22,335 research outputs found
Design, develop and fabricate a feasibility model of a ferrimagnetic memory using an optical accession system for read write functions Final report
Design, development, and fabrication of feasibility model of magneto-optic memory with gadolinium iron garnet platelet
Trade reforms and wage inequality in Colombia
We investigate the effects of the drastic tariff reductions of the 1980s and 1990s in Colombia on
the wage distribution. We identify three main channels through which the wage distribution was
affected: increasing returns to college education, changes in industry wages that hurt sectors with
initially lower wages and a higher fraction of unskilled workers, and shifts of the labor force
towards the informal sector that typically pays lower wages and offers no benefits. Our results
suggest that trade policy played a role in each of the above cases. The increase in the skill
premium was primarily driven by skilled-biased technological change; however, our evidence
suggests, that this change may have been in part motivated by the tariff reductions and the
increased foreign competition to which the trade reform exposed domestic producers. With
respect to industry wages, we find that wage premiums decreased by more in sectors that
experienced larger tariff cuts. Finally, we find some evidence that the increase in the size of the
informal sector is related to increased foreign competition â sectors with larger tariff cuts and
more trade exposure, as measured by the size their imports, experience a greater increase in
informality, though this effect is concentrated in the years prior to the labor market reform.
Nevertheless, increasing returns to education, and changes in industry premiums and informality
alone cannot fully explain the increase in wage inequality we observe over this period. This
suggests that overall the effect of the trade reforms on the wage distribution may have been
small
Real fluid properties of normal and parahydrogen
Computer program calculates the real fluid properties of normal or parahydrogen using a library of single function calls without initial estimates. Accurate transport and thermodynamic properties of molecular hydrogen are needed for advanced propulsion systems
Exact Nonperturbative Unitary Amplitudes for 1->N Transitions
I present an extension to arbitrary N of a previously proposed field
theoretic model, in which unitary amplitudes for processes were
obtained. The Born amplitude in this extension has the behavior
expected in a bosonic field theory. Unitarity
is violated when , or when Numerical
solutions of the coupled Schr\"odinger equations shows that for weak coupling
and a large range of N>\ncrit, the exact unitary amplitude is reasonably fit
by a factorized expression |A(1->N)| \sim (0.73 /N) \cdot \exp{(-0.025/\g2)}.
The very small size of the coefficient 1/\g2 , indicative of a very weak
exponential suppression, is not in accord with standard discussions based on
saddle point analysis, which give a coefficient The weak dependence
on could have experimental implications in theories where the exponential
suppression is weak (as in this model). Non-perturbative contributions to
few-point correlation functions in this theory would arise at order $K\ \simeq\
\left((0.05/\g2)+ 2\ ln{N}\right)/ \ ln{(1/\g2)}\g2.$Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures (not included
Solutions of Penrose's Equation
The computational use of Killing potentials which satisfy Penrose's equation
is discussed. Penrose's equation is presented as a conformal Killing-Yano
equation and the class of possible solutions is analyzed. It is shown that
solutions exist in spacetimes of Petrov type O, D or N. In the particular case
of the Kerr background, it is shown that there can be no Killing potential for
the axial Killing vector.Comment: To appear in J. Math. Phy
Weyl-type Fields with Geodesic Lines of Force
The static electrogravitational equations are studied and it is shown that an
aligned type D metric which has a Weyl-type relationship between the
gravitational and electric potential has shearfree geodesic lines of force. All
such fields are then found and turn out to be the fields of a charged sphere,
charged infinite rod and charged infinite plate. A further solution is also
found with shearing geodesic lines of force. This new solution can have
or , but cannot be in the Majumdar-Papapetrou class (in which ). It is algebraically general and has flat equipotential surfaces.Comment: 13 pages, RevTe
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Fungal speciation using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) in patients with and without chronic rhinosinusitis.
Objectives/hypothesisThe objectives of this study were to determine the mycology of the middle meatus using an endoscopically guided brush sampling technique and polymerase chain reaction laboratory processing of nasal mucous; to compare the mycology of the middle meatus in patients with sinus disease with subjects without sinus disease; to compare the responses on two standardized quality-of-life survey forms between patients with and without sinusitis; and to determine whether the presence of fungi in the middle meatus correlates with responses on these data sets.Study designThe authors conducted a single-blind, prospective, cross-sectional study.MethodsPatients with sinus disease and a control group without sinus disease were enrolled in the study. A disease-specific, validated Sinonasal Outcomes Test survey (SNOT-20) was completed by the subjects and a generalized validated Medical Outcomes Short Form 36 Survey (SF-36) was also completed. An endoscopically guided brush sampling of nasal mucous was obtained from the middle meatus. Fungal specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) was performed on the obtained sample to identify one of 82 different species of fungus in the laboratory. Statistical analysis was used to categorize the recovered fungal DNA and to crossreference this information with the outcomes surveys.ResultsThe fungal recovery rate in the study was 45.9% in patients with sinus disease and 45.9% in control subjects. Patients with chronic rhinosinusitis had a mean SNOT-20 score of 1.80 versus the control group mean score of 0.77 (P < .0001). SF-36 data similarly showed a statistically significant difference between diseased and control populations with controls scoring a mean of 80.37 and patients with chronic rhinosinusitis scoring a mean of 69.35 for a P value of .02. However, no statistical significance could be ascribed to the presence or absence of fungi recovered, the type of fungi recovered, or the possible impact of fungi on the quality-of-life survey results.ConclusionThe recovery rate of fungi from the middle meatus of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and a control population without chronic rhinosinusitis is 45.9% using QPCR techniques. No direct causation with regard to fungal species or presence was proven; however, a species grouping for future studies is proposed based on trends in this data and other reports. Disease-specific outcomes surveys revealed a statistically significant difference between the two groups
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