20,616 research outputs found
Brief of Amici Curiae in Support of Appellant, James Townsend v. Midland Funding, LLC
The Consumer Protection Clinic of the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, filed a Motion to Participate and an Amicus Brief in the case of Townsend v. Midland Funding, LLC. The case presents the question of whether documents created by third party predecessors in interest—usually a bank—may be admitted into evidence when a debt buyer plaintiff does not demonstrate personal knowledge regarding any of the foundational elements which would be required to admit the documents under the business records exception to the hearsay rule. Amici urge the Court to overturn the lower court, and hold that a debt buyer’s documents may not be admitted into evidence without the debt buyer first laying the proper foundation for the business records exception to the hearsay rule. The Clinic was joined by AARP, the National Consumer Law Center, the National Association of Consumer Advocates, and by the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau and Maryland\u27s Public Justice Center. The Brief deals with the problems of data integrity and the lack of competent, reliable evidence in lawsuits filed purchasers of charged off credit card debt, known as debt buyers. The Consumer Protection Clinic and other amici examine due process and professionalism concerns which arise when our courts (primarily Maryland\u27s District Court) do not strictly apply the special evidentiary and procedural rules which exist for small claims actions
Subleading corrections to the Double Coset Ansatz preserve integrability
In this article we compute the anomalous dimensions for a class of operators,
belonging to the SU(3) sector of the theory, that have a bare dimension of
order N. For these operators the large N limit and the planar limit are
distinct and summing only the planar diagrams will not capture the large N
dynamics. Although the spectrum of anomalous dimensions has been computed for
this class of operators, previous studies have neglected certain terms which
were argued to be small. After dropping these terms diagonalizing the
dilatation operator reduces to diagonalizing a set of decoupled oscillators. In
this article we explicitly compute the terms which were neglected previously
and show that diagonalizing the dilatation operator still reduces to
diagonalizing a set of decoupled oscillators.Comment: 1 + 39 pages; v2: references adde
Wideband Optical Filters with Small Gap Coupled Subwavelength Metal Structures
In this letter, we show that the bandwidth of optical band-stop filters made
of subwavelength metal structures can be significantly increased by the strong
plasmonic near-field coupling through the corners of the periodic metal
squares. The effect of small gap coupling on the spectral bandwidth is
investigated by varying the gap size between the metal squares. An equivalent
transmission line model is used to fit the transmission and reflection spectra
of the metal filters. The transmission line model can characterize well the
metal structures with the gap size larger than the near-field decay length.
However, it fails to model the transmission and reflection spectra when the gap
size reaches the decay range of the near-field in the small gaps
An Experiment in Model Driven Architecture for e-Enterprise Systems
OMG's Model Driven Architecture demonstrates how a system's specification model can be used within the process of creating supporting software implementations. This article documents the findings of an experiment aimed at determining the extent to which this method of software engineering can be used within the domain of e-Enterprise systems
Russian Cities in Transition: The Impact of Market Forces in the 1990s
This paper analyses Russian city growth during the command and transition eras. Our main focus is on understanding the extent to which market forces are replacing command forces, and the resulting changes in Russian city growth patterns. We examine net migration rates for a sample of 171 medium and large cities for the period 1960 through 2002. We conclude that while the declining net migration rate was reversed during the first half of the 1990s, restrictions continued to matter during the early years of transition in the sense that net migration rates were lower in the restricted than in the unrestricted cities. This pattern seemingly came to an end in the late 1990s.cities; city growth; migration; Russia; urbanization
Russian Cities in Transition: The Impact of Market Forces in the 1990s
This paper analyses Russian city growth during the command and transition eras. Our main focus is on understanding the extent to which market forces are replacing command forces, and the resulting changes in Russian city growth patterns. We examine net migration rates for a sample of 171 medium and large cities for the period 1960 through 2002. We conclude that while the declining net migration rate was reversed during the first half of the 1990s, restrictions continued to matter during the early years of transition in the sense that net migration rates were lower in the restricted than in the unrestricted cities. This pattern seemingly came to an end in the late 1990s.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40083/3/wp697.pd
Multi-region relaxed magnetohydrodynamics with anisotropy and flow
We present an extension of the multi-region relaxed magnetohydrodynamics
(MRxMHD) equilibrium model that includes pressure anisotropy and general plasma
flows. This anisotropic extension to our previous isotropic model is motivated
by Sun and Finn's model of relaxed anisotropic magnetohydrodynamic equilibria.
We prove that as the number of plasma regions becomes infinite, our anisotropic
extension of MRxMHD reduces to anisotropic ideal MHD with flow. The
continuously nested flux surface limit of our MRxMHD model is the first
variational principle for anisotropic plasma equilibria with general flow
fields.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1401.307
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