1,247 research outputs found
The Impact of School Quality on Earnings and Educational Returns
The expansion of education has been widely adopted as a key element in the development strategies of low-income countries. While there is substantial evidence on the benefits of greater educational attainment for subsequent labor market earnings, empirical evidence on the role played by school quality is scarce. This paper combines household survey data with unique data on school quality, from Honduras, to study the importance of school quality as a determinant of earnings. Our objective measures of school quality capture teacher training, school infrastructure and school crowding. The results diaplay strong positive effects of school quality on earnings and on educational returns. These effects persist across a variety of model specifications
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Radar studies of the vertical distribution of insects migrating over southern Britain: the influence of temperature inversions on nocturnal layer concentrations
Insects migrating over two sites in southern UK (Malvern in Worcestershire, and Harpenden in Hertfordshire) have been monitored continuously with nutating vertical-looking radars (VLRs) equipped with powerful control and analysis software. These observations make possible, for the first time, a systematic investigation of the vertical distribution of insect aerial density in the atmosphere, over temporal scales ranging from the short (instantaneous vertical profiles updated every 15 min) to the very long (profiles aggregated over whole seasons or even years). In the present paper, an outline is given of some general features of insect stratification as revealed by the radars, followed by a description of occasions during warm nights in the summer months when intense insect layers developed. Some of these nocturnal layers were due to the insects flying preferentially at the top of strong surface temperature inversions, and in other cases, layering was associated with higher-altitude temperature maxima, such as those due to subsidence inversions. The layers were formed from insects of a great variety of sizes, but peaks in the mass distributions pointed to a preponderance of medium-sized noctuid moths on certain occasions
Effect of screening of the electron-phonon interaction on the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation of intersite bipolarons
Here we consider an interacting electron-phonon system within the framework
of extended Holstein-Hubbard model at strong enough electron-phonon interaction
limit in which (bi)polarons are the essential quasiparticles of the system. It
is assumed that the electron-phonon interaction is screened and its potential
has Yukawa-type analytical form. An effect of screening of the electron-phonon
interaction on the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation of the intersite
bipolarons is studied for the first time. It is revealed that the temperature
of Bose-Einstein condensation of intersite bipolarons is higher in the system
with the more screened electron-phonon interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Climate justice and global cities: Mapping the emerging discourses
Ever since climate change came to be a matter of political concern, questions of justice have been at the forefront of academic and policy debates in the international arena. Curiously, as attention has shifted to other sites and scales of climate change politics matters of justice have tended to be neglected. In this paper, we examine how discourses of justice are emerging within urban responses to climate change. Drawing on a database of initiatives taking place in 100 global cities and qualitative case-study research in Philadelphia, Quito and Toronto, we examine how notions of distributive and procedural justice are articulated in climate change projects and plans in relation to both adaptation and mitigation. We find that there is limited explicit concern with justice at the urban level. However, where discourses of justice are evident there are important differences emerging between urban responses to adaptation and mitigation, and between those in the north and in the south. Adaptation responses tend to stress the distribution of ‘rights’ to protection, although those in the South also stress the importance of procedural justice. Mitigation responses also stress ‘rights’ to the benefits of responding to climate change, with limited concern for ‘responsibilities’ or for procedural justice. Intriguingly, while adaptation responses tend to stress the rights of individuals, we also find discourses of collective rights emerging in relation to mitigation
Geometry of Frictionless and Frictional Sphere Packings
We study static packings of frictionless and frictional spheres in three
dimensions, obtained via molecular dynamics simulations, in which we vary
particle hardness, friction coefficient, and coefficient of restitution.
Although frictionless packings of hard-spheres are always isostatic (with six
contacts) regardless of construction history and restitution coefficient,
frictional packings achieve a multitude of hyperstatic packings that depend on
system parameters and construction history. Instead of immediately dropping to
four, the coordination number reduces smoothly from as the friction
coefficient between two particles is increased.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Importance of Time Congruity in the Organisation.
In 1991 Kaufman, Lane, and Lindquist proposed that time congruity in terms of an individual's time preferences and the time use methods of an organisation would lead to satisfactory performance and enhancement of quality of work and general life. The research reported here presents a study which uses commensurate person and job measures of time personality in an organisational setting to assess the effects of time congruity on one aspect of work life, job-related affective well-being. Results show that time personality and time congruity were found to have direct effects on well-being and the influence of time congruity was found to be mediated through time personality, thus contributing to the person–job (P–J) fit literature which suggests that direct effects are often more important than indirect effects. The study also provides some practical examples of ways to address some of the previously cited methodological issues in P–J fit research
Beyond Gross-Pitaevskii:local density vs. correlated basis approach for trapped bosons
We study the ground state of a system of Bose hard-spheres trapped in an
isotropic harmonic potential to investigate the effect of the interatomic
correlations and the accuracy of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We compare a
local density approximation, based on the energy functional derived from the
low density expansion of the energy of the uniform hard sphere gas, and a
correlated wave function approach which explicitly introduces the correlations
induced by the potential. Both higher order terms in the low density expansion,
beyond Gross-Pitaevskii, and explicit dynamical correlations have effects of
the order of percent when the number of trapped particles becomes similar to
that attained in recent experiments.Comment: Revtex, 2 figure
Beyond Gross-Pitaevskii:local density vs. correlated basis approach for trapped bosons
We study the ground state of a system of Bose hard-spheres trapped in an
isotropic harmonic potential to investigate the effect of the interatomic
correlations and the accuracy of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We compare a
local density approximation, based on the energy functional derived from the
low density expansion of the energy of the uniform hard sphere gas, and a
correlated wave function approach which explicitly introduces the correlations
induced by the potential. Both higher order terms in the low density expansion,
beyond Gross-Pitaevskii, and explicit dynamical correlations have effects of
the order of percent when the number of trapped particles becomes similar to
that attained in recent experiments.Comment: Revtex, 2 figure
Testing quantum correlations in a confined atomic cloud by scattering fast atoms
We suggest measuring one-particle density matrix of a trapped ultracold
atomic cloud by scattering fast atoms in a pure momentum state off the cloud.
The lowest-order probability of the inelastic process, resulting in a pair of
outcoming fast atoms for each incoming one, turns out to be given by a Fourier
transform of the density matrix. Accordingly, important information about
quantum correlations can be deduced directly from the differential scattering
cross-section. A possible design of the atomic detector is also discussed.Comment: 5 RevTex pages, no figures, submitted to PR
Decision theory in the study of national action: problems and a proposal
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66743/2/10.1177_002200276500900202.pd
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