10,111 research outputs found
Thermodynamic versus Topological Phase Transitions: Cusp in the Kert\'esz Line
We present a study of phase transitions of the Curie--Weiss Potts model at
(inverse) temperature , in presence of an external field . Both
thermodynamic and topological aspects of these transitions are considered. For
the first aspect we complement previous results and give an explicit equation
of the thermodynamic transition line in the -- plane as well as the
magnitude of the jump of the magnetization (for . The signature
of the latter aspect is characterized here by the presence or not of a giant
component in the clusters of a Fortuin--Kasteleyn type representation of the
model. We give the equation of the Kert\'esz line separating (in the
-- plane) the two behaviours. As a result, we get that this line
exhibits, as soon as , a very interesting cusp where it
separates from the thermodynamic transition line
Surface penetrators for planetary exploration: Science rationale and development program
Work on penetrators for planetary exploration is summarized. In particular, potential missions, including those to Mars, Mercury, the Galilean satellites, comets, and asteroids are described. A baseline penetrator design for the Mars mission is included, as well as potential instruments and their status in development. Penetration tests in soft soil and basalt to study material eroded from the penetrator; changes in the structure, composition, and physical properties of the impacted soil; seismic coupling; and penetrator deflection caused by impacting rocks, are described. Results of subsystem studies and tests are given for design of entry decelerators, high-g components, thermal control, data acquisition, and umbilical cable deployment
Multispectral determination of soil moisture
The edited Guymon soil moisture data collected on August 2, 5, 14, 17, 1978 were grouped into four field cover types for statistical analysis. These are the bare, milo with rows parallel to field of view, milo with rows perpendicular to field of view and alfalfa cover groups. There are 37, 22, 24 and 14 observations respectively in each group for each sensor channel and each soil moisture layer. A subset of these data called the 'five cover set' (VEG5) limited the scatterometer data to the 15 deg look angle and was used to determine discriminant functions and combined group regressions
A Way Out of the Quantum Trap
We review Event Enhanced Quantum Theory (EEQT). In Section 1 we address the
question "Is Quantum Theory the Last Word". In particular we respond to some of
recent challenging staments of H.P. Stapp. We also discuss a possible future of
the quantum paradigm - see also Section 5. In Section 2 we give a short sketch
of EEQT. Examples are given in Section 3. Section 3.3 discusses a completely
new phenomenon - chaos and fractal-like phenomena caused by a simultaneous
"measurement" of several non-commuting observables (we include picture of
Barnsley's IFS on unit sphere of a Hilbert space). In Section 4 we answer
"Frequently Asked Questions" concerning EEQT.Comment: Replacement. Corrected affiliation. Latex, one .jpg figure. To appear
in Proc. Conf. Relativistic Quantum Measurements, Napoli 1998, Ed. F.
Petruccion
Space capsule Patent
Manned space capsule configuration for orbital flight and atmospheric reentr
Violence against female sex workers in Karnataka state, south India: impact on health, and reductions in violence following an intervention program.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Violence against female sex workers (FSWs) can impede HIV prevention efforts and contravenes their human rights. We developed a multi-layered violence intervention targeting policy makers, secondary stakeholders (police, lawyers, media), and primary stakeholders (FSWs), as part of wider HIV prevention programming involving >60,000 FSWs in Karnataka state. This study examined if violence against FSWs is associated with reduced condom use and increased STI/HIV risk, and if addressing violence against FSWs within a large-scale HIV prevention program can reduce levels of violence against them. METHODS: FSWs were randomly selected to participate in polling booth surveys (PBS 2006-2008; short behavioural questionnaires administered anonymously) and integrated behavioural-biological assessments (IBBAs 2005-2009; administered face-to-face). RESULTS: 3,852 FSWs participated in the IBBAs and 7,638 FSWs participated in the PBS. Overall, 11.0% of FSWs in the IBBAs and 26.4% of FSWs in the PBS reported being beaten or raped in the past year. FSWs who reported violence in the past year were significantly less likely to report condom use with clients (zero unprotected sex acts in previous month, 55.4% vs. 75.5%, adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 0.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.3 to 0.5, p < 0.001); to have accessed the HIV intervention program (ever contacted by peer educator, 84.9% vs. 89.6%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.0, p = 0.04); or to have ever visited the project sexual health clinic (59.0% vs. 68.1%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.6 to 1.0, p = 0.02); and were significantly more likely to be infected with gonorrhea (5.0% vs. 2.6%, AOR 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.3, p = 0.02). By the follow-up surveys, significant reductions were seen in the proportions of FSWs reporting violence compared with baseline (IBBA 13.0% vs. 9.0%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.5 to 0.9 p = 0.01; PBS 27.3% vs. 18.9%, crude OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4 to 0.5, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This program demonstrates that a structural approach to addressing violence can be effectively delivered at scale. Addressing violence against FSWs is important for the success of HIV prevention programs, and for protecting their basic human rights
Factor demand linkages, technology shocks, and the business cycle
This paper argues that factor demand linkages can be important for the transmission of both sectoral and aggregate shocks. We show this using a panel of highly disaggregated manufacturing sectors together with sectoral structural VARs. When sectoral interactions are explicitly accounted for, a contemporaneous technology shock to all manufacturing sectors implies a positive response in both output and hours at the aggregate level. Otherwise there is a negative correlation, as in much of the existing literature. Furthermore, we find that technology shocks are important drivers of the business cycle
Random Walks Along the Streets and Canals in Compact Cities: Spectral analysis, Dynamical Modularity, Information, and Statistical Mechanics
Different models of random walks on the dual graphs of compact urban
structures are considered. Analysis of access times between streets helps to
detect the city modularity. The statistical mechanics approach to the ensembles
of lazy random walkers is developed. The complexity of city modularity can be
measured by an information-like parameter which plays the role of an individual
fingerprint of {\it Genius loci}.
Global structural properties of a city can be characterized by the
thermodynamical parameters calculated in the random walks problem.Comment: 44 pages, 22 figures, 2 table
Non-Markovian dynamics for bipartite systems
We analyze the appearance of non-Markovian effects in the dynamics of a
bipartite system coupled to a reservoir, which can be described within a class
of non-Markovian equations given by a generalized Lindblad structure. A novel
master equation, which we term quantum Bloch-Boltzmann equation, is derived,
describing both motional and internal states of a test particle in a quantum
framework. When due to the preparation of the system or to decoherence effects
one of the two degrees of freedom is amenable to a classical treatment and not
resolved in the final measurement, though relevant for the interaction with the
reservoir, non-Markovian behaviors such as stretched exponential or power law
decay of coherences can be put into evidence.Comment: published version, 15 pages, revtex, no figure
Lyapunov exponents and transport in the Zhang model of Self-Organized Criticality
We discuss the role played by the Lyapunov exponents in the dynamics of
Zhang's model of Self-Organized Criticality. We show that a large part of the
spectrum (slowest modes) is associated with the energy transpor in the lattice.
In particular, we give bounds on the first negative Lyapunov exponent in terms
of the energy flux dissipated at the boundaries per unit of time. We then
establish an explicit formula for the transport modes that appear as diffusion
modes in a landscape where the metric is given by the density of active sites.
We use a finite size scaling ansatz for the Lyapunov spectrum and relate the
scaling exponent to the scaling of quantities like avalanche size, duration,
density of active sites, etc ...Comment: 33 pages, 6 figures, 1 table (to appear
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