27,034 research outputs found
The implicit theory of historical change in the work of Alan S. Milward
Alan S. Milward was an economic historian who developed an implicit theory of historical change. His interpretation which was neither liberal nor Marxist posited that social, political, and economic change, for it to be sustainable, had to be a gradual process rather than one resulting from a sudden, cataclysmic revolutionary event occurring in one sector of the economy or society. Benign change depended much less on natural resource endowment or technological developments than on the ability of state institutions to respond to changing political demands from within each society. State bureaucracies were fundamental to formulating those political demands and advising politicians of ways to meet them. Since each society was different there was no single model of development to be adopted or which could be imposed successfully by one nation-state on others, either through force or through foreign aid programs. Nor could development be promoted simply by copying the model of a more successful economy. Each nation-state had to find its own response to the political demands arising from within its society. Integration occurred when a number of nationâ states shared similar political objectives which they could not meet individually but could meet collectively. It was not simply the result of their increasing interdependence. It was how and whether nation-states responded to these domestic demands which determined the nature of historical change.historical change,development,World Wars,Third Reich,Blitzkrieg,New Order,Vichy,Fascism,Grossraumwirtschaft,German question,reconstruction,golden age,integration,supranationality,Bretton Woods
Inference of historical population-size changes with allele-frequency data
With up to millions of nearly neutral polymorphisms now being routinely sampled in population-genomic surveys, it is possible to estimate the site-frequency spectrum of such sites with high precision. Each frequency class reflects a mixture of potentially unique demographic histories, which can be revealed using theory for the probability distributions of the starting and ending points of branch segments over all possible coalescence trees. Such distributions are completely independent of past population history, which only influences the segment lengths, providing the basis for estimating average population sizes separating tree-wide coalescence events. The history of population-size change experienced by a sample of polymorphisms can then be dissected in a model-flexible fashion, and extension of this theory allows estimation of the mean and full distribution of long-term effective population sizes and ages of alleles of specific frequencies. Here, we outline the basic theory underlying the conceptual approach, develop and test an efficient statistical procedure for parameter estimation, and apply this to multiple population-genomic datasets for the microcrustacean Daphnia pulex
Effects of geometric constraints on the nuclear multifragmentation process
We include in statistical model calculations the facts that in the nuclear
multifragmentation process the fragments are produced within a given volume and
have a finite size. The corrections associated with these constraints affect
the partition modes and, as a consequence, other observables in the process. In
particular, we find that the favored fragmenting modes strongly suppress the
collective flow energy, leading to much lower values compared to what is
obtained from unconstrained calculations. This leads, for a given total
excitation energy, to a nontrivial correlation between the breakup temperature
and the collective expansion velocity. In particular we find that, under some
conditions, the temperature of the fragmenting system may increase as a
function of this expansion velocity, contrary to what it might be expected.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Statistical multifragmentation model with discretized energy and the generalized Fermi breakup. I. Formulation of the model
The Generalized Fermi Breakup recently demonstrated to be formally equivalent
to the Statistical Multifragmentation Model, if the contribution of excited
states are included in the state densities of the former, is implemented. Since
this treatment requires the application of the Statistical Multifragmentation
Model repeatedly on the hot fragments until they have decayed to their ground
states, it becomes extremely computational demanding, making its application to
the systems of interest extremely difficult. Based on exact recursion formulae
previously developed by Chase and Mekjian to calculate the statistical weights
very efficiently, we present an implementation which is efficient enough to
allow it to be applied to large systems at high excitation energies. Comparison
with the GEMINI++ sequential decay code shows that the predictions obtained
with our treatment are fairly similar to those obtained with this more
traditional model.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Coupling and higher-order effects in the 12C(d,p)13C and 13C(p,d)12C reactions
Coupled channels calculations are performed for the 12C(d,p)13C and
13C(p,d)12C reactions between 7 and 60 MeV to study the effect of inelastic
couplings in transfer reactions. The effect of treating transfer beyond Born
approximation is also addressed. The coupling to the 12C 2+ state is found to
change the peak cross-section by up to 15 %. Effects beyond Born approximation
lead to a significant renormalization of the cross-sections, between 5 and 10 %
for deuteron energies above 10 MeV, and larger than 10 % for lower energies. We
also performed calculations including the remnant term in the transfer
operator, which has a small impact on the 12C(d,p)13C(g.s.) and
13C(p,d)12C(g.s.) reactions. Above 30 MeV deuteron energy, the effect of the
remnant term is larger than 10 % for the 12C(d,p)13C(3.09 MeV) reaction and is
found to increase with decreasing neutron separation energy for the 3.09 MeV
state of 13C. This is of importance for transfer reactions with weakly bound
nuclei.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Soft Landing Problem: Minimizing Energy Loss by a Legged Robot Impacting Yielding Terrain
Enabling robots to walk and run on yielding terrain is increasingly vital to
endeavors ranging from disaster response to extraterrestrial exploration. While
dynamic legged locomotion on rigid ground is challenging enough, yielding
terrain presents additional challenges such as permanent ground deformation
which dissipates energy. In this paper, we examine the soft landing problem:
given some impact momentum, bring the robot to rest while minimizing foot
penetration depth. To gain insight into properties of penetration
depth-minimizing control policies, we formulate a constrained optimal control
problem and obtain a bang-bang open-loop force profile. Motivated by examples
from biology and recent advances in legged robotics, we also examine
impedance-control solutions to the dimensionless soft landing problem. Through
simulations, we find that optimal impedance reduces penetration depth nearly as
much as the open-loop force profile, while remaining robust to model
uncertainty. Through simulations and experiments, we find that the solution
space is rich, exhibiting qualitatively different relationships between impact
velocity and the optimal impedance for small and large dimensionless impact
velocities. Lastly, we discuss the relevance of this work to
minimum-cost-of-transport locomotion for several actuator design choices
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