.150981701E-05 2.214684510E+03 -2.295073686E-05
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2.0 20.0 3.931278522E+07 6.329543612E-10 3.852369486E+07 -6.516012331E-10
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3.0 1.0 2.216842492E-02 7.101262825E+00 6.924239499E-02 -2.292862737E+01
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3.0 2.0 2.127399592E-01 6.473853909E-01 3.698385088E-01 -1.224837841E+00
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3.0 5.0 1.033115017E+01 8.291768415E-03 1.130692487E+01 -1.028400476E-02
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3.0 10.0 1.758380717E+03 2.725270026E-05 1.754004753E+03 -2.968562708E-05
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3.0 50.0 2.677764139E+20 3.727936774E-23 2.655764792E+20 -3.771608045E-23
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5.0 1.0 2.714631560E-04 3.609605896E+02 1.379804441E-03 -1.849035364E+03
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5.0 2.0 9.825679323E-03 9.431049101E+00 2.616437167E-02 -2.577353868E+01
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5.0 5.0 2.157974547E+00 3.270627371E-02 2.950260216E+00 -4.796533952E-02
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5.0 10.0 7.771882864E+02 5.754184999E-05 8.378963946E+02 -6.663236215E-05
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5.0 50.0 2.278548308E+20 4.367182254E-23 2.267244113E+20 -4.432002477E-23
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10.0 1.0 2.752948040E-10 1.807132899E+08 2.765437823E-09 -1.817137940E+09
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10.0 2.0 3.016963879E-07 1.624824040E+05 1.535703963E-06 -8.302224962E+05
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10.0 5.0 4.580044419E-03 9.758562829E+00 1.015562998E-02 -2.202940355E+01
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10.0 10.0 2.189170616E+01 1.614255300E-03 3.042758634E+01 -2.324264134E-03
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10.0 50.0 1.071597159E+20 9.150988210E-23 1.082473779E+20 -9.419859989E-23
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20.0 1.0 3.966835986E-25 6.294369360E+22 7.943111714E-24 -1.260529076E+24
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20.0 2.0 4.310560576E-19 5.770856853E+16 4.331042808E-18 -5.801141519E+17
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20.0 5.0 5.024239358E-11 4.827000521E+08 2.068719274E-10 -1.993195442E+09
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20.0 10.0 1.250799736E-04 1.787442782E+02 2.784778118E-04 -4.015325804E+02
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20.0 50.0 5.442008403E+18 1.706148380E-21 5.814242572E+18 -1.852264589E-21
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Spherical Bessel Functions n,x,sjn(x),syn(x),sjnp(x),synp(x)
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11 Values
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0 0.1 9.9833417E-01 -9.9500417E+00 -3.3300012E-02 1.0049875E+02
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0 1.0 8.4147098E-01 -5.4030231E-01 -3.0116868E-01 1.3817733E+00
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0 5.0 -1.9178485E-01 -5.6732437E-02 9.5089408E-02 -1.8043837E-01
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0 50.0 -5.2474971E-03 -1.9299321E-02 1.9404271E-02 -4.8615107E-03
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1 0.1 3.3300012E-02 -1.0049875E+02 3.3233393E-01 2.0000250E+03
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1 1.0 3.0116868E-01 -1.3817733E+00 2.3913363E-01 2.2232443E+00
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1 5.0 -9.5089408E-02 1.8043837E-01 -1.5374909E-01 -1.2890778E-01
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1 50.0 -1.9404271E-02 4.8615107E-03 -4.4713263E-03 -1.9493781E-02
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20 1.0 7.5377957E-26 -3.2395922E+23 1.5058053E-24 6.7948312E+24
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20 5.0 5.4277268E-12 -9.2679514E+08 2.1071414E-11 3.7715819E+09
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20 50.0 -1.5785030E-02 1.3759531E-02 -1.2204181E-02 -1.4702296E-02
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Airy Functions
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8 Values
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-3.5 -0.37553382 0.16893984 -0.34344343 -0.69311628
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-2.0 0.22740743 -0.41230259 0.61825902 0.27879517
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-1.0 0.53556088 0.10399739 -0.01016057 0.59237563
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-0.01 0.35761619 0.61044364 -0.25880157 0.44831896
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0.00 0.35502805 0.61492663 -0.25881940 0.44828836
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0.01 0.35243992 0.61940962 -0.25880174 0.44831926
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0.5 0.23169361 0.85427704 -0.22491053 0.54457256
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1.00 0.13529242 1.20742359 -0.15914744 0.93243593
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Elliptic Integral First Kind RF
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3 Values
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0.1 0.1 0.1 3.16227766
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0.0 1.0 2.0 1.31102878
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100.0 100.0 100.0 0.1
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Elliptic Integral Second Kind RD
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3 Values
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0.1 0.1 0.1 31.6227766
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0.0 2.0 1.0 1.79721036
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100.0 100.0 100.0 0.001
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Elliptic Integral Third Kind RJ
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3 Values
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0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 31.6227766
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2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 0.142975797
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100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 0.001
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Elliptic Integral Degenerate RC
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5 Values
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0.1 0.1 3.16227766
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0.0 0.25 3.14159265
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0.0625 0.125 3.14159265
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2.25 2.0 0.69314718
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100.0 100.0 0.1
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Legendre Elliptic Integral First Kind
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9 Values
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5.0 2.0 0.08726660
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5.0 30.0 0.08729413
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5.0 88.0 0.08737730
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30.0 2.0 0.52362636
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30.0 30.0 0.52942863
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30.0 88.0 0.54927042
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90.0 2.0 1.57127495
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90.0 30.0 1.68575035
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90.0 88.0 4.74271727
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Legendre Elliptic Integral Second Kind
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9 Values
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5.0 2.0 0.08726633
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5.0 30.0 0.08723881
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5.0 88.0 0.08715588
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30.0 2.0 0.52357119
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30.0 30.0 0.51788193
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30.0 88.0 0.50003003
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90.0 2.0 1.57031792
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90.0 30.0 1.46746221
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90.0 88.0 1.00258409
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Legendre Elliptic Integral Third Kind
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12 Values
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15.0 0.4 30.0 0.264953
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60.0 0.6 90.0 1.71951
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90.0 0.0 30.0 1.68575
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90.0 0.9 75.0 12.46407
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15.0 1.0 15.0 0.268156
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45.0 0.0625 30.0 0.813845
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45.0 0.625 30.0 0.921130
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45.0 1.25 30.0 1.132136
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45.0 -0.25 30.0 0.769872
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90.0 0.0625 30.0 1.743055
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90.0 0.625 30.0 2.800989
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90.0 -0.25 30.0 1.501762
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Fresnel Integrals
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6 Values
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0.1 0.0005236 0.0999975
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1.0 0.4382591 0.7798934
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1.5 0.6975050 0.4452612
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2.0 0.3434157 0.4882534
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5.0 0.4991914 0.5636312
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20.0 0.4840845 0.4999873
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Exponential Integral En n,x,En(x)
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13 Values
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0 1.0 0.3678794
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2 0.0 1.0000000
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3 0.0 0.5000000
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4 0.0 0.3333333
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2 0.5 0.3266439
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3 0.5 0.2216044
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4 0.5 0.1652428
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10 0.5 0.0634583
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20 0.5 0.0310612
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2 5.0 0.9964690E-03
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20 5.0 0.2782746E-03
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2 50.0 0.3711783E-23
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20 50.0 0.2766423E-23
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Cosine and Sine Integrals
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17 Values
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0.1 -1.727868E+00 9.994446E-02
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0.2 -1.042206E+00 1.995561E-01
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0.6 -2.227071E-02 5.881288E-01
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0.7 1.005147E-01 6.812222E-01
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1.8 4.568111E-01 1.505817E+00
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1.9 4.419403E-01 1.557775E+00
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2.0 4.229808E-01 1.605413E+00
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2.1 4.005120E-01 1.648699E+00
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2.2 3.750746E-01 1.687625E+00
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3.3 2.467829E-02 1.848081E+00
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6.3 -1.988822E-02 1.418174E+00
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6.4 -4.181411E-03 1.419223E+00
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6.5 1.110152E-02 1.421794E+00
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6.6 2.582314E-02 1.425816E+00
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10.0 -4.545644E-02 1.658348E+00
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12.5 -1.140835E-02 1.492337E+00
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15.0 4.627868E-02 1.618194E+00
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Exponential Integral Ei
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21 Values
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0.1 -1.62281
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0.2 -0.821761
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0.3 -0.302669
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||||
0.4 0.104768
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||||
0.5 0.454220
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||||
0.6 0.769881
|
||||
0.7 1.06491
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||||
0.8 1.34740
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||||
0.9 1.62281
|
||||
2.2 5.73261
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||||
2.4 6.60067
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||||
3.5 13.9254
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||||
3.9 18.3157
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||||
5.0 40.1853
|
||||
5.4 54.1935
|
||||
12.5 23565.1
|
||||
13.0 37197.7
|
||||
13.5 58827.0
|
||||
14.0 93193.0
|
||||
14.5 147866.
|
||||
15.0 234955.
|
||||
Gamma Function
|
||||
17 Values
|
||||
1.0 1.000000
|
||||
1.2 0.918169
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||||
1.4 0.887264
|
||||
1.6 0.893515
|
||||
1.8 0.931384
|
||||
2.0 1.000000
|
||||
0.2 4.590845
|
||||
0.4 2.218160
|
||||
0.6 1.489192
|
||||
0.8 1.164230
|
||||
-0.2 -5.821149
|
||||
-0.4 -3.722981
|
||||
-0.6 -3.696933
|
||||
-0.8 -5.738555
|
||||
10.0 3.6288000E05
|
||||
20.0 1.2164510E17
|
||||
30.0 8.8417620E30
|
||||
N-factorial
|
||||
18 Values
|
||||
1 1
|
||||
2 2
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||||
3 6
|
||||
4 24
|
||||
5 120
|
||||
6 720
|
||||
7 5040
|
||||
8 40320
|
||||
9 362880
|
||||
10 3628800
|
||||
11 39916800
|
||||
12 479001600
|
||||
13 6227020800
|
||||
14 87178291200
|
||||
15 1.3076755E12
|
||||
20 2.4329042E18
|
||||
25 1.5511222E25
|
||||
30 2.6525281E32
|
||||
Binomial Coefficients
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
1 0 1
|
||||
6 1 6
|
||||
6 3 20
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||||
6 5 6
|
||||
15 1 15
|
||||
15 3 455
|
||||
15 5 3003
|
||||
15 7 6435
|
||||
15 9 5005
|
||||
15 11 1365
|
||||
15 13 105
|
||||
25 1 25
|
||||
25 3 2300
|
||||
25 5 53130
|
||||
25 7 480700
|
||||
25 9 2042975
|
||||
25 11 4457400
|
||||
25 13 5200300
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||||
25 15 3268760
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||||
25 17 1081575
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||||
Beta Function
|
||||
15 Values
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.000000
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||||
0.2 1.0 5.000000
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||||
1.0 0.2 5.000000
|
||||
0.4 1.0 2.500000
|
||||
1.0 0.4 2.500000
|
||||
0.6 1.0 1.666667
|
||||
0.8 1.0 1.250000
|
||||
6.0 6.0 3.607504E-04
|
||||
6.0 5.0 7.936508E-04
|
||||
6.0 4.0 1.984127E-03
|
||||
6.0 3.0 5.952381E-03
|
||||
6.0 2.0 0.238095E-01
|
||||
7.0 7.0 8.325008E-05
|
||||
5.0 5.0 1.587302E-03
|
||||
4.0 4.0 7.142857E-03
|
||||
3.0 3.0 0.333333E-01
|
||||
2.0 2.0 1.666667E-01
|
||||
Incomplete Gamma Function
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.1 3.1622777E-02 0.7420263
|
||||
0.1 3.1622777E-01 0.9119753
|
||||
0.1 1.5811388 0.9898955
|
||||
0.5 7.0710678E-02 0.2931279
|
||||
0.5 7.0710678E-01 0.7656418
|
||||
0.5 3.5355339 0.9921661
|
||||
1.0 0.1000000 0.0951626
|
||||
1.0 1.0000000 0.6321206
|
||||
1.0 5.0000000 0.9932621
|
||||
1.1 1.0488088E-01 0.0757471
|
||||
1.1 1.0488088 0.6076457
|
||||
1.1 5.2440442 0.9933425
|
||||
2.0 1.4142136E-01 0.0091054
|
||||
2.0 1.4142136 0.4130643
|
||||
2.0 7.0710678 0.9931450
|
||||
6.0 2.4494897 0.0387318
|
||||
6.0 12.247449 0.9825937
|
||||
11.0 16.583124 0.9404267
|
||||
26.0 25.495098 0.4863866
|
||||
41.0 44.821870 0.7359709
|
||||
Error Function
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.0 0.000000
|
||||
0.1 0.1124629
|
||||
0.2 0.2227026
|
||||
0.3 0.3286268
|
||||
0.4 0.4283924
|
||||
0.5 0.5204999
|
||||
0.6 0.6038561
|
||||
0.7 0.6778012
|
||||
0.8 0.7421010
|
||||
0.9 0.7969082
|
||||
1.0 0.8427008
|
||||
1.1 0.8802051
|
||||
1.2 0.9103140
|
||||
1.3 0.9340079
|
||||
1.4 0.9522851
|
||||
1.5 0.9661051
|
||||
1.6 0.9763484
|
||||
1.7 0.9837905
|
||||
1.8 0.9890905
|
||||
1.9 0.9927904
|
||||
Incomplete Beta Function
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.5 0.5 0.01 0.0637686
|
||||
0.5 0.5 0.10 0.2048328
|
||||
0.5 0.5 1.00 1.0000000
|
||||
1.0 0.5 0.01 0.0050126
|
||||
1.0 0.5 0.10 0.0513167
|
||||
1.0 0.5 1.00 1.0000000
|
||||
1.0 1.0 0.5 0.5000000
|
||||
5.0 5.0 0.5 0.5000000
|
||||
10.0 0.5 0.9 0.1516409
|
||||
10.0 5.0 0.5 0.0897827
|
||||
10.0 5.0 1.0 1.0000000
|
||||
10.0 10.0 0.5 0.5000000
|
||||
20.0 5.0 0.8 0.4598773
|
||||
20.0 10.0 0.6 0.2146816
|
||||
20.0 10.0 0.8 0.9507365
|
||||
20.0 20.0 0.5 0.5000000
|
||||
20.0 20.0 0.6 0.8979414
|
||||
30.0 10.0 0.7 0.2241297
|
||||
30.0 10.0 0.8 0.7586405
|
||||
40.0 20.0 0.7 0.7001783
|
||||
Bessel Function J0
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
-5.0 -0.1775968
|
||||
-4.0 -0.3971498
|
||||
-3.0 -0.2600520
|
||||
-2.0 0.2238908
|
||||
-1.0 0.7651976
|
||||
0.0 1.0000000
|
||||
1.0 0.7651977
|
||||
2.0 0.2238908
|
||||
3.0 -0.2600520
|
||||
4.0 -0.3971498
|
||||
5.0 -0.1775968
|
||||
6.0 0.1506453
|
||||
7.0 0.3000793
|
||||
8.0 0.1716508
|
||||
9.0 -0.0903336
|
||||
10.0 -0.2459358
|
||||
11.0 -0.1711903
|
||||
12.0 0.0476893
|
||||
13.0 0.2069261
|
||||
14.0 0.1710735
|
||||
15.0 -0.0142245
|
||||
Bessel Function Y0
|
||||
15 Values
|
||||
0.1 -1.5342387
|
||||
1.0 0.0882570
|
||||
2.0 0.51037567
|
||||
3.0 0.37685001
|
||||
4.0 -0.0169407
|
||||
5.0 -0.3085176
|
||||
6.0 -0.2881947
|
||||
7.0 -0.0259497
|
||||
8.0 0.2235215
|
||||
9.0 0.2499367
|
||||
10.0 0.0556712
|
||||
11.0 -0.1688473
|
||||
12.0 -0.2252373
|
||||
13.0 -0.0782079
|
||||
14.0 0.1271926
|
||||
15.0 0.2054743
|
||||
Bessel Function J1
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
-5.0 0.3275791
|
||||
-4.0 0.0660433
|
||||
-3.0 -0.3390590
|
||||
-2.0 -0.5767248
|
||||
-1.0 -0.4400506
|
||||
0.0 0.0000000
|
||||
1.0 0.4400506
|
||||
2.0 0.5767248
|
||||
3.0 0.3390590
|
||||
4.0 -0.0660433
|
||||
5.0 -0.3275791
|
||||
6.0 -0.2766839
|
||||
7.0 -0.0046828
|
||||
8.0 0.2346364
|
||||
9.0 0.2453118
|
||||
10.0 0.0434728
|
||||
11.0 -0.1767853
|
||||
12.0 -0.2234471
|
||||
13.0 -0.0703181
|
||||
14.0 0.1333752
|
||||
15.0 0.2051040
|
||||
Bessel Function Y1
|
||||
15 Values
|
||||
0.1 -6.4589511
|
||||
1.0 -0.7812128
|
||||
2.0 -0.1070324
|
||||
3.0 0.3246744
|
||||
4.0 0.3979257
|
||||
5.0 0.1478631
|
||||
6.0 -0.1750103
|
||||
7.0 -0.3026672
|
||||
8.0 -0.1580605
|
||||
9.0 0.1043146
|
||||
10.0 0.2490154
|
||||
11.0 0.1637055
|
||||
12.0 -0.0570992
|
||||
13.0 -0.2100814
|
||||
14.0 -0.1666448
|
||||
15.0 0.0210736
|
||||
Bessel Function Jn, n>=2
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
2 1.0 1.149034849E-01
|
||||
2 2.0 3.528340286E-01
|
||||
2 5.0 4.656511628E-02
|
||||
2 10.0 2.546303137E-01
|
||||
2 50.0 -5.971280079E-02
|
||||
5 1.0 2.497577302E-04
|
||||
5 2.0 7.039629756E-03
|
||||
5 5.0 2.611405461E-01
|
||||
5 10.0 -2.340615282E-01
|
||||
5 50.0 -8.140024770E-02
|
||||
10 1.0 2.630615124E-10
|
||||
10 2.0 2.515386283E-07
|
||||
10 5.0 1.467802647E-03
|
||||
10 10.0 2.074861066E-01
|
||||
10 50.0 -1.138478491E-01
|
||||
20 1.0 3.873503009E-25
|
||||
20 2.0 3.918972805E-19
|
||||
20 5.0 2.770330052E-11
|
||||
20 10.0 1.151336925E-05
|
||||
20 50.0 -1.167043528E-01
|
||||
Bessel Function Yn, n>=2
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
2 1.0 -1.650682607
|
||||
2 2.0 -6.174081042E-01
|
||||
2 5.0 3.676628826E-01
|
||||
2 10.0 -5.868082460E-03
|
||||
2 50.0 9.579316873E-02
|
||||
5 1.0 -2.604058666E02
|
||||
5 2.0 -9.935989128
|
||||
5 5.0 -4.536948225E-01
|
||||
5 10.0 1.354030477E-01
|
||||
5 50.0 -7.854841391E-02
|
||||
10 1.0 -1.216180143E08
|
||||
10 2.0 -1.291845422E05
|
||||
10 5.0 -2.512911010E01
|
||||
10 10.0 -3.598141522E-01
|
||||
10 50.0 5.723897182E-03
|
||||
20 1.0 -4.113970315E22
|
||||
20 2.0 -4.081651389E16
|
||||
20 5.0 -5.933965297E08
|
||||
20 10.0 -1.597483848E03
|
||||
20 50.0 1.644263395E-02
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function I0
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.0 1.0000000
|
||||
0.2 1.0100250
|
||||
0.4 1.0404018
|
||||
0.6 1.0920453
|
||||
0.8 1.1665149
|
||||
1.0 1.2660658
|
||||
1.2 1.3937256
|
||||
1.4 1.5533951
|
||||
1.6 1.7499807
|
||||
1.8 1.9895593
|
||||
2.0 2.2795852
|
||||
2.5 3.2898391
|
||||
3.0 4.8807925
|
||||
3.5 7.3782035
|
||||
4.0 11.301922
|
||||
4.5 17.481172
|
||||
5.0 27.239871
|
||||
6.0 67.234406
|
||||
8.0 427.56411
|
||||
10.0 2815.7167
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function K0
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.1 2.4270690
|
||||
0.2 1.7527038
|
||||
0.4 1.1145291
|
||||
0.6 0.77752208
|
||||
0.8 0.56534710
|
||||
1.0 0.42102445
|
||||
1.2 0.31850821
|
||||
1.4 0.24365506
|
||||
1.6 0.18795475
|
||||
1.8 0.14593140
|
||||
2.0 0.11389387
|
||||
2.5 6.2347553E-02
|
||||
3.0 3.4739500E-02
|
||||
3.5 1.9598897E-02
|
||||
4.0 1.1159676E-02
|
||||
4.5 6.3998572E-03
|
||||
5.0 3.6910983E-03
|
||||
6.0 1.2439943E-03
|
||||
8.0 1.4647071E-04
|
||||
10.0 1.7780062E-05
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function I1
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.0 0.00000000
|
||||
0.2 0.10050083
|
||||
0.4 0.20402675
|
||||
0.6 0.31370403
|
||||
0.8 0.43286480
|
||||
1.0 0.56515912
|
||||
1.2 0.71467794
|
||||
1.4 0.88609197
|
||||
1.6 1.0848107
|
||||
1.8 1.3171674
|
||||
2.0 1.5906369
|
||||
2.5 2.5167163
|
||||
3.0 3.9533700
|
||||
3.5 6.2058350
|
||||
4.0 9.7594652
|
||||
4.5 15.389221
|
||||
5.0 24.335643
|
||||
6.0 61.341937
|
||||
8.0 399.87313
|
||||
10.0 2670.9883
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function K1
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.1 9.8538451
|
||||
0.2 4.7759725
|
||||
0.4 2.1843544
|
||||
0.6 1.3028349
|
||||
0.8 0.86178163
|
||||
1.0 0.60190724
|
||||
1.2 0.43459241
|
||||
1.4 0.32083589
|
||||
1.6 0.24063392
|
||||
1.8 0.18262309
|
||||
2.0 0.13986588
|
||||
2.5 7.3890816E-02
|
||||
3.0 4.0156431E-02
|
||||
3.5 2.2239393E-02
|
||||
4.0 1.2483499E-02
|
||||
4.5 7.0780949E-03
|
||||
5.0 4.0446134E-03
|
||||
6.0 1.3439197E-03
|
||||
8.0 1.5536921E-04
|
||||
10.0 1.8648773E-05
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function Kn, n>=2
|
||||
28 Values
|
||||
2 0.2 49.512430
|
||||
2 1.0 1.6248389
|
||||
2 2.0 2.5375975E-01
|
||||
2 2.5 1.2146021E-01
|
||||
2 3.0 6.1510459E-02
|
||||
2 5.0 5.3089437E-03
|
||||
2 10.0 2.1509817E-05
|
||||
2 20.0 6.3295437E-10
|
||||
3 1.0 7.101262825
|
||||
3 2.0 6.473853909E-01
|
||||
3 5.0 8.291768415E-03
|
||||
3 10.0 2.725270026E-05
|
||||
3 50.0 3.72793677E-23
|
||||
5 1.0 3.609605896E02
|
||||
5 2.0 9.431049101
|
||||
5 5.0 3.270627371E-02
|
||||
5 10.0 5.754184999E-05
|
||||
5 50.0 4.36718224E-23
|
||||
10 1.0 1.807132899E08
|
||||
10 2.0 1.624824040E05
|
||||
10 5.0 9.758562829
|
||||
10 10.0 1.614255300E-03
|
||||
10 50.0 9.15098819E-23
|
||||
20 1.0 6.294369369E22
|
||||
20 2.0 5.770856853E16
|
||||
20 5.0 4.827000521E08
|
||||
20 10.0 1.787442782E02
|
||||
20 50.0 1.70614838E-21
|
||||
Modified Bessel Function In, n>=2
|
||||
28 Values
|
||||
2 0.2 5.0166876E-03
|
||||
2 1.0 1.3574767E-01
|
||||
2 2.0 6.8894844E-01
|
||||
2 2.5 1.2764661
|
||||
2 3.0 2.2452125
|
||||
2 5.0 17.505615
|
||||
2 10.0 2281.5189
|
||||
2 20.0 3.9312785E07
|
||||
3 1.0 2.216842492E-02
|
||||
3 2.0 2.127399592E-01
|
||||
3 5.0 1.033115017E01
|
||||
3 10.0 1.758380717E01
|
||||
3 50.0 2.67776414E20
|
||||
5 1.0 2.714631560E-04
|
||||
5 2.0 9.825679323E-03
|
||||
5 5.0 2.157974547
|
||||
5 10.0 7.771882864E02
|
||||
5 50.0 2.27854831E20
|
||||
10 1.0 2.752948040E-10
|
||||
10 2.0 3.016963879E-07
|
||||
10 5.0 4.580044419E-03
|
||||
10 10.0 2.189170616E01
|
||||
10 50.0 1.07159716E20
|
||||
20 1.0 3.966835986E-25
|
||||
20 2.0 4.310560576E-19
|
||||
20 5.0 5.024239358E-11
|
||||
20 10.0 1.250799736E-04
|
||||
20 50.0 5.44200840E18
|
||||
Legendre Polynomials
|
||||
19 Values
|
||||
1 0 1.0 1.224745
|
||||
10 0 1.0 3.240370
|
||||
20 0 1.0 4.527693
|
||||
1 0 0.7071067 0.866025
|
||||
10 0 0.7071067 0.373006
|
||||
20 0 0.7071067 -0.874140
|
||||
1 0 0.0 0.000000
|
||||
10 0 0.0 -0.797435
|
||||
20 0 0.0 0.797766
|
||||
2 2 0.7071067 0.484123
|
||||
10 2 0.7071067 -0.204789
|
||||
20 2 0.7071067 0.910208
|
||||
2 2 0.0 0.968246
|
||||
10 2 0.0 0.804785
|
||||
20 2 0.0 -0.799672
|
||||
10 10 0.7071067 0.042505
|
||||
20 10 0.7071067 -0.707252
|
||||
10 10 0.0 1.360172
|
||||
20 10 0.0 -0.853705
|
||||
Jacobian Elliptic Function
|
||||
20 Values
|
||||
0.0 0.1 0.099833
|
||||
0.0 0.2 0.19867
|
||||
0.0 0.5 0.47943
|
||||
0.0 1.0 0.84147
|
||||
0.0 2.0 0.90930
|
||||
0.5 0.1 0.099751
|
||||
0.5 0.2 0.19802
|
||||
0.5 0.5 0.47075
|
||||
0.5 1.0 0.80300
|
||||
0.5 2.0 0.99466
|
||||
1.0 0.1 0.099668
|
||||
1.0 0.2 0.19738
|
||||
1.0 0.5 0.46212
|
||||
1.0 1.0 0.76159
|
||||
1.0 2.0 0.96403
|
||||
1.0 4.0 0.99933
|
||||
1.0 -0.2 -0.19738
|
||||
1.0 -0.5 -0.46212
|
||||
1.0 -1.0 -0.76159
|
||||
1.0 -2.0 -0.96403
|
||||
44
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx1.dat
Normal file
44
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx1.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
|
||||
MATRICES FOR INPUT TO TEST ROUTINES
|
||||
Size of matrix (NxN), Number of solutions:
|
||||
3 2
|
||||
Matrix A:
|
||||
1.0 0.0 0.0
|
||||
0.0 2.0 0.0
|
||||
0.0 0.0 3.0
|
||||
Solution vectors:
|
||||
1.0 0.0 0.0
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM
|
||||
Size of matrix (NxN), Number of solutions:
|
||||
3 2
|
||||
Matrix A:
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
2.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
3.0 3.0 3.0
|
||||
Solution vectors:
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.0
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Size of matrix (NxN), Number of solutions:
|
||||
5 2
|
||||
Matrix A:
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 1.0
|
||||
3.0 4.0 5.0 1.0 2.0
|
||||
4.0 5.0 1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
5.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0
|
||||
Solution vectors:
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Size of matrix (NxN), Number of solutions:
|
||||
5 2
|
||||
Matrix A:
|
||||
1.4 2.1 2.1 7.4 9.6
|
||||
1.6 1.5 1.1 0.7 5.0
|
||||
3.8 8.0 9.6 5.4 8.8
|
||||
4.6 8.2 8.4 0.4 8.0
|
||||
2.6 2.9 0.1 9.6 7.7
|
||||
Solution vectors:
|
||||
1.1 1.6 4.7 9.1 0.1
|
||||
4.0 9.3 8.4 0.4 4.1
|
||||
44
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx2.dat
Normal file
44
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx2.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
|
||||
FILE OF TRIDIAGONAL MATRICES FOR PROGRAM 'TRIDAG'
|
||||
Dimension of matrix
|
||||
3
|
||||
Diagonal elements (N)
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
Super-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.0 3.0
|
||||
Sub-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.0 3.0
|
||||
Right-hand side vector (N)
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Dimension of matrix
|
||||
5
|
||||
Diagonal elements (N)
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
|
||||
Super-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0
|
||||
Sub-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
Right-hand side vector (N)
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Dimension of matrix
|
||||
5
|
||||
Diagonal elements (N)
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
Super-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
Sub-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
Right-hand side vector (N)
|
||||
1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Dimension of matrix
|
||||
6
|
||||
Diagonal elements (N)
|
||||
9.7 9.5 5.2 3.5 5.1 6.0
|
||||
Super-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
6.0 1.2 0.7 3.0 1.5
|
||||
Sub-diagonal elements (N-1)
|
||||
2.1 9.4 3.3 7.5 8.8
|
||||
Right-hand side vector (N)
|
||||
2.0 7.5 0.6 7.4 9.8 8.8
|
||||
28
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx3.dat
Normal file
28
lib/nr/ansi/data/matrx3.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
|
||||
FILE OF MATRICES FOR SVDCMP:
|
||||
Number of Rows, Columns
|
||||
5 3
|
||||
Matrix
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0
|
||||
2.0 3.0 4.0
|
||||
3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
4.0 5.0 6.0
|
||||
5.0 6.0 7.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Number of Rows, Columns
|
||||
5 5
|
||||
Matrix
|
||||
1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
2.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
3.0 3.0 3.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 5.0
|
||||
5.0 5.0 5.0 5.0 5.0
|
||||
NEXT PROBLEM:
|
||||
Number of Rows, Columns
|
||||
6 6
|
||||
Matrix
|
||||
3.0 5.3 5.6 3.5 6.8 5.7
|
||||
0.4 8.2 6.7 1.9 2.2 5.3
|
||||
7.8 8.3 7.7 3.3 1.9 4.8
|
||||
5.5 8.8 3.0 1.0 5.1 6.4
|
||||
5.1 5.1 3.6 5.8 5.7 4.9
|
||||
3.5 2.7 5.7 8.2 9.6 2.9
|
||||
300
lib/nr/ansi/data/spctrl.dat
Normal file
300
lib/nr/ansi/data/spctrl.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,300 @@
|
||||
0.097911 0.367270 0.500363 0.425597
|
||||
0.058794 -0.383898 -0.811678 -0.852240
|
||||
-0.540416 0.077375 0.609527 0.949625
|
||||
0.934536 0.547584 0.065175 -0.343537
|
||||
-0.364521 -0.234990 -0.060539 0.070118
|
||||
-0.053797 -0.195746 -0.378981 -0.302282
|
||||
0.078039 0.496074 0.873213 0.920654
|
||||
0.639311 0.016809 -0.545344 -0.847283
|
||||
-0.757841 -0.419941 0.050494 0.412930
|
||||
0.443676 0.355997 0.190416 0.004934
|
||||
0.098812 0.334695 0.487672 0.390609
|
||||
0.091482 -0.471872 -0.822832 -0.862922
|
||||
-0.541732 0.037119 0.632220 0.969027
|
||||
0.938331 0.524281 0.054555 -0.316386
|
||||
-0.417168 -0.258567 -0.002089 0.081358
|
||||
-0.010683 -0.250513 -0.395420 -0.292397
|
||||
0.037531 0.541725 0.858324 0.979284
|
||||
0.632282 0.052913 -0.513068 -0.861395
|
||||
-0.844621 -0.381213 0.032628 0.441947
|
||||
0.494978 0.353964 0.103450 0.050774
|
||||
0.186340 0.348806 0.477618 0.439581
|
||||
0.030414 -0.376526 -0.748378 -0.839505
|
||||
-0.572722 0.070455 0.592158 0.997204
|
||||
0.871991 0.573119 0.016951 -0.299401
|
||||
-0.380699 -0.213378 -0.045667 0.014124
|
||||
-0.083163 -0.211765 -0.394188 -0.329720
|
||||
0.056738 0.487655 0.899056 0.923687
|
||||
0.679856 0.053336 -0.580099 -0.898054
|
||||
-0.777465 -0.449933 0.008536 0.397103
|
||||
0.442733 0.382489 0.126694 0.008359
|
||||
0.174158 0.298124 0.492837 0.387331
|
||||
0.092230 -0.421991 -0.760395 -0.836616
|
||||
-0.490595 0.002870 0.662405 0.970864
|
||||
0.870277 0.485316 0.037991 -0.338729
|
||||
-0.430330 -0.232343 -0.048044 0.032509
|
||||
-0.019183 -0.230955 -0.379461 -0.286177
|
||||
0.009042 0.568075 0.874133 0.912020
|
||||
0.610105 0.098793 -0.487907 -0.815460
|
||||
-0.839317 -0.455718 0.033628 0.359049
|
||||
0.489247 0.299280 0.142992 0.076076
|
||||
0.164557 0.331189 0.435143 0.371382
|
||||
0.028573 -0.429901 -0.789573 -0.827289
|
||||
-0.516383 0.019417 0.660162 0.998339
|
||||
0.943339 0.553927 0.064096 -0.268127
|
||||
-0.343639 -0.208262 -0.080817 0.014051
|
||||
-0.091364 -0.251841 -0.332385 -0.253401
|
||||
0.004142 0.562365 0.857352 0.980905
|
||||
0.640451 0.070460 -0.560346 -0.860592
|
||||
-0.800160 -0.411101 0.035681 0.419918
|
||||
0.456588 0.380944 0.103726 0.061474
|
||||
0.146002 0.335740 0.530424 0.424361
|
||||
0.001236 -0.376993 -0.768314 -0.816661
|
||||
-0.574880 0.001497 0.631647 0.908096
|
||||
0.882109 0.558594 0.042774 -0.296324
|
||||
-0.405426 -0.211205 -0.029234 0.085678
|
||||
-0.036877 -0.276193 -0.370418 -0.333459
|
||||
0.030051 0.509729 0.935126 0.962784
|
||||
0.662392 0.072465 -0.579946 -0.894496
|
||||
-0.846667 -0.445903 0.094651 0.436459
|
||||
0.451768 0.372502 0.171457 0.074792
|
||||
0.140627 0.311938 0.514634 0.414529
|
||||
0.037810 -0.377700 -0.813998 -0.880491
|
||||
-0.504330 0.016679 0.596882 0.918905
|
||||
0.889236 0.478435 0.036437 -0.323710
|
||||
-0.398283 -0.293001 -0.081568 0.036554
|
||||
-0.019824 -0.221855 -0.387019 -0.334675
|
||||
0.080294 0.491516 0.922518 0.963173
|
||||
0.661262 0.013510 -0.562322 -0.893592
|
||||
-0.764120 -0.466779 0.016865 0.438673
|
||||
0.475335 0.347867 0.122441 0.095509
|
||||
0.122242 0.374897 0.432223 0.394942
|
||||
0.089702 -0.404219 -0.756637 -0.845088
|
||||
-0.516642 0.039524 0.654199 0.984378
|
||||
0.896149 0.525603 0.033058 -0.247243
|
||||
-0.355035 -0.228370 0.007792 0.008678
|
||||
-0.064855 -0.231288 -0.374441 -0.332992
|
||||
0.005931 0.508226 0.942214 1.002574
|
||||
0.586029 0.075539 -0.508032 -0.893993
|
||||
-0.798908 -0.387166 0.083562 0.384966
|
||||
0.487865 0.332096 0.181928 0.008358
|
||||
0.135767 0.352306 0.478585 0.401968
|
||||
0.054226 -0.399437 -0.819389 -0.826667
|
||||
-0.533762 0.002544 0.677559 0.921943
|
||||
0.884705 0.488659 0.032441 -0.260313
|
||||
-0.387379 -0.218315 -0.088176 0.045573
|
||||
-0.084575 -0.283227 -0.431495 -0.305018
|
||||
0.020692 0.495659 0.903865 0.979479
|
||||
0.641578 0.096499 -0.532013 -0.818501
|
||||
-0.801651 -0.458958 0.051335 0.414244
|
||||
0.489763 0.336589 0.117080 0.084142
|
||||
0.125365 0.301872 0.512340 0.445291
|
||||
0.073475 -0.448532 -0.801094 -0.842954
|
||||
-0.528140 0.025966 0.603184 0.946022
|
||||
0.882719 0.539963 0.098792 -0.289700
|
||||
-0.387006 -0.195881 -0.081170 0.023650
|
||||
-0.026617 -0.253341 -0.408916 -0.343958
|
||||
0.066436 0.554518 0.915065 0.979764
|
||||
0.615021 0.095966 -0.535727 -0.900540
|
||||
-0.747872 -0.456808 0.018016 0.432158
|
||||
0.453624 0.354854 0.139914 0.073312
|
||||
0.107453 0.362039 0.483963 0.428043
|
||||
0.095897 -0.416062 -0.752085 -0.881777
|
||||
-0.506618 0.019157 0.634220 0.906013
|
||||
0.942182 0.536385 0.055480 -0.316476
|
||||
-0.351742 -0.213961 -0.053189 0.060703
|
||||
0.001519 -0.246973 -0.384560 -0.331215
|
||||
0.009580 0.493835 0.911937 0.951883
|
||||
0.603137 0.054710 -0.524431 -0.897798
|
||||
-0.780356 -0.408528 0.033938 0.424251
|
||||
0.528502 0.376326 0.176091 0.045445
|
||||
0.164536 0.375618 0.525160 0.426136
|
||||
0.008985 -0.447627 -0.807413 -0.859091
|
||||
-0.559236 0.011335 0.590186 0.936487
|
||||
0.856904 0.530043 0.012522 -0.335937
|
||||
-0.412646 -0.209519 -0.053693 0.051147
|
||||
-0.053526 -0.222614 -0.410404 -0.279051
|
||||
0.019434 0.520151 0.924055 0.905338
|
||||
0.599860 0.072868 -0.495636 -0.852138
|
||||
-0.842475 -0.410295 0.045931 0.374146
|
||||
0.507044 0.304955 0.110229 0.014329
|
||||
0.099445 0.313920 0.442175 0.440693
|
||||
0.057408 -0.424944 -0.804769 -0.813377
|
||||
-0.567945 0.061968 0.598933 0.986802
|
||||
0.848188 0.515720 0.047513 -0.329140
|
||||
-0.349152 -0.242236 -0.078811 0.079854
|
||||
-0.024022 -0.265492 -0.355148 -0.309431
|
||||
0.096588 0.575235 0.849259 0.941124
|
||||
0.595528 0.055573 -0.503313 -0.883673
|
||||
-0.816723 -0.439862 0.048003 0.440092
|
||||
0.494922 0.379278 0.180705 0.057666
|
||||
0.108089 0.332832 0.464212 0.374919
|
||||
0.021429 -0.471234 -0.757271 -0.809901
|
||||
-0.497724 0.082059 0.657500 0.948854
|
||||
0.896929 0.511290 0.073270 -0.317564
|
||||
-0.361846 -0.280574 -0.033892 0.037408
|
||||
-0.073339 -0.285403 -0.429735 -0.246847
|
||||
0.031412 0.567831 0.933083 0.974899
|
||||
0.648928 0.090599 -0.513837 -0.874769
|
||||
-0.778362 -0.450210 0.063260 0.403755
|
||||
0.485675 0.325856 0.126301 0.056894
|
||||
0.153595 0.366111 0.464019 0.377563
|
||||
0.004612 -0.414628 -0.761011 -0.867799
|
||||
-0.499577 0.091861 0.654241 0.997871
|
||||
0.942204 0.483009 0.091923 -0.335708
|
||||
-0.338226 -0.278998 -0.008505 0.053219
|
||||
-0.058173 -0.219469 -0.352340 -0.302103
|
||||
0.052941 0.528985 0.893284 0.981896
|
||||
0.606492 0.065509 -0.534164 -0.857461
|
||||
-0.802981 -0.388117 0.004868 0.442722
|
||||
0.435563 0.314212 0.183261 0.077975
|
||||
0.176073 0.295736 0.482821 0.374858
|
||||
0.076716 -0.422508 -0.837674 -0.807773
|
||||
-0.531693 0.074174 0.649856 0.953869
|
||||
0.851023 0.573365 0.006548 -0.324274
|
||||
-0.335403 -0.199929 0.004564 0.097017
|
||||
-0.040870 -0.271010 -0.415173 -0.263773
|
||||
0.018949 0.509171 0.912486 0.909274
|
||||
0.663260 0.016081 -0.488704 -0.868258
|
||||
-0.747901 -0.388979 0.024781 0.367971
|
||||
0.522698 0.305092 0.186602 0.098019
|
||||
0.166066 0.381537 0.442624 0.424076
|
||||
0.025891 -0.452799 -0.814807 -0.810631
|
||||
-0.572332 0.070288 0.605258 0.956582
|
||||
0.903865 0.495041 0.050691 -0.276583
|
||||
-0.421594 -0.278223 -0.006641 0.091677
|
||||
-0.035410 -0.200884 -0.356414 -0.292225
|
||||
0.088560 0.537159 0.860301 0.960125
|
||||
0.597692 0.067915 -0.500009 -0.852144
|
||||
-0.810110 -0.401515 0.002545 0.396196
|
||||
0.437215 0.334308 0.113528 0.034839
|
||||
0.154359 0.297152 0.512050 0.402023
|
||||
0.053790 -0.411957 -0.776809 -0.804607
|
||||
-0.545230 0.004483 0.606468 1.004181
|
||||
0.877637 0.520703 0.014247 -0.327739
|
||||
-0.427206 -0.228288 -0.067409 0.002191
|
||||
-0.059131 -0.221008 -0.343540 -0.253384
|
||||
0.047465 0.485443 0.899890 0.910847
|
||||
0.663669 0.037764 -0.517929 -0.876655
|
||||
-0.751527 -0.433621 0.018924 0.441145
|
||||
0.523340 0.391304 0.156069 0.020190
|
||||
0.184455 0.323097 0.455107 0.361767
|
||||
0.089370 -0.385349 -0.794025 -0.903242
|
||||
-0.532589 0.034371 0.668037 0.928333
|
||||
0.929222 0.547698 0.097208 -0.311597
|
||||
-0.367236 -0.232687 -0.051130 0.048259
|
||||
-0.060719 -0.260017 -0.418074 -0.303872
|
||||
0.072928 0.484907 0.855767 0.976362
|
||||
0.610166 0.014785 -0.486794 -0.846244
|
||||
-0.748778 -0.394212 0.009820 0.358356
|
||||
0.526840 0.354162 0.190473 0.028436
|
||||
0.176236 0.322849 0.462059 0.370479
|
||||
0.064294 -0.384773 -0.792332 -0.806280
|
||||
-0.523412 0.078413 0.661642 0.926860
|
||||
0.922979 0.544351 0.025883 -0.340230
|
||||
-0.354519 -0.247419 -0.003119 0.082101
|
||||
-0.012022 -0.198200 -0.391275 -0.330999
|
||||
0.072228 0.554047 0.940904 0.963250
|
||||
0.607121 0.019336 -0.555746 -0.832664
|
||||
-0.760450 -0.395728 0.061648 0.383536
|
||||
0.522079 0.316498 0.134781 0.021790
|
||||
0.168653 0.344387 0.485338 0.429979
|
||||
0.091185 -0.386099 -0.803865 -0.847632
|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
-0.399566 -0.258405 -0.066580 0.087800
|
||||
-0.042150 -0.269474 -0.332681 -0.322917
|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
0.082284 -0.444665 -0.803149 -0.815407
|
||||
-0.489638 0.091010 0.635438 0.941832
|
||||
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|
||||
-0.419672 -0.290083 -0.013989 0.083569
|
||||
-0.055919 -0.257622 -0.430436 -0.277385
|
||||
0.006100 0.515979 0.908006 0.993760
|
||||
0.618310 0.001543 -0.535351 -0.899117
|
||||
-0.829096 -0.456206 0.000256 0.376039
|
||||
0.480801 0.382116 0.150624 0.018162
|
||||
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|
||||
0.077535 -0.439301 -0.842485 -0.819257
|
||||
-0.544317 0.078440 0.623969 0.977282
|
||||
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|
||||
-0.350568 -0.286092 -0.062614 0.015146
|
||||
-0.088102 -0.281699 -0.397238 -0.311890
|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
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|
||||
0.058446 -0.454213 -0.845370 -0.813975
|
||||
-0.480999 0.010004 0.665455 0.931345
|
||||
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|
||||
-0.333008 -0.200222 -0.044808 0.065249
|
||||
-0.071637 -0.273911 -0.332033 -0.306899
|
||||
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|
||||
0.596889 0.038615 -0.566205 -0.817764
|
||||
-0.756176 -0.403098 0.035555 0.444095
|
||||
0.510418 0.307940 0.179051 0.061500
|
||||
0.098928 0.345776 0.464550 0.435004
|
||||
0.060468 -0.383262 -0.788087 -0.831224
|
||||
-0.523793 0.033440 0.633217 0.944808
|
||||
0.920680 0.483308 0.058446 -0.254890
|
||||
-0.402245 -0.206168 0.002455 0.098080
|
||||
0.001098 -0.204013 -0.342597 -0.276006
|
||||
0.076104 0.519721 0.848375 0.954724
|
||||
0.595388 0.017591 -0.554098 -0.823085
|
||||
-0.832739 -0.394980 0.031532 0.407808
|
||||
0.506202 0.365729 0.112260 0.015105
|
||||
0.156834 0.390595 0.502499 0.376821
|
||||
0.022250 -0.468862 -0.828902 -0.865065
|
||||
-0.521754 0.008702 0.582262 0.990812
|
||||
0.858668 0.479814 0.004871 -0.339759
|
||||
-0.382635 -0.254824 -0.058774 0.040762
|
||||
-0.064244 -0.207980 -0.406088 -0.248284
|
||||
0.065140 0.502790 0.909789 0.948749
|
||||
0.594440 0.095172 -0.482355 -0.813955
|
||||
-0.750694 -0.449014 0.038131 0.432970
|
||||
0.460675 0.310682 0.140371 0.003175
|
||||
0.148347 0.304243 0.480985 0.429534
|
||||
0.059744 -0.451427 -0.761063 -0.903347
|
||||
-0.542992 0.066439 0.606244 0.972373
|
||||
0.849850 0.538147 0.037460 -0.270762
|
||||
-0.385688 -0.243512 -0.051111 0.040176
|
||||
-0.046009 -0.222313 -0.415061 -0.344722
|
||||
0.065446 0.521380 0.896401 0.990178
|
||||
0.672997 0.031288 -0.488687 -0.839813
|
||||
-0.747661 -0.454405 0.003323 0.431151
|
||||
0.498745 0.359902 0.147358 0.026276
|
||||
0.119546 0.357631 0.468306 0.368227
|
||||
0.007975 -0.405726 -0.835639 -0.826552
|
||||
-0.498900 0.075505 0.610725 0.999256
|
||||
0.849490 0.538016 0.030475 -0.274609
|
||||
-0.394095 -0.244471 -0.007600 0.048182
|
||||
-0.090882 -0.213751 -0.363397 -0.248384
|
||||
0.085440 0.574230 0.947322 0.982645
|
||||
0.653703 0.025142 -0.537558 -0.809595
|
||||
-0.807243 -0.444492 0.099258 0.365283
|
||||
0.499182 0.301096 0.155158 0.094121
|
||||
0.180500 0.367823 0.453490 0.358748
|
||||
0.090581 -0.409058 -0.779713 -0.805878
|
||||
-0.572210 0.007475 0.614132 0.921802
|
||||
0.927101 0.504223 0.068253 -0.268464
|
||||
-0.380833 -0.238024 -0.012982 0.007172
|
||||
-0.009599 -0.259873 -0.391673 -0.293916
|
||||
0.070242 0.564174 0.881125 0.968656
|
||||
0.648719 0.063631 -0.568027 -0.824792
|
||||
-0.806184 -0.454851 0.026379 0.404643
|
||||
0.448427 0.351062 0.126076 0.097715
|
||||
0.138137 0.355728 0.525115 0.349266
|
||||
0.055674 -0.447023 -0.779438 -0.871175
|
||||
-0.572309 0.074596 0.583332 0.926666
|
||||
0.866427 0.571239 0.061118 -0.282493
|
||||
-0.340329 -0.231417 -0.031789 0.092093
|
||||
-0.067833 -0.236263 -0.415730 -0.255997
|
||||
0.061875 0.484668 0.912390 0.998998
|
||||
0.608189 0.011819 -0.575031 -0.844429
|
||||
-0.785034 -0.465118 0.005862 0.381676
|
||||
0.500147 0.331682 0.186613 0.002278
|
||||
13
lib/nr/ansi/data/table1.dat
Normal file
13
lib/nr/ansi/data/table1.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
|
||||
Contingency Table for CNTAB1 and CNTAB2
|
||||
Accidental Deaths by Month and Type (1979)
|
||||
Month: jan feb mar apr may jun jul aug sep oct nov dec
|
||||
|
||||
Motor Vehicle 3298 3304 4241 4291 4594 4710 4914 4942 4861 4914 4563 4892
|
||||
Falls 1150 1034 1089 1126 1142 1100 1112 1099 1114 1079 999 1181
|
||||
Drowning 180 190 370 530 800 1130 1320 990 580 320 250 212
|
||||
Fires 874 768 630 516 385 324 277 272 271 381 533 760
|
||||
Choking 299 264 258 247 273 269 251 269 271 279 297 266
|
||||
Fire-arms 168 142 122 140 153 142 147 160 162 172 266 230
|
||||
Poisons 298 277 346 263 253 239 268 228 240 260 252 241
|
||||
Gas-poison 267 193 144 127 70 63 55 53 60 118 150 172
|
||||
Other 1264 1234 1172 1220 1547 1339 1419 1453 1359 1308 1264 1246
|
||||
24
lib/nr/ansi/data/table2.dat
Normal file
24
lib/nr/ansi/data/table2.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
|
||||
Table for use with chapter 13 routines
|
||||
Average solar radiation (watts/sq.m.) for selected cities
|
||||
Month: jul aug sep oct nov dec jan feb mar apr may jun ave lat
|
||||
|
||||
Atlanta, GA 257 246 201 166 30 102 106 140 184 236 258 271 192 34.0
|
||||
Barrow, AK 208 123 56 20 0 0 0 18 87 184 248 256 100 71.0
|
||||
Bismark, ND 296 251 185 132 78 60 76 121 170 217 267 284 178 47.0
|
||||
Boise, ID 324 275 221 152 88 60 69 113 164 235 284 309 191 43.5
|
||||
Boston, MA 240 206 165 115 70 58 67 96 142 176 228 242 150 42.5
|
||||
Caribou, ME 246 218 161 102 53 51 66 111 178 194 229 232 153 47.0
|
||||
Cleveland, OH 267 239 182 127 68 56 60 87 151 182 253 271 162 41.5
|
||||
Dodge City, KS 311 287 239 184 138 113 123 153 202 256 275 315 216 38.0
|
||||
El Paso, TX 324 309 278 224 178 151 160 209 266 317 346 353 260 32.0
|
||||
Fresno, CA 323 293 243 182 117 77 90 143 212 264 308 337 216 37.0
|
||||
Greensboro, NC 263 235 197 156 118 95 97 134 171 227 257 273 185 36.0
|
||||
Honolulu, HI 305 293 271 245 208 176 175 200 234 262 300 297 247 21.0
|
||||
Little Rock, AR 270 250 214 167 118 91 96 127 173 220 256 272 188 35.0
|
||||
Miami, FL 260 246 216 188 171 154 166 201 238 263 267 257 219 26.0
|
||||
New York, NY 251 238 175 127 77 62 71 102 151 183 220 255 159 41.0
|
||||
Omaha, NE 275 252 192 142 96 80 99 134 172 224 248 272 182 21.0
|
||||
Rapid City, SD 288 262 208 152 99 76 90 135 193 235 259 287 190 44.0
|
||||
Seattle, WA 242 209 150 84 44 29 34 60 118 174 216 228 132 47.5
|
||||
Tucson, AZ 304 286 281 216 172 144 151 195 264 322 358 343 253 41.0
|
||||
Washington, DC 267 190 196 145 75 64 101 124 153 182 215 247 163 39.0
|
||||
11
lib/nr/ansi/data/tarray.dat
Normal file
11
lib/nr/ansi/data/tarray.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
|
||||
Test data for chapter 8:
|
||||
29.82 71.51 3.30 87.44 53.42 63.16 89.10 25.75 93.16 27.72
|
||||
71.58 48.34 53.11 18.34 27.13 60.31 83.34 22.81 66.84 52.91
|
||||
53.42 15.22 8.01 53.39 76.12 79.09 67.61 38.39 24.81 73.21
|
||||
13.42 52.10 34.86 99.83 38.46 81.59 61.75 79.62 93.39 3.21
|
||||
99.34 92.22 94.29 7.03 6.67 89.35 83.14 9.01 12.68 62.22
|
||||
2.95 85.02 95.82 73.96 49.29 77.72 36.65 3.48 48.98 71.83
|
||||
1.41 9.48 32.37 89.95 28.39 79.36 54.05 46.08 11.67 37.78
|
||||
77.17 74.33 10.13 4.62 49.95 68.40 19.40 34.06 4.11 98.40
|
||||
42.44 64.14 89.41 52.99 71.79 3.94 19.73 44.91 71.44 59.10
|
||||
27.54 15.67 67.95 55.61 26.05 25.01 82.09 89.67 57.08 38.27
|
||||
525
lib/nr/ansi/data/text.dat
Normal file
525
lib/nr/ansi/data/text.dat
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,525 @@
|
||||
This is a file of text, for use in testing programs.
|
||||
|
||||
Visible characters on the typewriter keyboard:
|
||||
~!@#$%^&*()_+
|
||||
`1234567890-=
|
||||
QWERTYUIOP{}|
|
||||
qwertyuiop[]\
|
||||
ASDFGHJKL:"
|
||||
asdfghjkl;'
|
||||
ZXCVBNM<>?
|
||||
zxcvbnm,./
|
||||
|
||||
Several blocks of text:
|
||||
IT was nearly midnight on the eve of St. Thomas's, the
|
||||
shortest day in the year. A desolating wind wandered
|
||||
from the north over the hill whereon Oak had watched
|
||||
the yellow waggon and its occupant in the sunshine of
|
||||
a few days earlier.
|
||||
Norcombe Hill -- not far from lonely Toller-Down
|
||||
-- was one of the spots which suggest to a passer-by
|
||||
that he is in the presence of a shape approaching the
|
||||
indestructible as nearly as any to be found on earth.
|
||||
It was a featureless convexity of chalk and soil -- an
|
||||
ordinary specimen of those smoothly-outlined protuber+
|
||||
ances of the globe which may remain undisturbed on
|
||||
some great day of confusion, when far grander heights
|
||||
and dizzy granite precipices topple down.
|
||||
The hill was covered on its northern side by an
|
||||
ancient and decaying plantation of beeches, whose
|
||||
upper verge formed a line over the crest, fringing its
|
||||
arched curve against the sky, like a mane. To-night
|
||||
these trees sheltered the southern slope from the keenest
|
||||
blasts, which smote the wood and floundered through
|
||||
it with a sound as of grumbling, or gushed over its
|
||||
crowning boughs in a weakened moan. The dry leaves
|
||||
in the ditch simmered and boiled in the same breezes,
|
||||
a tongue of air occasionally ferreting out a few, and
|
||||
sending them spinning across the grass. A group or
|
||||
two of the latest in date amongst the dead multitude
|
||||
had remained till this very mid-winter time on the twigs
|
||||
which bore them and in falling rattled against the trunks
|
||||
with smart taps:
|
||||
Betwenne this half-wooded, half naked hill, and the
|
||||
vague still horizon that its summit indistinctly com+
|
||||
manded, was a mysterious sheet of fathomless shade
|
||||
-- the sounds from which suggested that what it con+
|
||||
cealed bore some reduced resemblance to features here.
|
||||
The thin grasses, more or less coating the hill, were
|
||||
touched by the wind in breezes of differing powers, and
|
||||
almost of differing natures -- one rubbing the blades
|
||||
heavily, another raking them piercingly, another brushing
|
||||
them like a soft broom. The instinctive act of human+
|
||||
kind was to stand and listen, and learn how the trees
|
||||
to each other in the regular antiphonies of a cathedral
|
||||
choir; how hedges and other shapes to leeward them
|
||||
caught the note, lowering it to the tenderest sob; and
|
||||
how the hurrying gust then plunged into the south, to
|
||||
be heard no more.
|
||||
The sky was clear -- remarkably clear -- and the
|
||||
twinkling of all the stars seemed to be but throbs of
|
||||
one body, timed by a common pulse. The North Star
|
||||
was directly in the wind's eye, and since evening the
|
||||
Bear had swung round it outwardly to the east, till he
|
||||
was now at a right angle with the meridian. A
|
||||
difference of colour in the stars -- oftener read of than
|
||||
seen in England-was really perceptible here. The
|
||||
sovereign brilliancy of Sirius pierced the eye with a steely
|
||||
glitter, the star called Capella was yellow, Aldebaran and
|
||||
Betelgueux shone with a fiery red.
|
||||
To persons standing alone on a hill during a clear
|
||||
midnight such as this, the roll of the world eastward is
|
||||
almost a palpable movement. The sensation may be
|
||||
caused by the panoramic glide of the stars past earthly
|
||||
objects, which is perceptible in a few minutes of still+
|
||||
ness, or by the better outlook upon space that a hill
|
||||
affords, or by the wind, or by the solitude ; but whatever
|
||||
be its origin, the impression of riding along is vivid and
|
||||
abiding. The poetry of motion is a phrase much in
|
||||
use, and to enjoy the epic form of that gratification it
|
||||
is necessary to stand on a hill at a small hour of the
|
||||
night, and, having first expanded with a sense of differ+
|
||||
ence from the mass of civilised mankind, who are
|
||||
dreamwrapt and disregardful of all such proceedings at
|
||||
this time, long and quietly watch your stately progress
|
||||
through the stars. After such a nocturnal reconnoitre
|
||||
it is hard to get back to earth, and to believe that the
|
||||
consciousness of such majestic speeding is derived from
|
||||
a tiny human frame.
|
||||
Suddenly an unexpected series of sounds began to
|
||||
be heard
|
||||
in this place up against the sky. They had a
|
||||
clearness which was to be found nowhere in the wind,
|
||||
and a sequence which was to be found nowhere in
|
||||
nature. They were the notes of Farmer Oak's flute.
|
||||
The tune was not floating unhindered into the open
|
||||
air : it seemed muffled in some way, and was altogether
|
||||
too curtailed in power to spread high or wide. It came
|
||||
from the direction of a small dark object under the
|
||||
plantation hedge -- a shepherd's hut -- now presenting
|
||||
an outline to which an uninitiated person might have
|
||||
been puzzled to attach either meaning or use.
|
||||
The image as a whole was that of a small Noah's
|
||||
Ark on a small Ararat, allowing the traditionary outlines
|
||||
and general form of the Ark which are followed by toy+
|
||||
makers -- and by these means are established in men's
|
||||
imaginations among their firmest, because earliest im+
|
||||
pressions -- to pass as an approximate pattern. The
|
||||
hut stood on little wheels, which raised its floor about a
|
||||
foot from the ground. Such shepherds' huts are dragged
|
||||
into the fields when the lambing season comes on, to
|
||||
shelter the shepherd in his- enforced nightly attendance.
|
||||
It was only latterly that people had begun to call
|
||||
Gabriel !Farmer' Oak. During the twelvemonth pre+
|
||||
ceding this time he had been enabled by sustained
|
||||
efforts of industry and chronic good spirits to lease the
|
||||
small shepp farm of which Norcombe Hill was a portion,
|
||||
and stock it with two hundred sheep. Previously he
|
||||
had been a bailiff for a short time, and earlier still a
|
||||
shepherd only, having from his childhood assisted his
|
||||
father in tending the floeks of large proprietors, till old
|
||||
Gabriel sank to rest.
|
||||
This venture, unaided and alone, into the paths of
|
||||
farming as master and not as man, with an advance of
|
||||
sheep not yet paid for, was a critical juncture with
|
||||
Gabriel Oak, and he recognised his position clearly.
|
||||
The first movement in his new progress was the lambing
|
||||
of his ewes, and sheep having been his speciality from
|
||||
his "youth, he wisely refrained from deputing -- the task
|
||||
of tending them at this season to a hireling or a novice.
|
||||
The wind continued to beat-about the corners of the
|
||||
hut, but the flute-playing ceased. A rectangular space
|
||||
of light
|
||||
appeared in the side of the hut, and in the
|
||||
opening the outline of Farmer Oak's figure. He carried
|
||||
a lantern in his hand, and closing the door behind him,
|
||||
came forward and busied himself about this nook of the
|
||||
field for nearly twenty minutes, the lantern light appear+
|
||||
ing and disappearing here and there, and brightening
|
||||
him or darkening him as he stood before or behind it.
|
||||
Oak's motions, though they had a quiet-energy, were
|
||||
slow, and their deliberateness accorded well with his
|
||||
occupation. Fitness being the basis of beauty, nobody
|
||||
could-have denied that his steady swings and turns"
|
||||
in and- about the flock had elements of grace, Yet,
|
||||
although if occasion demanded he could do or think a
|
||||
thing with as mercurial a dash as can the men of towns
|
||||
who are more to the manner born, his special power,
|
||||
morally, physically, and mentally, was static, owing
|
||||
little or nothing to momentum as a rule.
|
||||
A close examination of the ground hereabout, even
|
||||
by the wan starlight only, revealed how a portion of
|
||||
what would have been casually called a wild slope had
|
||||
been appropriated by Farmer Oak for his great purpose
|
||||
this winter. Detached hurdles thatched with straw
|
||||
were stuck into the ground at various scattered points,
|
||||
amid and under which the whitish forms of his meek
|
||||
ewes moved and rustled. The ring of the sheep-bell,
|
||||
which had been silent during his absence, recommenced,
|
||||
in tones that had more mellowness than clearness, owing
|
||||
to an increasing growth of surrounding wool. This
|
||||
continued till Oak withdrew again from the flock. He
|
||||
-- returned to the hut, bringing in his arms a new-born
|
||||
lamb, consisting of four legs large enough for a full+
|
||||
grown sheep, united by a seemingly inconsiderable mem+
|
||||
brane about half the substance of the legs collectively,
|
||||
which constituted the animal's entire body just at present.
|
||||
The little speck of life he placed on a wisp of hay
|
||||
before the small stove, where a can of milk was simmer+
|
||||
ing. Oak extinguished the lantern by blowing into it
|
||||
and then pinching the snuff, the cot being lighted
|
||||
by a candle suspended by a twisted wire. A rather
|
||||
hard couch, formed of a few corn sacks thrown carelessly
|
||||
down, covered half the floor of this little
|
||||
habitation, and
|
||||
here the young man stretched himself along, loosened
|
||||
his woollen cravat, and closed his eyes. In about the
|
||||
time a person unaccustomed to bodily labour would have
|
||||
decided upon which side to lie, Farmer Oak was asleep.
|
||||
The inside of the hut, as it now presented itself, was
|
||||
cosy and alluring, and the scarlet handful of fire in
|
||||
addition to the candle, reflecting its own genial colour
|
||||
upon whatever it could reach, flung associations of
|
||||
enjoyment even over utensils and tools. In the corner
|
||||
stood the sheep-crook, and along a shelf at one side
|
||||
were ranged bottles and canisters of the simple prepara+
|
||||
tions pertaining to ovine surgery and physic; spirits of
|
||||
wine, turpentine, tar, magnesia, ginger, and castor-oil
|
||||
being the chief. On a triangular shelf across the corner
|
||||
stood bread, bacon, cheese, and a cup for ale or cider,
|
||||
which was supplied from a flagon beneath. Beside the
|
||||
provisions lay the flute whose notes had lately been
|
||||
called forth by the lonely watcher to beguile a tedious
|
||||
hour. The house was ventilated by two round holes,
|
||||
like the lights of a ship's cabin, with wood slides+
|
||||
The lamb, revived by the warmth' began to bleat'
|
||||
instant meaning, as expected sounds will. Passing
|
||||
from the profoundest sleep to the most alert wakefulness
|
||||
with the same ease that had accompanied the reverse
|
||||
operation, he looked at his watch, found that the hour+
|
||||
hand had shifted again, put on his hat, took the lamb
|
||||
in his arms, and carried it into the darkness. After
|
||||
placing the little creature with its mother, he stood and
|
||||
carefully examined the sky, to ascertain the time of
|
||||
night from the altitudes of the stars.
|
||||
The Dog-star and Aldebaran, pointing to the restless
|
||||
Pleiades, were half-way up the Southern sky, and between
|
||||
them hung Orion, which gorgeous constellation never
|
||||
burnt more vividly than now, as it soared forth above
|
||||
the rim of the landscape. Castor and Pollux will
|
||||
the north-west; far away through the plantation Vega
|
||||
and Cassiopeia's chair stood daintily poised on the
|
||||
uppermost boughs.
|
||||
"One o'clock,' said Gabriel.
|
||||
Being a man not without a frequent consciousness
|
||||
that there was some charm in this life he led, he stood
|
||||
still after looking at the sky as a useful instrument, and
|
||||
regarded it in an appreciative spirit, as a work of art
|
||||
superlatively beautiful. For a moment he seemed
|
||||
impressed with the speaking loneliness of the scene, or
|
||||
rather with the complete abstraction from all its compass
|
||||
of the sights and sounds of man. Human shapes,interferences,
|
||||
troubles, and joys were all as if they were not, and there
|
||||
seemed to be on the shaded hemisphere of the globe no sentient being
|
||||
save himself; he could fancy them all gone round to the sunny side.
|
||||
Occupied this, with eyes stretched afar, Oak gradually per+
|
||||
ceived that what he had previously taken to be a star low
|
||||
down behind the outskirts of the plantation was in reality no
|
||||
such thing. It was an artificial light, almost close at hand.
|
||||
To find themselves utterly alone at night where company
|
||||
is desirable and expected makes some people fearful; but a
|
||||
case more trying by far to the nerves is to discover some
|
||||
mysterious companionship when intuition, sensation, memory,
|
||||
analogy, testimony, probability, induction -- every kind of
|
||||
evidence in the logician's list -- have united to persuade con+
|
||||
sciousness that it is quite in isolation.
|
||||
Farmer Oak went towards the plantation and pushed
|
||||
through its lower boughs to the windy side. A dim mass under
|
||||
the slope reminded him that a shed occupied a place here,
|
||||
the site being a cutting into the slope of the hill, so that at
|
||||
its back part the roof was almost level with the ground. In
|
||||
front it was formed of board nailed to posts and covered with
|
||||
tar as apreservative. Through crevices in the roof and side
|
||||
spread streaks and spots of light, a combination of which made
|
||||
the radiance that had attracted him. Oak stepped up behind,
|
||||
where,leaning down upon the roof and putting his eye close
|
||||
to a hole, he could see into the interior clearly.
|
||||
The place contained two women and two cows. By the side
|
||||
of the latter a steaming bran-mash stood in a bucket. One
|
||||
of the women was past middle age. Her companion was ap+
|
||||
parently young and graceful; he could form no decided opinion
|
||||
upon her looks, her position being almost beneath his eye, so
|
||||
that he saw her in a bird's-eye view, as Milton's Satan first saw
|
||||
Paradise. She wore no bonnet or het, but had enveloped her+
|
||||
self in a large cloak, which was carelessly flung over her head
|
||||
as a covering.
|
||||
"There, now we'll go home," said the elder of the two, resting
|
||||
her knuckles upon her hips, and looking at their goings-on as
|
||||
a whole. "I do hope Daisy will fetch round again now. I have
|
||||
never been more frightened in my life, but I don't mind break+
|
||||
ing my rest if she recovers."
|
||||
The young woman, whose eyelids were apparently inclined
|
||||
to fall together on the smallest provocation of silence,yawned
|
||||
in sympathy.
|
||||
"I wish we were rich enough to pay a man to do these
|
||||
things," she said.
|
||||
"As we are not, we must do them ourselves," said the other;
|
||||
"for you must help me if you stay."
|
||||
"Well, my hat is gone, however," continued the younger. "It
|
||||
went over the hedge, I think. The idea of such a slight wind
|
||||
catching it."
|
||||
The cow standing erect was of the Devon breed, and was
|
||||
encased in a tight warm hide of rich Indian red, as absolutely
|
||||
uniform from eyes to tail as if the animal had been dipped in
|
||||
a dye of that colour, her long back being mathematically level.
|
||||
The other was spotted,grey and white. Beside her Oak now
|
||||
noticed a little calf about a day old, looking idiotically at
|
||||
the two women, which showed that it had not long been
|
||||
accustomed to the phenomenon of eyesight, and often turn+
|
||||
ing to the lantern, which it apparently mistook for the moon.
|
||||
inherited instinct having as yet had little time for correction
|
||||
by experience. Between the sheep and the cows Lucina had
|
||||
been busy on Norcombe hill lately.
|
||||
"I think we had better send for some oatmeal," said the
|
||||
"Yes, aunt; and I'll ride over for it as soon as it is
|
||||
light. '
|
||||
" But there's no side-saddle.'
|
||||
"I can ride on the other : trust me.'
|
||||
Oak, upon hearing these remarks, became more
|
||||
curious to observe her features, but this prospect being
|
||||
denied him by the hooding efect of the cloak, and by his
|
||||
aerial position, he felt himself drawing upon his fancy
|
||||
for their details. In making even horizontal and clear
|
||||
inspections we colour and mould according to the warts
|
||||
within us whatever our eyes bring in. Had Gabriel
|
||||
been able from the first to get a distinct view of her +
|
||||
countenance, his estimate of it as very handsome or
|
||||
slightly so would have been as his soul required a
|
||||
divinity at the moment or was ready supplied with one.
|
||||
Having for some time known the want of a satisfactory
|
||||
form to fill an increasing void within him, his position
|
||||
moreover affording the widest scope for his fancy, he
|
||||
painted her a beauty.
|
||||
By one of those whimsical coincidences in which
|
||||
Nature, like a busy mother, seems to spare a moment
|
||||
from her unremitting labours to turn and make her
|
||||
children smile, the girl now dropped the cloak, and
|
||||
forth tumbled ropes of black hair over a red jacket.
|
||||
Oak knew her instantly as the heroine of the yellow
|
||||
waggon, myrtles, and looking-glass : prosily, as the
|
||||
woman who owed him twopence.
|
||||
They placed the calf beside its mother again, took
|
||||
up the lantern, and went out, the light sinking down
|
||||
the hill till it was no more than a nebula. Gabriel
|
||||
Oak returned to his flock.
|
||||
A GIRL ON HORSEBACK -- CONVERSATION
|
||||
THE sluggish day began to break. Even its position
|
||||
terrestrially is one of the elements of a new interest,
|
||||
and for no particular reason save that the incident of
|
||||
the night had occurred there, Oak went again into
|
||||
the plantation. Lingering and musing here, he heard
|
||||
the steps of a horse at the foot of the hill, and soon
|
||||
there appeared in view an auburn pony with a girl on
|
||||
its back, ascending by the path leading past the cattle+
|
||||
shed. She was the young woman of the night before.
|
||||
Gabriel instantly thought of the hat she had mentioned
|
||||
as having lost in the wind; possibly she had come to
|
||||
look for it. He hastily scanned the ditch and after
|
||||
walking about ten yards along it, found the hat among the
|
||||
leaves. Gabriel took it in his hand and returned to his
|
||||
hut. Here he ensconced himself, and peeped through
|
||||
the loophole in the direction of the riders approach.
|
||||
She came up and looked around -- then on the other
|
||||
side of the hedge. Gabriel was about to advance and
|
||||
restore the missing article when an unexpected per+
|
||||
formance induced him to suspend the action for the
|
||||
present. The path, after passing the cowshed, bisected
|
||||
the plantation. It was not a bridle-path -- merely a
|
||||
pedestrian's track, and the boughs spread horizontally
|
||||
at a height not greater than seven feet above the ground,
|
||||
which made it impossible to ride erect beneath them.
|
||||
The girl, who wore no riding-habit, looked around for
|
||||
a moment, as if to assure herself that all humanity was
|
||||
out of view, then dexterously dropped backwards flat
|
||||
upon the pony's back, her head over its tail, her feet
|
||||
against its shoulders, and her eyes to the sky. The
|
||||
rapidity of her glide into this position was that of a
|
||||
kingfisher -- its noiselessness that of a hawk. Gabriel's
|
||||
eyes had scarcely been able to follow her. The tall lank
|
||||
pony seemed used to such doings, and ambled
|
||||
along unconcerned. Thus she passed under the level boughs.
|
||||
The performer seemed quite at home anywhere
|
||||
between a horse's head and its tail, and the necessity
|
||||
for this abnormal attitude having ceased with the
|
||||
passage of the plantation, she began to adopt another,
|
||||
even more obviously convenient than the first. She had
|
||||
no side-saddle, and it was very apparent that a firm
|
||||
seat upon the smooth leather beneath her was un+
|
||||
attainable sideways. Springing to her accustomed
|
||||
perpendicular like a bowed sapling, and satisfying her,
|
||||
self that nobody was in sight, she seated herself in the
|
||||
manner demanded by the saddle, though hardly expected
|
||||
of the woman, and trotted off in the direction of Tewnell
|
||||
Mill.
|
||||
Oak was amused, perhaps a little astonished, and
|
||||
hanging up the hat in his hut, went again among his
|
||||
ewes. An hour passed, the girl returned, properly
|
||||
seated now, with a bag of bran in front of her. On
|
||||
nearing the cattle-shed she was met by a boy bringing
|
||||
a milking-pail, who held the reins of the pony whilst
|
||||
she slid off. The boy led away the horse, leaving the
|
||||
pail with the young woman.
|
||||
Soon soft spirts alternating with loud spirts came
|
||||
in regular succession from within the shed, the obvious
|
||||
sounds of a person milking a cow. Gabriel took the
|
||||
lost hat in his hand, and waited beside the path she
|
||||
would follow in leaving the hill.
|
||||
She came, the pail in one hand, hanging against her
|
||||
knee. The left arm was extended as a balance, enough
|
||||
of it being shown bare to make Oak wish that the event
|
||||
ha happened in the summer, when the whole would
|
||||
have been revealed. There was a bright air and manner
|
||||
about her now, by which she seemed to imply that the
|
||||
desirability of her existence could not be questioned;
|
||||
and this rather saucy assumption failed in being offensive,
|
||||
because a beholder felt it to be, upon the whole, true.
|
||||
Like exceptional emphasis in the tone of a genius, that
|
||||
which would have made mediocrity ridiculous was an
|
||||
addition to recognised power. It was with some
|
||||
surprise that she saw Gabriel's face rising like the
|
||||
moon behind the hedge.
|
||||
The adjustment of the farmer's hazy conceptions of
|
||||
her
|
||||
charms to the portrait of herself she now presented
|
||||
him with was less a diminuition than a difference. The
|
||||
starting-point selected by the judgment was. her height
|
||||
She seemed tall, but the pail was a small one, and the
|
||||
hedge diminutive; hence, making allowance for error
|
||||
by comparison with these, she could have been not
|
||||
above the height to be chosen by women as best. All
|
||||
features of consequence were severe and regular. It
|
||||
may have been observed by persons who go about the
|
||||
shires with eyes for beauty, that in Englishwoman a
|
||||
classically-formed face is seldom found to be united
|
||||
with a figure of the same pattern, the highly-finished
|
||||
features being generally too large for the remainder of
|
||||
the frame ; that a graceful and proportionate figure of
|
||||
eight heads usually goes off into random facial curves.
|
||||
Without throwing a Nymphean tissue over a milkmaid,
|
||||
let it be said that here criticism checked itself as out
|
||||
of place, and looked at her proportions with a long
|
||||
consciousness of pleasure. From the contours of her
|
||||
figure in its upper part, she must have had a beautiful
|
||||
neek and shoulders ; but since her infancy nobody had
|
||||
ever seen them. Had she been put into a low dress
|
||||
she would have run and thrust her head into a bush.
|
||||
Yet she was not a shy girl by any means; it was merely
|
||||
her instinct to draw the line dividing the seen from the
|
||||
unseen higher than they do it in towns.
|
||||
That the girl's thoughts hovered about her face
|
||||
and form as soon as she caught Oak's eyes conning the
|
||||
same page was natural, and almost certain. The self+
|
||||
consciousness shown would have been vanity if a little
|
||||
more pronounced, dignity if a little less. Rays of male
|
||||
vision seem to have a tickling effect upon virgin faces
|
||||
in rural districts ; she brushed hers with her hand, as if
|
||||
Gabriel had been irritating its pink surface by actual
|
||||
touch, and the free air of her previous movements was
|
||||
reduced at the same time to a chastened phase of
|
||||
itself. Yet it was the man who blushed, the maid not
|
||||
at all.
|
||||
" I found a hat,' said Oak.
|
||||
" It is mine,' said she, and, from a sense of proportion,
|
||||
kept down to a small smile an inclination to laugh dis+
|
||||
tinctly : "it flew away last night.'
|
||||
" One o'clock this morning ? '
|
||||
" Well -- it was.' She was surprised. " How did you
|
||||
know ? ' she said.
|
||||
" I was here.'
|
||||
" You are Farmer Oak, are you not ? '
|
||||
" That or thereabouts. I'm lately come to this place.'
|
||||
" A large farm ? ' she inquired, casting her eyes round,
|
||||
and swinging back her hair, which was black in the
|
||||
shaded hollows of its mass; but it being now an hour
|
||||
past sunrise, the rays touched its prominent curves with
|
||||
a colour of their own.
|
||||
" No ; not large. About a hundred.' (In speaking
|
||||
of farms the word "acres ' is omitted by the natives, by
|
||||
analogy to such old expressions as "a stag of ten.')
|
||||
' "I wanted my hat this morning,' she went on.
|
||||
had to ride to Tewnell Mill.'
|
||||
"Yes you had.'
|
||||
"How do you know?'
|
||||
"I saw you!
|
||||
"Where?' she inquired, a misgiving bringing every
|
||||
muscle of her lineaments and frame to a standstill.
|
||||
"Here-going through the plantation, and all down
|
||||
the hill,' said Farmer Oak, with an aspect excessively
|
||||
knowing with regard to some matter in his mind, as he
|
||||
gazed at a remote point in the direction named, and then
|
||||
turned back to meet his colloquist's eyes.
|
||||
A perception caused him to withdraw his own eyes
|
||||
from hers as suddenly as if he had been caught in a
|
||||
theft. Recollection of the strange antics she had
|
||||
indulged in when passing through the trees, was suc+
|
||||
ceeded in the girl by a nettled palpitation, and that' by
|
||||
a hot face. It was a time to see a woman redden who
|
||||
was not given to reddening s a rule; not a point in
|
||||
the milkmaid but was of the deepest rose-colour. From
|
||||
the Maiden's Blush, through all varieties of the Provence
|
||||
down to the Crimson Tuscany, the countenance of Oak's
|
||||
acquaintance quickly graduated ; whereupon he, in con+
|
||||
siderateness, turned away his head.
|
||||
The sympathetic man still looked the other way, and
|
||||
wondered when she would recover coolness sufficient to
|
||||
justify him in facing her again. He heard what seemed
|
||||
to be the flitting of a
|
||||
dead leaf upon the breeze, and
|
||||
looked. She had gone away.
|
||||
With an air between that of Tragedy and Comedy !
|
||||
Gabriel returned to his work.
|
||||
Five mornings and evenings passed. The young
|
||||
woman came regularly to milk the healthy cow or to
|
||||
attend to the sick one, but never allowed her vision to
|
||||
stray in the direction of Oak's person. His want of
|
||||
tact had deeply offended her -- not by seeing what he
|
||||
could not help, but by letting her know that he had
|
||||
seen it. For, as without law there is no sin, without
|
||||
eyes there is no indecorum; and she appeared to feel
|
||||
that Gabriel's espial had made her an indecorous woman
|
||||
without her own connivance. It was food for great regret
|
||||
with him; it was also a contretemps which touched into
|
||||
life a latent heat he had experienced in that direction.
|
||||
The acquaintanceship might, however, have ended in
|
||||
a slow forgetting, but for an incident which occurred at
|
||||
the end of the same week. One afternoon it began to
|
||||
freeze, and the frost increased with evening, which drew
|
||||
on like a stealthy tightening of bonds. It was a time
|
||||
when in cottages the breath of the sleepers freezes to
|
||||
the sheets; when round the drawing-room fire of a
|
||||
thick-walled mansion the sitters' backs are cold, even
|
||||
whilst their faces are all aglow. Many a small bird went
|
||||
to bed supperless that night among the bare boughs.
|
||||
As the milking-hour drew near, Oak kept his usual
|
||||
watch upon the cowshed. At last he felt cold, and
|
||||
shaking an extra quantity of bedding round the yeaning
|
||||
ewes he entered the hut and heaped more fuel upon
|
||||
the stove. The wind came in at the bottom of the door,
|
||||
and to prevent it Oak laid a sack there and wheeled the
|
||||
cot round a little more to the south. Then the wind
|
||||
spouted in at a ventilating hole -- of which there was one
|
||||
on each side of the hut.
|
||||
Gabriel had always known that when the fire was
|
||||
lighted and the door closed one of these must be kept
|
||||
open -- that chosen being always on the side away from
|
||||
the wind. Closing the slide to windward, he turned to
|
||||
open the other; on second -- -thoughts the farmer con+
|
||||
sidered that he would first sit down leaving both
|
||||
closed for a minute or two, till the temperature of the
|
||||
hut was a little raised. He sat down.
|
||||
His head began to ache in an unwonted manner, and,
|
||||
fancying himself weary by reason of the broken rests of
|
||||
the preceding nights, Oak decided to get up, open the
|
||||
slide, and then allow himself to fall asleep. He fell
|
||||
asleep, however, without having performed the necessary
|
||||
preliminary.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user