12,174 research outputs found
Web Based Organizing and the Management of Human Resources
The paper focuses on the consequences of web-based business-to-business transactions in medium and large old economy companies in particular and discusses the implications for HRM and HR professionals. Medium and large old economy companies can be involved in transactions within the new economy in different ways. First of all the paper gives an overview of the striking characteristics that distinguish web-based transactions from more traditional transactions. The paper continues with an overview of the different ways in which old economy companies are attempting to integrate elements of web-based organizing into their current business and the implications of it for human resources management. Three different ways of integration are distinguished:-Seeing the Net as an extension of normal market channels for buying and selling.-Using the Net to expand and improve current co-makership relationships amongst key suppliers (section 4).-Totally re-thinking business models before deciding on e-commerce strategy and practice, which implies desegregation and organizational revolution. Each of these areas will be highlighted and possible implications for human resources management and HR managers considered.human resource management;business to business transactions;human resource managers;web-based organizing
Cosmological milestones and energy conditions
Until recently, the physically relevant singularities occurring in FRW
cosmologies had traditionally been thought to be limited to the "big bang", and
possibly a "big crunch". However, over the last few years, the zoo of
cosmological singularities considered in the literature has become considerably
more extensive, with "big rips" and "sudden singularities" added to the mix, as
well as renewed interest in non-singular cosmological events such as "bounces"
and "turnarounds". In this talk, we present an extensive catalogue of such
cosmological milestones, both at the kinematical and dynamical level. First,
using generalized power series, purely kinematical definitions of these
cosmological events are provided in terms of the behaviour of the scale factor
a(t). The notion of a "scale-factor singularity" is defined, and its relation
to curvature singularities (polynomial and differential) is explored. Second,
dynamical information is extracted by using the Friedmann equations (without
assuming even the existence of any equation of state) to place constraints on
whether or not the classical energy conditions are satisfied at the
cosmological milestones. Since the classification is extremely general, and
modulo certain technical assumptions complete, the corresponding results are to
a high degree model-independent.Comment: 8 pages, 1 table, conference proceedings for NEB XII conference in
Nafplio, Greec
Geometric structure of the generic static traversable wormhole throat
Traversable wormholes have traditionally been viewed as intrinsically
topological entities in some multiply connected spacetime. Here, we show that
topology is too limited a tool to accurately characterize a generic traversable
wormhole: in general one needs geometric information to detect the presence of
a wormhole, or more precisely to locate the wormhole throat. For an arbitrary
static spacetime we shall define the wormhole throat in terms of a
2-dimensional constant-time hypersurface of minimal area. (Zero trace for the
extrinsic curvature plus a "flare-out" condition.) This enables us to severely
constrain the geometry of spacetime at the wormhole throat and to derive
generalized theorems regarding violations of the energy conditions-theorems
that do not involve geodesic averaging but nevertheless apply to situations
much more general than the spherically symmetric Morris-Thorne traversable
wormhole. [For example: the null energy condition (NEC), when suitably weighted
and integrated over the wormhole throat, must be violated.] The major technical
limitation of the current approach is that we work in a static spacetime-this
is already a quite rich and complicated system.Comment: 25 pages; plain LaTeX; uses epsf.sty (four encapsulated postscript
figures
The Twente humanoid head
This video shows the results of the project on the mechatronic development of the Twente humanoid head. The mechanical structure consists of a neck with four degrees of freedom (DOFs) and two eyes (a stereo pair system) which tilt on a common axis and rotate sideways freely providing a three more DOFs. The motion control algorithm is designed to receive, as an input, the output of a biological-inspired vision processing algorithm and to exploit the redundancy of the joints for the realization of the movements. The expressions of the humanoid head are implemented by projecting light from the internal part of the translucent plastic cover
of the quantized fields in the Unruh state in the Schwarzschild spacetime
The renormalized expectation value of the stress energy tensor of the
conformally invariant massless fields in the Unruh state in the Schwarzschild
spacetime is constructed. It is achieved through solving the conservation
equation in conformal space and utilizing the regularity conditions in the
physical metric. The relations of obtained results to the existing
approximations are analysed.Comment: 17 pages, REVTE
The Topology of Branching Universes
The purpose of this paper is to survey the possible topologies of branching
space-times, and, in particular, to refute the popular notion in the literature
that a branching space-time requires a non-Hausdorff topology
Theorems on gravitational time delay and related issues
Two theorems related to gravitational time delay are proven. Both theorems
apply to spacetimes satisfying the null energy condition and the null generic
condition. The first theorem states that if the spacetime is null geodesically
complete, then given any compact set , there exists another compact set
such that for any , if there exists a ``fastest null
geodesic'', , between and , then cannot enter . As
an application of this theorem, we show that if, in addition, the spacetime is
globally hyperbolic with a compact Cauchy surface, then any observer at
sufficiently late times cannot have a particle horizon. The second theorem
states that if a timelike conformal boundary can be attached to the spacetime
such that the spacetime with boundary satisfies strong causality as well as a
compactness condition, then any ``fastest null geodesic'' connecting two points
on the boundary must lie entirely within the boundary. It follows from this
theorem that generic perturbations of anti-de Sitter spacetime always produce a
time delay relative to anti-de Sitter spacetime itself.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure. Example of gauge perturbation changed/corrected.
Two footnotes added and one footnote remove
From wormhole to time machine: Comments on Hawking's Chronology Protection Conjecture
The recent interest in ``time machines'' has been largely fueled by the
apparent ease with which such systems may be formed in general relativity,
given relatively benign initial conditions such as the existence of traversable
wormholes or of infinite cosmic strings. This rather disturbing state of
affairs has led Hawking to formulate his Chronology Protection Conjecture,
whereby the formation of ``time machines'' is forbidden. This paper will use
several simple examples to argue that the universe appears to exhibit a
``defense in depth'' strategy in this regard. For appropriate parameter regimes
Casimir effects, wormhole disruption effects, and gravitational back reaction
effects all contribute to the fight against time travel. Particular attention
is paid to the role of the quantum gravity cutoff. For the class of model
problems considered it is shown that the gravitational back reaction becomes
large before the Planck scale quantum gravity cutoff is reached, thus
supporting Hawking's conjecture.Comment: 43 pages,ReV_TeX,major revision
General polarization modes for the Rosen gravitational wave
Strong-field gravitational plane waves are often represented in either the
Rosen or Brinkmann forms. While these two metric ansatze are related by a
coordinate transformation, so that they should describe essentially the same
physics, they rather puzzlingly seem to treat polarization states quite
differently. Both ansatze deal equally well with + and X linear polarizations,
but there is a qualitative difference in they way they deal with circular,
elliptic, and more general polarization states. In this article we will develop
a general formalism for dealing with arbitrary polarization states in the Rosen
form of the gravitational wave metric, representing an arbitrary polarization
by a trajectory in a suitably defined two dimensional hyperbolic plane.Comment: V1: 12 pages, no figures. V2: still 12 pages, reformatted. Minor
technical edits, discussion of Riemann tensor added, two references added, no
significant physics changes. This version accepted for publication in
Classical and Quantum Gravit
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