17,478 research outputs found
Choosing the best model in the presence of zero trade: a fish product analysis
The purpose of the paper is to test the hypothesis that food safety (chemical) standards act as barriers to international seafood imports. We use zero-accounting gravity models to test the hypothesis that food safety (chemical) standards act as barriers to international seafood imports. The chemical standards on which we focus include chloramphenicol required performance limit, oxytetracycline maximum residue limit, fluoro-quinolones maximum residue limit, and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) pesticide residue limit. The study focuses on the three most important seafood markets: the European Union’s 15 members, Japan, and North America
Micrometric particles twodimensional self-assembly during drying of liquid film
We computed the self-organisation process of a monodisperse collection of
spherical micrometric particles trapped in a two-dimensional (2D) thin liquid
film isothermally dried on a chemically inert substrate. The substrate is
either flat or indented to create linear stripes on its surface. The numerical
results are illustrated and discussed in the light of experimental ones
obtained from the drying of diamond particles water based suspension () on a glass substrate. The drying of the suspension on a flat
substrate leads to the formation of linear patterns and small clusters of
micrometric particles distributed over the whole surface of the substrate,
whereas the drying of the suspension on a indented substrate leads to the
aggregation of the particles along one side of the stripe which has a higher
roughness than the other side of the stripe. This is an easy experimental way
to obtain colloidal selforganized patterns.Comment: 16 pages 7 figure
A continuum-microscopic method based on IRBFs and control volume scheme for viscoelastic fluid flows
A numerical computation of continuum-microscopic model for visco-elastic flows based on the Integrated Radial Basis Function (IRBF) Control Volume and the Stochastic Simulation Techniques (SST) is reported in this paper. The macroscopic flow equations are closed by a stochastic equation for the extra stress at the microscopic level. The former are discretised by a 1D-IRBF-CV method while the latter is integrated with Euler explicit or Predictor-Corrector schemes. Modelling is very efficient as it is based on Cartesian grid, while the integrated RBF approach enhances both the stability of the procedure and the accuracy of the solution. The proposed method is demonstrated with the solution of the start-up Couette flow of the Hookean and FENE dumbbell model fluids
Sustainable Growth and Ethics: a Study of Business Ethics in Vietnam Between Business Students and Working Adults
Sustainable growth is not only the ultimate goal of business corporations but also the primary target of local governments as well as regional and global economies. One of the cornerstones of sustainable growth is ethics. An ethical organizational culture provides support to achieve sustainable growth. Ethical leaders and employees have great potential for positive influence on decisions and behaviors that lead to sustainability. Ethical behavior, therefore, is expected of everyone in the modern workplace. As a result, companies devote many resources and training programs to make sure their employees live according to the high ethical standards. This study provides an analysis of Vietnamese business students’ level of ethical maturity based on gender, education, work experience, and ethics training. The results of data from 260 business students compared with 704 working adults in Vietnam demonstrate that students have a significantly higher level of ethical maturity. Furthermore, gender and work experience are significant factors in ethical maturity. While more educated respondents and those who had completed an ethics course did have a higher level of ethical maturity, the results were not statistically significant. Analysis of the results along with suggestions and implications are provided
Probing topology by "heating": Quantized circular dichroism in ultracold atoms
We reveal an intriguing manifestation of topology, which appears in the
depletion rate of topological states of matter in response to an external
drive. This phenomenon is presented by analyzing the response of a generic 2D
Chern insulator subjected to a circular time-periodic perturbation: due to the
system's chiral nature, the depletion rate is shown to depend on the
orientation of the circular shake. Most importantly, taking the difference
between the rates obtained from two opposite orientations of the drive, and
integrating over a proper drive-frequency range, provides a direct measure of
the topological Chern number of the populated band (): this "differential
integrated rate" is directly related to the strength of the driving field
through the quantized coefficient . Contrary to the
integer quantum Hall effect, this quantized response is found to be non-linear
with respect to the strength of the driving field and it explicitly involves
inter-band transitions. We investigate the possibility of probing this
phenomenon in ultracold gases and highlight the crucial role played by edge
states in this effect. We extend our results to 3D lattices, establishing a
link between depletion rates and the non-linear photogalvanic effect predicted
for Weyl semimetals. The quantized circular dichroism revealed in this work
designates depletion-rate measurements as a universal probe for topological
order in quantum matter.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures (including Sup. Mat.). Revised version, accepted
for publicatio
Development and structure of karstification of the Dong Van Karst Plateau UNESCO Global Geopark, North Vietnam based on cave survey data
This paper presents a quantitative study of the relationship between the cave system and the tectonic and karst evolution of the Dong Van Karst Plateau based on analysis and statistics of geometric parameters and orientation of cave passages. The region is located in northern Vietnam and belongs to the extended part of the South China karst belt (Yunnan karst plateau), which is composed mainly of carbonate rocks. Cave classification based on cave conduits geometric parameters shows that caves developed mainly in the vadose zone (27 vadose branchwork caves, 10 mixed caves developed under the control of fault systems, and 12 water-table caves). The degree of correlation between cave levels and planation surfaces suggests that the development of horizontal cave passages is related to two levels of planation surfaces, including one at 1250–1450 masl (equivalent to cave level at 1350–1450 masl), and at 1000–1250 masl (corresponding to cave level at 1200–1250 masl). Additionally, cave passage orientation shows that the cave system formed and developed under the influence of tectonic activities in the Cenozoic. The dominant orientation trend is roughly in the East–West direction and occurred in the early phase (Eocene–Miocene). Next is a trend roughly North–South that occurred in the late phase (Pliocene–Quaternary). The last orientation trend follows the NW–SE direction due to the reactivation of paleo-fault systems in the same direction. Although there are limitations due to accessibility and the level of cave exploration, this research suggests that analysis and statistics of the geometric parameters and orientation of cave passages based on cave survey data can be one of the effective approaches used to identify the development and structure of karstification in the karst region
A molecular perspective on the limits of life: Enzymes under pressure
From a purely operational standpoint, the existence of microbes that can grow
under extreme conditions, or "extremophiles", leads to the question of how the
molecules making up these microbes can maintain both their structure and
function. While microbes that live under extremes of temperature have been
heavily studied, those that live under extremes of pressure have been
neglected, in part due to the difficulty of collecting samples and performing
experiments under the ambient conditions of the microbe. However, thermodynamic
arguments imply that the effects of pressure might lead to different organismal
solutions than from the effects of temperature. Observationally, some of these
solutions might be in the condensed matter properties of the intracellular
milieu in addition to genetic modifications of the macromolecules or repair
mechanisms for the macromolecules. Here, the effects of pressure on enzymes,
which are proteins essential for the growth and reproduction of an organism,
and some adaptations against these effects are reviewed and amplified by the
results from molecular dynamics simulations. The aim is to provide biological
background for soft matter studies of these systems under pressure.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Monte Carlo approach of the islanding of polycrystalline thin films
We computed by a Monte Carlo method derived from the Solid on Solid model,
the evolution of a polycrystalline thin film deposited on a substrate during
thermal treatment. Two types of substrates have been studied: a single
crystalline substrate with no defects and a single crystalline substrate with
defects. We obtain islands which are either flat (i.e. with a height which does
not overcome a given value) or grow in height like narrow towers. A good
agreement was found regarding the morphology of numerical nanoislands at
equilibrium, deduced from our model, and experimental nanoislands resulting
from the fragmentation of YSZ thin films after thermal treatment.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
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