55,146 research outputs found
Gender Quotas and Women’s Political Participation in Slovenia and Croatia: When Similar Historical Developments and Homogeneity of Design Yield Different Outcomes
This paper aims at summarizing the knowledge surrounding gender quotas – which are a quick gate-way to women’s political participation – and at assessing the efficacy of their different means of implementation. Through the cross-national study of Slovenia and Croatia (two countries similar on almost every political, social, and historical development except for women’s political representation) and in tandem with an extensive review of previous works in the literature, this paper sheds some light on the techniques the civil society and feminist/women’s movements could use to maximize their political impact and overall gender-quota effectiveness. Indeed, this paper finds that by appealing to the voters and the public during the election period, raising its awareness on key issues, such as gender-equality, informal barriers of entry for women, “the secret garden of nomination” and most importantly party male-dominated “traditionalism”, women’s movements will elicit maximum party response. By attacking directly the nexus of the parties’ survival, namely the votes, at an inopportune moment, namely during the elections, instead of using legislative and lobbying means, women’s movements will maximize their chances of overcoming the innate limitations of an inefficient gender-quota
Paul Bert
This biographical article on Paul Bert highlights his studies on the physiology of respiration and barometric pressure and, in particular his contributions to the understanding of hypoxia, hyperoxia and anesthesia
Crossed Andreev reflection as a probe for the pairing symmetry of Ferromagnetic Superconductors
The coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism has brought about the
phenomena of ferromagnetic superconductors. The theory needed to understand the
compatibility of such antagonistic phenomena cannot be built until the pairing
symmetry of such superconductors is correctly identified. The proper and
unambiguous identification of the pairing symmetry of such superconductors is
the subject of this paper. This work shows that crossed Andreev reflection can
be a very effective tool in order to identify the pairing symmetry of these
superconductors.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
B(Rapid Communication
International Water Management Institute success stories 2000-2009
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Bias to CMB Lensing Reconstruction from Temperature Anisotropies due to Large-Scale Galaxy Motions
Gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is expected to
be amongst the most powerful cosmological tools for ongoing and upcoming CMB
experiments. In this work, we investigate a bias to CMB lensing reconstruction
from temperature anisotropies due to the kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ)
effect, that is, the Doppler shift of CMB photons induced by Compton-scattering
off moving electrons. The kSZ signal yields biases due to both its own
intrinsic non-Gaussianity and its non-zero cross-correlation with the CMB
lensing field (and other fields that trace the large-scale structure). This
kSZ-induced bias affects both the CMB lensing auto-power spectrum and its
cross-correlation with low-redshift tracers. Furthermore, it cannot be removed
by multifrequency foreground separation techniques because the kSZ effect
preserves the blackbody spectrum of the CMB. While statistically negligible for
current datasets, we show that it will be important for upcoming surveys, and
failure to account for it can lead to large biases in constraints on neutrino
masses or the properties of dark energy. For a Stage 4 CMB experiment, the bias
can be as large as 15% or 12% in cross-correlation with LSST galaxy
lensing convergence or galaxy overdensity maps, respectively, when the maximum
temperature multipole used in the reconstruction is ,
and about half of that when . Similarly, we find that
the CMB lensing auto-power spectrum can be biased by up to several percent.
These biases are many times larger than the expected statistical errors.
Reducing can significantly mitigate the bias at the cost of a
decrease in the overall lensing reconstruction signal-to-noise.
Polarization-only reconstruction may be the most robust mitigation strategy.Comment: Updated to match published version and fixed typo. Improved study of
secondary contractions and end-to-end simulation
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