7,739 research outputs found
The Value of Recreational Inshore Marine Fishing
The relative values of New Zealand commercial and recreational marine fishing are unknown. Value transfer is applied to assess the likely value of inshore marine recreational fishing. The few relevant studies available report widely differing estimates of value. However, there is sufficient evidence to indicate that the value of recreational fishing is of the same order of magnitude as commercial fishing.Value transfer, recreational fishing, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Jet engine air intake system
An axisymmetric air intake system for a jet aircraft engine comprising a fixed cowl extending outwardly from the face of the engine, a centerbody coaxially disposed within the cowl, and an actuator for axially displacing the centerbody within the cowl was developed. The cowl and centerbody define a main airflow passageway therebetween, the configuration of which is changed by displacement of the centerbody. The centerbody includes a forwardly-located closeable air inlet which communicates with a centerbody auxiliary airflow passageway to provide auxiliary airflow to the engine. In one embodiment, a system for opening and closing the centerbody air inlet is provided by a dual-member centerbody, the forward member of which may be displaced axially with respect to the aft member
Aircraft engine nozzle
A variable area exit nozzle arrangement for an aircraft engine was a substantially reduced length and weight which comprises a number of longitudinally movable radial vanes and a number of fixed radial vanes. The movable radial vanes are alternately disposed with respect to the fixed radial vanes. A means is provided for displacing the movable vanes along the longitudinal axis of the engine relative to the fixed radial vanes which extend across the main exhaust flow of the engine
Harmonic operation of a free-electron laser
Harmonic operation of a free-electron-laser amplifier is studied. The key issue investigated here is suppression of the fundamental. For a tapered amplifier with the right choice of parameters, it is found that the presence of the harmonic mode greatly reduces the growth rate of the fundamental. A limit on the reflection coefficient of the fundamental mode that will ensure stable operation is derived. The relative merits of tripling the frequency by operating at the third harmonic versus decreasing the wiggler period by a factor of 3 are discussed
Authentic learning for pre-service teacherrs in a technology-rich environment
This paper shares the findings from a three year Participatory Action Research Study around the selection, implementation and effectiveness of educational technologies for enhancing learning in a Teacher Education subject for second year pre-service primary teachers. The innovative Project- Based subject is described using a critical lens. The paper will share how two lecturers and their students explored their changing roles as teachers and learners and the tensions that emerged between their beliefs about student centered, authentic learning and the role of technology. It will explore the ways the technological innovations began to reshape and inform thinking about teaching and learning practices
Rapid Bayesian learning in the mammalian olfactory system
Many experimental studies suggest that animals can rapidly learn to identify odors and predict the rewards associated with them. However, the underlying plasticity mechanism remains elusive. In particular, it is not clear how olfactory circuits achieve rapid, data efficient learning with local synaptic plasticity. Here, we formulate olfactory learning as a Bayesian optimization process, then map the learning rules into a computational model of the mammalian olfactory circuit. The model is capable of odor identification from a small number of observations, while reproducing cellular plasticity commonly observed during development. We extend the framework to reward-based learning, and show that the circuit is able to rapidly learn odor-reward association with a plausible neural architecture. These results deepen our theoretical understanding of unsupervised learning in the mammalian brain
Welcome to Neural Systems and Circuits: bridging the gap between theory and experiment
Molecular and Cellular Biolog
Shared Information -- New Insights and Problems in Decomposing Information in Complex Systems
How can the information that a set of random variables
contains about another random variable be decomposed? To what extent do
different subgroups provide the same, i.e. shared or redundant, information,
carry unique information or interact for the emergence of synergistic
information?
Recently Williams and Beer proposed such a decomposition based on natural
properties for shared information. While these properties fix the structure of
the decomposition, they do not uniquely specify the values of the different
terms. Therefore, we investigate additional properties such as strong symmetry
and left monotonicity. We find that strong symmetry is incompatible with the
properties proposed by Williams and Beer. Although left monotonicity is a very
natural property for an information measure it is not fulfilled by any of the
proposed measures.
We also study a geometric framework for information decompositions and ask
whether it is possible to represent shared information by a family of posterior
distributions.
Finally, we draw connections to the notions of shared knowledge and common
knowledge in game theory. While many people believe that independent variables
cannot share information, we show that in game theory independent agents can
have shared knowledge, but not common knowledge. We conclude that intuition and
heuristic arguments do not suffice when arguing about information.Comment: 20 page
A Photometric Survey for Variables and Transits in the Field of Praesepe with KELT
The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project is a small aperture,
wide-angle search for planetary transits of solar-type stars. In this paper, we
present the results of a commissioning campaign with the KELT telescope to
observe the open cluster Praesepe for 34 nights in early 2005. Lightcurves were
obtained for 69,337 stars, out of which we identify 58 long period variables
and 152 periodic variables. Sixteen of these are previously known as variable,
yielding 194 newly discovered variable stars for which we provide properties
and lightcurves. We also searched for planetary-like transits, finding four
transit candidates. Follow-up observations indicate that two of the candidates
are astrophysical false positives, with two candidates remaining as potential
planetary transits.Comment: 45 pages, 16 figures. Submitted to AJ. PDF version with full
resolution figures located at
http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pepper/kelt.pd
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