959,395 research outputs found
Comment on "Creating in-plane pseudomagnetic fields in excess of 1000 T by misoriented stacking in a graphene bilayer"
In a recent paper [Phys. Rev. B 89, 125418 (2014)], the authors argue that it
is possible to map the electronic properties of twisted bilayer graphene to
those of bilayer graphene in an in-plane magnetic field. However, their
description of the low-energy dynamics of twisted bilayer graphene is
restricted to the extended zone scheme and therefore neglects the effects of
the superperiodic structure. If the energy spectrum is studied in the supercell
Brillouin zone, we find that the comparison with an in-plane magnetic field
fails because (i) the energy spectra of the two situations exhibit different
symmetries and (ii) the low-energy spectra are very different.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
African Regional Integration: Implications for Food Security
This report looks at the African regional trade, regional integration agreements (RIAs) and the implications for food security. An overview is presented on the present state of African regional integration and the determinants of regional trade in agriculture and food commodities. In particular the study focuses on eight target countries, related RIAs and a set of strategic food commodities. The evidence presented in this study shows that African countries have made progress in opening up agriculture and food trade with partner countries. With, the exception of Ghana, Tanzania and Mozambique, the effective applied tariff rates for regional trade partners are substantially lower than the (MFN) rates applied to world trade partners. Nonetheless, regional trade in agriculture and food only increased marginally between 1990 and 2009, and is relatively low in comparison with other developing regions. The weak state of soft and hard infrastructure, rather than high trade tariffs, seem to be the cause of thi
Biodiversity studies in the Ningaloo Reef lagoon
As part of the CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship’s Ningaloo Collaboration Cluster program currently underway in Western Australia, this study aims to examine the habitats and biodiversity of lagoonal areas within Ningaloo Reef. Key habitat types were identified using information from hyperspectral remote sensing and were used to develop a stratified sampling approach. Two focal areas were selected, based on sanctuary zones within Ningaloo Marine Park: Osprey Bay in the north and Coral Bay in the central section; an additional site has recently been added at Gnaraloo in the south. A nested sampling programme was initiated within each location, consisting of surveying transects at different spatial scales: cross-reef transects (shore to back-reef) to identify major habitat types and boundaries between habitats; and finer-scale habitat surveys of biodiversity and abundance of different major groups of organisms, focussing on non-scleractinian cnidarians, macroalgae, sponges, echinoderms and molluscs. Three geomorphological categories have been sampled at each location: back-reef, lagoon and inner reefflat. Ground-truthing was carried out on the extent of habitats along defined transects selected to maximize the diversity of each site. A nested quadrat sampling regime was used to validate remotely-sensed data with field-collected data
Numerical Integration of Nonlinear Wave Equations for General Relativity
A second-order numerical implementation is given for recently derived
nonlinear wave equations for general relativity. The Gowdy T cosmology is
used as a test bed for studying the accuracy and convergence of simulations of
one-dimensional nonlinear waves. The complete freedom in space-time slicing in
the present formulation is exploited to compute in the Gowdy line-element.
Second-order convergence is found by direct comparison of the results with
either analytical solutions for polarized waves, or solutions obtained from
Gowdy's reduced wave equations for the more general unpolarized waves. Some
directions for extensions are discussed.Comment: 19 pages (LaTex), 3 figures (ps
Non-parametric indices of dependence between components for inhomogeneous multivariate random measures and marked sets
We propose new summary statistics to quantify the association between the
components in coverage-reweighted moment stationary multivariate random sets
and measures. They are defined in terms of the coverage-reweighted cumulant
densities and extend classic functional statistics for stationary random closed
sets. We study the relations between these statistics and evaluate them
explicitly for a range of models. Unbiased estimators are given for all
statistics and applied to simulated examples.Comment: Added examples in version
A spectral mean for point sampled closed curves
We propose a spectral mean for closed curves described by sample points on
its boundary subject to mis-alignment and noise. First, we ignore mis-alignment
and derive maximum likelihood estimators of the model and noise parameters in
the Fourier domain. We estimate the unknown curve by back-transformation and
derive the distribution of the integrated squared error. Then, we model
mis-alignment by means of a shifted parametric diffeomorphism and minimise a
suitable objective function simultaneously over the unknown curve and the
mis-alignment parameters. Finally, the method is illustrated on simulated data
as well as on photographs of Lake Tana taken by astronauts during a Shuttle
mission
The development of a mapping tool for the evaluation of building systems for future climate scenarios on European scale
The paper presents a tool for the mapping of the performance of building
systems on European scale for different (future) time periods. The tool is to
use for users and be applicable for different building systems. Users should
also be able to use a broad range of climate parameters to assess the influence
of climate change on these climatic parameters. Also should the calculation
time be reasonable short. The mapping tool is developed in MATLAB, which can be
used by other users for their own studies.Comment: 21 pages, 24 figures, pre-conferenc
State estimation for temporal point processes
This paper is concerned with combined inference for point processes on the
real line observed in a broken interval. For such processes, the classic
history-based approach cannot be used. Instead, we adapt tools from sequential
spatial point processes. For a range of models, the marginal and conditional
distributions are derived. We discuss likelihood based inference as well as
parameter estimation using the method of moments, conduct a simulation study
for the important special case of renewal processes and analyse a data set
collected by Diggle and Hawtin
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