1,306 research outputs found
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Institutions and investment in low and middle-income countries: the case of mobile communications
Unveiling GRB hard X-ray afterglow emission with Simbol-X
Despite the enormous progress occurred in the last 10 years, the Gamma-Ray
Bursts (GRB) phenomenon is still far to be fully understood. One of the most
important open issues that have still to be settled is the afterglow emission
above 10 keV, which is almost completely unexplored. This is due to the lack of
sensitive enough detectors operating in this energy band. The only detection,
by the BeppoSAX/PDS instrument (15-200 keV), of hard X-ray emission from a GRB
(the very bright GRB 990123), combined with optical and radio observations,
seriously challenged the standard scenario in which the dominant mechanism is
synchrotron radiation produced in the shock of a ultra-relativistic fireball
with the ISM, showing the need of a substantial revision of present models. In
this respect, thanks to its unprecedented sensitivity in the 10-80 keV energy
band, Simbol-X, through follow-up observations of bright GRBs detected and
localized by GRB dedicated experiments that will fly in the >2010 time frame,
will provide an important breakthrough in the GRB field.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Paper presented at "Simbol-X: the hard X-ray
universe in focus", held in Bologna, Italy, on 14-16 May 2007. To be
published in Memorie della Societa' Astronomica Italian
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Regulation and Performance: Evidence from the Telecommunications Industry
This thesis proposes an empirical analysis of performance in the telecommunications industry, in relation to the regulatory framework in place in the sector. We first provide an introduction and overview of the related literature on performance measurement and regulatory institutions. Chapters 1 and 2 focus on level measures of productivity components and, in particular, of technical change and efficiency. This analysis is motivated by the form of incentive regulation in force in the industry, which links future price increases allowed by the regulator to certain measures of the operators performance. Chapter 1 investigates embodied technical change in the U.S. industry relying on rm-level panel data It builds on the definition of capital as a sum of vintages of different qualities and incorporates this definition into a cost function. Estimates of embodied technical change in this sample vary depending on the specification, but do not appear large enough to affect productivity. Chapter 2 analyses the variation of efficiency over time in the same sample of U.S. operators. This is done by applying estimators that allow for (freely) time-varying efficiency to an input stochastic distance function. Estimates confirm that standard panel estimators, which are commonly used by regulators to assess relative efficiency, do not adequately capture the time-varying component of efficiency. Finally, Chapter 3 studies how cross-country differences in sector performance, measured in terms of access to mobile networks, can be explained by regulatory and country governance. In particular, using a system approach, it considers whether the impact of regulatory governance on penetration can be an indirect result of country institutions. In addition, feedback effects between access to infrastructure and income are incorporated in the analysis. The analysis is carried out on a panel of low and middle-income countries. The empirical results show that the establishment of a separate telecommunications regulator is associated to higher penetration levels, and that this is more important for low-income countries. The effect is partly related to the quality of wider country governance rather than sector specific institutions
Spatio-temporal changes of Munida Rutllanti Zariquiey-Alvarez, 1952 (Decapoda: Galatheidae) in the North-Western Ionian Sea (Central Mediterranean)
The spatio-temporal pattern of Munida rutllanti distribution in the north-western Ionian Sea has been studied. Data were collected during 14 experimental trawl surveys conducted from 1997 to 2010 as part of the international MEDITS project. The hauls were carried out during day-light hours between depths of 10 and 800 m in the spring season. A progressive increase in the abundance index (N/km2) of M. rutllanti was observed from 2000 to 2008, then a sharp decrease was shown in the last two years. The greatest and lowest abundance indices were observed in the Apulian and central Calabrian sub-areas, respectively. The species was collected between 107 and 795 m in depth, with a significant increase and decrease over time in the maximum and minimum depth of finding, respectively. A highly significant increase over time in the mean carapace length was also observed in the whole study area. The widespread occurrence and increasing abundance of this species in the Ionian Sea could be related to the increase in temperature and the variation in hydrographic conditions which occurred in the Ionian basin during the EMT-BiOS phenomenon
Comment on "Evidence of Non-Mean-Field-Like Low-Temperature Behavior in the Edwards-Anderson Spin-Glass Model"
A recent interesting paper [Yucesoy et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 177204
(2012), arXiv:1206:0783] compares the low-temperature phase of the 3D
Edwards-Anderson (EA) model to its mean-field counterpart, the
Sherrington-Kirkpatrick (SK) model. The authors study the overlap distributions
P_J(q) and conclude that the two models behave differently. Here we notice that
a similar analysis using state-of-the-art, larger data sets for the EA model
(generated with the Janus computer) leads to a very clear interpretation of the
results of Yucesoy et al., showing that the EA model behaves as predicted by
the replica symmetry breaking (RSB) theory.Comment: Version accepted for publication in PRL. 1 page, 1 figur
Strong ergodicity breaking in aging of mean-field spin glasses
Out-of-equilibrium relaxation processes show aging if they become slower as time passes. Aging processes are ubiquitous and play a fundamental role in the physics of glasses and spin glasses and in other applications (e.g., in algorithms minimizing complex cost/loss functions). The theory of aging in the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of mean-field spin glass models has achieved a fundamental role, thanks to the asymptotic analytic solution found by Cugliandolo and Kurchan. However, this solution is based on assumptions (e.g., the weak ergodicity breaking hypothesis) which have never been put under a strong test until now. In the present work, we present the results of an extraordinary large set of numerical simulations of the prototypical mean-field spin glass models, namely the Sherrington–Kirkpatrick and the Viana–Bray models. Thanks to a very intensive use of graphics processing units (GPUs), we have been able to run the latter model for more than 264 spin updates and thus safely extrapolate the numerical data both in the thermodynamical limit and in the large times limit. The measurements of the two-times correlation functions in isothermal aging after a quench from a random initial configuration to a temperature T < Tc provides clear evidence that, at large times, such correlations do not decay to zero as expected by assuming weak ergodicity breaking. We conclude that strong ergodicity breaking takes place in mean-field spin glasses aging dynamics which, asymptotically, takes place in a confined configurational space. Theoretical models for the aging dynamics need to be revised accordingly
Effect of different levels of dietary zinc, manganese, and copper from organic or inorganic sources on performance, bacterial chondronecrosis, intramuscular collagen characteristics, and occurrence of meat quality defects of broiler chickens
The aim of the experiment was to assess the effects of two dietary levels of trace minerals (TM) zinc, manganese and copper either from organic (OTM) or inorganic (ITM) sources on broiler performance, carcass traits, intramuscular collagen (IMC) properties, occurrence of hock burns (HB), foot pad dermatitis (FPD), femoral and tibia head necrosis and breast muscle abnormalities (white striping, WS; wooden breast, WB; poor cohesion, PC). A total of 3,600 1-d-old male chicks were randomly assigned to one of four dietary treatments in a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement (9 replicates of 100 birds/dietary treatment). Birds were slaughtered at 31 (thinning) and 51 d of age. Body weight, daily weight gain (DWG), feed intake, feed conversion rate (FCR) and mortality were determined. A significant effect of the source of TM supplementation was found only in 51 d old chickens. Birds of OTM groups were heavier (P 0.05) by the different sources and doses of TM administrated
Weak first order transition in the three-dimensional site-diluted Ising antiferromagnet in a magnetic field
We perform intensive numerical simulations of the three-dimensional
site-diluted Ising antiferromagnet in a magnetic field at high values of the
external applied field. Even if data for small lattice sizes are compatible
with second-order criticality, the critical behavior of the system shows a
crossover from second-order to first-order behavior for large system sizes,
where signals of latent heat appear. We propose "apparent" critical exponents
for the dependence of some observables with the lattice size for a generic
(disordered) first-order phase transition.Comment: Final version, accepted for publicatio
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