6,334 research outputs found
Tracking Public Support for Japan\u27s Remilitarization Policies: An Examination of Elitist and Pluralist Governance
Has Japan’s post-Second World War transformation into one of the most militarily capable nations been the result of 60 years of truly representative government? This research compares government-collected opinion polls to policy trends and actions, to determine whether the case of Japan’s remilitarization argues for or against the country’s democratic quality. For the purpose of this research, the size of Japan’s military and its legislative freedom to act as a more conventional military were considered the most pertinent militarization policies. Results indicated that those policies were consistently unjustified by measured opinion, suggesting elitist policy formation. However, other policy areas, such as Japan’s military budget, participation in UN peacekeeping, and national defense capability, have indicated a more pluralist model of policy formation. Therefore, results suggest that the country’s remilitarization has been the product of both elitist and pluralist governance
Effects of motion in structured populations
In evolutionary processes, population structure has a substantial effect on
natural selection. Here, we analyze how motion of individuals affects constant
selection in structured populations. Motion is relevant because it leads to
changes in the distribution of types as mutations march toward fixation or
extinction. We describe motion as the swapping of individuals on graphs, and
more generally as the shuffling of individuals between reproductive updates.
Beginning with a one-dimensional graph, the cycle, we prove that motion
suppresses natural selection for death-birth updating or for any process that
combines birth-death and death-birth updating. If the rule is purely
birth-death updating, no change in fixation probability appears in the presence
of motion. We further investigate how motion affects evolution on the square
lattice and weighted graphs. In the case of weighted graphs we find that motion
can be either an amplifier or a suppressor of natural selection. In some cases,
whether it is one or the other can be a function of the relative reproductive
rate, indicating that motion is a subtle and complex attribute of evolving
populations. As a first step towards understanding less restricted types of
motion in evolutionary graph theory, we consider a similar rule on dynamic
graphs induced by a spatial flow and find qualitatively similar results
indicating that continuous motion also suppresses natural selection.Comment: 25 pages; final versio
Feshbach resonances in ultracold 85Rb-87Rb and 6Li-87Rb mixtures
We present an analysis of experimentally accessible magnetic Feshbach
resonances in ultra-cold hetero-nuclear 85Rb-87Rb and 6Li-87Rb mixtures. Using
recent experimental measurements of the triplet scattering lengths for 6Li-87Rb
and 7Li-87Rb mixtures and Feshbach resonances for one combination of atomic
states, we create model potential curves and fine tune them to reproduce the
measured resonances and to predict the location of several experimentally
relevant resonances in Li-Rb collisions. To model 85Rb-87Rb collisions, we use
accurate Rb_2 potentials obtained previously from the analysis of experiments
on 87Rb-87Rb collisions. We find resonances that occur at very low magnetic
fields, below 10 G, which may be useful for entanglement generation in optical
lattices or atom chip magnetic traps.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Multiply quantized vortices in trapped Bose-Einstein condensates
Vortex configurations in rotating Bose-Einstein condensed gases trapped in
power-law and anharmonic potentials are studied. When the confining potential
is steeper than harmonic in the plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation,
vortices with quantum numbers larger than one are energetically favorable if
the interaction is weak enough. Features of the wave function for small and
intermediate rotation frequencies are investigated numerically.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Revised and extended article following referee
repor
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