1,788 research outputs found
EXPLORING GOAL TRADEOFFS IN METROPOLITAN NATURAL AREA PROTECTION
This study examines the issue of natural area protection in an urban environment. We report on the results of interviews conducted with a wide range of land use planners in the Chicago region. Of particular interest are the unique goals and challenges of land acquisition programs in a metropolitan area.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
PROVIDING EQUITABLE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF PROTECTED NATURAL AREAS IN A METROPOLITAN SETTING: AN APPLICATION OF THE LOCATION SET-COVERING PROBLEM
We use the location set covering problem to define a natural area site selection model for use in the Chicago region. This framework allows us to explicitly consider the equity of site distribution by stipulating that each population center has access to a recreational space within a specified distance.Land Economics/Use,
The Value of Information in Invasive Species Management
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Valuing Monitoring Networks for Invasive Species: The Case of Soybean Rust
Crop Production/Industries,
Estimates of lobster-handling mortality associated with the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands lobster-trap fishery
The 14C(n,g) cross section between 10 keV and 1 MeV
The neutron capture cross section of 14C is of relevance for several
nucleosynthesis scenarios such as inhomogeneous Big Bang models, neutron
induced CNO cycles, and neutrino driven wind models for the r process. The
14C(n,g) reaction is also important for the validation of the Coulomb
dissociation method, where the (n,g) cross section can be indirectly obtained
via the time-reversed process. So far, the example of 14C is the only case with
neutrons where both, direct measurement and indirect Coulomb dissociation, have
been applied. Unfortunately, the interpretation is obscured by discrepancies
between several experiments and theory. Therefore, we report on new direct
measurements of the 14C(n,g) reaction with neutron energies ranging from 20 to
800 keV
Testing T Invariance in the Interaction of Slow Neutrons with Aligned Nuclei
The study of five-fold (P even, T odd) correlation in the interaction of slow
polarized neutrons with aligned nuclei is a possible way of testing the time
reversal invariance due to the expected enhancement of T violating effects in
compound resonances. Possible nuclear targets are discussed which can be
aligned both dynamically as well as by the "brute force" method at low
temperature. A statistical estimation is performed of the five-fold correlation
for low lying p wave compound resonances of the Sb, Sb and
I nuclei. It is shown that a significant improvement can be achieved
for the bound on the intensity of the fundamental parity conserving time
violating (PCTV) interaction.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, published versio
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