1,095 research outputs found
Celibacy
Celibacy generically defined is the leading of one\u27s entire life outside the married state. But, for the purpose of clarity, it is best to treat the subject under each of its species - the involuntary and the voluntary
Decoupling of Photon Propagator in Compact QED
In compact QED quantum monopole fluctuations induce confinement by
expelling electric flux in a dual Meissner effect. Guided by Landau-Ginzburg
theory, one might guess that the inverse London penetration depth
---the only physical mass scale---equals the photon propagator
mass pole . I show this is not true. Indeed, in the Villain
approximation the monopole part of the partition function factorizes from the
photon part, whose dynamical variables are Dirac strings. Since Dirac strings
are gauge-variant structures, I conclude that is physically
irrelevant: it is not a blood relative of or any other quantity in
the gauge-invariant sector. This result is confirmed by numerical simulations
in the full theory, where is not sensitive to monopole prohibition
but essentially vanishes if Dirac strings are prohibited.Comment: (Postscript file fixed; see file header.) 4 pages, DOE/ER/40617-135
and LSUHEP-10-9
Phase transitions in self-dual generalizations of the Baxter-Wu model
We study two types of generalized Baxter-Wu models, by means of
transfer-matrix and Monte Carlo techniques. The first generalization allows for
different couplings in the up- and down triangles, and the second
generalization is to a -state spin model with three-spin interactions. Both
generalizations lead to self-dual models, so that the probable locations of the
phase transitions follow. Our numerical analysis confirms that phase
transitions occur at the self-dual points. For both generalizations of the
Baxter-Wu model, the phase transitions appear to be discontinuous.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figure
Dynamics at a smeared phase transition
We investigate the effects of rare regions on the dynamics of Ising magnets
with planar defects, i.e., disorder perfectly correlated in two dimensions. In
these systems, the magnetic phase transition is smeared because static
long-range order can develop on isolated rare regions. We first study an
infinite-range model by numerically solving local dynamic mean-field equations.
Then we use extremal statistics and scaling arguments to discuss the dynamics
beyond mean-field theory. In the tail region of the smeared transition the
dynamics is even slower than in a conventional Griffiths phase: the spin
autocorrelation function decays like a stretched exponential at intermediate
times before approaching the exponentially small equilibrium value following a
power law at late times.Comment: 10 pages, 8eps figures included, final version as publishe
Transport and Use of a Centaur Second Stage in Space
As nations continue to explore space, the desire to reduce costs will continue to grow. As a method of cost reduction, transporting and/or use of launch system components as integral components of missions may become more commonplace in the future. There have been numerous scenarios written for using launch vehicle components (primarily space shuttle used external tanks) as part of flight missions or future habitats. Future studies for possible uses of launch vehicle upper stages might include asteroid diverter using gravity orbital perturbation, orbiting station component, raw material at an outpost, and kinetic impactor. The LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was conceived as a low-cost means of determining whether water exists at the polar regions of the moon. Manifested as a secondary payload with the LRO (Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter) spacecraft aboard an Atlas V launch vehicle, LCROSS guided its spent Centaur Earth Departure Upper Stage (EDUS) into the lunar crater Cabeu's, as a kinetic impactor. This paper describes some of the challenges that the LCROSS project encountered in planning, designing, launching with and carrying the Centaur upper stage to the moon
Phylogenetic lineages in the Botryosphaeriaceae
Botryosphaeria is a species-rich genus with a cosmopolitan
distribution, commonly associated with dieback and cankers of woody plants. As
many as 18 anamorph genera have been associated with Botryosphaeria,
most of which have been reduced to synonymy under Diplodia (conidia
mostly ovoid, pigmented, thick-walled), or Fusicoccum (conidia mostly
fusoid, hyaline, thin-walled). However, there are numerous conidial anamorphs
having morphological characteristics intermediate between Diplodia
and Fusicoccum, and there are several records of species outside the
Botryosphaeriaceae that have anamorphs apparently typical of
Botryosphaeria s.str. Recent studies have also linked
Botryosphaeria to species with pigmented, septate ascospores, and
Dothiorella anamorphs, or Fusicoccum anamorphs with
Dichomera synanamorphs. The aim of this study was to employ DNA
sequence data of the 28S rDNA to resolve apparent lineages within the
Botryosphaeriaceae. From these data, 12 clades are recognised. Two of
these lineages clustered outside the Botryosphaeriaceae, namely
Diplodia-like anamorphs occurring on maize, which are best
accommodated in Stenocarpella (Diaporthales), as well as an
unresolved clade including species of
Camarosporium/Microdiplodia. We recognise 10 lineages within
the Botryosphaeriaceae, including an unresolved clade
(Diplodia/Lasiodiplodia/Tiarosporella),
Botryosphaeria s.str. (Fusicoccum anamorphs),
Macrophomina, Neoscytalidium gen. nov.,
Dothidotthia (Dothiorella anamorphs), Neofusicoccum
gen. nov. (Botryosphaeria-like teleomorphs, Dichomera-like
synanamorphs), Pseudofusicoccum gen. nov., Saccharata
(Fusicoccum- and Diplodia-like synanamorphs),
“Botryosphaeria” quercuum
(Diplodia-like anamorph), and Guignardia
(Phyllosticta anamorphs). Separate teleomorph and anamorph names are
not provided for newly introduced genera, even where both morphs are known.
The taxonomy of some clades and isolates (e.g. B. mamane) remains
unresolved due to the absence of ex-type cultures
Spatial Interaction Modelling of Cross-Region R&D Collaborations Empirical Evidence from the EU Framework Programmes
The focus of this study is on cross-region R&D collaboration networks in the
EU Framework Programmes (FP's). In contrast to most other empirical studies in
this field, we shift attention to regions as units of analysis, i.e. we use
aggregated data on research collaborations at the regional level. The objective
is to identify determinants of cross-region collaboration patterns. In
particular, we are interested whether geographical and technological distances
are significant determinants of interregional cooperation. Further we
investigate differences between intra-industry networks and public research
networks (i.e. universities and research organisations). The European coverage
is achieved by using data on 255 NUTS-2 regions of the 25 pre-2007 EU
member-states, as well as Norway and Switzerland. We adopt a Poisson spatial
interaction modelling perspective to analyse these questions. The dependent
variable is the intensity of collaborative interactions between two regions,
the independent variables are region-specific characteristics and variables
that measure the separation between two regions such as geographical or
technological distance. The results provide striking evidence that geographical
factors are important determinants of cross-region collaboration intensities,
but the effect of technological proximity is stronger. R&D collaborations occur
most often between organisations that are located close to each other in
technological space. Moreover geographical distance effects are significantly
higher for intra-industry than for public research collaborations.Comment: 27 pages; presented at the 1st ICC International Conference on
Network Modelling and Economic Systems, Lisbon, 200
Алкогольные виртуальные реальности. Девиртуализация синдрома зависимости от алкоголя
Представлен новый взгляд на синдром зависимости от алкоголя с позиций виртуалистики как на параллельную виртуальную реальность. Подробно освещена рассматриваемая проблема, описан разработанный автором метод лечения алкоголизма ФорсажТМ и показана его высокая эффективность.A new idea about syndrome of alcohol addiction as a parallel virtual reality is presented. The problem is discussed in detail, the original method of treatment of alcoholism Forsazh(tm) is described, its high efficacy is shown
On Estimating Conditional Conservatism
The concept of conditional conservatism (asymmetric earnings timeliness) has provided new insight into financial reporting and stimulated considerable research since Basu (1997). Patatoukas and Thomas (2011) report bias in firm-level cross-sectional asymmetry estimates that they attribute to scale effects. We do not agree with their advice that researchers should avoid conditional conservatism estimates and inferences from research based on such estimates. Our theoretical and empirical analyses suggest the explanation is a correlated omitted variables problem that can be addressed in a straightforward fashion, including fixed-effects regression. Correlation between the expected components of earnings and returns biases estimates of how earnings incorporate the information contained in returns. Further, the correlation varies with returns, biasing asymmetric timeliness estimates. When firm-specific effects are taken into account, estimates do not exhibit the bias, are statistically and economically significant, are consistent with priors, and behave as a predictable function of book-to-market, size, and leverage
Plants for planting ; indirect evidence for the movement of a serious forest pathogen, Teratosphaeria destructans, in Asia
Fungal diseases caused by native pathogens and pathogens introduced with planting stock have a significant impact on exotic plantation forestry in the tropics. Teratosphaeria destructans (formerly Kirramyces destructans) is a serious pathogen causing leaf, bud and shoot blight diseases of Eucalyptus spp. in plantations in the sub-tropics and tropics of south-east Asia. This pathogen was first discovered in Indonesia in 1995 and has subsequently spread to Thailand, China, Vietnam and East Timor. The biology, ecology and genetics of this important pathogen have not been explored yet. The objective of this study was, thus, to determine the genetic diversity and movement of T. destructans throughout south-east Asia using multi-gene phylogenies and microsatellite markers. Out of nine gene regions only two microsatellite markers detected a very low nucleotide polymorphism between isolates; seven other gene regions, ITS, β-tubulin, EF1-α, CHS, ATP6 and two microsatellite loci, reflected genetic uniformity. The two polymorphic molecular markers resolved six haplotypes among isolates from Indonesia and only a single haplotype elsewhere in Asia. The low diversity observed among isolates in the region of the first outbreak is as expected for a small founder population. The spread of a single clone over large distances throughout the region supports the hypothesis of spread via the human-mediated movement of germplasm.Murdoch University Doctoral Research Scholarship, University of Pretoria
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