66,193 research outputs found
Institutional Title IX Requirements for Researchers Conducting Human Subjects Research on Sexual Violence and other Forms of Interpersonal Violence
The purpose of this white paper is to provide guidance on how university and college Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) and IRB administrators can oversee, and researchers can conduct, research investigating the different aspects of Sexual Violence and other forms of Interpersonal Violence
A selfconsistent theory of current-induced switching of magnetization
A selfconsistent theory of the current-induced switching of magnetization
using nonequilibrium Keldysh formalism is developed for a junction of two
ferromagnets separated by a nonmagnetic spacer. It is shown that the
spin-transfer torques responsible for current-induced switching of
magnetization can be calculated from first principles in a steady state when
the magnetization of the switching magnet is stationary. The spin-transfer
torque is expressed in terms of one-electron surface Green functions for the
junction cut into two independent parts by a cleavage plane immediately to the
left and right of the switching magnet. The surface Green functions are
calculated using a tight-binding Hamiltonian with parameters determined from a
fit to an {\it ab initio} band structure.This treatment yields the spin
transfer torques taking into account rigorously contributions from all the
parts of the junction. To calculate the hysteresis loops of resistance versus
current, and hence to determine the critical current for switching, the
microscopically calculated spin-transfer torques are used as an input into the
phenomenological Landau-Lifshitz equation with Gilbert damping. The present
calculations for Co/Cu/Co(111) show that the critical current for switching is
, which is in good agreement with experiment.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figure
Shieling activity in the Norse Eastern Settlement : palaeoenvironment of the 'Mountain Farm', Vatnahverfi, Greenland
Peer reviewedPostprin
The biogeographical status of Alnus crispa (Ait.) Pursch in sub-Arctic southern Greenland : Do pollen records indicate local populations during the past 1500 years?
The Leverhulme Trust is thanked for financial support. We also thank the referees for their constructive comments that helped to improve the paper.Peer reviewedPostprin
A multiple profile approach to the palynological reconstruction of Norse landscapes in Greenland's Eastern Settlement
Acknowledgments The Leverhulme Trust is thanked for financial support. Gordon Cook provided radiocarbon dates. Thanks are also due to Andy McMullen for botanical identifications and assistance in the field, and to Sikuu Motzfeld for hospitality during fieldwork. We are also grateful to Emilie Gauthier, Mike Kaplan, Pete Langdon and Alan Gillespie for their comments.Peer reviewedPostprin
Competing hypotheses, ordination and pollen preservation : landscape impacts of Norse landnám in southern Greenland
We thank the Leverhulme Trust for financial support, and Gordon Cook and staff at SUERC for the provision of radiocarbon dates. We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers and Shinya Sugita for valuable comments which improved the manuscript.Peer reviewedPostprin
The impact of Chinese import penetration on the South African manufacturing sector
This article uses a Chenery-type decomposition and econometric estimation to evaluate the impact of Chinese trade on production and employment in South African manufacturing from 1992 to 2010. The results suggest that increased import penetration from China caused South African manufacturing output to be 5 per cent lower in 2010 than it otherwise would have been. The estimated reduction of total employment in manufacturing as a result of trade with China is larger – in 2010 about 8 per cent – because the declines in output were concentrated on labour-intensive industries and because the increase in imports raised labour productivity within industries
Economic Benefits of American Lobster Fishery Management Regulations
A simulation model is used to compare measures for future management identified in the American lobster fishery management plan; specifically, increases in the minimum legal size and a modest reduction in aggregate fishing mortality are evaluated. The analysis differs from previous work in that the distributional aspects of the alternative management regulations are quantified. The results indicate that (1) both an increased minimum size and a reduction in fishing mortality are economically justified in the sense that net benefits are positive; (2) increasing the minimum size without an adjunct regulation to prohibit entry will cause present fishermen to suffer an initial short-term reduction in revenues for which there will be no long-term gain; (3) because increased minimum size can be justified on the basis of consumer benefits alone, arguments favoring its increase to prevent recruitment failure are moot as far as a test of national economic efficiency is concerned; and (4) a program of effort reduction which reduces by 20% the fraction of available lobsters captured annually is projected to generate SI of producer benefits for every pound of lobster landed. Reducing the annual harvest fraction by 20% results in a level of fishery benefits greater than increasing the minimum size to 89 mm (3^-in.), and increases the coincidence of short-run costs and long-term benefits among those impacted by fishery management.Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
- …