11,685 research outputs found
Oscillation parameters present: Session summary
© Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons. Session I of the Neutrino Oscillation Workshop 2018 Conference, âNeutrino Oscillations: Presentâ, is summarised. Results were presented by the currently-running long-baseline oscillation experiments T2K and NOvA, as well as from the accelerator experiments OPERA and MiniBooNE. Status reports and results from experiments using short-baseline accelerator neutrinos (ICARUS and MicroBooNE), atmospheric neutrinos (Super-K, IceCube and ANTARES), and those from reactors (Daya Bay and Double Chooz), and from the Sun and the Earth (Borexino) were also presented. Our current knowledge of neutrino oscillation parameters depends significantly on the experimental inputs that inform us of details of the production and interactions of neutrinos, which were presented by the NA61/SHINE hadron production experiment and cross section measurements from T2K and MINERvA, as well as a review of the status of our understanding of neutrino production at nuclear reactors. The session also included theoretical reviews of the current status of neutrino oscillations, and phenomenological studies on neutrino tomography and experimental studies to support nuclear matrix element calculations (NUMEN)
Effect of interlayer processes on the superconducting state within t-J-U model: Full Gutzwiller wave-function solution and relation to experiment
The Gutzwiller wave function solution of the -- model is considered
for the bilayer high-T superconductor by using the so-called diagrammatic
expansion method. The focus is on the influence of the interlayer effects on
the superconducting state. The chosen pairing symmetry is a mixture of
symmetry within the layers and the so-called symmetry
for the interlayer contribution. The analyzed interlayer terms reflect the
interlayer electron hopping, the interlayer exchange coupling, and the
interlayer pair hopping. The obtained results are compared with selected
experimental data corresponding to the copper-based compound Bi-2212 with two
Cu-O planes in the unit cell. For the sake of comparison, selected results for
the case of the bilayer Hubbard model are also provided. This paper complements
our recent results obtained for the single-plane high temperature cuprates [cf.
J. Spa{\l}ek, M. Zegrodnik, and J. Kaczmarczyk, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 95}, 024506
(2017)
STUDIES'IN THE SEA TURTLES - II , The Nesting Site Characteristics of the Hawksbill and the Green Turtles
ĂâBSTRACT NOT AVAILABL
Long Term Versus Temporary Certified Emission Reductions in Forest Carbon-Sequestration Programs
Under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the Kyoto Protocol, forest projects can receive returns for carbon sequestration via two credit instruments: temporary (tCERs) or long-term certified emission reductions (lCERs). This article develops a theoretical model of optimal harvesting strategies that compares private optimal harvest decision under these two instruments. We find that risk neutral landowners are likely to prefer instituting lCERs over tCERs to maximize surplus. A particular type of early harvest penalty implemented under the lCERs is critical in determining the length of rotation intervals and the carbon credit supply. When this penalty is an increasing function of the difference in biomass before and after harvesting across verification periods, the landowner may choose longer or shorter rotation intervals compared to the Faustmann rotation. The resulting supply curve may have a backward bending region over a range of carbon prices.forest rotation, long term certified emission reductions (lCERs), carbon sequestration
Long Term Versus Temporary Certified Emission Reductions in Forest Carbon-Sequestration Programs
Under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the Kyoto Protocol, forest projects can receive returns for carbon sequestration via two credit instruments: temporary (tCERs) or long-term certified emission reductions (lCERs). This article develops a theoretical model of optimal harvesting strategies that compares private optimal harvest decision under these two instruments. We find that risk neutral landowners are likely to prefer instituting lCERs over tCERs to maximize surplus. A particular type of early harvest penalty implemented under the lCERs is critical in determining the length of rotation intervals and the carbon credit supply. When this penalty is an increasing function of the difference in biomass before and after harvesting across verification periods, the landowner may choose longer or shorter rotation intervals compared to the Faustmann rotation. The resulting supply curve may have a backward bending region over a range of carbon prices.forest rotation, long term certified emission reductions (lCERs), carbon sequestration, Environmental Economics and Policy, Land Economics/Use, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy, Q2, Q54, Q23,
Do Stated Preference Values Predict Revealed Behavior in âNewâ Markets for Ecosystem Services? A Comparison of Experiments Addressing Establishing A Market for Farmland Ecosystem Services
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Metal-insulator transition in Ca_{1-x}Li_xPd_3O_4
Metal-insulator transition in Ca_{1-x}Li_xPd_3O_4 has been studied through
charge transport measurements. The resistivity, the Seebeck coefficient, and
the Hall coefficient are consistently explained in terms of a simple one-band
picture, where a hole with a moderately enhanced mass is itinerant
three-dimensionally. Contrary to the theoretical prediction [Phys. Rev. B62,
13426 (2000)], CaPd_3O_4 is unlikely to be an excitonic insulator, and holds a
finite carrier concentration down to 4.2 K. Thus the metal-insulator transition
in this system is basically driven by localization effects.Comment: RevTeX4 format, 4 pages, 5 eps figure
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Total temperature measurements of laminar gas flow at micro-tube outlet: Cooled from the wall
This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.This paper presents experimental results on heat transfer characteristics of laminar gas flow in a micro-tube with constant wall temperature whose wall temperature is lower than the inlet temperature (cooled case). The experiment was performed for nitrogen gas flow through micro-tubes with 163 and 243
ÎŒm in diameter and 50 mm in length. The gas was heated in an upstream section of the micro-tube to Tin=315K, 335K and 355K. The wall temperature was maintained at 305K by circulating water around the micro-tube. The stagnation pressure was chosen in such a way that the exit Mach number ranges from 0.1
to 0.7. The outlet pressure was fixed at the atmospheric condition. The total temperature at the outlet, the inlet stagnation temperature, the mass flow rate and the inlet temperature were measured. The numerical computations based on the Arbitrary â Lagrangian â Eulerian (ALE) method were also performed for the same conditions of the experiment for validation of numerical results. The both results are in excellent agreement. The total and bulk temperatures obtained by the present study are also compared with the temperature of the incompressible flow
Near-Infrared, Adaptive Optics Observations of the T Tauri Multiple-Star System
With high-angular-resolution, near-infrared observations of the young stellar
object T Tauri at the end of 2002, we show that, contrary to previous reports,
none of the three infrared components of T Tau coincide with the compact radio
source that has apparently been ejected recently from the system (Loinard,
Rodriguez, and Rodriguez 2003). The compact radio source and one of the three
infrared objects, T Tau Sb, have distinct paths that depart from orbital or
uniform motion between 1997 and 2000, perhaps indicating that their interaction
led to the ejection of the radio source. The path that T Tau Sb took between
1997 and 2003 may indicate that this star is still bound to the presumably more
massive southern component, T Tau Sa. The radio source is absent from our
near-infrared images and must therefore be fainter than K = 10.2 (if located
within 100 mas of T Tau Sb, as the radio data would imply), still consistent
with an identity as a low-mass star or substellar object.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ
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