1,980 research outputs found

    Debt contracts with ex-ante and ex-post asymmetric information: an example.

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    We consider a simple model of lending and borrowing combining two informational problems: adverse selection and costly state verification. Our analysis highlights the interaction between these two informational problems. We notably show that the higher the monitoring cost, the less discriminating the optimal menu of contracts is.debt contracts, diversity of opinions, screening, costly monitoring, pooling.

    Red Clover in Monoculture or in Association with Grasses?

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    Sowing grass or clover under a cereal cover crop or after the harvest of the cereal is common practice, but there still are some questions about seed mixtures regarding monocultures or mixtures, especially when the fodder crop has to be productive for more than 2 years. In this experiment seed mixtures with clovers and grasses in a cereal cover situation were compared in terms of DM yield, energy and protein content and proportions of grass, clover and weeds

    Long-Distance Wind-Dispersal of Spores in a Fungal Plant Pathogen: Estimation of Anisotropic Dispersal Kernels from an Extensive Field Experiment

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    Given its biological significance, determining the dispersal kernel (i.e., the distribution of dispersal distances) of spore-producing pathogens is essential. Here, we report two field experiments designed to measure disease gradients caused by sexually- and asexually-produced spores of the wind-dispersed banana plant fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis. Gradients were measured during a single generation and over 272 traps installed up to 1000 m along eight directions radiating from a traceable source of inoculum composed of fungicide-resistant strains. We adjusted several kernels differing in the shape of their tail and tested for two types of anisotropy. Contrasting dispersal kernels were observed between the two types of spores. For sexual spores (ascospores), we characterized both a steep gradient in the first few metres in all directions and rare long-distance dispersal (LDD) events up to 1000 m from the source in two directions. A heavy-tailed kernel best fitted the disease gradient. Although ascospores distributed evenly in all directions, average dispersal distance was greater in two different directions without obvious correlation with wind patterns. For asexual spores (conidia), few dispersal events occurred outside of the source plot. A gradient up to 12.5 m from the source was observed in one direction only. Accordingly, a thin-tailed kernel best fitted the disease gradient, and anisotropy in both density and distance was correlated with averaged daily wind gust. We discuss the validity of our results as well as their implications in terms of disease diffusion and management strategy

    An entropy minimization approach to second-order variational mean-field games

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    We propose an entropy minimization viewpoint on variational mean-field games with diffusion and quadratic Hamiltonian. We carefully analyze the time discretization of such problems, establish Gamma-convergence results as the time step vanishes and propose an efficient algorithm relying on this entropic interpretation as well as on the Sinkhorn scaling algorithm

    Design aspects related to the reliability of the LHC beam dump kicker systems

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    The two LHC beam dump kicker systems consist each of 14 pulse generator and magnet subsystems. Their task is to extract on request the beams in synchronisation with the gap in the beam. This operation must be fail-safe to avoid disastrous consequences due to loss of the beam inside the LHC. Only a failing operation of one of the 14 pulse generators is allowed. To preserve this tolerance premature beam dumps are forced immediately after early detection of internal faults. However, these faults should occur rarely in order not to be a source of undesirable downtime of the LHC. The report determines first the level of reliability required for the main components of the system. In particular faults which could cause spontaneously non-synchronised beam dumps are identified. Then, technical solutions are evaluated on failure behaviour. Those having a most likely failure mode which does not cause dump triggers are favoured. These solutions need redundancy and are more complex but have the advantage to be fault tolerant. The design goal can be achieved with a combination of high quality components, redundant signal paths, fault tolerant subsystems, continuous surveillance and check-list validation tests before the start of the injection of beam in the LHC

    Automatic conditioning of the LHC injection kickers

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    The LHC injection systems, located near the interaction regions 2 and 8, comprise 4 fast pulsed kicker magnets (MKI) per ring to bring the beam onto the orbit. Each magnet is housed in a separate vacuum tank. Their nominal operating voltage is 54 kV, and the nominal pulse length 7.86 µs. To prepare these magnets for operation they are once assembled and baked out, gradually subjected to higher and higher voltages and greater pulse lengths, until their voltage holding capability is sufficiently beyond the nominal operating conditions. In the past this "conditioning" was carried out manually, and thus a manpower-intensive, and also technically not optimal procedure. To overcome these drawbacks a program has been developed, running in a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC), which has been used to condition the full suite of LHC injection kickers automatically
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