2,630 research outputs found
Asymptotic decay of pair correlations in a Yukawa fluid
We analyse the asymptotic decay of the total correlation
function, , for a fluid composed of particles interacting via a (point)
Yukawa pair potential. Such a potential provides a simple model for dusty
plasmas. The asymptotic decay is determined by the poles of the liquid
structure factor in the complex plane. We use the hypernetted-chain closure to
the Ornstein-Zernike equation to determine the line in the phase diagram,
well-removed from the freezing transition line, where crossover occurs in the
ultimate decay of , from monotonic to damped oscillatory. We show: i)
crossover takes place via the same mechanism (coalescence of imaginary poles)
as in the classical one-component plasma and in other models of Coulomb fluids
and ii) leading-order pole contributions provide an accurate description of
at intermediate distances as well as at long range.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Strategic Review of Tropical Fisheries Management
This project addresses the constraints to tropical fisheries development with sustainable exploitation through a strategic assessment of tropical fisheries management with the following purposes: (1) To evaluate relevant research methods for the development of assessment models appropriate to the circumstances of tropical coastal fisheries; and (2) To evaluate the utility of existing strategies for the implementation of management advice. The report consists of three substantive chapters. Chapter 2 contains a detailed socio-economic assessment of various instruments and implementation strategies applicable to tropical capture fisheries. In Chapter 3, a detailed assessment of the fisheries for tropical large marine ecosystems has been conducted using a technique developed by FAO (Granger & Garcia 1996). The data used were the FAO statistics published regularly by FAO. This analysis has been conducted for each of the tropical large marine ecosystems and indicates that there is the potential for increased fishing in a number of these ecosystems. One of the clear requirements identified in Chapter 2 and implicit in Chapter 3, is that there is a significant need for simple and robust fisheries assessment methods which can estimate the potential of a particular resource, its capacity in terms of the level of fishing effort and its current status ie whether it is currently exploited sustainably or not. In Chapter 4, these problems are addressed directly and, using two approaches, significant simplification of fishery methods is developed. In the first approach, simple empirical relationships between the life history parameters of a species are used to develop models of potential yield which can be determined by a simple assessment of fish growth. In the second approach, optimal life history theory is applied to the key demographic parameters of exploited fish populations and using estimates of the Beverton & Holt invariants a significant simplifying of the basic stock assessment equations is developed
Private sector expansion and the widening NHS treatment gap between rich and poor in England: Admissions for NHS-funded elective primary hip and knee replacements between 1997/98 and 2018/19
\ua9 2024Parliament has imposed duties on the government and NHS in England aimed at reducing health inequalities. Aim: to understand the effect on inequalities of government policies, which require the NHS in England to outsource elective surgery to the private sector. We analysed the numbers of admissions for hip and knee replacement surgery from the least and most deprived population quintiles in three time periods: before the introduction of the policies (1997/98–2002/03); following the implementation of the independent sector treatment centre programme (2003/04–2006/07); and after the extension of \u27choice at referral’ (2007/08–2018/19). Results: despite admission rates doubling and trebling for hip and knee replacements, respectively, between 1997/98 and 2018/19, inequality grew to the detriment of the most deprived. Inequality grew at the fastest rate during period 3; admission rates to the NHS fell while admissions to the private sector continued to rise. By 2018/19 almost a third of NHS funded procedures were provided privately. In 1997/98, for every 10 patients admitted for hip and knee surgery from the most deprived quintile, 13 and 9, respectively were admitted from the least deprived, by 2018/19 the gap had widened to 19 and 15, respectively. Socio-economic inequalities for hip and knee replacement have widened as outsourcing of NHS treatment to the private sector has increased. The NHS must rebuild in-house capacity and provision instead of outsourcing care
Coral Reef Fisheries Literature Review and Database Research Report, Final Technical Report
First, coral reef fisheries literature references were obtained and organised into a computer database and a user manual produced. Second, a comprehensive review article summarising and interpreting the disparate literature was written and distributed along with the database. The database and accompanying review should assist research and management of coral reef fisheries in developing countries. In the original project memorandum, it was stated that initial emphasis would be placed on fin-fish fisheries. This emphasis has been maintained throughout the projec
The Statistical Mechanical Theory of Transport Processes. III. The Coefficients of Shear and Bulk Viscosity of Liquids
A molecular theory of the coefficients of shear and bulk viscosity of monatomic liquids is developed on the basis of the general theory of transport processes presented in the first article of this series. With the use of the Lennard-Jones potential and a reasonable analytic approximation to the experimental radial distribution function, calculations of the coefficients of shear and bulk viscosity of liquid argon at 89°K have been carried out. The theory leads explicitly to ratios of the coefficients to the friction constant of the theory of Brownian motion. With a preliminary estimate of the friction constant, a value of the shear viscosity of liquid argon in moderately good agreement with experiment is obtained
The intermittent behavior and hierarchical clustering of the cosmic mass field
The hierarchical clustering model of the cosmic mass field is examined in the
context of intermittency. We show that the mass field satisfying the
correlation hierarchy is intermittent if , where is the dimension of the field, and is the power-law
index of the non-linear power spectrum in the discrete wavelet transform (DWT)
representation. We also find that a field with singular clustering can be
described by hierarchical clustering models with scale-dependent coefficients
and that this scale-dependence is completely determined by the
intermittent exponent and . Moreover, the singular exponents of a field
can be calculated by the asymptotic behavior of when is large.
Applying this result to the transmitted flux of HS1700 Ly forests, we
find that the underlying mass field of the Ly forests is significantly
intermittent. On physical scales less than about 2.0 h Mpc, the observed
intermittent behavior is qualitatively different from the prediction of the
hierarchical clustering with constant . The observations, however, do show
the existence of an asymptotic value for the singular exponents. Therefore, the
mass field can be described by the hierarchical clustering model with
scale-dependent . The singular exponent indicates that the cosmic mass
field at redshift is weakly singular at least on physical scales as
small as 10 h kpc.Comment: AAS Latex file, 33 pages,5 figures included, accepted for publication
in Ap
Hydrogen atom in phase space. The Kirkwood-Rihaczek representation
We present a phase-space representation of the hydrogen atom using the
Kirkwood-Rikaczek distribution function. This distribution allows us to obtain
analytical results, which is quite unique because an exact analytical form of
the Wigner functions corresponding to the atom states is not known. We show how
the Kirkwood-Rihaczek distribution reflects properties of the hydrogen atom
wave functions in position and momentum representations.Comment: 5 pages (and 5 figures
Information and communications technologies (ICT) in Higher Education teaching – a tale of gradualism rather than revolution
The widespread adoption of information and communications technologies (ICT) in higher education (HE) since the mid 1990s has failed to produce the radical changes in learning and teaching than many anticipated. Activity theory and Rogers’ model of the adoption of innovations provide analytic frameworks that help develop our understanding of the actual impact of ICT upon teaching practices. This paper draws on a series of large-scale surveys carried out over a 10 year period with distance education tutors at the UK Open University to explore the changing role of ICT in the work of teachers. It investigates how HE teachers in one large distance learning university have, over time, appropriated ICT applications as teaching tools, and the gradual rather than revolutionary changes that have resulted
Self-diffusion coefficients of charged particles: Prediction of Nonlinear volume fraction dependence
We report on calculations of the translational and rotational short-time
self-diffusion coefficients and for suspensions of
charge-stabilized colloidal spheres. These diffusion coefficients are affected
by electrostatic forces and many-body hydrodynamic interactions (HI). Our
computations account for both two-body and three-body HI. For strongly charged
particles, we predict interesting nonlinear scaling relations and depending on volume fraction
, with essentially charge-independent parameters and . These
scaling relations are strikingly different from the corresponding results for
hard spheres. Our numerical results can be explained using a model of effective
hard spheres. Moreover, we perceptibly improve the known result for of
hard sphere suspensions.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 3 Postscript figures included using eps
Theory of Systematic Computational Error in Free Energy Differences
Systematic inaccuracy is inherent in any computational estimate of a
non-linear average, due to the availability of only a finite number of data
values, N. Free energy differences (DF) between two states or systems are
critically important examples of such averages in physical, chemical and
biological settings. Previous work has demonstrated, empirically, that the
``finite-sampling error'' can be very large -- many times kT -- in DF estimates
for simple molecular systems. Here, we present a theoretical description of the
inaccuracy, including the exact solution of a sample problem, the precise
asymptotic behavior in terms of 1/N for large N, the identification of
universal law, and numerical illustrations. The theory relies on corrections to
the central and other limit theorems, and thus a role is played by stable
(Levy) probability distributions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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