11,137 research outputs found
The global event? The media, football and the FIFA World Cup
An examination of the FIFA World Cup as media mega event and the role played by television in this process
Sport, public relations and social media
This chapter examines the disruptive nature of social media as it alters the relationship between sports journalism and public relations. It looks at some key examples and argues that while much is changing, some aspects of the relationship between the media and sports also remain constant
Optimal Educational Policies and Comparative Advantage
We consider the optimal education policies of a small economy whose government has a limited budget. Initially, the economy is closed and the government chooses its education policy to maximize welfare under autarky. Then the economy trades with the rest of the world. Lastly, the government chooses a new education policy that maximizes welfare under trade. Is it ever optimal for the government to choose its new policy so that it reverses the economy's comparative advantage? We find that if the budget stays fixed when it is optimal to `move up the skills chain' it is not feasible. In such a case a foreign loan is welfare imroving. A move in the opposite direction can be optimal and when it is optimal it is also feasible.Patterns of Trade, Education Policy, Welfare
Optimal Education Policies and Comparative Advantage
We consider the optimal education policies of a small economy whose government has a limited budget. Initially, the economy is closed and the government chooses its education policy to maximize welfare under autarky. Then the economy trades with the rest of the world. Lastly, the government chooses a new education policy that maximizes welfare under trade. Is it ever optimal for the government to choose its new policy so that it reverses the economy’s comparative advantage? We find that if the budget stays fixed when it is optimal to ‘move up the skills chain’ it is not feasible. In such a case a foreign loan is welfare improving. A move in the opposite direction can be optimal and when it is optimal it is also feasible.patterns of trade, education policy, welfare
A Transition State Theory for Calculating Hopping Times and Diffusion in Highly Confined Fluids
Monte Carlo simulation is used to study the dynamical crossover from single
file diffusion to normal diffusion in fluids confined to narrow channels. We
show that the long time diffusion coefficients for a series of systems
involving hard and soft interaction potentials can be described in terms of a
hopping time that measures the time it takes for a particle to escape the cage
formed by its neighbors in the pore. Free energy barriers for the particle
hopping process are calculated and used to show that transition state theory
effectively describes the hopping time for all the systems studied, over a
range of pore diameters. Our work suggests that the combination of hopping
times and transition state theory offers a useful and general framework to
describe the dynamics of these highly confined fluids.Comment: 6 figure
Resolving the Ripples (and a Mine): High-Resolution Multibeam Survey of Martha\u27s Vineyard ONR Mine Burial Program Field Area
In an effort to better understand the coastal processes responsible for the burial and exposure of small objects on the seafloor, the Office of Naval Research is sponsoring the Mine Burial Program. Among the field areas chosen for this program is the site of the Martha\u27s Vineyard Coastal Observatory (MVCO), a permanent instrumented node in 12 m of water about 500 m off the southern shore of Martha?s Vineyard. In support of the ONR program, several site surveys of the MVCO area have been conducted (see Goff et al); here we report the result of the most recent of these surveys, a very high-resolution multibeam survey aimed at establishing a detailed base map for the region and providing a baseline from which subsequent surveys can measure seafloor change In late July we conducted a five day survey of an approximately 3 x 5 km area surrounding the MVCO node using a Reson 8125 focused multibeam sonar aboard the SAIC survey vessel Ocean Explorer. The 8125 is a newly developed multibeam sonar that operates at 455 kHz and uses dynamic focusing to compensate for the curvature of the wavefront in the near-field. By using a relatively long array, the system can achieve very high spatial resolution (0.5 degree beam width) and with the dynamic focusing, can operate in the near field. The real constraint on resolution using this system is the ability to position the soundings and thus three kinematic DGPS base stations were established on Martha?s Vineyard and three kinematic receivers were used on the survey vessel. The kinematic GPS positioning is also critical to the ability to do repeat surveys with an accuracy high enough to resolve small (less than 10 cm) seafloor changes. Also to aid in our ability to accurately position repeat surveys, divers jetted sonar reflectors into the seafloor to act as fiducials. A super high-resolution (4 m overlap) survey was conducted in a small area surrounding the MVCO node and mine burial sites, a slightly lower resolution survey (12 to 25 m overlap) in a box approximately 1 x 1 km surrounding the ?target box? and a lower resolution survey (25 to 40 m line overlap) in a 3 x 5 km region surrounding the 1 x 1 km box. The Reson 8125 produced approximately 1 gigabyte of data per hour. The bathymetric resolution we were able to achieve was beyond our expectations. The node site and all diver-emplaced reflectors were clearly identified Most amazingly, we are able to resolve fields of individual ripples that are less than 2 cm height. Of particular relevance to the mine burial program was our ability to resolve an instrumented mine that had been deployed earlier by NRL. This mine is buried in a scour depression and is only a few centimeters proud above the base of the depression
The Transition Zone in Balmer-Dominated Shocks
We examine the structure of the post-shock region in supernova remnants
(SNRs). The ``shock transition zone'' is set up by charge transfer and
ionization events between atoms and ions, and has a width
cm , where is the total pre-shock density (including
both atoms and ions). For Balmer-dominated SNRs with shock velocity km s, the Rankine-Hugoniot conditions for ion velocity and
temperature are obeyed instantly, leaving the full width at half-maximum (FWHM)
of the broad H line versus relation intact. However, the spatial
variation in the post-shock densities is relevant to the problem of Ly
resonant scattering in young, core-collapse SNRs. Both two- (pre-shock atoms
and ions) and three-component (pre-shock atoms, broad neutrals and ions) models
are considered. We compute the spatial emissivities of the broad () and
narrow () H lines; a calculation of these emissivities in SN
1006 is in general agreement with the computed ones of Raymond et al. (2007).
The (dimensionless) spatial shift, , between the centroids
of and is unique for a given shock velocity and ,
the pre-shock ion fraction. Measurements of can be used
to constrain .Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journa
- …