311 research outputs found
Closing the gaps. A framework for understanding policies and actions to address losses and damages
Global failures to mitigate and adapt to the climate crisis are causing massive losses and costly damages to the lives, livelihoods, and futures of communities around the world. Efforts to address the issue have been highly insufficient, and national and international humanitarian response systems are already overstretched and underfunded. There is a moral imperative to act in solidarity with those who are suffering now, and to develop an approach that will protect generations to come. This policy brief from the Zurich Flood Resilience Alliances explains how we got to this point, and makes urgent recommendations outlining how the international community can to scale up action, and resource a comprehensive approach to averting, minimizing, and addressing losses and damages
Falling through the gaps: how global failures to address the climate crisis are leading to increased losses and damages
An imaging time-of-propagation system for charged particle identification at a super B factory
Super B factories that will further probe the flavor sector of the Standard
Model and physics beyond will demand excellent charged particle identification
(PID), particularly K/pi separation, for momenta up to 4 GeV/c, as well as the
ability to operate under beam backgrounds significantly higher than current B
factory experiments. We describe an Imaging Time-of-Propagation (iTOP) detector
which shows significant potential to meet these requirements. Photons emitted
from charged particle interactions in a Cerenkov radiator bar are internally
reflected to the end of the bar, where they are collected on a compact image
plane using photodetectors with fine spatial segmentation in two dimensions.
Precision measurements of photon arrival time are used to enhance the two
dimensional imaging, allowing the system to provide excellent PID capabilities
within a reduced detector envelope. Results of the ongoing optimization of the
geometric and physical properties of such a detector are presented, as well as
simulated PID performance. Validation of simulations is being performed using a
prototype in a cosmic ray test stand at the University of Hawaii.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, submitted to TIPP09 proceeding
Prevention of bone mineral changes induced by bed rest: Modification by static compression simulating weight bearing, combined supplementation of oral calcium and phosphate, calcitonin injections, oscillating compression, the oral diophosphonatedisodium etidronate, and lower body negative pressure
The phenomenon of calcium loss during bed rest was found to be analogous to the loss of bone material which occurs in the hypogravic environment of space flight. Ways of preventing this occurrence are investigated. A group of healthy adult males underwent 24-30 weeks of continuous bed rest. Some of them were given an exercise program designed to resemble normal ambulatory activity; another subgroup was fed supplemental potassium phosphate. The results from a 12-week period of treatment were compared with those untreated bed rest periods. The potassium phosphate supplements prevented the hypercalciuria of bed rest, but fecal calcium tended to increase. The exercise program did not diminish the negative calcium balance. Neither treatment affected the heavy loss of mineral from the calcaneus. Several additional studies are developed to examine the problem further
Dirac and Weyl Equations on a Lattice as Quantum Cellular Automata
A discretized time evolution of the wave function for a Dirac particle on a
cubic lattice is represented by a very simple quantum cellular automaton. In
each evolution step the updated value of the wave function at a given site
depends only on the values at the nearest sites, the evolution is unitary and
preserves chiral symmetry. Moreover, it is shown that the relationship between
Dirac particles and cellular automata operating on two component objects on a
lattice is indeed very close. Every local and unitary automaton on a cubic
lattice, under some natural assumptions, leads in the continuum limit to the
Weyl equation. The sum over histories is evaluated and its connection with path
integrals and theories of fermions on a lattice is outlined.Comment: 6, RevTe
Throat related symptoms and voice: development of an instrument for self assessment of throat-problems
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Symptoms from throat (sensation of globus; frequent throat clearing; irritated throat) are common in patients referred to voice clinics and to ENT specialists. The relation to symptoms of voice discomfort is unclear and in some cases patients do not have voice problems at all. Instruments for patients' self-reporting of symptoms, and assessment of handicap, such as the Voice Handicap Index (VHI), are in common use in voice clinics. Symptoms from throat are however only marginally covered. Purpose: To develop and evaluate an instrument that could make the patients' estimation of symptoms from the throat possible. Further to facilitate the consideration of the relation between throat- and voice problems with the Throat subscale together with a Swedish translation of the Voice Handicap Index. Finally to try the VHI with the Throat subscale: the VHI-T, for test-retest reliability and validity.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A subscale with 10 throat related items was developed for appliance with the VHI. The VHI was translated to Swedish and retranslated to English. The questionnaire was tried in two phases on a total of 23+144 patients and 12+58 voice healthy controls. The reliability was calculated with Cronbach's alpha, ICC and Pearson's correlation coefficient. The validity was estimated by independent T-test.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The difference in VHI-T scores between the patients and the voice-healthy controls was significant (<it>p </it>= < 0,01) and there was a good correlation of the test- retest occasions. The reliability testing of the entire questionnaire showed an alpha value of <it>r </it>= 0,90 and that for the Throat subscale separately a value of <it>r </it>= 0,87 which shows a high degree of reliability.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>For the estimation of self-perceived throat and voice problems the scale on throat related problems together with the present Swedish translation of the Voice Handicap Index, (VHI) the VHI-Throat, proves to be a valid and reliable instrument. The throat subscale seems to help revealing a category of symptoms that are common in our patients. These are symptoms that have not earlier been possible to cover with the questionnaires designed for use in the voice clinic.</p
Conserved Charges in Einstein Gauss-Bonnet theory
Using Noether's identities, we define a superpotential with respect to a
background for the Einstein Gauss-Bonnet theory of gravity. As an example, we
show that its associated conserved charge yields the mass-energy of a
D-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet black hole in an anti-de Sitter spacetime.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, references added, typos corrected, version to appear
in Class. Quant. Gra
Affine Gravity, Palatini Formalism and Charges
Affine gravity and the Palatini formalism contribute both to produce a simple
and unique formula for calculating charges at spatial and null infinity for
Lovelock type Lagrangians whose variational derivatives do not depend on
second-order derivatives of the field components. The method is based on the
covariant generalization due to Julia and Silva of the Regge-Teitelboim
procedure that was used to define properly the mass in the classical
formulation of Einstein's theory of gravity. Numerous applications reproduce
standard results obtained by other secure but mostly specialized methods. As a
novel application we calculate the Bondi energy loss in five dimensional
gravity, based on the asymptotic solution given by Tanabe, Tanahashi and
Shiromizu, and obtain, as expected, the same result. We also give the
superpotential for Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity and find the superpotential
for Lovelock theories of gravity when the number of dimensions tends to
infinity with maximally symmetrical boundaries. The paper is written in
standard component formalism.Comment: The work is dedicated to Joshua Goldberg from whom I learned and got
interested in conservation laws in General Relativity (J.K
Wages in high-tech start-ups - do academic spin-offs pay a wage premium?
Due to their origin from universities, academic spinâoffs operate at the forefront of the
technological development. Therefore, spinâoffs exhibit a skillâbiased labour demand, i.e. spinâoffs
have a high demand for employees with cutting edge knowledge and technical skills. In order to accommodate
this demand, spinâoffs may have to pay a relative wage premium compared to other
highâtech startâups. However, neither a comprehensive theoretical assessment nor the empirical
literature on wages in startâups unambiguously predicts the existence and the direction of wage differentials
between spinâoffs and nonâspinâoffs. This paper addresses this research gap and examines
empirically whether or not spinâoffs pay their employees a wage premium. Using a unique linked
employerâemployee data set of German highâtech startâups, we estimate Mincerâtype wage regressions
applying the HausmanâTaylor panel estimator. Our results show that spinâoffs do not pay a
wage premium in general. However, a notable exception from this general result is that spinâoffs that
commercialise new scientific results or methods provide higher wages to employees with linkages to
the university sector â either as university graduates or as student workers
Constant elasticity of substitution functions for energy modeling in general equilibrium integrated assessment models:a critical review and recommendations
Applying constant elasticity of substitution (CES) functions in general equilibrium integrated assessment models (GE-IAMs) for the substitution of technical factor inputs (e.g., replacing fossil fuels) fails to match historically observed patterns in energy transition dynamics. This method of substitution is also very sensitive to the structure of CES implementation (nesting) and parameter choice. The resulting methodology-related artifacts are (i) the extension of the status quo technology shares for future energy supply relying on fossil fuels with carbon capture, biomass, and nuclear; (ii) monotonically increasing marginal abatement costs of carbon; and (iii) substitution of energy with non-physical inputs (e.g., knowledge and capital) without conclusive evidence that this is possible to the extent modeled. We demonstrate these issues using simple examples and analyze how they are relevant in the case of four major CES-based GE-IAMs. To address this, we propose alternative formulations either by opting for carefully applied perfect substitution for alternative energy options or by introducing dynamically variable elasticity of substitution as a potential intermediate solution. Nevertheless, complementing the economic analysis with physical modeling accounting for storage and resource availability at a high resolution spatially and temporally would be preferable
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