7,890 research outputs found
On the Evaluation of the Mechanical Behaviour of Structural Glass Elements
Glass can be considered to be a high-technology engineering material with a
multifunctional potential for structural applications. However, the conventional approach to the use
of glass is often based only on its properties of transparency and isolation. It is thus highly
appropriate and necessary to study the mechanical behaviour of this material and to develop
adequate methods and models leading to its characterisation. It is evident that the great potential of
growth for structural glass applications is an important opportunity of development for the glass
industry and the building/construction sectors. The work presented in this paper is a reflection of
this conclusion. The authors shortly present the state-of-the-art on the application of glass as a
structural element in building and construction, and refer to other potential fields of application and
available glass materials. The experimental procedures and methods adopted in three-point bending
tests performed on 500 Ă 100 [mm2] float, laminated and tempered glass specimens with
thicknesses between 4 and 19 mm are thoroughly described. The authors evaluated the mechanical
strength and stiffness of glass for structural applications. This work contributes to a deeper
knowledge of the properties of this material
The matching method for treatment evaluation with selective participation and inelligibles
The matching method for treatment evaluation does not balance selective unobserved differences between treated and non-treated. We derive a simple correction term if there is an instrument that shifts the treatment probability to zero in specific cases. Policies with eligibility restrictions,
where treatment is impossible if some variable exceeds a certain value, provide a natural application. In an empirical analysis, we first examine the performance of matching versus regression-discontinuity estimation in the
sharp age-discontinuity design of the NDYP job search assistance program for young unemployed in the UK. Next, we exploit the age eligibility restriction in the Swedish Youth Practice subsidized work program for young unemployed, where compliance is imperfect among the young. Adjusting
the matching estimator for selectivity changes the results towards ineffectiveness of subsidized work in moving individuals into employment
Evaluating the employment impact of a mandatory job search assistance program
This paper exploits area based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of
a labor market program â the New Deal for Young People in the UK. A central focus is on
substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive
job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the program significantly raised
transitions to employment by about five percentage points (about 20 percent over the pre-program
base). The impact is robust to a wide variety of non-experimental estimators. However we present
some evidence suggesting that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Evaluating the employment impact of a mandatory job search program
This paper exploits area-based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of a labor market programâthe New Deal for Young People in the U.K. A central focus is on substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the impact of the program significantly raised transitions to employment by about 5 percentage points. The impact is robust to a wide variety of nonexperimental estimators. However, we present some evidence that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Evaluating the employment effects of a mandatory job search program
This paper exploits area based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of
a labor market program â the New Deal for Young People in the UK. A central focus is on
substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive
job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the initial impact of the program
significantly raised transitions to unsubsidized employment by about five percentage points. The
impact is robust to a wide variety of non-experimental estimators. However we present some
evidence that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Monte Carlo Simulations of Ultrathin Magnetic Dots
In this work we study the thermodynamic properties of ultrathin ferromagnetic
dots using Monte Carlo simulations. We investigate the vortex density as a
function of the temperature and the vortex structure in monolayer dots with
perpendicular anisotropy and long-range dipole interaction. The interplay
between these two terms in the hamiltonian leads to an interesting behavior of
the thermodynamic quantities as well as the vortex density.Comment: 10 figure
The singularity problem and phase-space noncanonical noncommutativity
The Wheeler-DeWitt equation arising from a Kantowski-Sachs model is
considered for a Schwarzschild black hole under the assumption that the scale
factors and the associated momenta satisfy a noncanonical noncommutative
extension of the Heisenberg-Weyl algebra. An integral of motion is used to
factorize the wave function into an oscillatory part and a function of a
configuration space variable. The latter is shown to be normalizable using
asymptotic arguments. It is then shown that on the hypersufaces of constant
value of the argument of the wave function's oscillatory piece, the probability
vanishes in the vicinity of the black hole singularity.Comment: 4 pages, revtex
Time dependent transformations in deformation quantization
We study the action of time dependent canonical and coordinate
transformations in phase space quantum mechanics. We extend the covariant
formulation of the theory by providing a formalism that is fully invariant
under both standard and time dependent coordinate transformations. This result
considerably enlarges the set of possible phase space representations of
quantum mechanics and makes it possible to construct a causal representation
for the distributional sector of Wigner quantum mechanics.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in the J. Math. Phy
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