9,378 research outputs found
Nonlocal explanation of stationary and nonstationary regimes in cascaded soliton pulse compression
We study soliton pulse compression in materials with cascaded quadratic
nonlinearities, and show that the group-velocity mismatch creates two different
temporally nonlocal regimes. They correspond to what is known as the stationary
and nonstationary regimes. The theory accurately predicts the transition to the
stationary regime, where highly efficient pulse compression is possible.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, published verison in Optics Letters. Contains
revised equations, including an updated mode
A review of service quality and service delivery: Towards a customer co-production and customer-integration approach
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to provide researchers with an overview of the service quality and delivery domain, focussing on the inclusion of customer co-production and customer integration. Specifically, this paper concentrates on service quality (including quality measurement), the service environment, controls and their consequences. Design/methodology/approach: A comprehensive review of the literature is conducted, analysed and presented. Findings: The review shows that service delivery is both complex and challenging, particularly when considering the unique characteristics of services and the high level of customer involvement in their creation. The facilitation, transformation and usage framework identifies how failures can occur at each stage of service delivery, beginning with the characteristics of the service environment, while control theory offers insights into the formal and informal controls that may be applied in the facilitation and transformation stages, which may reduce the likelihood or extent of such failures. Originality/value: Despite the fact that it is widely accepted that service quality is an antecedent to customer satisfaction, it is surprising that this customer co-creation aspect has been largely neglected in the extant literature. As such, the role that customer co-production plays in service quality performance has been examined in this paper. It is hoped that this examination will enhance both theoretical and practical understanding of service quality. It would be useful to find modern tools that can help in improving service quality performance
Limits to compression with cascaded quadratic soliton compressors
We study cascaded quadratic soliton compressors and address the physical
mechanisms that limit the compression. A nonlocal model is derived, and the
nonlocal response is shown to have an additional oscillatory component in the
nonstationary regime when the group-velocity mismatch (GVM) is strong. This
inhibits efficient compression. Raman-like perturbations from the cascaded
nonlinearity, competing cubic nonlinearities, higher-order dispersion, and
soliton energy may also limit compression, and through realistic numerical
simulations we point out when each factor becomes important. We find that it is
theoretically possible to reach the single-cycle regime by compressing
high-energy fs pulses for wavelengths in a
-barium-borate crystal, and it requires that the system is in the
stationary regime, where the phase mismatch is large enough to overcome the
detrimental GVM effects. However, the simulations show that reaching
single-cycle duration is ultimately inhibited by competing cubic nonlinearities
as well as dispersive waves, that only show up when taking higher-order
dispersion into account.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Optics Expres
Knowledge sharing by entrepreneurs in a virtual community of practice (VCoP)
PurposeThis paper examines how entrepreneurs engage in a Virtual Community of Practice (VCoP) to share knowledge. Intensity of engagement is taken as a proxy to measure the strength of knowledge sharing.Design/methodology/approachThe archival data spanning over a three-year period from âStart-up-Nation©â (a VCoP purposefully setup for entrepreneurs) is used for analysis. A set of indices are introduced to measure participantsâ intensity of engagement in terms of message length, message frequency and reciprocity in the knowledge sharing process. Content analysis is employed to test a sample of âhighly engagedâ, âmoderately engagedâ, âlow engagedâ and ânot engagedâ discussion topics as part of the on-line discourse.FindingsWe find that entrepreneurs normally use short (fewer than 100 words) or medium (fewer than 250 words) message size to contribute to the discussions. In addition, we find that senior members and discussion moderators play important roles in igniting the âreciprocityâ behaviour in stimulating the interest of the community with the topic discussion. We also findthat highly engaged topics usually lead to further discussion threads.Originality/valueThis is the first study of its kind to explore how entrepreneurs engage in a VCoP to share their knowledge and experiences. The set of measurement indices tested here provide a tool for the owner, designer and moderator of the VCoP to measure the utility of their website in terms of its membersâ participation. In addition, the set of textual and subjective interventions identified here enable the moderator (administrator) of a VCoP to design effective interventions to facilitate on-line discourse and augment the knowledge sharing process amongst its community members
Crystalline free energies of micelles of diblock copolymer solutions
We report a characterization of the relative stability and structural
behavior of various micellar crystals of an athermal model of AB-diblock
copolymers in solution. We adopt a previously devel- oped coarse-graining
representation of the chains which maps each copolymer on a soft dumbbell.
Thanks to this strong reduction of degrees of freedom, we are able to
investigate large aggregated systems, and for a specific length ratio of the
blocks f = MA/(MA + MB) = 0.6, to locate the order-disorder transition of the
system of micelles. Above the transition, mechanical and thermal properties are
found to depend on the number of particles per lattice site in the simulation
box, and the application of a recent methodology for multiple occupancy
crystals (B.M. Mladek et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 235702 (2007)) is necessary
to correctly define the equilibrium state. Within this scheme we have performed
free energy calculations at two reduced density {\rho}/{\rho}\ast = 4,5 and for
several cubic structures as FCC,BCC,A15. At both densities, the BCC symmetry is
found to correspond to the minimum of the unconstrained free energy, that is to
the stable symmetry among the few considered, while the A15 structure is almost
degenerate, indicating that the present sys- tem prefers to crystallize in less
packed structures. At {\rho}/{\rho}\ast = 4 close to melting, the Lindemann
ratio is fairly high (~ 0.29) and the concentration of vacancies is roughly 6%.
At {\rho}/{\rho}\ast = 5 the mechanical stability of the stable BCC structure
increases and the concentration of vacancies ac- cordingly decreases. The ratio
of the corona layer thickness to the core radius is found to be in good
agreement with experimental data for poly(styrene-b-isoprene)(22-12) in
isoprene selective solvent which is also reported to crystallize in the BCC
structure
Recent revisions to corporate profits: what we know and when we knew it
Initial estimates in the National Income and Product Accounts significantly overstated U.S. corporate profits for the 1998-2000 period. Subsequent revisions reveal that the profitability of the nation's corporate sector in the late 1990s was substantially weaker than "real-time" data indicated. An unexpected surge in employee stock options exercised-and perhaps, in some sectors, firms' inflated statements of profit-may help explain the large downward revisions.Corporate profits ; Stock options ; Statistics ; Economic indicators
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