1,554 research outputs found

    Economic Evaluation of Water Supply Alternatives: A Mathematical Programming Approach

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    The main task of this paper is to propose a method for deriving regional water supply functions, taking into account a variety of supply alternatives and some engineering and environmental aspects of each. The purpose is to provide a framework for decisions about the efficient use of a region's water resources. The first section deals with distinctions between engineering and economics. The notion of supply-demand equilibrium and the economic efficiency properties of this equilibrium are reviewed. The second section surveys the "State-of-the-Art" in regional water supply, describing a number of alternative sources of supply. The third section considers how, for a region having just two inputs, each point on a supply curve can be derived as the solution to a nonlinear program to minimize the cost of obtaining a given quantity of water. The procedure is however perfectly general, and in the fourth section an application is made to a hypothetical region with several sources of supply, each having several inputs, with constraints on their use, and so on. An interesting feature of the model is that it can -- and does, in the application -- reflect environmental constraints as well. For ease in computation the production relations are linearized in order to use a linear programming solution algorithm. Based on the assumed production relations and resource constraints, a well behaved regional water supply function is derived

    Fecundity compensation and tolerance to a sterilizing pathogen in <em>Daphnia</em>

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    Hosts are armed with several lines of defence in the battle against parasites: they may prevent the establishment of infection, reduce parasite growth once infected or persevere through mechanisms that reduce the damage caused by infection, called tolerance. Studies on tolerance in animals have focused on mortality, and sterility tolerance has not been investigated experimentally. Here, we tested for genetic variation in the multiple steps of defence when the invertebrate Daphnia magna is infected with the sterilizing bacterial pathogen Pasteuria ramosa: anti-infection resistance, anti-growth resistance and the ability to tolerate sterilization once infected. When exposed to nine doses of a genetically diverse pathogen inoculum, six host genotypes varied in their average susceptibility to infection and in their parasite loads once infected. How host fecundity changed with increasing parasite loads did not vary between genotypes, indicating that there was no genetic variation for this measure of fecundity tolerance. However, genotypes differed in their level of fecundity compensation under infection, and we discuss how, by increasing host fitness without targeting parasite densities, fecundity compensation is consistent with the functional definition of tolerance. Such infection-induced life-history shifts are not traditionally considered to be part of the immune response, but may crucially reduce harm (in terms of fitness loss) caused by disease, and are a distinct source of selection on pathogens

    On Measures of Natural Resource Scarcity

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    Several questions concerning measures of natural resource scarcity are considered with the aid of optimal control models of exploration and extraction. It is shown that the unit cost of extraction is not a sufficient indicator of resource scarcity, because it neglects demand generally and the value of future output foregone in particular. Under plausible conditions, though, cost will rise as stock is depleted. Resource rent is also not fully satisfactory as an indicator of scarcity, since, contrary to recent suggestions, it may fall if cost rises as the stock is depleted. The best measure of scarcity is probably the market price of the resource. Introducing exploration into a model of optimal extraction leads to a practical proposal for estimating rent from exploration cost data

    PCV117 Identification of Hospital Guidelines for Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) in Hospitalized Non-Surgical Medically-Ill Patients in the United States

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    Logarithmic Corrections to Scaling in the XY2XY_2--Model

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    We study the distribution of partition function zeroes for the XYXY--model in two dimensions. In particular we find the scaling behaviour of the end of the distribution of zeroes in the complex external magnetic field plane in the thermodynamic limit (the Yang--Lee edge) and the form for the density of these zeroes. Assuming that finite--size scaling holds, we show that there have to exist logarithmic corrections to the leading scaling behaviour of thermodynamic quantities in this model. These logarithmic corrections are also manifest in the finite--size scaling formulae and we identify them numerically. The method presented here can be used to check the compatibility of scaling behaviour of odd and even thermodynamic functions in other models too.Comment: 3 pages, latex, 2 figure

    Electron transport in the dye sensitized nanocrystalline cell

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    Dye sensitised nanocrystalline solar cells (Gr\"{a}tzel cells) have achieved solar-to-electrical energy conversion efficiencies of 12% in diffuse daylight. The cell is based on a thin film of dye-sensitised nanocrystalline TiO2_2 interpenetrated by a redox electrolyte. The high surface area of the TiO2_2 and the spectral characteristics of the dye allow the device to harvest 46% of the solar energy flux. One of the puzzling features of dye-sensitised nano-crystalline solar cells is the slow electron transport in the titanium dioxide phase. The available experimental evidence as well as theoretical considerations suggest that the driving force for electron collection at the substrate contact arises primarily from the concentration gradient, ie the contribution of drift is negligible. The transport of electrons has been characterised by small amplitude pulse or intensity modulated illumination. Here, we show how the transport of electrons in the Gr\"{a}tzel cell can be described quantitatively using trap distributions obtained from a novel charge extraction method with a one-dimensional model based on solving the continuity equation for the electron density. For the first time in such a model, a back reaction with the I3−_3^- ions in the electrolyte that is second order in the electron density has been included.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, invited talk at the workshop 'Nanostructures in Photovoltaics' to appear in Physica

    Microwave conductivity of a d-wave superconductor disordered by extended impurities: a real-space renormalization group approach

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    Using a real-space renormalization group (RSRG) technique, we compute the microwave conductivity of a d-wave superconductor disordered by extended impurities. To do this, we invoke a semiclassical approximation which naturally accesses the Andreev bound states localized near each impurity. Tunneling corrections (which are captured using the RSRG) lead to a delocalization of these quasiparticles and an associated contribution to the microwave conductivity.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. 2 figures added to previous versio

    Sequential drain amylase to guide drain removal following pancreatectomy

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    BACKGROUND: Although used as criterion for early drain removal, postoperative day (POD) 1 drain fluid amylase (DFA) ≤ 5000 U/L has low negative predictive value for clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula (CR-POPF). It was hypothesized that POD3 DFA ≤ 350 could provide further information to guide early drain removal. METHODS: Data from a pancreas surgery consortium database for pancreatoduodenectomy and distal pancreatectomy patients were analyzed retrospectively. Those patients without drains or POD 1 and 3 DFA data were excluded. Patients with POD1 DFA ≤ 5000 were divided into groups based on POD3 DFA: Group A (≤350) and Group B (>350). Operative characteristics and 60-day outcomes were compared using chi-square test. RESULTS: Among 687 patients in the database, all data were available for 380. Fifty-five (14.5%) had a POD1 DFA > 5000. Among 325 with POD1 DFA ≤ 5000, 254 (78.2%) were in Group A and 71 (21.8%) in Group B. Complications (35 (49.3%) vs 87 (34.4%); p = 0.021) and CR-POPF (13 (18.3%) vs 10 (3.9%); p < 0.001) were more frequent in Group B. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with POD1 DFA ≤ 5000, POD3 DFA ≤ 350 may be a practical test to guide safe early drain removal. Further prospective testing may be useful

    Logarithmic Corrections to Scaling in the Two Dimensional XYXY--Model

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    By expressing thermodynamic functions in terms of the edge and density of Lee--Yang zeroes, we relate the scaling behaviour of the specific heat to that of the zero field magnetic susceptibility in the thermodynamic limit of the XYXY--model in two dimensions. Assuming that finite--size scaling holds, we show that the conventional Kosterlitz--Thouless scaling predictions for these thermodynamic functions are not mutually compatable unless they are modified by multiplicative logarithmic corrections. We identify these logarithmic corrections analytically in the case of the specific heat and numerically in the case of the susceptibility. The techniques presented here are general and can be used to check the compatibility of scaling behaviour of odd and even thermodynamic functions in other models too.Comment: 11 pages, latex, 4 figure

    Four-nucleon system with Δ\Delta-isobar excitation

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    The four-nucleon bound state and scattering below three-body breakup threshold are described based on the realistic coupled-channel potential CD Bonn + Δ\Delta which allows the excitation of a single nucleon to a Δ\Delta isobar. The Coulomb repulsion between protons is included. In the four-nucleon system the two-baryon coupled-channel potential yields effective two-, three- and four-nucleon forces, mediated by the Δ\Delta isobar and consistent with each other and with the underlying two-nucleon force. The effect of the four-nucleon force on the studied observables is much smaller than the effect of the three-nucleon force. The inclusion of the Δ\Delta isobar is unable to resolve the existing discrepancies with the experimental data.Comment: 11 figures, to be published in Phys. Lett.
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