2,013 research outputs found
Patch by Patch: North Carolina\u27s Crazy Quilt of Campaign Finance Regulations
After more than a decade of judicial intervention and legislative reforms, North Carolina\u27s campaign finance laws resemble a crazy quilt - a patchwork of provisions pieced together from remnants and scraps. The law is a dizzying array of proscriptions, requirements, and exceptions, sometimes based on speaker identity and sometimes based on the content or context of the political message. This quilt is what remained after the Fourth Circuit\u27s strained and confusing decision in North Carolina Right to Life, Inc. v. Leake, decided in 2008, immediately following the Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in McConnell v. FEC. This Comment evaluates and summarizes North Carolina\u27s existing campaign finance regulations, provides a critical analysis of both the state of the law and of the Fourth Circuit\u27s decision in North Carolina Right to Life, Inc. v. Leake, and offers a suggested analytical framework for future judicial review of campaign finance regulations
Spatial Patterns in Mass Balance of the Siple Coast and Amundsen Sea Sectors, West Antarctica
Local rates of change in ice-sheet thickness were calculated at IS sites in West Antarctica using the submergence velocity technique. This method entails a comparison of the vertical velocity of the ice sheet, measured using repeat global positioning system surveys of markers, and local long-term rates of snow accumulation obtained using firn-core stratigraphy. Any significant difference between these two quantities represents a thickness change with time. Measurements were conducted at sites located similar to 100-200 km apart along US ITASE traverse routes, and at several isolated locations. All but one of the sites are distributed in the Siple Coast and the Amundsen Sea basin along contours of constant elevation, along flowlines, across ice divides and close to regions of enhanced flow. Calculated rates of thickness change are different from site to site. Most of the large rates of change in ice thickness (similar to 10 cm a(-1) or larger) are observed in or close to regions of rapid flow, and are probably related to ice-dynamics effects. Near-steady-state conditions are calculated mostly at sites in the slow-moving ice-sheet interior and near the main West Antarctic ice divide. These results are consistent with regional estimates of ice-sheet change derived from remote-sensing measurements at similar locations in West Antarctica
Electronic structure and effects of dynamical electron correlation in ferromagnetic bcc-Fe, fcc-Ni and antiferromagnetic NiO
LDA+DMFT method in the framework of the iterative perturbation theory (IPT)
with full LDA Hamiltonian without mapping onto the effective Wannier orbitals.
We then apply this LDA+DMFT method to ferromagnetic bcc-Fe and fcc-Ni as a test
of transition metal, and to antiferromagnetic NiO as an example of transition
metal oxide. In Fe and Ni, the width of occupied 3d bands is narrower than
those in LDA and Ni 6eV satellite appears. In NiO, the resultant electronic
structure is of charge-transfer insulator type and the band gap is 4.3eV. These
results are in good agreement with the experimental XPS. The configuration
mixing and dynamical correlation effects play a crucial role in these results
Symmetry Properties of Nested Canalyzing Functions
Many researchers have studied symmetry properties of various Boolean
functions. A class of Boolean functions, called nested canalyzing functions
(NCFs), has been used to model certain biological phenomena. We identify some
interesting relationships between NCFs, symmetric Boolean functions and a
generalization of symmetric Boolean functions, which we call -symmetric
functions (where is the symmetry level). Using a normalized representation
for NCFs, we develop a characterization of when two variables of an NCF are
symmetric. Using this characterization, we show that the symmetry level of an
NCF can be easily computed given a standard representation of . We also
present an algorithm for testing whether a given -symmetric function is an
NCF. Further, we show that for any NCF with variables, the notion of
strong asymmetry considered in the literature is equivalent to the property
that is -symmetric. We use this result to derive a closed form
expression for the number of -variable Boolean functions that are NCFs and
strongly asymmetric. We also identify all the Boolean functions that are NCFs
and symmetric.Comment: 17 page
Experimental application of sum rules for electron energy loss magnetic chiral dichroism
We present a derivation of the orbital and spin sum rules for magnetic
circular dichroic spectra measured by electron energy loss spectroscopy in a
transmission electron microscope. These sum rules are obtained from the
differential cross section calculated for symmetric positions in the
diffraction pattern. Orbital and spin magnetic moments are expressed explicitly
in terms of experimental spectra and dynamical diffraction coefficients. We
estimate the ratio of spin to orbital magnetic moments and discuss first
experimental results for the Fe L_{2,3} edge.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
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