9,942 research outputs found

    Finite ma corrections for sea quark matrix elements

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    We discuss the finite mama corrections associated with the computation of sea quark matrix elements. We find them to differ from the standard normalization used for valence quarks and to depend strongly on the Lorentz structure of the current under consideration. Phenomenological implications of these results are briefly discussed in two examples. We also mention how the magnitude of the correction factors can be reduced by using a 2-link improved action.Comment: 3 pages, contribution to LATTICE'94, uuencoded compressed tar file (square root removed in equation (1)

    High temperature meson propagators with domain-wall quarks

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    We study the chiral properties of domain-wall quarks at high temperatures on an ensemble of quenched configurations. Low lying eigenmodes of the Dirac operator are calculated and used to check the extent to which the Atiyah-Singer index theorem is obeyed on lattices with finite N5N_5. We calculate the connected and disconnected screening propagators for the lowest mass scalar and pseudoscalar mesons in the sectors of different topological charge and note that they behave as expected. Separating out the would-be zero eigenmodes enables us to accurately estimate the disconnected propagators with far less effort than would be needed otherwise.Comment: LATTICE99(Finite Temperature and Density), 3 pages, 3 figure

    Agglomeration externalities, innovation and regional growth: Theoretical perspectives and meta-analysis

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    Technological change and innovation and are central to the quest for regional development. In the globally-connected knowledge-driven economy, the relevance of agglomeration forces that rely on proximity continues to increase, paradoxically despite declining real costs of information, communication and transportation. Globally, the proportion of the population living in cities continues to grow and sprawling cities remain the engines of regional economic transformation. The growth of cities results from a complex chain that starts with scale, density and geography, which then combine with industrial structure characterised by its extent of specialisation, competition and diversity, to yield innovation and productivity growth that encourages employment expansion, and further urban growth through inward migration. This paper revisits the central part of this virtuous circle, namely the Marshall-Arrow-Romer externalities (specialisation), Jacobs externalities (diversity) and Porter externalities (competition) that have provided alternative explanations for innovation and urban growth. The paper evaluates the statistical robustness of evidence for such externalities presented in 31 scientific articles, all building on the seminal work of Glaeser et al. (1992). We aim to explain variation in estimation results using study characteristics by means of ordered probit analysis. Among the results, we find that the impact of diversity depends on how it is measured and that diversity is important for the high-tech sector. High population density increases the chance of finding positive effects of specialisation on growth. More recent data find more positive results for both specialization and diversity, suggesting that agglomeration externalities become more important over time. Finally, primary study results depend on whether or not the externalities are considered jointly and on other features of the regression model specification

    The photodisintegration of the deuteron close to threshold

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    Bibliography: leaves 94-98.Theoretical calculations predict that deuteron photodisintegration is sensitive to meson exchange current and isobar configuration contributions in the threshold (2.225 MeV) region. These effects are manifested chiefly through Ml transitions, which reach maximum amplitude in this energy region. The calculated size of these effects can be verified from an angular distribution measurement of the photo-products

    Two-level pipelined systolic array graphics engine

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    The authors report a VLSI design of an advanced systolic array graphics (SAG) engine built from pipelined functional units which can generate realistic images interactively for high-resolution displays. They introduce a structured frame store system as an environment for the advanced SAG engine and present the principles and architecture of the advanced SAG engine. They introduce pipelined functional units into this SAG engine to meet the performance requirements. This is done by a formal approach where the original systolic array is represented at bit level by a finite, vertex-weighted, edge-weighted, directed graph. Two architectures built from pipelined functional units are described. A prototype containing nine processing elements was fabricated in a 1.6-Âżm CMOS technolog

    Die belangrikheid van sagteweefsel pedikels in beserings van die gesig

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    Twee gevalle wat demonstreer dat die sagteweefsel pedikel van gedeeltelik geamputeerde weefsel in gesigbeserings behou moet word, word beskryf. Eenvoudige, praktiese maatreels om optimale bloedvloei deur die pedikel te verseker, word genoem: torsie van bloedvate en uitdroging van weefsel moet voorkom word, vasokonstriksie beperk word, weefsel versigtig hanteer word en drukking vermy word

    Surgical practice in a maximum security prison – unique and perplexing problems

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    The practice of general surgery in a prison population differs considerably from that in a general surgical practice. We audited surgical consultations at the Mangaung Correctional Centre from December 2003 to April 2009. We found a high incidence of foreign object ingestion and anal pathology.Understanding the medical and social aspects of prison life facilitates the treatment of inmates with surgical problems

    On hardware for generating routes in Kautz digraphs

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    In this paper we present a hardware implementation of an algorithm for generating node disjoint routes in a Kautz network. Kautz networks are based on a family of digraphs described by W.H. Kautz[Kautz 68]. A Kautz network with in-degree and out-degree d has N = dk + dkÂż1 nodes (for any cardinals d, k>0). The diameter is at most k, the degree is fixed and independent of the network size. Moreover, it is fault-tolerant, the connectivity is d and the mapping of standard computation graphs such as a linear array, a ring and a tree on a Kautz network is straightforward.\ud The network has a simple routing mechanism, even when nodes or links are faulty. Imase et al. [Imase 86] showed the existence of d node disjoint paths between any pair of vertices. In Smit et al. [Smit 91] an algorithm is described that generates d node disjoint routes between two arbitrary nodes in the network. In this paper we present a simple and fast hardware implementation of this algorithm. It can be realized with standard components (Field Programmable Gate Arrays)

    Strongly coupled N=1 SYM theory on the lattice

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    We propose a strong coupling expansion as a possible tool to obtain qualitative and quantitative informations about N=1 SYM theory. We point out the existence of a mapping between strongly coupled lattice N=1 SYM theory and a generalized SO(4) antiferromagnetic spin system.Comment: Lattice2002(spin), 3 pages, no figure
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