21,250 research outputs found
MODELING ECOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS ON TROPICAL FOREST MANAGEMENT: COMMENT
We comment on four aspects of Albers' [1] model of ecological constraints on tropical forest management. Albers structures her model in a highly asymmetric manner, with strong, uniform biases against development and in favor of preservation. Despite Albers' repeated claims that her model is "complete" and that it has significant implications for tropical forest management, we contend instead that the results of a truly general, empirically defensible model are inherently ambiguous. Spatial and intertemporal dimensions clearly matter, but they do not point as neatly in favor of preservation as Albers would have us believe. Note: Forthcoming in Journal of Environmental Economics and Managementforest, interdependence, irreversibility, management, uncertainty, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy, D81, Q15, Q23,
AS-204/LM-1 launch vehicle operational flight trajectory
Apollo Saturn-204/LM-1 launch vehicle operational flight trajector
Universality of Decay out of Superdeformed Bands in the 190 Mass Region
Superdeformed nuclei in the 190 mass region exhibit a striking universality
in their decay-out profiles. We show that this universality can be explained in
the two-level model of superdeformed decay as related to a strong separation of
energy scales: a higher scale related to the nuclear interactions, and a lower
scale caused by electromagnetic decay. Furthermore, we present the results of
the two-level model for all decays for which sufficient data are known,
including statistical extraction of the matrix element for tunneling through
the potential barrier.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. v2: some minor clarifications, minor correction
to Fig.
Spectra and binding energy predictions of chiral interactions for 7Li
Using the no-core shell model approach, we report on the first results for
7Li based on the next-to-next-to-leading order chiral nuclear interaction.
Both, two-nucleon and three-nucleon interactions are taken into account. We
show that the p-shell nuclei are sensitive to the subleading parts of the
chiral interactions including three-nucleon forces. Though chiral interactions
are soft, we do not observe overbinding for this p-shell nucleus and find a
realistic description for the binding energy, excitation spectrum and radius.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
A compact micro-wave synthesizer for transportable cold-atom interferometers
We present the realization of a compact micro-wave frequency synthesizer for
an atom interferometer based on stimulated Raman transitions, applied to
transportable inertial sensing. Our set-up is intended to address the hyperfine
transitions of Rubidium 87 atoms at 6.8 GHz. The prototype is evaluated both in
the time and the frequency domain by comparison with state-of-the-art frequency
references developed at LNE-SYRTE. In free-running mode, it features a residual
phase noise level of -65 dBrad$^2.Hz^{-1} at 10-Hz offset frequency and a white
phase noise level in the order of -120 dBrad^2.Hz^{-1} for Fourier frequencies
above 10 kHz. The phase noise effect on the sensitivity of the atomic
interferometer is evaluated for diverse values of cycling time, interrogation
time and Raman pulse duration. To our knowledge, the resulting contribution is
well below the sensitivity of any demonstrated cold atom inertial sensors based
on stimulated Raman transitions. The drastic improvement in terms of size,
simplicity and power consumption paves the way towards field and mobile
operations.Comment: accepted for publication in Review of Scientific Instruments, 6
pages, 4 figure
Manifestation of three-body forces in f7/2-shell nuclei
The traditional nuclear shell model approach is extended to include many-body
forces. The empirical Hamiltonian with a three-body force is constructed for
the identical nucleons on the 0f7/2 shell. Manifestations of the three-body
force in spectra, binding energies, seniority mixing, particle-hole symmetry,
electromagnetic and particle transition rates are investigated. It is shown
that in addition to the usual expansion of the valence space within the
tranditional two-body shell model, the three-body component in the Hamiltonian
can be an important part improving the quality of the theoretical approach.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS, HUMAN CAPITAL AND PRODUCTIVE EFFICIENCY: EVIDENCE FROM WEST AFRICAN FARMERS
Little empirical work has quantified the transitory effects of macroeconomic shocks on farm-level production behavior. We develop a simple analytical model to explain how macroeconomic shocks might temporarily divert managerial attention, thereby affecting farm-level productivity, but perhaps to different degrees and for different durations across production units. We then successfully test hypotheses from that model using panel data bracketing massive currency devaluation in the west African nation of Cote d'Ivoire. We find a transitory increase in mean plot-level technical inefficiency among Ivorien rice producers and considerable variation in the magnitude and persistence of this effect, attributable largely to ex ante complexity of operations, and the educational attainment and off-farm employment status of the plot manager.Labor and Human Capital, O1, Q12, Q18,
Extrapolation Method for the No-Core Shell Model
Nuclear many-body calculations are computationally demanding. An estimate of
their accuracy is often hampered by the limited amount of computational
resources even on present-day supercomputers. We provide an extrapolation
method based on perturbation theory, so that the binding energy of a large
basis-space calculation can be estimated without diagonalizing the Hamiltonian
in this space. The extrapolation method is tested for 3H and 6Li nuclei. It
will extend our computational abilities significantly and allow for reliable
error estimates.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, PRC accepte
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