27 research outputs found

    Cost Effectiveness in River Management: Evaluation of Integrated River Policy System in Tidal Ouse

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    The River Ouse forms a significant part of Humber river system, which drains about one fifth the land area of England and provides the largest fresh water source to the North Sea from UK. The river quality in the tidal river suffered from sag of dissolved oxygen (DO) during last few decades, deteriorated by the effluent discharges. The Environment Agency (EA) proposed to increase the water quality of Ouse by implementing more potent environmental policies. This paper explores the cost effectiveness of water management in the Tidal Ouse through various options by taking into account the variation of assimilative capacity of river water, both in static and dynamic scope of time. Reduction in both effluent discharges and water abstraction were considered along side with choice of effluent discharge location. Different instruments of environmental policy, the emission tax-subsidy (ETS) scheme and tradable pollution permits (TPP) systems were compared with the direct quantitative control approach. This paper at the last illustrated an empirical example to reach a particular water quality target in the tidal Ouse at the least cost, through a solution of constrained optimisation problem. The results suggested significant improvement in the water quality with less cost than current that will fail the target in low flow year

    Measurement of the inclusive jet cross section in pp collisions at √s=2.76 TeV

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    The double-differential inclusive jet cross section is measured as a function of jet transverse momentum pT and absolute rapidity IyI, using proton-proton collision data collected with the CMS experiment at the LHC, at a center-of-mass energy of √s=2.76 TeV and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.43 pb⁻¹. Jets are reconstructed within the pT range of 74 to 592 GeV and the rapidity range IyI < 3.0.The reconstructed jet spectrum is corrected for detector resolution. The measurements are compared to the theoretical prediction at next-to-leading-order QCD using different sets of parton distribution functions. This inclusive cross section measurement explores a new kinematic region and is consistent with QCD predictions
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