12,513 research outputs found
Failure matters: Reassembling eco-urbanism in a globalizing China
This paper is an attempt to reassess the role of failure in policy mobilities. Empirically, this paper examines the various aftermaths of, and the continuing trans-local connections originating from, the prominent but un-materialized Sino-British Shanghai-Dongtan eco-city—with a particular consideration on its relation with a subsequently realized project—the Sino-Singapore Tianjin eco-city. The findings reveal that despite its apparent failure, Dongtan eco-city established a set of urban planning procedures adopted by many, including those who designed and delivered the Tianjin eco-city. Meanwhile, Dongtan’s failure to materialize motivated the Chinese government to pursue collaboration with the Singaporean government over the increased involvement of private Western partners. The intent to avoid association with Dongtan’s failure also fostered a new eco-urbanism model based on rebranding the planning practices of Singapore’s public housing. Parts of Dongtan eco-city have also lived on through the international circulation of a piece of planning software that was first developed for the failed project. This paper contributes to the policy mobilities literature by challenging its dominant focus on successful exemplars and exploring how a project fails in implementation yet parts of it remain mobile, influential and present in other developments. This paper also advances the understanding of contemporary urban sustainability by revealing how eco-urbanism models are co-produced in this globalizing era between the global North and South, as well as within the global South. </jats:p
On Two-Pair Two-Way Relay Channel with an Intermittently Available Relay
When multiple users share the same resource for physical layer cooperation
such as relay terminals in their vicinities, this shared resource may not be
always available for every user, and it is critical for transmitting terminals
to know whether other users have access to that common resource in order to
better utilize it. Failing to learn this critical piece of information may
cause severe issues in the design of such cooperative systems. In this paper,
we address this problem by investigating a two-pair two-way relay channel with
an intermittently available relay. In the model, each pair of users need to
exchange their messages within their own pair via the shared relay. The shared
relay, however, is only intermittently available for the users to access. The
accessing activities of different pairs of users are governed by independent
Bernoulli random processes. Our main contribution is the characterization of
the capacity region to within a bounded gap in a symmetric setting, for both
delayed and instantaneous state information at transmitters. An interesting
observation is that the bottleneck for information flow is the quality of state
information (delayed or instantaneous) available at the relay, not those at the
end users. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first result regarding
how the shared intermittent relay should cooperate with multiple pairs of users
in such a two-way cooperative network.Comment: extended version of ISIT 2015 pape
Experimental evidence for new symmetry axis of electromagnetic beams
The new symmetry axis of a well-behaved electromagnetic beam advanced in
paper Physical Review A 78, 063831 (2008) is not purely a mathematical concept.
The experimental result reported by Hosten and Kwiat in paper Science 319, 787
(2008) is shown to demonstrate the existence of this symmetry axis that is
neither perpendicular nor parallel to the propagation axis.Comment: 10 pages and 3 figure
Influence of migration policy risk on international market segmentation: analysis of housing and rental markets in the euro area
This paper aims to discuss the influence of migration policy risk
on market segmentation of housing and rental markets in the
Euro Area. Policy risk is represented by the Migration Policy
Uncertainty Index (MPUI) and Migration Fear Index (MFI) of
Germany and the United Kingdom; in this study, whether these
indexes influence the interaction between the housing and rental
markets of the two countries and euro-area countries was examined.
The empirical results showed that the influence of the
United Kingdom’s migration policy risk on the euro-area countries
is higher than that of Germany. The United Kingdom’s MPUI and
MFI significantly contribute to the influence of the United
Kingdom’s housing market on other markets except for Belgium
and Spain. Compared with housing market connectedness, the
rental market connectedness is less influenced by migration policy
risk and migration fear. This may be because variables related
to short-term residence policies influence the rental market. The
high policy risk is more likely to influence decisions related to
long-term house purchase, but not those related to short-term
residence. Finally, this study found that the higher the uncertainty
of the migration policies of the United Kingdom and Germany is,
the higher the house market segmentation is
Radio Frequency Spectroscopy of Trapped Fermi Gases with Population Imbalance
Motivated by recent experiments, we address, in a fully self consistent
fashion, the behavior and evolution of radio frequency (RF) spectra as
temperature and polarization are varied in population imbalanced Fermi gases.
We discuss a series of scenarios for the experimentally observed zero
temperature pseudogap phase and show how present and future RF experiments may
help in its elucidation. We conclude that the MIT experiments at the lowest
may well reflect ground state properties, but take issue with their claim that
the pairing gap survives up to temperatures of the order of the degeneracy
temperature at unitarity.Comment: 4 page, 3 figures, submitted to PRA Rapi
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