368 research outputs found
Voting procedures and parliamentary representation in the European Parliament
Parliamentary representation is a fluid concept. Yet, while the behaviour of elected representatives during roll call votes has been widely analysed, we know little about how parliamentarians act when their individual voting choices are not made public. This paper explores the relationship between voting procedures and the likelihood that Members of the European Parliament prioritise the interests of their EP party group versus the interests of their national party. Using an original survey, I find that MEPs are more likely to prioritise the interests of their national party over those of their EP party group when voting by show of hands or electronically, as opposed to by roll call. Moreover, this voting procedure effect is particularly salient among MEPs elected from 2004/07 accession countries
Polarized light-flavor antiquarks from Drell-Yan processes of h+\vec{N}\to\vec{l^{+-}} + l^{-+} + X
We propose a formula to determine the first moment of difference between the
polarized - and -quarks in the nucleon, {\it i.e.} from the Drell-Yan processes in collisions of unpolarized
hadrons with longitudinally polarized nucleons by measuring outgoing lepton
helicities. As coefficients in the differential cross section depend on the
- and -quark numbers in the unpolarized hadron beam, the difference
can be independently tested by changing the hadron
beam. Moreover, a formula for estimating the -factor in Drell-Yan processes
is also suggested.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Drell-Yan forward-backward and spin asymmetries for arbitrary vector boson production at next-to-leading order
Longitudinally polarized, unpolarized and forward-backward mass differential
cross sections for Drell-Yan lepton-pair production by arbitrary vector bosons
are calculated in next-to-leading order (NLO) QCD. Analytical results are
presented in a form valid for all consistent -dimensional regularization
schemes, with the mass factorization scheme kept general. NLO predictions for
all Drell-Yan type processes (, and ) at BNL's
relativistic heavy ion collider (RHIC) are made using polarized parton
distributions which fit the recent deep-inelastic scattering data. These are
examined as tools in the determination of the polarized parton distributions
and the unpolarized ratio. NLO predictions for the
forward-backward lepton asymmetry at Fermilab are made and the precision
determination of from future runs is studied. In all the
above, the QCD corrections are found to be significant. An introductory
discussion is given of various theoretical issues, such as allowable
factorization and regularization schemes, and scale dependences.Comment: 34 pages, figures included, revtex. Some discussions and references
added/modified. In more compact form. To appear in Phys. Rev.
The Stability of Bredigite and Other Ca-Mg Silicates
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65844/1/j.1151-2916.1980.tb10213.x.pd
Medidas de biosseguridade no uso da inseminação artificial em bovinos.
O que são medidas de biosseguridade? Quais são os pontos críticos no uso da IA? Como a IA pode contribuir para disseminação de patógenos?bitstream/item/223082/1/COMUNICADO-TECNICO-382.pd
Election proximity and representation focus in party-constrained environments
Do elected representatives have a time-constant representation focus or do they adapt their focus depending on election proximity? In this article, we examine these overlooked theoretical and empirical puzzles by looking at how reelection-seeking actors adapt their legislative behavior according to the electoral cycle. In parliamentary democracies, representatives need to serve two competing principals: their party and their district. Our analysis hinges on how representatives make a strategic use of parliamentary written questions in a highly party-constrained institutional context to heighten their reselection and reelection prospects. Using an original data set of over 32,000 parliamentary questions tabled by Portuguese representatives from 2005 to 2015, we examine how time interacts with two key explanatory elements: electoral vulnerability and party size. Results show that representation focus is not static over time and, in addition, that electoral vulnerability and party size shape strategic use of parliamentary questions
Predictors of invertebrate biomass and rate of advancement of invertebrate phenology across eight sites in the North American Arctic
Average annual temperatures in the Arctic increased by 2–3 °C during the second half of the twentieth century. Because
shorebirds initiate northward migration to Arctic nesting sites based on cues at distant wintering grounds, climate-driven
changes in the phenology of Arctic invertebrates may lead to a mismatch between the nutritional demands of shorebirds
and the invertebrate prey essential for egg formation and subsequent chick survival. To explore the environmental drivers
afecting invertebrate availability, we modeled the biomass of invertebrates captured in modifed Malaise-pitfall traps over
three summers at eight Arctic Shorebird Demographics Network sites as a function of accumulated degree-days and other
weather variables. To assess climate-driven changes in invertebrate phenology, we used data from the nearest long-term
weather stations to hindcast invertebrate availability over 63 summers, 1950–2012. Our results confrmed the importance
of both accumulated and daily temperatures as predictors of invertebrate availability while also showing that wind speed
negatively afected invertebrate availability at the majority of sites. Additionally, our results suggest that seasonal prey avail ability for Arctic shorebirds is occurring earlier and that the potential for trophic mismatch is greatest at the northernmost
sites, where hindcast invertebrate phenology advanced by approximately 1–2.5 days per decade. Phenological mismatch
could have long-term population-level efects on shorebird species that are unable to adjust their breeding schedules to the
increasingly earlier invertebrate phenologies.publishedVersio
Monitoring the Dusty S-Cluster Object (DSO/G2) on its Orbit towards the Galactic Center Black Hole
We analyse and report in detail new near-infrared (1.45 - 2.45 microns)
observations of the Dusty S-cluster Object (DSO/G2) during its approach to the
black hole at the center of the Galaxy that were carried out with ESO
VLT/SINFONI between February and September 2014. Before May 2014 we detect
spatially compact Br-gamma and Pa-alpha line emission from the DSO at about
40mas east of SgrA*. The velocity of the source, measured from the red-shifted
emission, is 2700+-60 km/s. No blue-shifted emission above the noise level is
detected at the position of SgrA* or upstream the presumed orbit. After May we
find spatially compact Br-gamma blue-shifted line emission from the DSO at
about 30mas west of SgrA* at a velocity of -3320+-60 km/s and no indication for
significant red-shifted emission. We do not detect any significant extension of
velocity gradient across the source. We find a Br-gamma-line full width at half
maximum of 50+-10 Angstroem before and 15+-10 Angstroem after the peribothron
transit, i.e. no significant line broadening with respect to last year is
observed. Br-gamma line maps show that the bulk of the line emission originates
from a region of less than 20mas diameter. This is consistent with a very
compact source on an elliptical orbit with a peribothron time passage in
2014.39+-0.14. For the moment, the flaring activity of the black hole in the
near-infrared regime has not shown any statistically significant increment.
Increased accretion activity of SgrA* may still be upcoming. We discuss details
of a source model according to which the DSO is rather a young accreting star
than a coreless gas and dust cloud.Comment: 32 pages - 3 tables - 17 figure - accepted by Ap
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