33,089 research outputs found
Outer planet probe missions, designs and science
The similarities and differences of atmosphere entry probe mission designs and sciences appropriate to certain solar system objects, are reviewed. Candidate payloads for Saturn and Titan probes are suggested. Significant supporting research and technology efforts are required to develop mission-peculiar technology for probe exploration of the Saturnian system
Relaxation time for the temperature in a dilute binary mixture from classical kinetic theory
The system of our interest is a dilute binary mixture, in which we consider
that the species have different temperatures as an initial condition. To study
their time evolution, we use the full version of the Boltzmann equation, under
the hypothesis of partial local equilibrium for both species. Neither a
diffusion force nor mass diffusion appears in the system. We also estimate the
time in which the temperatures of the components reach the full local
equilibrium. In solving the Boltzmann equation, we imposed no assumptions on
the collision term. We work out its solution by using the well known
Chapman-Enskog method to first order in the gradients. The time in which the
temperatures relax is obtained following Landau's original idea. The result is
that the relaxation time for the temperatures is much smaller than the
characteristic hydrodynamical times but greater than a collisional time. The
main conclusion is that there is no need to study binary mixtures with
different temperatures when hydrodynamical properties are sought
Job growth and finance : are some financial institutions better suited to early stages of development than others?
This paper combines firm-level data from 89 countries with updated country-level data on financial structure, and uses two estimation approaches. It finds that in low-income countries, labor growth is swifter in countries with a higher level of private credit/gross domestic product; the positive effect of bank credit is especially pronounced in industries that depend heavily on external finance; and banking development is positively associated with more physical and human capital investment. These findings are consistent with predictions from new structural economics. In high-income countries, labor growth rates are increasing in the level of stock market capitalization, which is also consistent with predictions from new structural economics, although the analysis is unable to provide evidence that the association is causal. It finds no evidence that small-scale firms in low-income countries benefit most from private credit market development. Rather, the labor growth rates of larger, capital-intensive firms increase more with the level of private credit market development, a finding consistent with the history-based political economy view that banking systems in low-income countries serve the interests of the elite, rather than providing broad-based access to financial services.Debt Markets,Banks&Banking Reform,Access to Finance,Economic Theory&Research,Emerging Markets
The Structure of Temperament and Personality Traits: A Developmental Perspective
In this chapter, we articulate a developmental perspective on personality traits from early childhood through adulthood. In the first section, we address two topics that are fundamental in defining the most important traits at each point in the life span: the relationship between temperament and personality and the methods used to ascertain the structure of traits in the temperament and personality research traditions. We argue in this section that temperament and personality are different ways of describing the same basic traits, with temperament research primarily focused on early-emerging individual differences and personality research focused on individual differences that appear later in childhood and continue into adulthood. In the second section, we describe the current status of the most prominent models of temperament, as well as the most widely-accepted personality trait model, the Big Five. In the third section, we articulate a structural model that integrates contemporary findings on temperament and personality traits from early childhood through adulthood. We use the Big Five trait structure, along with the trait of activity level, to organize this taxonomy. In the fourth section, we discuss the current research on the psychological and biological processes that underlie individual differences in the Big Five traits in childhood and adulthood. In the final sections, we offer concluding thoughts on the nature of personality trait development and suggestions for future research. This is an exciting time in the study of personality in part because of the marked progress in uncovering the basic structure of traits across the lifespan.
Entropy Production in Relativistic Binary Mixtures
In this paper we calculate the entropy production of a relativistic binary
mixture of inert dilute gases using kinetic theory. For this purpose we use the
covariant form of Boltzmann's equation which, when suitably transformed, yields
a formal expression for such quantity. Its physical meaning is extracted when
the distribution function is expanded in the gradients using the well-known
Chapman-Enskog method. Retaining the terms to first order, consistently with
Linear Irreversible Thermodynamics we show that indeed, the entropy production
can be expressed as a bilinear form of products between the fluxes and their
corresponding forces. The implications of this result are thoroughly discussed
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The oxygen isotopic composition of water extracted from carbonaceous chondrites
The oxygen isotopic composition of water from carbonaceous chondrites suggests that close to isotopic equilibrium was attained on CI and CM parent bodies. This is more consistent with a closed system than one with fluid flow. Tagish Lake does not display such equilibrium
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