43,657 research outputs found
Jet Formation in the magnetospheres of supermassive black holes: analytic solutions describing energy loss through Blandford-Znajek processes
In this paper, we provide exact solutions for the extraction of energy from a
rotating black hole via both the electromagnetic Poynting flux and matter
currents. By appropriate choice of a radially independent poloidal function
, we find solutions where the dominant outward energy flux is
along the polar axis, consistent with a jet-like collimated outflow, but also
with a weaker flux of energy along the equatorial plane. Unlike all the
previously obtained solutions (Blandford & Znajek (1977), Menon & Dermer
(2005)), the magnetosphere is free of magnetic monopoles everywhere
Executive Power: Rethinking the Modalities of Control
The Honorable Sundaresh Menon, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Singapore, delivered the 2018-2019 Bernstein Lecture in Comparative Law titled Executive Power: Rethinking the Modalities of Control. The Chief Justice discussed the control of executive power in Singapore as compared to other legal systems. Co-sponsored by the Center for International and Comparative Law and the Office of the Dean
From Spaghetti Bowl to Jigsaw Puzzle? Addressing the Disarray in the World Trade System
The rise of mega-regionals such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) suggests that the world trade system is fragmenting to the point it appears more like a jigsaw puzzle than a spaghetti bowl. There are both regional and global jigsaw puzzles to be solved—in that order—to clean up the world trade system. But is this even likely? The difficulties of free trade agreement (FTA) consolidation at the regional level are well known, while piecing together the blocs around the world to form a coherent whole is even more challenging. In this context, a way forward is to return to the most widely used modality of trade liberalization—unilateral actions—but this time involving the multilateralization of preferences rather than unreciprocated reductions in tariff rates. As more and more FTAs are negotiated, preference erosion sets in, reducing the resistance of FTA partners to multilateralization. Multilateralization of preferences may then present a practical way forward in addressing the disarray in the world trade system
Verification of feature regions for stops and fricatives in natural speech
The presence of acoustic cues and their importance in speech perception have
long remained debatable topics. In spite of several studies that exist in this
eld, very little is known about what exactly humans perceive in speech. This
research takes a novel approach towards understanding speech perception. A
new method, named three-dimensional deep search (3DDS), was developed
to explore the perceptual cues of 16 consonant-vowel (CV) syllables, namely
/pa/, /ta/, /ka/, /ba/, /da/, /ga/, /fa/, /Ta/, /sa/, /Sa/, /va/, /Da/, /za/,
/Za/, from naturally produced speech. A veri cation experiment was then
conducted to further verify the ndings of the 3DDS method. For this pur-
pose, the time-frequency coordinate that de nes each CV was ltered out
using the short-time Fourier transform (STFT), and perceptual tests were
then conducted. A comparison between unmodi ed speech sounds and those
without the acoustic cues was made. In most of the cases, the scores dropped
from 100% to chance levels even at 12 dB SNR. This clearly emphasizes the
importance of features in identifying each CV. The results con rm earlier
ndings that stops are characterized by a short-duration burst preceding the
vowel by 10 cs in the unvoiced case, and appearing almost coincident
with the vowel in the voiced case. As has been previously hypothesized,
we con rmed that the F2 transition plays no signi cant role in consonant
identi cation. 3DDS analysis labels the /sa/ and /za/ perceptual features
as an intense frication noise around 4 kHz, preceding the vowel by 15{20
cs, with the /za/ feature being around 5 cs shorter in duration than that
of /sa/; the /Sa/ and /Za/ events are found to be frication energy near 2
kHz, preceding the vowel by 17{20 cs. /fa/ has a relatively weak burst and
frication energy over a wide-band including 2{6 kHz, while /va/ has a cue
in the 1.5 kHz mid-frequency region preceding the vowel by 7{10 cs. New
information is established regarding /Da/ and /Ta/, especially with regards
to the nature of their signi cant confusions
Approach to self-similarity in Smoluchowski's coagulation equations
We consider the approach to self-similarity (or dynamical scaling) in
Smoluchowski's equations of coagulation for the solvable kernels ,
and . In addition to the known self-similar solutions with
exponential tails, there are one-parameter families of solutions with algebraic
decay, whose form is related to heavy-tailed distributions well-known in
probability theory. For K=2 the size distribution is Mittag-Leffler, and for
and it is a power-law rescaling of a maximally skewed
-stable Levy distribution. We characterize completely the domains of
attraction of all self-similar solutions under weak convergence of measures.
Our results are analogous to the classical characterization of stable
distributions in probability theory. The proofs are simple, relying on the
Laplace transform and a fundamental rigidity lemma for scaling limits.Comment: Latex2e, 42 pages with 1 figur
Topics on High-Energy Elastic Hadron Scattering
We review the main results we have obtained in the area of high-energy
elastic hadron scattering and presented in this series of Workshops on Hadronic
Interactions. After an introduction to some basic experimental and theoretical
concepts, we survey the results reached by means of four approaches: analytic
models, model-independent analyses, eikonal models and nonperturbative QCD.
Some of the ongoing researches and future perspectives are also outlined.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, typos corrected, one reference added and six
references updated. Version to appear in Brazilian Journal of Physic
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