27 research outputs found

    Financial reporting by New Zealand charities: finding a way forward

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    Purpose – Charities are becoming recognised as playing an important part in communities by furthering government’s social objectives through increasing support to disadvantaged members of society. As charities multiply in number, it becomes increasingly difficult for fund providers and contributors to determine which charity to support. In New Zealand there is a move towards providing public access to the financial accounts of charities to assist stakeholders in their decision making and to enhance transparency in charities. However, this assumes that these financial accounts are understandable by all stakeholders. This paper aims to identify four problems that limit the way forward for financial reporting by New Zealand charities. Design/methodology/approach – The first section of the paper comprises a review of the literature on charities’ financial accounts with a particular focus on the four problems identified above. The paper then reports the results of eight interviews with charitable organisations, auditors and academics that have expertise in charity financial reporting, with a particular emphasis on the four identified problems. Findings – There was agreement that unresolved, these four problems could limit the way forward in financial reporting by New Zealand charities. Some recommendations are proposed that suggest a way forward with regard to these problems, so that the users of the financial reports of charities may benefit. Research limitations/implications – Highlights a need for further research into these problems to identify the feasibility of the proposed recommendations. Originality/value – The enactment of the Charities Act 2005 in New Zealand and its requirement to include financial accounts on a publicly available register has raised the profile of the financial reports of charities. However, there has been limited research into the financial reporting by New Zealand charities, so this paper is a timely evaluation of four specific problems that could limit the way forward of financial reporting by New Zealand charities

    Cooper pair trajectories in superconducting slab at self-field conditions

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    Dissipative-free electric current flow is one of the most fascinating and practically important properties of superconductors. Theoretical consideration of the charge carriers flow in infinitely long rectangular slab of superconductor in the absence of external magnetic field (so called, self-field) is based on an assumption that the charge carriers have rectilinear trajectories in the direction of the current flow whereas the current density and magnetic flux density are decaying towards superconducting slab with London penetration depth as characteristic length. Here, we calculate charge particle trajectories (as single electron/hole, as Cooper pair) at self-field conditions and find that charge carriers do not follow intuitive rectilinear trajectories along the slab surface, but instead ones have meander shape trajectories cross the whole thickness of the slab. Moreover, if the particle velocity is below some value, the charge moves in opposite direction to nominal current flow. This disturbance of the canonical magnetic flux density distribution and backward movement of Cooper pairs can be entire mechanism for power dissipation in superconductors. © 2021 World Scientific Publishing Company.EFT thanks financial support provided by the state assignment of Minobrnauki of Russia (theme “Pressure” No. AAAA-A18-118020190104-3) and by Act 211 Government of the Russian Federation, contract No. 02.A03.21.0006

    Classifying superconductivity in ThH-ThD superhydrides/superdeuterides

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    Satterthwaite and Toepke (1970 Phys. Rev. Lett. 25 741) discovered that Th4H15-Th4D15 superhydrides are superconducting but exhibit no isotope effect. As the isotope effect is a fundamental prediction of electron-phonon mediated superconductivity described by Bardeen, Cooper, and Schrieffer (BCS) its absence alludes to some other mechanism. Soon after this work, Stritzker and Buckel (1972 Zeitschrift für Physik A Hadrons and nuclei 257 1-8) reported that superconductors in the PdHx-PdDx system exhibit the reverse isotope effect. Yussouff et al (1995 Solid State Communications 94 549) extended this finding in PdHx-PdDx-PdTx systems. Renewed interest in hydrogen- and deuterium-rich superconductors is driven by the discovery of near-room-temperature superconductivity in highly-compressed H3S (Drozdov et al 2015 Nature 525 73) and LaH10 (Somayazulu et al 2019 Phys. Rev. Lett. 122 027001). Here we attempt to reaffirm or disprove our primary idea that the mechanism for near-room-temperature superconductivity in hydrogen-rich superconductors is not BCS electron-phonon mediated. To that end, we analyse the upper critical field data, B c2(T), in Th4H15-Th4D15 (Satterthwaite and Toepke 1970 Phys. Rev. Lett. 25 741) as well as two recently discovered high-pressure hydrogen-rich phases of ThH9 and ThH10 (Semenok et al 2019 Materials Today, DOI: 10.1016/j.mattod.2019.10.005). We conclude that all known thorium super-hydrides/deuterides, to date, are unconventional superconductors - along with the heavy fermions, fullerenes, pnictides, cuprates - where we find they have T c/T F ratios within a range of 0.008 < T c/T F < 0.120, where T c is the superconducting transition temperature and T F is the Fermi temperature. © 2020 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd

    The Role of Ethnic Directors in Corporate Social Responsibility: Does Culture matter? The Cultural Trait Theory Perspectives

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    This paper investigates the effect of cultural differences between ethnic directors on corporate social responsibility (CSR) of Public Liability Companies (PLCs) in Nigeria. Using the cultural trait theory, the study focuses on how the ethnic directors are influenced when making decisions concerning CSR. Adopting multiple regression analysis of data, the study investigates the three major ethnic groups (Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa) and finds cultural differences between the ethnic directors affect the adoption of CSR. Empirical results indicate that ethnic directors (Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa) were positively and significantly related to CSR. The paper contributes to the corporate governance and CSR debate concerning how ethnic directors’ decisions impact on CSR activities, particularly on the directors who are individualistic and collectivists towards CSR

    Polar projections for big data analysis in applied superconductivity

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    There is a growing problem to represent and analyse large experimental datasets in many emerging fields of science aside of traditional big data-based disciplines, i.e., elementary particles, genetics/genomics and geoscience. One of these emerging fields is applied superconductivity where recently a large, regularly up-dated, public database of critical currents of commercial superconductors was established. The size, dimensionality and resolution of this data makes current methods of display and analysis inadequate. As is often the case in physics and materials science, when dealing with any anisotropic properties, one measures the effects of rotations around a low symmetry axis, this is also the case in critical current measurements as found in applied superconductivity. In this paper we propose the use of polar projected images to map these much larger data sets into useful visualizations for analysis. Where we suggest the radial coordinate and the colour represent amplitudes of two measured parameters, and sample rotation angle is naturally mapped to the polar coordinate. We demonstrate the advantage of this projection for analysing, otherwise unwieldy large, critical current datasets, and naturally recover previously used empirical relations

    Classifying superconductivity in Moiré graphene superlattices

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    Several research groups have reported on the observation of superconductivity in bilayer graphene structures where single atomic layers of graphene are stacked and then twisted at angles θ forming Moiré superlattices. The characterization of the superconducting state in these 2D materials is an ongoing task. Here we investigate the pairing symmetry of bilayer graphene Moiré superlattices twisted at θ = 1.05°, 1.10° and 1.16° for carrier doping states varied in the range of n = (0.5 − 1.5) · 1012 cm−2 (where superconductivity can be realized) by analyzing the temperature dependence of the upper critical field Bc2(T) and the self-field critical current Jc(sf,T) within currently available models – all of which start from phonon-mediated BCS theory – for single- and two-band s−, d−, p− and d + id-wave gap symmetries. Extracted superconducting parameters show that only s-wave and a specific kind of p-wave symmetries are likely to be dominant in bilayer graphene Moiré superlattices. More experimental data is required to distinguish between the s- and remaining p-wave symmetries as well as the suspected two-band superconductivity in these 2D superlattices.Peer reviewe
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