Sage as a quaternary color
  slate
  sage[1]
  citron

Sage is a grey-green resembling that of dried sage leaves. As a quaternary color, it is an equal mix of the tertiary colors citron and slate (both confusingly also known as olive in different sources).[2][3]

References [link]

  1. ^ RGB approximations of RYB tertiary colors, using cubic interpolation.[1] The colors displayed here are substantially paler than the true colors a mixture of paints would produce.
  2. ^ William J. Miskella, 1928, Practical Color Simplified: A Handbook on Lacquering, Enameling, Coloring And Painting, pp
  3. ^ John Lemos, 1920, "Color Charts for the School Room", in School Arts, vol. 19, pp 580–584

See also [link]



https://wn.com/Sage_(color)

Sage (comics)

Sage, also known as Tessa, is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe. She has most often been associated with the X-Men and the Hellfire Club, whom she spied upon for Professor Charles Xavier.

A mutant, Sage possesses a number of mental abilities and was originally presented as the personal assistant to the Hellfire Club’s Sebastian Shaw, but an extended retcon revealed that she was one of the first mutants discovered by Professor Xavier. She has been a member of the original X-Men teams, the Excalibur, the Exiles, and a cross-dimensional X-Men team similar to the Exiles known as the X-Treme X-Men.

Publication history

Tessa first appeared in The X-Men #132 (April 1980), and was created by Chris Claremont and John Byrne.

Fictional character biography

Sage's exact country of origin remains unrevealed, but she claims to have come from a war-torn region. By the time she reaches young adulthood, she is living by herself in Afghanistan. Although she tries to keep out of the conflicts between the rebels and the government, she is willing to use her guns and other weapons on anything that poses a threat. One day, she feels called to a cave which is considered haunted by the locals. She hears a voice in her head that guides her deeper into the cavern, where she finds Charles Xavier, who is trapped underneath a pile of debris. His legs have been crushed during his battle with the alien Lucifer. Xavier senses that Sage is a mutant, and explains to her what her abilities mean. Sage says that this was about the same time as he located Beast, but in other accounts he found Sage first.

SageMath

SageMath (previously Sage or SAGE, System for Algebra and Geometry Experimentation) is mathematical software with features covering many aspects of mathematics, including algebra, combinatorics, numerical mathematics, number theory, and calculus.

The first version of SageMath was released on 24 February 2005 as free and open source software under the terms of the GNU General Public License, with the initial goals of creating an "open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica, and MATLAB". The originator and leader of the SageMath project, William Stein, is a mathematician at the University of Washington.

SageMath "uses a Python-like syntax," supporting procedural, functional and object-oriented constructs.

Features

Features of SageMath include:

  • A browser-based notebook for review and re-use of previous inputs and outputs, including graphics and text annotations. Compatible with Firefox, Opera, Konqueror, Google Chrome and Safari. Notebooks can be accessed locally or remotely and the connection can be secured with HTTPS.
  • JY

    Jy or JY may refer to:

    People

  • Jimmy Young (disc jockey) (born 1921), former BBC radio broadcaster
  • James Young (American musician) (born 1949), guitarist for Styx
  • Joey Yung (born 1980), Hong Kong cantopop singer
  • Other uses

  • Air Turks and Caicos, IATA airline designator JY
  • Jansky (symbol Jy), a non-SI unit of spectral flux density
  • Japanese yen, a currency unit
  • Jia Yu Channel, a 24-hour Mandarin subscription channel founded in Malaysia
  • Joyo

    Joyo may refer to:

  • Joyo (tribe) in Pakistan
  • Jōyō, Kyoto, a city in Japan
  • Jōyō, Fukuoka, a former town in Japan
  • Jōyō kanji, a set of characters used in Japanese writing
  • Joyo Bank, a banking company in Japan
  • Joyo.com, a Chinese website acquired by Amazon.com
  • Jōyō (nuclear reactor), a liquid metal research reactor
  • Jōyō (nuclear reactor)

    Jōyō (常陽) is a test sodium-cooled fast reactor located in Ōarai, Ibaraki, Japan, operated by the Japan Atomic Energy Agency. The name comes from the previous country name of the area around Ibaraki.

    It was made with the purpose of doing tests on and advancing the development of that type of reactor, as an irradiation test facility for construction materials. It also does tests with the nuclear fuel as well as activation experiments.

    The reactor has gone through 3 different core changes.

  • MK-I April 24, 1977 - January 1, 1982 (the power was 50-75 MWt)
  • MK-II November 22, 1982 - September 12, 1997. This core surpassed 50,000 hours of operating time with 100 MWt.
  • MK-III July 2, 2003–2007 (140-150 MWt).
  • The current core provides the neutron flux of 4×1015 cm−2s−1 for E>0.1 MeV.

    After an incident in 2007, the reactor is suspended for repairing, recovery works were planned to be completed in 2014.

    See also

  • Monju
  • Nuclear power in Japan
  • External links

  • Official site
  • T. Soga, W. Itagaki, Y. Kihara, Y. Maeda. Endeavor to improve in-pile testing techniques in the experimental fast reactor Joyo. / In-pile testing and instrumentation for development of generation-IV fuels and materials. Proceedings of a technical meeting held in Halden, Norway, 21–24 August 2012. - IAEA, 2013. - P. 107-122.
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×