66 research outputs found
Simulation model to determine ratios between quay, yard and intra-terminal transfer equipment in an integrated container handling system
This paper presents a generic simulation model to determine the equipment mix (quay, yard and intra-terminal transfer) for a Container Terminal Logistics Operations System (CTLOS). The simulation model for the CTLOS, a typical type of discrete event dynamic system (DEDS), consists of three sub-models: ship queue, loading-unloading operations and yard-gate operations. The simulation model is empirically applied to phase 1 of the Yangshan Deep Water Port in Shanghai. This study considers different scenarios in terms of container throughput levels, equipment utilization rates, and operational bottle-necks, and presents a sensitivity analysis to evaluate and choose reasonable equipment ratio ranges under different operational conditions
Risk, innovation and resilience : moving towards mutual supportiveness
There is a growing recognition that environmental law has changed and transformed over the last 40 years. Such transformation has occurred due to a myriad of factors, not least of which is the fact that environmental risks are now more global, requiring multilateral solutions. However, such multilateral solutions still require domestic implementation and this is where further transformation has occurred. While the state and domestic legislation still has a central role to play, the role of non-state actors has increased, leading to broader notions of regulatory governance. A further aspect of the emergence of new forms of environmental regulatory governance has been an increased reliance on market-based instruments, either together with or as a replacement for command and control instruments within a country's regulatory mix
Manipulating strong coupling between exciton and quasi-bound states in the continuum resonance
Strong coupling exhibits unique ability to preserve quantum sates between
light and matter, which is essential for the development of quantum information
technology. To explore the physical mechanism behind this phenomenon, we employ
the tight-binding method for expanding the temporal coupled-mode theory, with
the absorption spectrum formula of coupled system directly obtained in an
analytical way. It reveals all the physical meaning of parameters defined in
our theory, and shows how to tailor lineshapes of the coupled systems. Here, we
set an example to manipulate the strong coupling in a hybrid structure composed
of excitons in monolayer WS and quasi-bound states in the continuum
supported by the TiO nanodisk metasurfaces. The simulated results show that
a clear spectral splitting appeared in the absorption curve, which can be
controlled by adjusting the asymmetric parameter of the nanodisk metasurfaces
and well fitted through our theoretical predictions. Our work not only gives a
more comprehensive understanding of such coupled systems, but also offers a
promising strategy in controlling the strong light-matter coupling to meet
diversified application requests
Enhancing Faraday and Kerr rotations based on toroidal dipole mode in an all-dielectric magneto-optical metasurface
The magneto-optical Faraday and Kerr effects are widely used in modern
optical devices. In this letter, we propose an all-dielectric metasurface
composed of perforated magneto-optical thin films, which can support the highly
confined toroidal dipole resonance and provide full overlap between the
localized electromagnetic field and the thin film, and consequently enhance the
magneto-optical effects to an unprecedented degree. The numerical results based
on finite element method show that the Faraday and Kerr rotations can reach
-13.59 and 8.19 in the vicinity of toroidal dipole resonance,
which are 21.2 and 32.8 times stronger than those in the equivalent thickness
of thin films, respectively. In addition, we design an environment refractive
index sensor based on the resonantly enhanced Faraday and Kerr rotations, with
sensitivities of 62.96 nm/RIU and 73.16 nm/RIU, and the corresponding maximum
figures of merit 132.22/RIU and 429.45/RIU, respectively. This
work provides a new strategy for enhancing the magneto-optical effects at
nanoscale, and paves the way for the research and development of
magneto-optical metadevices such as sensors, memories, and circuits
GL-CLeF: A Global-Local Contrastive Learning Framework for Cross-lingual Spoken Language Understanding
Due to high data demands of current methods, attention to zero-shot
cross-lingual spoken language understanding (SLU) has grown, as such approaches
greatly reduce human annotation effort. However, existing models solely rely on
shared parameters, which can only perform implicit alignment across languages.
We present Global--Local Contrastive Learning Framework (GL-CLeF) to address
this shortcoming. Specifically, we employ contrastive learning, leveraging
bilingual dictionaries to construct multilingual views of the same utterance,
then encourage their representations to be more similar than negative example
pairs, which achieves to explicitly aligned representations of similar
sentences across languages. In addition, a key step in GL-CLeF is a proposed
Local and Global component, which achieves a fine-grained cross-lingual
transfer (i.e., sentence-level Local intent transfer, token-level Local slot
transfer, and semantic-level Global transfer across intent and slot).
Experiments on MultiATIS++ show that GL-CLeF achieves the best performance and
successfully pulls representations of similar sentences across languages
closer.Comment: Accepted at ACL2022 Main Conferenc
Principles of International Law Relevant for Consideration in the Design and Implementation of Trade-Related Climate Measures and Policies. Report of an International Legal Expert Group.
The report offers independent guidance for governments and stakeholders by eminent legal experts on principles of international law relevant for consideration in the design and implementation of trade-related climate measures and policies.
The report reviews a set of recognized principles of international law that the expert group deems especially relevant for consideration including: Sovereignty; Prevention; Cooperation; Prohibition of Arbitrary & Unjustifiable Discrimination; Sustainable Development, Equity, & CBDR-RC; and Transparency & Consultation.
The vision driving this report is that shared understandings on such principles could help foster dialogue and international cooperation on the design and implementation of trade-related climate measures and policies in the context of sustainable development priorities.
According to the expert group, trade-related climate measures and policies should be approached as legal hybrids. Their rationale, design, and the debates about them draw from different areas of international law relating to the environment, climate, international trade and general international law.
The principles are analysed in a way that presents them as cumulative and simultaneously applicable, in a mutually supportive and coherent manner, giving full effect to all relevant parts of international law, insofar as possible
The Reform of China's Energy Policies
China's shift in energy policies has been broader, deeper and more successful than that of most other emerging economies, although the economic costs of this transition are tremendous because China is an over-industrialized country whose production is highly energy-intense and it depends on emission-intensive coal as main energy source. Factors that have influenced energy reforms, which focus on saving and conserving energy, developing renewable sources and nuclear power, are - on the international level - the impact of climate change on India, the desire to be recognized as a responsible power in the international community, China's dangerously growing dependence on energy imports, and the uncertain prospects of equity oil abroad for energy security. Domestic factors are the growing assertiveness of environmental NGOs, relatively effective sectorial governance, and the embedding of energy policies in a blueprint for industrial upgrading
Draft genome sequence of the mulberry tree Morus notabilis
Human utilization of the mulberry–silkworm interaction started at least 5,000 years ago and greatly influenced world history through the Silk Road. Complementing the silkworm genome sequence, here we describe the genome of a mulberry species Morus notabilis. In the 330-Mb genome assembly, we identify 128 Mb of repetitive sequences and 29,338 genes, 60.8% of which are supported by transcriptome sequencing. Mulberry gene sequences appear to evolve ~3 times faster than other Rosales, perhaps facilitating the species’ spread worldwide. The mulberry tree is among a few eudicots but several Rosales that have not preserved genome duplications in more than 100 million years; however, a neopolyploid series found in the mulberry tree and several others suggest that new duplications may confer benefits. Five predicted mulberry miRNAs are found in the haemolymph and silk glands of the silkworm, suggesting interactions at molecular levels in the plant–herbivore relationship. The identification and analyses of mulberry genes involved in diversifying selection, resistance and protease inhibitor expressed in the laticifers will accelerate the improvement of mulberry plants
China’s Peaceful Development and Global Climate Change: A Legal Perspective
Since the adoption of the reform and opening-up policy, China has witnessed rapid socio-economic progress accompanied by serious environmental problems, such as climate change, which have had a major impact on the global environment and aroused international concern about China’s peaceful development. International law on climate change has taken shape with the core instruments of the 1992 Framework Convention on Climate Change and the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. Under the current arrangement China is temporarily exempt from having to reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), although it will face strong pressure to commit to do so in the near future. In order to prepare for future challenges and to ensure peaceful development, it is proposed that China takes the initiative at the international level, participates in events and negotiations on implementation in respect of climate change, stresses the integration of state interests and the common interest of humankind, argues for the responsibility allocation principle of common but differentiated responsibilities of developed and developing countries, and undertakes international cooperation with regards to the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). At the national level, it is advisable that China persists in and develops a legal system that favours recycling and improves policies and laws on energy and resources with a view to consolidate the construction of a conservation-minded society
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