12,400 research outputs found
An economics systems analysis of land mobile radio telephone services
The economic interaction of the terrestrial and satellite systems is considered. Parametric equations are formulated to allow examination of necessary user thresholds and growth rates as a function of system costs. Conversely, first order allowable systems costs are found as a function of user thresholds and growth rates. Transitions between satellite and terrestrial service systems are examined. User growth rate density (user/year/sq km) is shown to be a key parameter in the analysis of systems compatibility. The concept of system design matching the price/demand curves is introduced and examples are given. The role of satellite systems is critically examined and the economic conditions necessary for the introduction of satellite service are identified
Seismic Stabilization of Historic Adobe Structures: Final Report of the Getty Seismic Adobe Project
Provides the final report of GSAP activities, and the first publication to provide an overview of the results of scale-model laboratory research along with field data from a survey of damage to historic adobe buildings after an actual earthquake
Pacs des villes et pas des champs
La géographie du pacs ne se laisse pas réduire à des oppositions classiques du type Paris-province, urbain-rural ou grandes villes-villes moyennes et petites. La géographie sociale nuancée que le pacs révèle peut désormais être affinée en fonction du sexe des pacsés. La répartition des pacs entre personnes du même sexe, aujourd'hui ultra-minoritaires, est plus contrastée et explique la suprématie persistante de Paris
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Palaeolimnology of Lake Sapanca and identification of historic earthquake signals, Northern Anatolian Fault Zone (Turkey)
Lake Sapanca is located on a strand of the Northern Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ, Turkey), where a series of strong earthquakes (Ms >6.0) have occurred over the past hundred years. Identifying prehistoric
earthquakes in and around Lake Sapanca is key to a better understanding of plate movements along the
NAFZ. This study contributes to the development of palaeolimnological tools to identify past earthquakes
in Lake Sapanca. To this end several promising proxies were investigated, specifically lithology, magnetic
susceptibility, grain size (thin-section and laser analysis), geochemistry, pollen concentration, diatom
assemblages, 137Cs and 210Pb. Sedimentological indicators provided evidence for reworked, turbidite-like
or homogeneous facies (event layers) in several short cores (<45 cm). Other indicators of sediment input
and the historical chronicles available for the area suggest that three of these event layers likely originated
from the AD 1957, 1967 and 1999 earthquakes. Recent changes in sediment deposition and nutrient
levels have also been identified, but are probably not related to earthquakes. This study demonstrates
that a combination of indicators can be used to recognize earthquake-related event layers in cores that encompass a longer period of time
Exploring Outliers in Crowdsourced Ranking for QoE
Outlier detection is a crucial part of robust evaluation for crowdsourceable
assessment of Quality of Experience (QoE) and has attracted much attention in
recent years. In this paper, we propose some simple and fast algorithms for
outlier detection and robust QoE evaluation based on the nonconvex optimization
principle. Several iterative procedures are designed with or without knowing
the number of outliers in samples. Theoretical analysis is given to show that
such procedures can reach statistically good estimates under mild conditions.
Finally, experimental results with simulated and real-world crowdsourcing
datasets show that the proposed algorithms could produce similar performance to
Huber-LASSO approach in robust ranking, yet with nearly 8 or 90 times speed-up,
without or with a prior knowledge on the sparsity size of outliers,
respectively. Therefore the proposed methodology provides us a set of helpful
tools for robust QoE evaluation with crowdsourcing data.Comment: accepted by ACM Multimedia 2017 (Oral presentation). arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1407.763
Fractal Markets Hypothesis and the Global Financial Crisis: Scaling, Investment Horizons and Liquidity
We investigate whether fractal markets hypothesis and its focus on liquidity
and invest- ment horizons give reasonable predictions about dynamics of the
financial markets during the turbulences such as the Global Financial Crisis of
late 2000s. Compared to the mainstream efficient markets hypothesis, fractal
markets hypothesis considers financial markets as com- plex systems consisting
of many heterogenous agents, which are distinguishable mainly with respect to
their investment horizon. In the paper, several novel measures of trading
activity at different investment horizons are introduced through scaling of
variance of the underlying processes. On the three most liquid US indices -
DJI, NASDAQ and S&P500 - we show that predictions of fractal markets hypothesis
actually fit the observed behavior quite well.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
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Boron content of Lake Ulubat sediment: A key to interpret the morphological history of NW Anatolia, Turkey
Freshwater Lake Ulubat (c. 1.5 m deep and c. 138 km2) receives sediment from a 10.414 km2 area in the seismically active Susurluk Drainage Basin (SDB) of NW Turkey. The B and trace element contents of the lake infill seem to be a link between the fresh landforms of the SDB and the lacustrine sediment. Deposition in Lake Ulubat has been 1.60 cm.a-1 for the last 50 a according to radionucleides; however the sedimentation rate over the last millennium was 0.37 cm.a-1 based on 14C dating. The B content of the lacustrine infill displays a slight increase at 0.50 m and a drastic increase at 4 m depth occurring c. 31 a and c. 1070 a ago respectively. Probably the topmost change corresponds to the start of open mining in the SDB and the second one to the natural trenching of borate ore-deposits. These dates also show indirectly a 1.4 cm.a-1 erosion rate during the last millennium as the borate beds were trenched up to 15 m. By extrapolation, it is possible to establish that the formation of some of the present morphological features of the southern Marmara region, especially river incision, began in the late Pleistocene, and developed especially over the last 75 ka
Solar rotation rate and its gradients during cycle 23
Available helioseismic data now span almost the entire solar activity cycle
23 making it possible to study solar-cycle related changes of the solar
rotation rate in detail. In this paper we study how the solar rotation rate, in
particular, the zonal flows change with time. In addition to the zonal flows
that show a well known pattern in the solar convection zone, we also study
changes in the radial and latitudinal gradients of the rotation rate,
particularly in the shear layer that is present in the immediate sub-surface
layers of the Sun. In the case of the zonal-flow pattern, we find that the band
indicating fast rotating region close to the equator seems to have bifurcated
around 2005. Our investigation of the rotation-rate gradients show that the
relative variation in the rotation-rate gradients is about 20% or more of their
average values, which is much larger than the relative variation in the
rotation rate itself. These results can be used to test predictions of various
solar dynamo models.Comment: To appear in ApJ. Fig 5 has been corrected in this versio
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