42,721 research outputs found
A continuum-microscopic method based on IRBFs and control volume scheme for viscoelastic fluid flows
A numerical computation of continuum-microscopic model for visco-elastic flows based on the Integrated Radial Basis Function (IRBF) Control Volume and the Stochastic Simulation Techniques (SST) is reported in this paper. The macroscopic flow equations are closed by a stochastic equation for the extra stress at the microscopic level. The former are discretised by a 1D-IRBF-CV method while the latter is integrated with Euler explicit or Predictor-Corrector schemes. Modelling is very efficient as it is based on Cartesian grid, while the integrated RBF approach enhances both the stability of the procedure and the accuracy of the solution. The proposed method is demonstrated with the solution of the start-up Couette flow of the Hookean and FENE dumbbell model fluids
Large-scale energy spectra in surface quasi-geostrophic turbulence
The large-scale energy spectrum in two-dimensional turbulence governed by the
surface quasi-geostrophic (SQG) equation
is studied. The nonlinear transfer of this system conserves the two quadratic
quantities and
(kinetic energy), where denotes
a spatial average. The energy density is bounded and its spectrum
is shallower than in the inverse-transfer range. For
bounded turbulence, in the low-wavenumber region can be bounded by
where is a constant independent of but dependent on the domain
size. Results from numerical simulations confirming the theoretical predictions
are presented.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, to appear in JF
Lunar nuclear power feasibility study
Based on review of literature and on limited examination of nuclear power systems now proposed for space applications, a nuclear fission reactor powered system should be seriously considered as the first large (order of 50 kWe or greater) power system to be placed on a lunar base. With relatively minor modifications, the major one being addition of a cooled side shield, the proposed 100 kWe product of the SP-100 Program could be adapted for use on a lunar base
Sustainable Growth and Ethics: a Study of Business Ethics in Vietnam Between Business Students and Working Adults
Sustainable growth is not only the ultimate goal of business corporations but also the primary target of local governments as well as regional and global economies. One of the cornerstones of sustainable growth is ethics. An ethical organizational culture provides support to achieve sustainable growth. Ethical leaders and employees have great potential for positive influence on decisions and behaviors that lead to sustainability. Ethical behavior, therefore, is expected of everyone in the modern workplace. As a result, companies devote many resources and training programs to make sure their employees live according to the high ethical standards. This study provides an analysis of Vietnamese business students’ level of ethical maturity based on gender, education, work experience, and ethics training. The results of data from 260 business students compared with 704 working adults in Vietnam demonstrate that students have a significantly higher level of ethical maturity. Furthermore, gender and work experience are significant factors in ethical maturity. While more educated respondents and those who had completed an ethics course did have a higher level of ethical maturity, the results were not statistically significant. Analysis of the results along with suggestions and implications are provided
Novel duality in disorder driven local quantum criticality
We find that competition between random Kondo and random magnetic
correlations results in a quantum phase transition from a local Fermi liquid to
a spin liquid. The local charge susceptibility turns out to have exactly the
same critical exponent as the local spin susceptibility, suggesting novel
duality between the Kondo singlet phase and the critical local moment state
beyond the Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson symmetry breaking framework. This leads us to
propose an enhanced symmetry at the local quantum critical point, described by
an O(4) vector for spin and charge. The symmetry enhancement serves mechanism
of electron fractionalization in critical impurity dynamics, where such
fractionalized excitations are identified with topological excitations
Estimation and Inference for Threshold Effects in Panel Data Stochastic Frontier Models
One of the most enduring problems in cross-section or panel data models is heterogeneity among individual observations. Different approaches have been proposed to deal with this issue, but threshold regression models offer intuitively appealing econometric methods to account for heterogeneity. We propose three different estimators that can accommodate multiple thresholds. The first two, allowing respectively for fixed and random effects, assume that the firms specific inefficiency scores are time-invariant while the third one allows for time-varying inefficiency scores. We rely on a likelihood ratio test with m − 1 regimes under the null against m regimes. Testing for threshold effects is problematic because of the presence of a nuisance parameter which is not identified under the null hypothesis. This is known as Davies problem. We apply procedures pioneered by Hansen (1999) to test for the presence of threshold effects and to obtain a confidence set for the threshold parameter. These procedures specifically account for Davies problem and are based on non-standard asymptotic theory. Finally, we perform an empirical application of the fixed effects model on a panel of Quebec dairy farms. The specifications involving a trend and the Cobb- Douglas and Translog functional forms support three thresholds or four regimes based on farm size. The efficiency scores vary between 0.95 and 1 in models with and without thresholds. Therefore, productivity differences across farm sizes are most likely due to technological heterogeneity.Stochastic frontier models, threshold regression, technical efficiency, bootstrap, dairy production, C12, C13, C23, C52, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,
Pediatric Liver Transplantation: Then and Now
This paper reviews the past 50 years of liver transplantation in children from the perspective of patient demographics, perioperative patient management, surgical techniques, immunosuppression and patient outcomes
- …
