38,821 research outputs found
Water Funds: Conserving Green Infrastructure
This manual is an effort by TNC to compile, analyze and synthesize its own experience, together with that of the water funds already in existence and under creation, in order to provide operational guidelines to people and organizations interested in establishing a water fund or similar mechanism. Each location has different ecological, social, economic, legal and institutional features and, therefore, each water fund will have its own characteristics, phases and projections. This manual presents general guidelines and logical steps that must be followed to boost the opportunities and benefits of a water fund and to minimize possible obstacles for its creation. It is not intended to be an in-depth look at every aspect of water funds. Although TNC participates in several other initiatives and similar approaches to watershed management, such as the water producers program in Brazil, this document will not address those initiatives and will only focus on the water funds scheme, placing greater emphasis on experiences in the Andean region
Triangle singularities in and
We study the appearance of structures in the decay of the into and final states by forming
invariant mass distributions of and pairs,
respectively. The structure in the distribution is associated to the
kinematical triangle singularity that appears when the () decay process is followed by the decay
of the into and the subsequent rescattering of the () pair forming the ()
resonance. We find this type of non-resonant peaks at 2850 MeV in the invariant
mass of pairs from decays and
around 3000 MeV in the invariant mass of pairs from decays. By employing the measured branching ratios of
the and decays, we
predict the branching ratios for the processes into and , in the vicinity of the
triangle singularity peak, to be about and ,
respectively. The observation of this reaction would also give extra support to
the molecular picture of the and .Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, accepted version for publication in Eur. Phys.
J.
Generalized enthalpy model of a high pressure shift freezing process
High-pressure freezing processes are a novel emerging technology in food processing, offering significant improvements to the quality of frozen foods. To be able to simulate plateau times and thermal history under different conditions, in this work we present a generalized enthalpy model of the high-pressure shift freezing process. The model includes the effects of pressure on conservation of enthalpy and incorporates the freezing point depression of non-dilute food samples. In addition the significant heat transfer effects of convection in the pressurizing medium are accounted for by solving the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. We run the model for several numerical tests where the food sample is agar gel, and find good agreement with experimental data from the literature
An analysis of the Lattice QCD spectra for and
In this talk I present the results obtained using effective field theories in
a finite volume from a reanalysis of lattice data on the systems,
where bound states of and are found and associated with the states
and , respectively. We confirm the presence of
such states on the lattice data and determine the weight of the channel in
the wave function of and that of in the wave function
of . Our results indicate a large meson-meson component in both
cases.Comment: Conference Proceedings, Hadron 2017, Salamanca, Spai
The Resonance Overlap and Hill Stability Criteria Revisited
We review the orbital stability of the planar circular restricted three-body
problem, in the case of massless particles initially located between both
massive bodies. We present new estimates of the resonance overlap criterion and
the Hill stability limit, and compare their predictions with detailed dynamical
maps constructed with N-body simulations. We show that the boundary between
(Hill) stable and unstable orbits is not smooth but characterized by a rich
structure generated by the superposition of different mean-motion resonances
which does not allow for a simple global expression for stability.
We propose that, for a given perturbing mass and initial eccentricity
, there are actually two critical values of the semimajor axis. All values
are
unstable in the Hill sense. The first limit is given by the Hill-stability
criterion and is a function of the eccentricity. The second limit is virtually
insensitive to the initial eccentricity, and closely resembles a new resonance
overlap condition (for circular orbits) developed in terms of the intersection
between first and second-order mean-motion resonances.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures, accepte
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