7,263 research outputs found
'Alive after five' : constructing the neoliberal night in Newcastle upon Tyne.
The development of the ‘night-time economy’ in the UK through the 1990s has been associated with neoliberal urban governance. Academics have, however, begun to question the use and the scope of the concept ‘neoliberalism’. In this paper, I identify two common approaches to studying neoliberalism, one exploring neoliberalism as a series of policy networks, the other exploring neoliberalism as the governance of subjectivities. I argue that to understand the urban night, we need to explore both these senses of ‘neoliberalism’.
As a case study, I take the ‘Alive After Five’ project, organised by the Business Improvement District in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, which sought to extend shopping hours in order to encourage more people to use the city at night. Drawing from Actor-Network-Theory, I explore the planning, the translation, and the practice of this new project. In doing so, I explore the on-going nature and influence of neoliberal policy on the urban night in the UK
Effect of Particle-Hole Asymmetry on the Mott-Hubbard Metal-Insulator Transition
The Mott-Hubbard metal-insulator transition is one of the most important
problems in correlated electron systems. In the past decade, much progress has
been made on examining a particle-hole symmetric form of the transition in the
Hubbard model with dynamical mean field theory where it was found that the
electronic self energy develops a pole at the transition. We examine the
particle-hole asymmetric metal-insulator transition in the Falicov-Kimball
model, and find that a number of features change when the noninteracting
density of states has a finite bandwidth. Since, generically particle-hole
symmetry is broken in real materials, our results have an impact on
understanding the metal-insulator transition in real materials.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Tone-activated, remote, alert communication system
Pocket sized transmitter, frequency modulated by crystal derived tones, with integral loop antenna provides police with easy operating alert signal communicator which uses patrol car radio to relay signal. Communication channels are time shared by several patrol units
Bethe Ansatz solution of a new class of Hubbard-type models
We define one-dimensional particles with generalized exchange statistics. The
exact solution of a Hubbard-type Hamiltonian constructed with such particles is
achieved using the Coordinate Bethe Ansatz. The chosen deformation of the
statistics is equivalent to the presence of a magnetic field produced by the
particles themselves, which is present also in a ``free gas'' of these
particles.Comment: 4 pages, revtex. Essentially modified versio
Physical Conditions of Fast Glacier Flow 2:Variable Extent of Anisotropic Ice and Soft Basal Sediment From Seismic Reflection Data Acquired on Store Glacier, West Greenland
Outlet glaciers of the Greenland Ice Sheet transport ice from the interior to the ocean and contribute directly to sea level rise because because discharge and ablation often exceed the accumulation. To develop a better understanding of these fast flowing glaciers, we investigate the basal conditions of Store Glacier, a large outlet glacier flowing into Uummannaq Fjord in West Greenland. We use two crossing seismic profiles acquired near the centreline, 30 km upstream of the calving front, to interpret the physical nature of the ice and bed. We identify one notably englacial and two notably subglacial seismic reflections on both profiles. The englacial reflection represents a change in crystal orientation fabric, interpreted to be the Holocene?Wisconsin transition. From Amplitude Versus Angle (AVA) analysis we infer that the deepest ?80 m of ice of the parallel-flow profile below this reflection is anisotropic with an enhancement of simple shear of ?2. The ice is underlain by ?45 m of unconsolidated sediments, below which there is a strong reflection caused by the transition to consolidated sediments. In the across-flow profile subglacial properties vary over small scale and the polarity of the ice?bed reflection switches from positive to negative. We interpret these as patches of different basal slipperiness associated with variable amounts of water. Our results illustrate variability in basal properties, and hence ice-bed coupling, at a spatial scale of ?100 m, highlighting the need for direct observations of the bed to improve the basal boundary conditions in ice-dynamic modelspublishersversionPeer reviewe
Gravitational signature of Jupiter’s internal dynamics
Telescopic observations and space missions to Jupiter have provided vast information about Jupiter's cloud level winds, but the depth to which these winds penetrate has remained an ongoing mystery. Scheduled to be launched in 2011, the Jupiter orbiter Juno will make high-resolution observations of Jupiter's gravity field. In this paper we show that these measurements are sensitive to the depth of the internal winds. We use dynamical models ranging from an idealized thermal wind balance analysis, using the observed cloud-top winds, to a full general circulation model (GCM). We relate the depth of the dynamics to the external gravity spectrum for different internal wind structure scenarios. In particular, we predict that substantial Jovian winds below a depth of 500 km would lead to detectable (milligal-level) gravity anomalies with respect to the expected gravity for a planet in solid body rotation
On Quantum Groups in the Hubbard Model with Phonons
The correct Hamiltonian for an extended Hubbard model with quantum group
symmetry as introduced by A. Montorsi and M. Rasetti is derived for a
D-dimensional lattice. It is shown that the superconducting SUq(2) holds as a
true quantum symmetry only for D = 1 and that terms of higher order in the
fermionic operators in addition to phonons are required for a quantum symmetric
hamiltonian. The condition for quantum symmetry is "half filling" and there is
no local electron-phonon coupling. A discussion of Quantum symmetries in
general is given in a formalism that should be readily accessible to non
Hopf-algebraists.Comment: latex, 17 page
On the derivation of the t-J model: electron spectrum and exchange interactions in narrow energy bands
A derivation of the t-J model of a highly-correlated solid is given starting
from the general many-electron Hamiltonian with account of the
non-orthogonality of atomic wave functions. Asymmetry of the Hubbard subbands
(i.e. of ``electron'' and ``hole''cases) for a nearly half-filled bare band is
demonstrated. The non-orthogonality corrections are shown to lead to occurrence
of indirect antiferromagnetic exchange interaction even in the limit of the
infinite on-site Coulomb repulsion. Consequences of this treatment for the
magnetism formation in narrow energy bands are discussed. Peculiarities of the
case of ``frustrated'' lattices, which contain triangles of nearest neighbors,
are considered.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
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