2,701 research outputs found

    DOES PRIVATE LABEL OWNERSHIP AND PRICING STRUCTURE MATTER?

    Get PDF
    This article provides an analysis of the two-stage game between manufacturers and retailers. Response functions showing how prices are set are derived for the case of a manufacturer producing one and multiple goods and for a retailer selling multiple goods. The functions are expressed in terms of elasticities, budget shares, and variable production costs. An application using ready-to-eat cereals is conducted to investigate the pricing structure and ownership of private label cereals.Demand and Price Analysis,

    Missouri\u27s Uniform Limited Partnership Act

    Get PDF

    The Public Policy Exception to the Recognition of Foreign Judgments

    Get PDF
    This Note examines the public policy exception to the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments. The author first examines other grounds that a United States court can use to refuse to recognize a foreign judgment. An analysis of several cases construing the public policy exception follows. The author concludes with a suggested analysis for courts faced with the public policy exception

    Corporations--Are Nonvoting Shares Entitled to Appraisal Rights

    Get PDF

    Doctrine of Precedents and Public Service Commissions, The

    Get PDF

    Body and canard effects on an attached-flow maneuver wing at Mach 1.62

    Get PDF
    A wing-body-canard configuration was tested at a Mach number of 1.62 by using both a cambered and an uncambered wing. The cambered wing was designed to produce efficient high lift by using attached supercritical crossflow and was originally tested as an isolated wing. The uncambered wing has the same planform and essentially the same thickness distribution as the cambered wing. The experiment determined the effects of a body and canards on both wings. The experimental data showed that both the body and the canards influenced the wing pressure levels, but that the attached supercritical crossflow, which was achieved in the isolated cambered-wing test, was maintained in the presence of a body and canards. Tables of experimental pressure, force, and moment data are included, as well as photographs of oil flow patterns on the upper surface

    Supersonic, nonlinear, attached-flow wing design for high lift with experimental validation

    Get PDF
    Results of the experimental validation are presented for the three dimensional cambered wing which was designed to achieve attached supercritical cross flow for lifting conditions typical of supersonic maneuver. The design point was a lift coefficient of 0.4 at Mach 1.62 and 12 deg angle of attack. Results from the nonlinear full potential method are presented to show the validity of the design process along with results from linear theory codes. Longitudinal force and moment data and static pressure data were obtained in the Langley Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel at Mach numbers of 1.58, 1.62, 1.66, 1.70, and 2.00 over an angle of attack range of 0 to 14 deg at a Reynolds number of 2.0 x 10 to the 6th power per foot. Oil flow photographs of the upper surface were obtained at M = 1.62 for alpha approx. = 8, 10, 12, and 14 deg

    Photon number resolution using a time-multiplexed single-photon detector

    Full text link
    Photon number resolving detectors are needed for a variety of applications including linear-optics quantum computing. Here we describe the use of time-multiplexing techniques that allows ordinary single photon detectors, such as silicon avalanche photodiodes, to be used as photon number-resolving detectors. The ability of such a detector to correctly measure the number of photons for an incident number state is analyzed. The predicted results for an incident coherent state are found to be in good agreement with the results of a proof-of-principle experimental demonstration.Comment: REVTeX4, 6 pages, 8 eps figures, v2: minor changes, v3: changes in response to referee report, appendix added, 1 reference adde

    Using crocodilian tails as models for dinosaur tails

    Get PDF
    The tails of extant crocodilians are anatomically the closest approximation of the tails of non-avian dinosaurs, and therefore a good starting point for any reconstruction of non-avian dinosaur tail muscles. However, we here demonstrate some methodological problems using crocodile tails, firstly regarding the general reconstruction of tail mobility from osteology, secondly for the reconstruction of tail musculature for the quantification of muscle forces, especially the m. caudofemoralis longus, and thirdly with respect to the anatomical differences between crocodilians and non-avian dinosaurs, especially in relation to the reconstruction of m. caudofemoralis brevis. Our results show that, given the current limited knowledge of crocodilian tails, volumetric reconstructions should be created on the basis of more gross morphological data than is usually used, and that biomechanical studies should include sensitivity analysis with greater parameter ranges than often applied.preprin

    Characterization of an Inhibitor of Neuronal Plasminogen Activator Released by Heart Cells

    Get PDF
    A basic understanding of growth cone dynamics and developmental events involving growth cones requires an understanding of the function and regulation of molecules associated with and released by growth cones. Rat sympathetic neurons in culture release a urokinase-like plasminogen activator from their distal processes and/or growth cones (Pittman, 1985a). When sympathetic neurons are grown in cocultures with heart cells, however, plasminogen activator activity is not detected. The absence of plasminogen activator activity in cocultures of sympathetic neurons and heart cells appears to be due to the release of an inhibitor of plasminogen activator by heart cells. This inhibitor has a molecular weight of approximately 50 kDa in the presence of SDS and apparent molecular weights of approximately 50 and greater than 2000 kDa under native conditions. A significant fraction of the large- molecular-weight form of the inhibitor is converted to the smaller form following treatment with heparinase. Extremely stable complexes of 68 and 80 kDa are formed between the heart inhibitor and the plasminogen activator, urokinase, such that the complexes withstand boiling in SDS/mercaptoethanol. The data are consistent with the formation of an 80 kDa urokinase-inhibitor complex in the presence of heparan sulfate proteoglycan and a 68 kDa complex in the absence of heparan sulfate proteoglycan. A highly purified preparation of the heart inhibitor produces a 2- to 3-fold increase in neurite outgrowth from sympathetic neurons. These data indicate that the activity of the plasminogen activator released by sympathetic neurons can be regulated by a normal target tissue and that this regulation may result in increased neurite outgrowth from the neurons
    corecore