190,397 research outputs found
Land Law – The fight against gazumping
Professor M.P. Thompson (University of Leicester) considers the background and needs for the government review of conveyancing procedures in England and Wales which has focussed on stamping out the practice of gazumping. Note published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
Is the Internet a Viable Threat to Representative Democracy?
The Internet, despite its relatively recent advent, is critical to millions of Americans’ way of life. Although the Internet arguably opens new opportunities for citizens to become more directly involved in their government, some scholars fear this direct involvement poses a risk to one of the Constitution’s most precious ideals: representative democracy. This iBrief explores whether the constitutional notion of representation is vulnerable to the Internet’s capacity to open new vistas for a more direct democracy by analyzing statistics and theories about why voters in the United States do or do not vote and by examining the inherent qualities of the Internet itself. This iBrief concludes that the Constitution will adapt to the Internet and the Internet to the Constitution, such that even if there are advances in direct democracy, representative democracy will not be unduly threatened
AdS Solutions of 2D Type 0A
We present a two-parameter family of AdS solutions to the two-dimensional
type 0A effective action.Comment: 9 page
A short note on the multiplier ideals of monomial space curves
Thompson (2014) exhibits a formula for the multiplier ideal with multiplier
lambda of a monomial curve C with ideal I as an intersection of a term coming
from the I-adic valuation, the multiplier ideal of the term ideal of I, and
terms coming from certain specified auxiliary valuations. This short note shows
it suffices to consider only one auxiliary valuation. This improvement is
achieved through a more intrinsic approach, reduction to the toric case.Comment: This version adds Corollary 10 and fixes several typo
SCUBA polarisation observations of the magnetic fields in the prestellar cores L1498 and L1517B
We have mapped linearly polarized dust emission from the prestellar cores
L1498 and L1517B with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) using the
Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) and its polarimeter SCUBAPOL
at a wavelength of 850um. We use these measurements to determine the
plane-of-sky magnetic field orientation in the cores. In L1498 we see a
magnetic field across the peak of the core that lies at an offset of 19 degrees
to the short axis of the core. This is similar to the offsets seen in previous
observations of prestellar cores. To the southeast of the peak, in the
filamentary tail of the core, we see that the magnetic field has rotated to lie
almost parallel to the long axis of the filament. We hypothesise that the field
in the core may have decoupled from the field in the filament that connects the
core to the rest of the cloud. We use the Chandrasekhar-Fermi (CF) method to
measure the plane-of-sky field strength in the core of L1498 to be 10 +/- 7 uG.
In L1517B we see a more gradual turn in the field direction from the northern
part of the core to the south. This appears to follow a twist in the filament
in which the core is buried, with the field staying at a roughly constant 25
degree offset to the short axis of the filament, also consistent with previous
observations of prestellar cores. We again use the CF method and calculate the
magnetic field strength in L1517B also to be 30 +/- 10 uG. Both cores appear to
be roughly virialised. Comparison with our previous work on somewhat denser
cores shows that, for the denser cores, thermal and non-thermal (including
magnetic) support are approximately equal, while for the lower density cores
studied here, thermal support dominates.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication by MNRA
Gas field scheduling
Woodside Offshore Petroleum is the operator in the development of new gas fields in Australia's North West Shelf project. Sequencing the development of new gas fields in this project is a key determinant of its return on investment. This development sequence has constraints imposed by infrastructure and contractual obligations as well as natural features. The determination of an optimal or very good solution may involve a number of techniques from operations research. The study group attempted several approaches to the problem, principal amongst them being mathematical programming and dynamic programming. A few other heuristic approaches were also considered. The mathematical programming approach was able to yield solutions to small instances of the problem. The group was able to identify several avenues for further research and work on the problem is ongoing
Control of bacterial disease in small scale fresh-water aquaculture: Project R0754. Project completion report December 1998 - May 1999
The work presented here represents an 18-month study to examine the relationship between environmental conditions, bacterial load in the water and bacteria levels in tissue macrophages of a range of clinically healthy freshwater fish species, farmed in a range of culture systems in Thailand and Vietnam. Preliminary assessment was made of the clinical significance of the macrophage bacterial load. The aim of this work was to improve production in fresh-water aquaculture through the control of clinical bacterial disease and subclinical infection, and to identify management practices most effective in promoting fish health. [PDF contains 37 pages
Covariance-Adaptive Slice Sampling
We describe two slice sampling methods for taking multivariate steps using
the crumb framework. These methods use the gradients at rejected proposals to
adapt to the local curvature of the log-density surface, a technique that can
produce much better proposals when parameters are highly correlated. We
evaluate our methods on four distributions and compare their performance to
that of a non-adaptive slice sampling method and a Metropolis method. The
adaptive methods perform favorably on low-dimensional target distributions with
highly-correlated parameters
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