368 research outputs found

    Country paper of Myanmar

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    The paper presents the coastal resources management initiatives in Myanmar. Moreover, policies on the management of fisheries, coastal resources and coastal environment are also discussed

    The role of agricultural co-operatives in Burma

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    Burma is a country with a long history of rural co-operatives and with new trends in the co-operative movement. The trend has recently been to move from lower to higher stages of cooperation - from credit provision to marketing, and from marketing to farming activities. The latest development is in the field of co-operative farming which involves joint efforts in cultivation of land leading to pooling of cultivation rights and to group farming. The major aim of this study is to see how agricultural co-operatives have contributed to rural development in Burma, to examine the causes of failure and success of the agricultural co-operative movement in the past, to review the present status of the movement, and to highlight ways and means that will encourage success in the future. The co-operative movement was started in Burma in 1905, under British rule, to free the small cultivator from dependence on private money-lenders. Much was expected of the movement, but it was a failure and this seriously damaged the image of co-operatives. After Burma regained its independence the Five Year Co-operative Plan was announced and agricultural co-operatives were formed to service its members with finance, to supply consumer goods and agricultural inputs, to sell produce and to promote thrift. Serious difficulties, including reliance on government loans, inefficiency compared to private traders and inadequate leadership, meant that most society did not serve their members well. When the Revolutionary Council came to power, bogus societies were liquidated and efforts were made to form new socialist co-operatives as a mode of socialist ownership of means of production. The co-operative was regarded as the only socially-acceptable form of socializing small-scale producers, but most of the peasants were unwilling to pool their land. The Ministry of Co-operatives adopted the Pilot Project for Co-operative Fanning which emphasised establishing co-operative farms on cultivable waste land. The Pilot Project aimed to attract farmers through demonstration of the benefits of co-operative farming. Most co-operative farms, however, appear to have failed to take full advantage of their large scale and have experienced management disadvantages. The majority of land remains under individual private ownership and management and the small-holders are still economically dominant. Co-operative farming is still in its infancy and has not taken firm root. Only state initiative and local leadership can give momentum to the movement. It has to rely on good management and new technology to achieve higher productivity and output in order to attract more farmers

    Status of fisheries in Union of Myanmar

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    Presented in the paper is the status of fisheries in the Union of Myanmar for the period 1996-1997. Discussed are the fishery production, and trade of the country, including its fishery policies

    Wall effects on pressure fluctuations in turbulent channel flow

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    The purpose of the present paper is to study the influence of wall-echo on pressure fluctuations pp', and on statistical correlations containing pp', {\em viz} redistribution ϕij\phi_{ij}, pressure diffusion dij(p)d_{ij}^{(p)}, and velocity/pressure-gradient Πij\Pi_{ij}. We extend the usual analysis of turbulent correlations containing pressure fluctuations in wall-bounded \tsc{dns} computations [Kim J.: {\em J. Fluid Mech.} {\bf 205} (1989) 421--451], separating pp' not only into rapid p(r)p_{(\mathrm{r})}' and slow p(s)p_{(\mathrm{s})}' parts [Chou P.Y.: {\em Quart. Appl. Math.} {\bf 3} (1945) 38--54], but further into volume (p(r;V)p'_{(\mathrm{r};\mathfrak{V})} and p(s;V)p'_{(\mathrm{s};\mathfrak{V})}) and surface (wall-echo; p(r;w)p'_{(\mathrm{r};w)} and p(s;w)p'_{(\mathrm{s};w)}) terms. An algorithm, based on a Green's function approach, is developed to compute the above splittings for various correlations containing pressure fluctuations (redistribution, pressure diffusion, velocity/pressure-gradient), in fully developed turbulent plane channel flow. This exact analysis confirms previous results based on a method-of-images approximation [Manceau R., Wang M., Laurence D.: {\em J. Fluid Mech.} {\bf 438} (2001) 307--338] showing that, at the wall, p(V)p'_{(\mathfrak{V})} and p(w)p'_{(w)} are usually of the same sign and approximately equal. The above results are then used to study the contribution of each mechanism on the pressure correlations in low Reynolds-number plane channel flow, and to discuss standard second-moment-closure modelling practices

    A Hyperbolic PDE with Parabolic Behavior

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    QCD chiral Lagrangian on the lattice, strong coupling expansion and Ward identities with Wilson fermions

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    We discuss a general strategy to compute the coefficients of the QCD chiral Lagrangian using lattice QCD with Wilson fermions. This procedure requires the introduction of a lattice chiral Lagrangian as an intermediate step in the calculation. The QCD chiral Lagrangian is then obtained by expanding the lattice effective theory in increasing powers of the lattice spacing and the external momenta. In order to investigate the consequences of the chiral symmetry breaking induced by the Wilson term, we study the lattice chiral Lagrangian at the leading order of the strong coupling and large NN expansion. We show that the effects of the Wilson term can be conveniently taken into account, in the lattice effective theory, by a suitable renormalization procedure. In particular, we show that, at the leading order of the strong coupling and large N expansion, the chiral symmetry is exactly recovered on the lattice provided that the bare quark mass and the lattice operators are properly renormalized.Comment: 45 pages, no figures. Latex fil

    Light-Front Quantisation as an Initial-Boundary Value Problem

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    In the light front quantisation scheme initial conditions are usually provided on a single lightlike hyperplane. This, however, is insufficient to yield a unique solution of the field equations. We investigate under which additional conditions the problem of solving the field equations becomes well posed. The consequences for quantisation are studied within a Hamiltonian formulation by using the method of Faddeev and Jackiw for dealing with first-order Lagrangians. For the prototype field theory of massive scalar fields in 1+1 dimensions, we find that initial conditions for fixed light cone time {\sl and} boundary conditions in the spatial variable are sufficient to yield a consistent commutator algebra. Data on a second lightlike hyperplane are not necessary. Hamiltonian and Euler-Lagrange equations of motion become equivalent; the description of the dynamics remains canonical and simple. In this way we justify the approach of discretised light cone quantisation.Comment: 26 pages (including figure), tex, figure in latex, TPR 93-

    Resonance saturation for four-nucleon operators

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    In the modern description of nuclear forces based on chiral effective field theory, four-nucleon operators with unknown coupling constants appear. These couplings can be fixed by a fit to the low partial waves of neutron-proton scattering. We show that the so determined numerical values can be understood on the basis of phenomenological one-boson-exchange models. We also extract these values from various modern high accuracy nucleon-nucleon potentials and demonstrate their consistency and remarkable agreement with the values in the chiral effective field theory approach. This paves the way for estimating the low-energy constants of operators with more nucleon fields and/or external probes.Comment: 16 pp, REVTeX, 3 figure

    Older cancer patients during the COVID-19 epidemic: Practice proposal of the international geriatric radiotherapy group

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    The coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) pandemic is unprecedented as it reached all countries in the world within a record short period of time. Even though COVID-19 infection may be just severe in any adults, older adults (65-year-old or older) may experience a higher mortality rate. Among those affected, cancer patients may have a worse outcome compared to the general population because of their depressed immune status. As the health resources of most countries are limited, clinicians may face painful decisions about which patients to save if they require artificial ventilation. Cancer patients, especially the older ones, may be denied supportive care because of their shorter life expectancy. Thus, special considerations should be taken to prevent infection of older cancer patients and to provide them with adequate social support during their cancer treatment. The following proposal was reached: (1) Education of health care providers about the special needs of older cancer patients and their risks of infection. (2) Special consideration such as surgical masks and separate scheduling should be made to protect them from being infected. (3) Social services such as patient navigators should be provided to ensure adequate medical supply, food, and daily transportation to cancer centers. (4) Close monitoring through phone calls, telecommunication to ensure social distancing and psychological support from patient family to prevent anxiety and depression. (5) Shorter course of radiotherapy by use of hypofractionation where possible to decrease the needs for daily transportation and exposure to infection. (6) Enrollment of older cancer patients in clinical trials for potential antiviral medications if infection does occur. (7) Home health care telemedicine may be an effective strategy for older cancer patients with COVID-19 infection to avoid hospital admission when health care resources become restricted. (8) For selected patients, immunotherapy and targeted therapy may become the systemic therapy of choice for older cancer patients and need to be tested in clinical trials
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