1,941 research outputs found
Assessment of Connections Between Knowledge- Based Economy Characteristics and Selected Macroeconomic Categories in the European Union's Countries by Means of Panel Models
The aim of the article is to analyze the impact of knowledge-based economy variables on the selected macroeconomic categories - the share of total investments in GDP and the employment rate- in European Union's countries in the years 2000-2007, conducted with application of panel models.Celem artykułu jest analiza wpływu zmiennych opisujących gospodarkę opartą na wiedzy na podstawowe kategorie makroekonomiczne - udział całkowitych inwestycji w PKB i stopę zatrudnienia - w krajach Unii Europejskiej (z podziałem na kraje UE-15 i nowe kraje członkowskie UE) w latach 2000-2007, przeprowadzona w oparciu o modele panelowe
An Assessment of the Net Value of CSP Systems Integrated with Thermal Energy Storage
AbstractWithin this study, we evaluate the operational and capacity value—or total system value—for multiple concentrating solar power (CSP)plant configurations under an assumed 33% renewable penetration scenario in California. We calculate the first-year bid price for two CSP plants, including a 2013 molten-salt tower integrated with a conventional Rankine cycle and a hypothetical 2020 molten-salt tower system integrated with an advanced supercritical carbon-dioxide power block. The overall benefit to the regional grid, defined in this study as the net value, is calculated by subtracting the first-year bid price from the total system value.Re--sults of this study indicate a positive net value for a variety of scenarios, depending on technology assumptions and assumed values for natural gas price and tax incentives. We provide results for the 2013 and 2020 CSP configurations as a function of thermal energy storage capacity and solar field size. We provide a sensitivity of these results to natural gas price, which influence the operation value and thus the total system value. We also investigate the sensitivity of the net value to current and anticipated tax incentives
Bounding sup-norms of cusp forms of large level
Let f be an -normalized weight zero Hecke-Maass cusp form of square-free
level N, character and Laplacian eigenvalue . It is
shown that , from which the hybrid
bound (for some
) is derived. The first bound holds also for where F
is a holomorphic cusp form of weight k with the implied constant now depending
on k.Comment: version 3: substantially revised versio
Bimodality in Damped Lyman alpha Systems
We report evidence for a bimodality in damped Ly systems (DLAs). Using [C II]
158 mu cooling rates, lc, we find a distribution with peaks at lc=10^-27.4 and
10^-26.6 ergs s^-1 H^-1 separated by a trough at lc^crit ~= lc < 10^-27.0 ergs
s^-1 H^-1. We divide the sample into low cool DLAs with lc < lc^crit and high
cool DLAs with lc > lc^crit and find the Kolmogorv-Smirnov probabilities that
velocity width, metallicity, dust-to-gas ratio, and Si II equivalent width in
the two subsamples are drawn from the same parent population are small. All
these quantities are significantly larger in the high cool population, while
the H I column densities are indistinguishable in the two populations. We find
that heating by X-ray and FUV background radiation is insufficient to balance
the cooling rates of either population. Rather, the DLA gas is heated by local
radiation fields. The rare appearance of faint, extended objects in the Hubble
Ultra Deep Field rules out in situ star formation as the dominant
star-formation mode for the high cool population, but is compatible with in
situ star formation as the dominant mode for the low cool population. Star
formation in the high cool DLAs likely arises in Lyman Break galaxies. We
investigate whether these properties of DLAs are analogous to the bimodal
properties of nearby galaxies. Using Si II equivalent width as a mass
indicator, we construct bivariate distributions of metallicity, lc, and areal
SFR versus the mass indicators. Tentative evidence is found for correlations
and parallel sequences, which suggest similarities between DLAs and nearby
galaxies. We suggest that the transition-mass model provides a plausible
scenario for the bimodality we have found. As a result, the bimodality in
current galaxies may have originated in DLAs.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal 18 pages 14
figure
On the appearance of Eisenstein series through degeneration
Let be a Fuchsian group of the first kind acting on the hyperbolic
upper half plane , and let be the
associated finite volume hyperbolic Riemann surface. If is parabolic,
there is an associated (parabolic) Eisenstein series, which, by now, is a
classical part of mathematical literature. If is hyperbolic, then,
following ideas due to Kudla-Millson, there is a corresponding hyperbolic
Eisenstein series. In this article, we study the limiting behavior of parabolic
and hyperbolic Eisenstein series on a degenerating family of finite volume
hyperbolic Riemann surfaces. In particular, we prove the following result. If
corresponds to a degenerating hyperbolic element, then a
multiple of the associated hyperbolic Eisenstein series converges to parabolic
Eisenstein series on the limit surface.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. This paper has been accepted for publication in
Commentarii Mathematici Helvetic
Technical Manual for the SAM Biomass Power Generation Model
This technical manual provides context for the implementation of the biomass electric power generation performance model in the National Renewable Energy Laboratory's (NREL's) System Advisor Model (SAM). Additionally, the report details the engineering and scientific principles behind the underlying calculations in the model. The framework established in this manual is designed to give users a complete understanding of behind-the-scenes calculations and the results generated
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Genetic variation in the SIM1 locus is associated with erectile dysfunction.
Erectile dysfunction affects millions of men worldwide. Twin studies support the role of genetic risk factors underlying erectile dysfunction, but no specific genetic variants have been identified. We conducted a large-scale genome-wide association study of erectile dysfunction in 36,649 men in the multiethnic Kaiser Permanente Northern California Genetic Epidemiology Research in Adult Health and Aging cohort. We also undertook replication analyses in 222,358 men from the UK Biobank. In the discovery cohort, we identified a single locus (rs17185536-T) on chromosome 6 near the single-minded family basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor 1 (SIM1) gene that was significantly associated with the risk of erectile dysfunction (odds ratio = 1.26, P = 3.4 × 10-25). The association replicated in the UK Biobank sample (odds ratio = 1.25, P = 6.8 × 10-14), and the effect is independent of known erectile dysfunction risk factors, including body mass index (BMI). The risk locus resides on the same topologically associating domain as SIM1 and interacts with the SIM1 promoter, and the rs17185536-T risk allele showed differential enhancer activity. SIM1 is part of the leptin-melanocortin system, which has an established role in body weight homeostasis and sexual function. Because the variants associated with erectile dysfunction are not associated with differences in BMI, our findings suggest a mechanism that is specific to sexual function
Phenological Mismatch Between Season Advancement and Migration Timing Alters Arctic Plant Traits
Climate change is creating phenological mismatches between herbivores and their plant resources throughout the Arctic. While advancing growing seasons and changing arrival times of migratory herbivores can have consequences for herbivores and forage quality, developing mismatches could also influence other traits of plants, such as above‐ and below‐ground biomass and the type of reproduction, that are often not investigated. In coastal western Alaska, we conducted a 3‐year factorial experiment that simulated scenarios of phenological mismatch by manipulating the start of the growing season (3 weeks early and ambient) and grazing times (3 weeks early, typical, 3 weeks late, or no‐grazing) of Pacific black brant (Branta bernicla nigricans), to examine how the timing of these events influence a primary goose forage species, Carex subspathacea. After 3 years, an advanced growing season compared to a typical growing season increased stem heights, standing dead biomass, and the number of inflorescences. Early season grazing compared to typical season grazing reduced above‐ and below‐ground biomass, stem height, and the number of tillers; while late season grazing increased the number of inflorescences and standing dead biomass. Therefore, an advanced growing season and late grazing had similar directional effects on most plant traits, but a 3‐week delay in grazing had an impact on traits 3–5 times greater than a similarly timed shift in the advancement of spring. In addition, changes in response to treatments for some variables, such as the number of inflorescences, were not measurable until the second year of the experiment, while other variables, such as root productivity and number of tillers, changed the direction of their responses to treatments over time. Synthesis. Factors affecting the timing of migration have a larger influence than earlier springs on an important forage species in the breeding and rearing habitats of Pacific black brant. The phenological mismatch prediction for this site of earlier springs and later goose arrival will likely increase above‐ and below‐ground biomass and sexual reproduction of the often‐clonally reproducing C. subspathacea. Finally, the implications of mismatch may be difficult to predict because some variables required successive years of mismatch to respond
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