368 research outputs found
Self-financing Roads
Mohring and Harwitz (1962) showed that, under certain conditions, an optimally designed and priced road would generate user toll revenues just sufficient to cover its capital costs. Several scholars subsequently explored the robustness of that finding. This paper briefly summarizes further research on the relationship between congestion-toll revenues and road costs. Despite its transparency, the self-financing theorem can lead to erroneous interpretations. The paperâs second part discusses three such possible fallacies. It uses a simple numerical model to investigate them. The model shows that the naĂŻve interpretation of the Mohring-Harwitz rule may lead to substantial welfare losses. These losses are particularly prominent when the difference between capital and investment cost is confused and when balanced-budget constraints are imposed under second-best network conditions. In contrast, losses from imposing a balanced-budget constraint when economies or diseconomies of scale exist are surprisingly small
Multiplicative Noise: Applications in Cosmology and Field Theory
Physical situations involving multiplicative noise arise generically in
cosmology and field theory. In this paper, the focus is first on exact
nonlinear Langevin equations, appropriate in a cosmologica setting, for a
system with one degree of freedom. The Langevin equations are derived using an
appropriate time-dependent generalization of a model due to Zwanzig. These
models are then extended to field theories and the generation of multiplicative
noise in such a context is discussed. Important issues in both the cosmological
and field theoretic cases are the fluctuation-dissipation relations and the
relaxation time scale. Of some importance in cosmology is the fact that
multiplicative noise can substantially reduce the relaxation time. In the field
theoretic context such a noise can lead to a significant enhancement in the
nucleation rate of topological defects.Comment: 21 pages, LaTex, LA-UR-93-210
Strangeness Enhancement in and Interactions at SPS Energies
The systematics of strangeness enhancement is calculated using the HIJING and
VENUS models and compared to recent data on , and
collisions at CERN/SPS energies (). The HIJING model is used to
perform a {\em linear} extrapolation from to . VENUS is used to
estimate the effects of final state cascading and possible non-conventional
production mechanisms. This comparison shows that the large enhancement of
strangeness observed in collisions, interpreted previously as possible
evidence for quark-gluon plasma formation, has its origins in non-equilibrium
dynamics of few nucleon systems. % Strangeness enhancement %is therefore traced
back to the change in the production dynamics %from to minimum bias
and central collisions. A factor of two enhancement of at
mid-rapidity is indicated by recent data, where on the average {\em one}
projectile nucleon interacts with only {\em two} target nucleons. There appears
to be another factor of two enhancement in the light ion reaction relative
to , when on the average only two projectile nucleons interact with two
target ones.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures in uuencoded postscript fil
A New Elimination Rule for the Calculus of Inductive Constructions
Published in the post-proceedings of TYPES but actually not presented orally to the conferenceInternational audienceIn Type Theory, definition by dependently-typed case analysis can be expressed by means of a set of equations â the semantic approach â or by an explicit pattern-matching construction â the syntactic approach. We aim at putting together the best of both approaches by extending the pattern-matching construction found in the Coq proof assistant in order to obtain the expressivity and flexibility of equation-based case analysis while remaining in a syntax-based setting, thus making dependently-typed programming more tractable in the Coq system. We provide a new rule that permits the omission of impossible cases, handles the propagation of inversion constraints, and allows to derive Streicher's K axiom. We show that subject reduction holds, and sketch a proof of relative consistency
Measurement induced quantum-classical transition
A model of an electrical point contact coupled to a mechanical system
(oscillator) is studied to simulate the dephasing effect of measurement on a
quantum system. The problem is solved at zero temperature under conditions of
strong non-equilibrium in the measurement apparatus. For linear coupling
between the oscillator and tunneling electrons, it is found that the oscillator
dynamics becomes damped, with the effective temperature determined by the
voltage drop across the junction. It is demonstrated that both the quantum
heating and the quantum damping of the oscillator manifest themselves in the
current-voltage characteristic of the point contact.Comment: in RevTex, 1 figure, corrected notatio
The play's the thing
For very understandable reasons phenomenological approaches predominate in the field of sensory urbanism. This paper does not seek to add to that particular discourse. Rather it takes Rortyâs postmodernized Pragmatism as its starting point and develops a position on the role of multi-modal design representation in the design process as a means of admitting many voices and managing multidisciplinary collaboration.
This paper will interrogate some of the concepts underpinning the Sensory Urbanism project to help define the scope of interest in multi-modal representations. It will then explore a range of techniques and approaches developed by artists and designers during the past fifty years or so and comment on how they might inform the question of multi-modal representation. In conclusion I will argue that we should develop a heterogeneous tool kit that adopts, adapts and re-invents existing methods because this will better serve our purposes during the exploratory phase(s) of any design project that deals with complexity
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