2,227 research outputs found
On Zurek's derivation of the Born rule
Recently, W. H. Zurek presented a novel derivation of the Born rule based on
a mechanism termed environment-assisted invariance, or "envariance" [W. H.
Zurek, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90(2), 120404 (2003)]. We review this approach and
identify fundamental assumptions that have implicitly entered into it,
emphasizing issues that any such derivation is likely to face.Comment: 8 pages; v2: minor clarifications added; v3: reference to Zurek's
quant-ph/0405161 added. To appear in Foundations of Physics (Cushing Volume
Examining how companies’ support of tourist attractions affects visiting intentions: The mediating role of perceived authenticity
As public funding for the restoration of tourist attractions decreases, assistance is often sought from the private sector in the form of corporate social responsibility (CSR). However, research has yet to understand how such CSR activities impact the beneficiary, namely tourist attractions. Thus, extending past CSR literature, we explore whether differing company CSR motivations can influence a tourists’ visiting intentions. The results of two experimental studies show low company altruism (e.g., demanding to acquire naming rights of the site), compared to high company altruism (e.g., demanding nothing in return), decreases visiting intentions. Furthermore, we show that perceived authenticity of the site mediates this effect. Finally, we find the negative effect of low altruistic CSR is mitigated in the case of no heritage. Based on the results, we show tourist attraction managers should be wary of companies displaying nonaltruistic intentions, as such activity may have harmful consequences
Toric Construction of Global F-Theory GUTs
We systematically construct a large number of compact Calabi-Yau fourfolds
which are suitable for F-theory model building. These elliptically fibered
Calabi-Yaus are complete intersections of two hypersurfaces in a six
dimensional ambient space. We first construct three-dimensional base manifolds
that are hypersurfaces in a toric ambient space. We search for divisors which
can support an F-theory GUT. The fourfolds are obtained as elliptic fibrations
over these base manifolds. We find that elementary conditions which are
motivated by F-theory GUTs lead to strong constraints on the geometry, which
significantly reduce the number of suitable models. The complete database of
models is available at http://hep.itp.tuwien.ac.at/f-theory/. We work out
several examples in more detail.Comment: 35 pages, references adde
Decoherence, the measurement problem, and interpretations of quantum mechanics
Environment-induced decoherence and superselection have been a subject of
intensive research over the past two decades, yet their implications for the
foundational problems of quantum mechanics, most notably the quantum
measurement problem, have remained a matter of great controversy. This paper is
intended to clarify key features of the decoherence program, including its more
recent results, and to investigate their application and consequences in the
context of the main interpretive approaches of quantum mechanics.Comment: 41 pages. Final published versio
Atmospheric Acetaldehyde: Importance of Air-Sea Exchange and a Missing Source in the Remote Troposphere.
We report airborne measurements of acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) during the first and second deployments of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Atmospheric Tomography Mission (ATom). The budget of CH3CHO is examined using the Community Atmospheric Model with chemistry (CAM-chem), with a newly-developed online air-sea exchange module. The upper limit of the global ocean net emission of CH3CHO is estimated to be 34 Tg a-1 (42 Tg a-1 if considering bubble-mediated transfer), and the ocean impacts on tropospheric CH3CHO are mostly confined to the marine boundary layer. Our analysis suggests that there is an unaccounted CH3CHO source in the remote troposphere and that organic aerosols can only provide a fraction of this missing source. We propose that peroxyacetic acid (PAA) is an ideal indicator of the rapid CH3CHO production in the remote troposphere. The higher-than-expected CH3CHO measurements represent a missing sink of hydroxyl radicals (and halogen radical) in current chemistry-climate models
The Human Lung Cell Atlas: A High-Resolution Reference Map of the Human Lung in Health and Disease.
Lung disease accounts for every sixth death globally. Profiling the molecular state of all lung cell types in health and disease is currently revolutionizing the identification of disease mechanisms and will aid the design of novel diagnostic and personalized therapeutic regimens. Recent progress in high-throughput techniques for single-cell genomic and transcriptomic analyses has opened up new possibilities to study individual cells within a tissue, classify these into cell types, and characterize variations in their molecular profiles as a function of genetics, environment, cell-cell interactions, developmental processes, aging, or disease. Integration of these cell state definitions with spatial information allows the in-depth molecular description of cellular neighborhoods and tissue microenvironments, including the tissue resident structural and immune cells, the tissue matrix, and the microbiome. The Human Cell Atlas consortium aims to characterize all cells in the healthy human body and has prioritized lung tissue as one of the flagship projects. Here, we present the rationale, the approach, and the expected impact of a Human Lung Cell Atlas.Supported by the Helmholtz Association and the German Center for Lung Research (DZL) (H.B.S.); the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement 753039 (L.M.S.); U.K. Medical Research Council grant G0900424 (E.L.R.); National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants ES013995, HL071643, and AG049665, and Veterans Administration grant BX000201 and Department of Defense grant PR141319 (G.R.S.B.); NIH grants HL135124 and AI135964 and Department of Defense grant PR141319 (A.V.M.); NIH grants R01HL141852, R01HL127349, UHHL3123886, U01HL122626, and UG3TR002445, and Department of Defence grant PR151124 (N.K.); and the Netherlands Lung Foundation grants 5.1.14.020 and 4.1.18.226 (M.C.N.)
Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) for the Subaru Telescope: Overview, recent progress, and future perspectives
PFS (Prime Focus Spectrograph), a next generation facility instrument on the
8.2-meter Subaru Telescope, is a very wide-field, massively multiplexed,
optical and near-infrared spectrograph. Exploiting the Subaru prime focus, 2394
reconfigurable fibers will be distributed over the 1.3 deg field of view. The
spectrograph has been designed with 3 arms of blue, red, and near-infrared
cameras to simultaneously observe spectra from 380nm to 1260nm in one exposure
at a resolution of ~1.6-2.7A. An international collaboration is developing this
instrument under the initiative of Kavli IPMU. The project is now going into
the construction phase aiming at undertaking system integration in 2017-2018
and subsequently carrying out engineering operations in 2018-2019. This article
gives an overview of the instrument, current project status and future paths
forward.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Proceeding of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and
Instrumentation 201
LINT, a Novel dL(3)mbt-Containing Complex, Represses Malignant Brain Tumour Signature Genes
Mutations in the l(3)mbt tumour suppressor result in overproliferation of Drosophila larval brains. Recently, the derepression of different gene classes in l(3)mbt mutants was shown to be causal for transformation. However, the molecular mechanisms of dL(3)mbt-mediated gene repression are not understood. Here, we identify LINT, the major dL(3)mbt complex of Drosophila. LINT has three core subunits—dL(3)mbt, dCoREST, and dLint-1—and is expressed in cell lines, embryos, and larval brain. Using genome-wide ChIP–Seq analysis, we show that dLint-1 binds close to the TSS of tumour-relevant target genes. Depletion of the LINT core subunits results in derepression of these genes. By contrast, histone deacetylase, histone methylase, and histone demethylase activities are not required to maintain repression. Our results support a direct role of LINT in the repression of brain tumour-relevant target genes by restricting promoter access
Patents and Industrialisation. An Historical Overview of the British Case, 1624-1907
A Report to the Strategic Advisory Board on Intellectual Property Policy (SABIP), U
How to Exploit the Digitalization Potential of Business Processes
Process improvement is the most value-adding activity in the business process management (BPM) lifecycle. Despite mature knowledge, many approaches have been criticized to lack guidance on how to put process improvement into practice. Given the variety of emerging digital technologies, organizations not only face a process improvement black box, but also high uncertainty regarding digital technologies. This paper thus proposes a method that supports organizations in exploiting the digitalization potential of their business processes. To achieve this, action design research and situational method engineering were adopted. Two design cycles involving practitioners (i.e., managers and BPM experts) and end-users (i.e., process owners and participants) were conducted. In the first cycle, the method’s alpha version was evaluated by interviewing practitioners from five organizations. In the second cycle, the beta version was evaluated via real-world case studies. In this paper, detailed results of one case study, which was conducted at a semiconductor manufacturer, are included
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