8,217 research outputs found
Appropriating the Environment. How the European Institutions Received the Novel Idea of the Environment and Made it Their Own.
Environmental policy has become an important area of European Union (EU) policy making, even though it had not originally been foreseen in the Treaty of Rome. Its emergence in the early 1970s can be understood as a result of a transfer of the novel policy idea of the environment to the European level. This paper thus inquires into the emergence of a European environmental policy from a diffusion of ideas perspective. Rather than focusing on multi-level policy making it seeks to trace the diffusion of environmental ideas from the level of international organizations to the European Communities (EC) in the early 1970s. It analyzes how and why these new concepts were taken up by the European Communities and adapted to the specific institutional framework of the EC. Starting with a brief introduction into the historical context, the paper first explores the origins of the notion of the environment as a political concept emerging in the context of international organizations at the time. Secondly, an analysis of the first Environmental Action Programme of 1973 will be used to show how the EC conceptualized the environment, including the definition of problems and potential remedies. Thirdly, the origins of these ideas will be traced back to international models, from the UNESCO conference Man and the Biosphere in 1968 onwards. In a final step, the paper tries to explain the diffusion and reception of ideas. It examines how these ideas were received by the EC, which actors were involved in this process, and which mechanisms of diffusion played a role. The goal is thus to make a contribution to the debate about the transnational diffusion of ideas.environmental policy; Europeanization; Europeanization
On detecting oscillations of gamma rays into axion-like particles in turbulent and coherent magnetic fields
Background radiation fields pervade the Universe, and above a certain energy
any -ray flux emitted by an extragalactic source should be attenuated
due to pair production. The opacity could be alleviated if photons
oscillated into hypothetical axion-like particles (ALPs) in ambient magnetic
fields, leading to a -ray excess especially at high optical depths that
could be detected with imaging air Cherenkov telescopes (IACTs).
Here, we introduce a method to search for such a signal in -ray data
and to estimate sensitivities for future observations. Different magnetic
fields close to the -ray source are taken into account in which photons
can convert into ALPs that then propagate unimpeded over cosmological distances
until they re-convert in the magnetic field of the Milky Way. Specifically, we
consider the coherent field at parsec scales in a blazar jet as well as the
turbulent field inside a galaxy cluster. For the latter, we explicitly derive
the transversal components of a magnetic field with gaussian turbulence which
are responsible for the photon-ALP mixing. To illustrate the method, we apply
it to a mock IACT array with characteristics similar to the Cherenkov Telescope
Array and investigate the dependence of the sensitivity to detect a
-ray excess on the magnetic-field parameters.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures. Published in JCA
A Study of Energy and Locality Effects using Space-filling Curves
The cost of energy is becoming an increasingly important driver for the
operating cost of HPC systems, adding yet another facet to the challenge of
producing efficient code. In this paper, we investigate the energy implications
of trading computation for locality using Hilbert and Morton space-filling
curves with dense matrix-matrix multiplication. The advantage of these curves
is that they exhibit an inherent tiling effect without requiring specific
architecture tuning. By accessing the matrices in the order determined by the
space-filling curves, we can trade computation for locality. The index
computation overhead of the Morton curve is found to be balanced against its
locality and energy efficiency, while the overhead of the Hilbert curve
outweighs its improvements on our test system.Comment: Proceedings of the 2014 IEEE International Parallel & Distributed
Processing Symposium Workshops (IPDPSW
Visualisation of semantic architectural information within a game engine environment
Because of the importance of graphics and information within the domain of architecture, engineering and construction (AEC), an appropriate combination of visualisation technology and information management technology is of utter importance in the development of appropriately supporting design and construction applications. We therefore started an investigation of two of the newest developments in these domains, namely game engine technology and semantic web technology. This paper documents part of this research, containing a review and comparison of the most prominent game engines and documenting our architectural semantic web. A short test-case illustrates how both can be combined to enhance information visualisation for architectural design and construction
Extending the design process into the knowledge of the world
Research initiatives throughout history have shown how a designer typically makes associations and references to a vast amount of knowledge based on experiences to make decisions. With the increasing usage of information systems in our everyday lives, one might imagine an information system that provides designers access to the ‘architectural memories’ of other architectural designers during the design process, in addition to their own physical architectural memory. In this paper, we discuss how the increased adoption of semantic web technologies might advance this idea. We briefly discuss how such a semantic web of building information can be set up, and how this can be linked to a wealth of information freely available in the Linked Open Data (LOD) cloud
Design thinking support: information systems versus reasoning
Numerous attempts have been made to conceive and implement appropriate information systems to support architectural designers in their creative design thinking processes. These information systems aim at providing support in very diverse ways: enabling designers to make diverse kinds of visual representations of a design, enabling them to make complex calculations and simulations which take into account numerous relevant parameters in the design context, providing them with loads of information and knowledge from all over the world, and so forth. Notwithstanding the continued efforts to develop these information systems, they still fail to provide essential support in the core creative activities of architectural designers. In order to understand why an appropriately effective support from information systems is so hard to realize, we started to look into the nature of design thinking and on how reasoning processes are at play in this design thinking. This investigation suggests that creative designing rests on a cyclic combination of abductive, deductive and inductive reasoning processes. Because traditional information systems typically target only one of these reasoning processes at a time, this could explain the limited applicability and usefulness of these systems. As research in information technology is increasingly targeting the combination of these reasoning modes, improvements may be within reach for design thinking support by information systems
Quantum contextuality for rational vectors
The Kochen-Specker theorem states that noncontextual hidden variable models
are inconsistent with the quantum predictions for every yes-no question on a
qutrit, corresponding to every projector in three dimensions. It has been
suggested [D. A. Meyer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 3751 (1999)] that the
inconsistency would disappear when we are restricted to projectors on unit
vectors with rational components; that noncontextual hidden variables could
reproduce the quantum predictions for rational vectors. Here we show that a
qutrit state with rational components violates an inequality valid for
noncontextual hidden-variable models [A. A. Klyachko et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
101, 020403 (2008)] using rational projectors. This shows that the
inconsistency remains even when using only rational vectors.Comment: REVTeX4-1, 1 pag
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