2,106 research outputs found
Lewis through a looking glass : public sector employment, rent-seeking, and economic growth
This paper argues that the labor transfer process outlined by the Lewis model (1954) can give rise to surplus labour - in the sense than the marginal product of labour is less that the wage - in the public part of the modern sector and that this may deprive the modern sector of its dynamism. Moreover, creating sheltered employment tends to be self-perpetuating. It creates and consolidates vested interests that seek to perpetuate the protected jobs. In the inverse of the Lewis model, the extent of surplus labour increases, rather than diminishes, over time.Environmental Economics&Policies,Banks&Banking Reform,Economic Theory&Research,Public Sector Economics&Finance,Health Monitoring&Evaluation
Recovering piecewise smooth functions from nonuniform Fourier measurements
In this paper, we consider the problem of reconstructing piecewise smooth
functions to high accuracy from nonuniform samples of their Fourier transform.
We use the framework of nonuniform generalized sampling (NUGS) to do this, and
to ensure high accuracy we employ reconstruction spaces consisting of splines
or (piecewise) polynomials. We analyze the relation between the dimension of
the reconstruction space and the bandwidth of the nonuniform samples, and show
that it is linear for splines and piecewise polynomials of fixed degree, and
quadratic for piecewise polynomials of varying degree
Quenching of lamellar ordering in an n-alkane embedded in nanopores
We present an X-ray diffraction study of the normale alkane nonadecane
C_{19}H_{40} embedded in nanoporous Vycor glass. The confined molecular crystal
accomplishes a close-packed structure by alignment of the rod-like molecules
parallel to the pore axis while sacrificing one basic principle known from the
bulk state, i.e. the lamellar ordering of the molecules. Despite this disorder,
the phase transitions observed in the confined solid mimic the phase behavior
of the 3D unconfined crystal, though enriched by the appearance of a true
rotator phase known only from longer alkane chains.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Criminal Cases Gone Paperless : Hanging With the Wrong Crowd
This article explores issues concerning electronic discovery (e-discovery), its association with ESI, and how it impacts criminal litigation
Male infertility due to germ cell apoptosis in mice lacking the thiamin carrier, Tht1. A new insight into the critical role of thiamin in spermatogenesis.
A mouse model of thiamin-responsive megaloblastic anemia (diabetes mellitus, deafness, megaloblastic anemia) lacking functional Slc19a2 has been generated and unexpectedly found to have a male-specific sterility phenotype. We describe here the characterization of the testis-specific effects of absence of the high-affinity thiamin transporter, Tht1. Null males were found to have hypoplastic testes secondary to germ cell depletion. Morphologic and expression analysis revealed that under conditions of standard thiamin intake, tissues affected in the syndrome (pancreatic beta-cell, hematopoietic cells, auditory nerve) maintained normal function but pachytene stage spermatocytes underwent apoptosis. Under conditions of thiamin challenge, the apoptotic cell loss extended to earlier stages of germ cells but spared Sertoli cells and Leydig cells. Injection of high-dose thiamin was effective in reversing the spermatogenic failure, suggesting that the absence of the thiamin carrier could be overcome by diffusion-mediated transport at supranormal thiamin concentrations. These observations demonstrated that male germ cells, particularly those with high thiamin transporter expression beyond the blood-testis barrier, were more susceptible to apoptosis triggered by intracellular thiamin deficiency than any other tissue type. The findings described here highlight an unexpected and critical role for thiamin transport and metabolism in spermatogenesis
A High Performance H2-Cl2 Fuel Cell for Space Power Applications
NASA has numerous airborne/spaceborne applications for which high power and energy density power sources are needed. The proton exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) is an attractive candidate for such a power source. PEMFC's offer many advantages for airborne/spaceborne applications. They have high power and energy densities, convert fuel to electrical power with high efficiency at both part and full load, and can rapidly startup and shutdown. In addition, PEMFC's are lightweight and operate silently. A significant impediment to the attainment of very high power and energy densities by PEMFC's is their current exclusive reliance on oxygen as the oxidant. Conventional PEMFC's oxidize hydrogen at the anode and reduce oxygen at the cathode. The electrode kinetics of oxygen reduction are known to be highly irreversible, incurring large overpotential losses. In addition, the modest open circuit potential of 1.2V for the H2-O2 fuel cell is unattainable due to mixed potential effects at the oxygen electrode. Because of the high overpotential losses, cells using H2 and O2 are capable of achieving high current densities only at very low cell voltages, greatly curtailing their power output. Based on experimental work on chlorine reduction in a gas diffusion electrode, we believe significant increases in both the energy and power densities of PEMFC systems can be achieved by employing chlorine as an alternative oxidant
Soft disks in a narrow channel
The pressure components of "soft" disks in a two dimensional narrow channel
are analyzed in the dilute gas regime using the Mayer cluster expansion and
molecular dynamics. Channels with either periodic or reflecting boundaries are
considered. It is found that when the two-body potential, u(r), is singular at
some distance r_0, the dependence of the pressure components on the channel
width exhibits a singularity at one or more channel widths which are simply
related to r_0. In channels with periodic boundary conditions and for
potentials which are discontinuous at r_0, the transverse and longitudinal
pressure components exhibit a 1/2 and 3/2 singularity, respectively. Continuous
potentials with a power law singularity result in weaker singularities of the
pressure components. In channels with reflecting boundary conditions the
singularities are found to be weaker than those corresponding to periodic
boundaries
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