3,744 research outputs found
Mapping of strongly correlated steady-state nonequilibrium to an effective equilibrium
By mapping steady-state nonequilibrium to an effective equilibrium, we
formulate nonequilibrium problems within an equilibrium picture where we can
apply existing equilibrium many-body techniques to steady-state electron
transport problems. We study the analytic properties of many-body scattering
states, reduce the boundary condition operator in a simple form and prove that
this mapping is equivalent to the correct linear-response theory. In an example
of infinite-U Anderson impurity model, we approximately solve for the
scattering state creation operators, based on which we derive the bias operator
Y to construct the nonequilibrium ensemble in the form of the Boltzmann factor
exp(-beta(H-Y)). The resulting Hamiltonian is solved by the non-crossing
approximation. We obtain the Kondo anomaly conductance at zero bias, inelastic
transport via the charge excitation on the quantum dot and significant
inelastic current background over a wide range of bias. Finally, we propose a
self-consistent algorithm of mapping general steady-state nonequilibrium.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Efficiency and Effectiveness of Social Spending
In this qualitative sociological and quantitative economic policy paper, we start out from the assumption of a very recent European Commission Background paper on the “Efficiency and effectiveness of social spending”, which says the effectiveness of social spending can be defined by the degree to which the realized allocation approaches the socially desired outcome. The conclusions listed in the Commission paper are found far reaching and not supported by the empirical data. We perform such an analysis, starting from advances in recent literature. A more encompassing sociological perspective on the issue and factor analytical calculations is presented, which supports our general argument about the efficiency of the Scandinavian model. The social quality approach provides an alternative perspective on welfare system analysis, focusing on public policies rather than social policies. The empirical evidence, suggests that in terms of the efficiency of the European social model, the geography of comparative performance include: the direct action against social exclusion, health and family social expenditures, the neo-liberal approach, and the unemployment benefit centred approach. Applying rigorous comparative social science methodology, we also arrive at the conclusion that in terms of the initial ECOFIN definition of efficiency, the data presented in this article suggest that apart from Finland and the Netherlands, three new EU-27 member countries, especially the Czech Republic and Slovenia, provide interesting answers to the question about the efficiency of state expenditures in reducing poverty rates.social spending, European Commission, index numbers and aggregation, cross-sectional models, spatial models, economic integration, regional economic activity, international factor movements, nternational political economy
Evaluation of CNN-based Single-Image Depth Estimation Methods
While an increasing interest in deep models for single-image depth estimation
methods can be observed, established schemes for their evaluation are still
limited. We propose a set of novel quality criteria, allowing for a more
detailed analysis by focusing on specific characteristics of depth maps. In
particular, we address the preservation of edges and planar regions, depth
consistency, and absolute distance accuracy. In order to employ these metrics
to evaluate and compare state-of-the-art single-image depth estimation
approaches, we provide a new high-quality RGB-D dataset. We used a DSLR camera
together with a laser scanner to acquire high-resolution images and highly
accurate depth maps. Experimental results show the validity of our proposed
evaluation protocol
Methodology to assess EU Biofuel Policies: The CAPRI Approach
This report is based on the outcome of a study carried out by the European Commission's Joint Research Centre - Institute for Prospective Technological Studies (JRC-IPTS, Spain) in cooperation with EuroCARE (Bonn, Germany). The report provides a detailed description of the methodology developed to assess the implications of the European Renewable Energy Directive on the agricultural sector, with an explicit focus on regional effects of biofuel targets in the EU. For the analysis, the spatial agricultural sector model CAPRI has been extended to include a global representation of biofuel markets (with endogenous supply, demand and trade flows for biofuels and biofuel feedstocks) while keeping the focus on regional impacts in the EU. The model is capable to simulate the impacts of EU biofuel policies on food production and prices, the potential use of by-products in the feed chain, the increasing pressure on marginal and idle land and the share of imported biofuels (self-sufficiency indicators). CAPRI is now able to jointly assess biofuel and agricultural policies, including policy instruments defined at the Member State level. The CAPRI biofuel module allows for a detailed analysis of most relevant biofuel support instruments like consumer tax exemptions, quota obligations, import tariffs and other trade measures. Additionally, the model allows for analysing scenarios regarding technical progress in 2nd generation technologies for biofuels
Production Capitalism vs Financial Capitalism - Symbiosis and Parasitism. An Evolutionary Perspective and Bibliography
This working paper presents a note and an extensive bibliography on the relationship between production capitalism and financial capitalism. The document was produced for a conference held at Leangkollen outside Oslo on September 3-4, 1998. The background for the conference was the Asian financial crisis that started in July 1997. The massive Russian financial crisis had started a few days before the conference, on August 17, 1998, and the Russian participant, Prof. Vladimir Avtonomov, brought fresh news from these dramatic events. The conference was organized by Erik Reinert, who at the time worked for Norsk Investorforum, an organisation which at the time organized Norwegian production capitalists and later helped Reinert launch The Other Canon Foundation. Reinert was at the time also affiliated with SUM, Centre for Development and the Environment at the University of Oslo. The global financial crisis that started in 2008 . ten years after this conference . vindi- cates the perspectives presented here, and prompted the wish to make the note and the very extensive bibliography of relevant, but mostly forgotten, litterature on the relationship between the production sector and the monetary sector of the economy. The conference programme is found at the end of the document.
Influences on the formability and mechanical properties of 7000-aluminum alloys in hot and warm forming
Aluminum alloys of the 7000 series possess high lightweight potential due to their high specific tensile strength combined with a good ultimate elongation. For this reason, hot-formed boron-manganese-steel parts can be substituted by these alloys. Therefore, the application of these aluminum alloys for structural car body components is desired to decrease the weight of the body in white and consequently CO2 emissions during vehicle operation. These days, the limited formability at room temperature limits an application in the automobile industry. By increasing the deformation temperature, formability can be improved. In this study, two different approaches to increase the formability of these alloys by means of higher temperatures were investigated. The first approach is a warm forming route to form sheets in T6 temper state with high tensile strength at temperatures between 150 °C and 300 °C. The second approach is a hot forming route. Here, the material is annealed at solution heat treatment temperature and formed directly after the annealing step. Additionally, a quench step is included in the forming stage. After the forming and quenching step, the sheets have to be artificially aged to achieve the high specific tensile strength. In this study, several parameters in the presented process routes, which influence the formability and the mechanical properties, have been investigated for the aluminum alloys EN AW7022 and EN AW7075. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
Nonlinear dynamics in gene regulation promote robustness and evolvability of gene expression levels
Cellular phenotypes underpinned by regulatory networks need to respond to evolutionary pressures to allow adaptation, but at the same time be robust to perturbations. This creates a conflict in which mutations affecting regulatory networks must both generate variance but also be tolerated at the phenotype level. Here, we perform mathematical analyses and simulations of regulatory networks to better understand the potential trade-off between robustness and evolvability. Examining the phenotypic effects of mutations, we find an inverse correlation between robustness and evolvability that breaks only with nonlinearity in the network dynamics, through the creation of regions presenting sudden changes in phenotype with small changes in genotype. For genotypes embedding low levels of nonlinearity, robustness and evolvability correlate negatively and almost perfectly. By contrast, genotypes embedding nonlinear dynamics allow expression levels to be robust to small perturbations, while generating high diversity (evolvability) under larger perturbations. Thus, nonlinearity breaks the robustness-evolvability trade-off in gene expression levels by allowing disparate responses to different mutations. Using analytical derivations of robustness and system sensitivity, we show that these findings extend to a large class of gene regulatory network architectures and also hold for experimentally observed parameter regimes. Further, the effect of nonlinearity on the robustness-evolvability trade-off is ensured as long as key parameters of the system display specific relations irrespective of their absolute values. We find that within this parameter regime genotypes display low and noisy expression levels. Examining the phenotypic effects of mutations, we find an inverse correlation between robustness and evolvability that breaks only with nonlinearity in the network dynamics. Our results provide a possible solution to the robustness-evolvability trade-off, suggest an explanation for the ubiquity of nonlinear dynamics in gene expression networks, and generate useful guidelines for the design of synthetic gene circuits
Elliptic flow in Au+Au collisions at sqrt sNN = 130 GeV
Elliptic flow from nuclear collisions is a hadronic observable sensitive to the early stages of system evolution. We report first results on elliptic flow of charged particles at midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN] = 130 GeV using the STAR Time Projection Chamber at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The elliptic flow signal, v2, averaged over transverse momentum, reaches values of about 6% for relatively peripheral collisions and decreases for the more central collisions. This can be interpreted as the observation of a higher degree of thermalization than at lower collision energies. Pseudorapidity and transverse momentum dependence of elliptic flow are also presented.alle Autoren: K. H. Ackermann19, N. Adams28, C. Adler12, Z. Ahammed27, S. Ahmad28, C. Allgower13, J. Amsbaugh34, M. Anderson6, E. Anderssen17, H. Arnesen3, L. Arnold14, G. S. Averichev10, A. Baldwin16, J. Balewski13, O. Barannikova10,27, L. S. Barnby16, J. Baudot14, M. Beddo1, S. Bekele24, V. V. Belaga10, R. Bellwied35, S. Bennett35, J. Bercovitz17, J. Berger12, W. Betts24, H. Bichsel34, F. Bieser17, L. C. Bland13, M. Bloomer17, C. O. Blyth4, J. Boehm17, B. E. Bonner28, D. Bonnet14, R. Bossingham17, M. Botlo3, A. Boucham30, N. Bouillo30, S. Bouvier30, K. Bradley17, F. P. Brady6, E. S. Braithwaite2, W. Braithwaite2, A. Brandin21, R. L. Brown3, G. Brugalette34, C. Byrd2, H. Caines24, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez36, A. Cardenas27, L. Carr34, J. Carroll17, J. Castillo30, B. Caylor17, D. Cebra6, S. Chatopadhyay35, M. L. Chen3, W. Chen3, Y. Chen7, S. P. Chernenko10, M. Cherney9, A. Chikanian36, B. Choi31, J. Chrin9, W. Christie3, J. P. Coffin14, L. Conin30, C. Consiglio3, T. M. Cormier35, J. G. Cramer34, H. J. Crawford5, V. I. Danilov10, D. Dayton3, M. DeMello28, W. S. Deng16, A. A. Derevschikov26, M. Dialinas30, H. Diaz3, P. A. DeYoung8, L. Didenko3, D. Dimassimo3, J. Dioguardi3, W. Dominik32, C. Drancourt30, J. E. Draper6, V. B. Dunin10, J. C. Dunlop36, V. Eckardt19, W. R. Edwards17, L. G. Efimov10, T. Eggert19, V. Emelianov21, J. Engelage5, G. Eppley28, B. Erazmus30, A. Etkin3, P. Fachini29, C. Feliciano3, D. Ferenc6, M. I. Ferguson7, H. Fessler19, E. Finch36, V. Fine3, Y. Fisyak3, D. Flierl12, I. Flores5, K. J. Foley3, D. Fritz17, N. Gagunashvili10, J. Gans36, M. Gazdzicki12, M. Germain14, F. Geurts28, V. Ghazikhanian7, C. Gojak14, J. Grabski33, O. Grachov35, M. Grau3, D. Greiner17, L. Greiner5, V. Grigoriev21, D. Grosnick1, J. Gross9, G. Guilloux30, E. Gushin21, J. Hall35, T. J. Hallman3, D. Hardtke17, G. Harper34, J. W. Harris36, P. He5, M. Heffner6, S. Heppelmann25, T. Herston27, D. Hill1, B. Hippolyte14, A. Hirsch27, E. Hjort27, G. W. Hoffmann31, M. Horsley36, M. Howe34, H. Z. Huang7, T. J. Humanic24, H. Hümmler19, W. Hunt13, J. Hunter17, G. J. Igo7, A. Ishihara31, Yu. I. Ivanshin11, P. Jacobs17, W. W. Jacobs13, S. Jacobson17, R. Jared17, P. Jensen31, I. Johnson17, P. G. Jones4, E. Judd5, M. Kaneta17, M. Kaplan8, D. Keane16, V. P. Kenney23*, A. Khodinov21, J. Klay6, S. R. Klein17, A. Klyachko13, G. Koehler17, A. S. Konstantinov26, V. Kormilitsyne7,26, L. Kotchenda21, I. Kotov24, A. D. Kovalenko10, M. Kramer22, P. Kravtsov21, K. Krueger1, T. Krupien3, P. Kuczewski3, C. Kuhn14, G. J. Kunde36, C. L. Kunz8, R. Kh. Kutuev11, A. A. Kuznetsov10, L. Lakehal-Ayat30, J. Lamas-Valverde28, M. A. C. Lamont4, J. M. Landgraf3, S. Lange12, C. P. Lansdell31, B. Lasiuk36, F. Laue24, A. Lebedev3, T. LeCompte1, W. J. Leonhardt3, V. M. Leontiev26, P. Leszczynski33, M. J. LeVine3, Q. Li35, Q. Li17, Z. Li3, C.-J. Liaw3, J. Lin9, S. J. Lindenbaum22, V. Lindenstruth5, P. J. Lindstrom5, M. A. Lisa24, H. Liu16, T. Ljubicic3, W. J. Llope28, G. LoCurto19, H. Long7, R. S. Longacre3, M. Lopez-Noriega24, D. Lopiano1, W. A. Love3, J. R. Lutz14, D. Lynn3, L. Madansky15§, R. Maier19, R. Majka36, A. Maliszewski33, S. Margetis16, K. Marks17, R. Marstaller19, L. Martin30, J. Marx17, H. S. Matis17, Yu. A. Matulenko26, E. A. Matyushevski10, C. McParland17, T. S. McShane9, J. Meier9, Yu. Melnick26, A. Meschanin26, P. Middlekamp3, N. Mikhalin7,26, B. Miller3, Z. Milosevich8, N. G. Minaev26, B. Minor17, J. Mitchell15, E. Mogavero3, V. A. Moiseenko11, D. Moltz17, C. F. Moore31, V. Morozov17, R. Morse17, M. M. de Moura29, M. G. Munhoz29, G. S. Mutchler28, J. M. Nelson4, P. Nevski3, T. Ngo7, M. Nguyen3, T. Nguyen3, V. A. Nikitin11, L. V. Nogach26, T. Noggle17, B. Norman16, S. B. Nurushev26, T. Nussbaum28, J. Nystrand17, G. Odyniec17, A. Ogawa25, C. A. Ogilvie18, K. Olchanski3, M. Oldenburg19, D. Olson17, G. A. Ososkov10, G. Ott31, D. Padrazo3, G. Paic24, S. U. Pandey35, Y. Panebratsev10, S. Y. Panitkin16, A. I. Pavlinov26, T. Pawlak33, M. Pentia10, V. Perevotchikov3, W. Peryt33, V. A Petrov11, W. Pinganaud30, S. Pirogov7, E. Platner28, J. Pluta33, I. Polk3, N. Porile27, J. Porter3, A. M. Poskanzer17, E. Potrebenikova10, D. Prindle34, C. Pruneau35, J. Puskar-Pasewicz13, G. Rai17, J. Rasson17, O. Ravel30, R. L. Ray31, S. V. Razin10,13, D. Reichhold9, J. Reid34, R. E. Renfordt12, F. Retiere30, A. Ridiger21, J. Riso35, H. G. Ritter17, J. B. Roberts28, D. Roehrich12, O. V. Rogachevski10, J. L. Romero6, C. Roy30, D. Russ8, V. Rykov35, I. Sakrejda17, R. Sanchez7, Z. Sandler7, J. Sandweiss36, P. Sappenfield28, A. C. Saulys3, I. Savin11, J. Schambach31, R. P. Scharenberg27, J. Scheblien3, R. Scheetz3, R. Schlueter17, N. Schmitz19, L. S. Schroeder17, M. Schulz3,19, A. Schüttauf19, J. Sedlmeir3, J. Seger9, D. Seliverstov21, J. Seyboth19, P. Seyboth19, R. Seymour34, E. I. Shakaliev10, K. E. Shestermanov26, Y. Shi7, S. S. Shimanskii10, D. Shuman17, V. S. Shvetcov11, G. Skoro10, N. Smirnov36, L. P. Smykov10, R. Snellings17, K. Solberg13, J. Sowinski13, H. M. Spinka1, B. Srivastava27, E. J. Stephenson13, R. Stock12, A. Stolpovsky35, N. Stone3, R. Stone17, M. Strikhanov21, B. Stringfellow27, H. Stroebele12, C. Struck12, A. A. P. Suaide29, E. Sugarbaker24, C. Suire14, T. J. M. Symons17, J. Takahashi29, A. H. Tang16, A. Tarchini14, J. Tarzian17, J. H. Thomas17, V. Tikhomirov21, A. Szanto de Toledo29, S. Tonse17, T. Trainor34, S. Trentalange7, M. Tokarev10, M. B. Tonjes20, V. Trofimov21, O. Tsai7, K. Turner3, T. Ullrich36, D. G. Underwood1, I. Vakula7, G. Van Buren3, A. M. VanderMolen20, A. Vanyashin17, I. M. Vasilevski11, A. N. Vasiliev26, S. E. Vigdor13, G. Visser5, S. A. Voloshin35, C. Vu17, F. Wang27, H. Ward31, D. Weerasundara34, R. Weidenbach17, R. Wells17, R. Wells24, T. Wenaus3, G. D. Westfall20, J. P. Whitfield8, C. Whitten, Jr.7, H. Wieman17, R. Willson24, K. Wilson35, J. Wirth17, J. Wisdom7, S. W. Wissink13, R. Witt16, J. Wolf17, L. Wood6, N. Xu17, Z. Xu36, A. E. Yakutin26, E. Yamamoto7, J. Yang7, P. Yepes28, A. Yokosawa1, V. I. Yurevich10, Y. V. Zanevski10, J. Zhang17, W. M. Zhang16, J. Zhu34, D. Zimmerman17, R. Zoulkarneev11, and A. N. Zubare
Violation of particle number conservation in the it GW approximation
We present a nontrivial model system of interacting electrons that can be solved analytically in the GW approximation. We obtain the particle number from the GW Green's function strictly analytically, and prove that there is a genuine violation of particle number conservation if the self-energy is calculated non-self-consistently from a zeroth order Green's function, as done in virtually all practical implementations. We also show that a simple shift of the self-energy that partially restores self-consistency reduces the numerical deviation significantly
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