13,400 research outputs found
Entrepreneurship as nexus of change: the syncretistic production of the future
This paper deals with the issue of how the future is created and the mechanisms through which it is produced and conceived. Key to this process appears to be social interaction and how it is used to bring about change. Examining the entrepreneurial context by qualitative longitudinal research techniques, the study considers the situations of three entrepreneurs. It demonstrates that the web of relationships in which individuals are engaged provide the opportunity to enact the environment in new ways, thus producing organizations for the future. It further provides empirical evidence for a Heideggerian reading of strategy-as-practice, extending this conceptualization to account for the temporal dimension
Subdiffusive motion in kinetically constrained models
We discuss a kinetically constrained model in which real-valued local
densities fluctuate in time, as introduced recently by Bertin, Bouchaud and
Lequeux. We show how the phenomenology of this model can be reproduced by an
effective theory of mobility excitations propagating in a disordered
environment. Both excitations and probe particles have subdiffusive motion,
characterised by different exponents and operating on different time scales. We
derive these exponents, showing that they depend continuously on one of the
parameters of the model.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
One-loop renormalisation of N=1/2 supersymmetric gauge theory with a superpotential
We construct a superpotential for the general N=1/2 supersymmetric gauge
theory coupled to chiral matter in the fundamental and adjoint representations,
and investigate the one-loop renormalisability of the theories.Comment: 67 pages, including 17 figures. Plain TeX. Uses Harvmac and epsf.
Combined and condensed version of hep-th/0607194 and hep-th/0607195 with some
added material including in particular a generalisation of the Lunin-Rey
classification of potentially divergent operator
The Fayet-Iliopoulos D-term and its renormalisation in softly-broken supersymmetric theories
We consider the renormalisation of the Fayet-Iliopoulos D-term in a
softly-broken abelian supersymmetric theory, and calculate the associated
beta-function through three loops. We show that there exists (at least through
three loops) a renormalisation group invariant trajectory for the coefficient
of the D-term, corresponding to the conformal anomaly solution for the soft
masses and couplings.Comment: 30 pages, Revtex, 15 Figures. Minor changes, and inadvertent omission
of author from this abstract correcte
Robert Burns as Dramatic Poet
Discusses Burns\u27s skill in creating dramatic voice in his poetry, and what can be learned about the poems in their performance. Examples include My luve is like a red, red rose, John Anderson, my jo, Robert Burns\u27s March to Bannockburn, and Tam o\u27 Shanter
Robert Burns as Dramatic Poet
Robert Burns & Friends
essays by W. Ormiston Roy Fellows
presented to G. Ross Roy
edited by Patrick Scott and Kenneth Simpson
This volume of essays about the Scottish poet Robert Burns (1759-1796) pays tribute to the distinguished Burns scholar G. Ross Roy. Subjects covered include writers who influenced Burns; aspects of the writing of Burns and that of his friends and contemporaries; and Burns\u27s influence on later writers. The volume also includes essays on Ross Roy\u27s own accomplishments and on the Burns collection he built (now at the University of South Carolina), together with a checklist of his published writings.
G. Ross Roy, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature, founded the journal Studies in Scottish Literature in 1963, and as its editor for nearly fifty years he has had a central role in establishing international academic recognition for the field. His own scholarly work includes the standard Letters of Robert Burns (2 vols., Clarendon Press, 1985). His contributions to Scottish literature have earned him honorary doctorates from the Universities of Edinburgh (2002) and Glasgow (2009).
The contributors are all former W. Ormiston Roy Visiting Fellows at the University of South Carolina.
This book is also available in a print edition (ISBN: 978-1439270974) through the usual on-line vendors. It is not available for direct purchase from the editors or the University of South Carolina
Finite-temperature critical point of a glass transition
We generalize the simplest kinetically constrained model of a glass-forming
liquid by softening kinetic constraints, allowing them to be violated with a
small finite rate. We demonstrate that this model supports a first-order
dynamical (space-time) phase transition, similar to those observed with hard
constraints. In addition, we find that the first-order phase boundary in this
softened model ends in a finite-temperature dynamical critical point, which we
expect to be present in natural systems. We discuss links between this critical
point and quantum phase transitions, showing that dynamical phase transitions
in dimensions map to quantum transitions in the same dimension, and hence
to classical thermodynamic phase transitions in dimensions. We make these
links explicit through exact mappings between master operators, transfer
matrices, and Hamiltonians for quantum spin chains.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Dissipation and Tunnelling in Quantum Hall Bilayers
We discuss the interplay between transport and intrinsic dissipation in
quantum Hall bilayers, within the framework of a simple thought experiment. We
compute, for the first time, quantum corrections to the semiclassical dynamics
of this system. This allows us to re-interpret tunnelling measurements on these
systems. We find a strong peak in the zero-temperature tunnelling current that
arises from the decay of Josephson-like oscillations into incoherent charge
fluctuations. In the presence of an in-plane field, resonances in the
tunnelling current develop an asymmetric lineshape.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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