283 research outputs found

    Are SRI Funds More Resilient towards the Global Financial Crisis?

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    This paper compares the resilience of Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) funds with that of conventional funds towards the global financial crisis by using an event study methodology. Taking the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers as the particular event, we estimated the average cumulative abnormal returns of both SRI funds and conventional funds. Our results show that SRI funds are more resilient to such a shock. Similar results are obtained by an estimation with a market model that accounts for ARCH effects.SRI, Event study, Financial crisis

    Stripe antiferromagnetic correlations in LaFeAsO1-xFx probed by 75As NMR

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    The anisotropy of the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T11/T_{1} of 75^{75}As was investigated in the iron-based superconductor LaFeAs(O1x_{1-x}Fx_{x}) (x=0.07,0.11x = 0.07, 0.11 and 0.14) as well as LaFeAsO. While the temperature dependence of the normal-state 1/T1T1/T_1T in the superconducting (SC) x=0.07x = 0.07 is different from that in the SC x=0.11x = 0.11, their anisotropy of 1/T11/T_1, R(1/T1)Hab/(1/T1)HcR \equiv (1/T_{1})_{H \parallel ab}/(1/T_{1})_{H \parallel c} in the normal state is almost the same (\simeq 1.5). The observed anisotropy is ascribable to the presence of the local stripe correlations with Q=(π,0)Q = (\pi, 0) or (0,π)(0, \pi). In contrast, 1/T11/T_1 is isotropic and RR is approximately 1 in the overdoped x=0.14x = 0.14 sample, where superconductivity is almost suppressed. These results suggest that the presence of the local stripe correlations originating from the nesting between hole and electron Fermi surfaces is linked to high-TcT_c superconductivity in iron pnictides.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    ^{31}P and ^{75}As NMR evidence for a residual density of states at zero energy in superconducting BaFe_2(As_{0.67}P_{0.33})_2

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    ^{31}P and ^{75}As NMR measurements were performed in superconducting BaFe_2(As_{0.67}P_{0.33})_2 with T_c = 30 K. The nuclear-spin-lattice relaxation rate T_1^{-1} and the Knight shift in the normal state indicate the development of antiferromagnetic fluctuations, and T_1^{-1} in the superconducting (SC) state decreases without a coherence peak just below T_c, as observed in (Ba_{1-x}K_{x})Fe_2As_2. In contrast to other iron arsenide superconductors, the T_1^{-1} \propto T behavior is observed below 4K, indicating the presence of a residual density of states at zero energy. Our results suggest that strikingly different SC gaps appear in BaFe_2(As_{1-x}P_{x})_2 despite a comparable T_c value, an analogous phase diagram, and similar Fermi surfaces to (Ba_{1-x}K_{x})Fe_2As_2.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Energy Production from Fish Waste in Large-scale Anaerobic Digestion

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    Poster Presentatio

    A Case of Abdominal Abscess in Crohn's Disease: Successful Endoscopic Demonstration of an Obscure Enteric Fistula by Dye Injection via a Percutaneous Drainage Catheter

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    Abdominal and pelvic abscesses occur in approximately 10–30% of Crohn's disease patients during the course of the disease; most of these abscesses have an enteric communication. For this condition, percutaneous abscess drainage (PAD) rather than emergency surgery has recently been recognized as a valuable procedure for initial treatment. However, in cases wherein the abscess is accompanied by an enteric fistula, the recurrence of abscess might be inevitable without the management of the enteric fistula. Therefore, demonstration and evaluation of the enteric fistula is essential to prevent abscess recurrence; however, this is not necessarily a simple procedure. Here, we report abdominal abscess accompanied by a rectal fistula in a patient with Crohn's disease; this condition was successfully treated by PAD. Furthermore, PAD was also useful in identifying the fistula by colonoscopy involving dye injection via the drainage catheter. To our knowledge, no previous literature has reported the use of dye injection via the drainage catheter for identifying a fistula during endoscopic examination. We present here the radiographic, sonographic, and endoscopic findings of this case
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