2,253 research outputs found
Entrepreneurial intentions among students: towards a re-focused research agenda
Purpose â This paper aims to address the need for a re-focused research agenda in relation to graduate entrepreneurship. An important theme for some years has been the effort to monitor attitudes and intentions of students towards starting up their own businesses. It is timely, however, to raise some questions about both the impact of this research and likewise the general approach it has taken in understanding the phenomenon of graduate entrepreneurship. Design/methodology/approach â The paper draws on a large data set (over 8,000 students) from one UK region. Specifically, it presents data from the 2007/2008 Entrepreneurial Intentions (EI) survey within the Yorkshire and Humberside region and reflects back over previous iterations of this research. Findings â The paper identifies three key outcomes. First, it establishes that across all years of the survey a substantial minority of students consistently hold relatively strong start-up intentions. Second, the paper highlights that, despite considerable efforts to increase the numbers moving to start-up, little impact is discernible. Third, the paper suggests that, although the EI survey is useful as a stock-taking exercise, it fails to address critical questions around the impact of higher education on entrepreneurship and the transition from entrepreneurial intent to the act of venture creation. Originality/value â The paper provides an important positioning perspective on the relationship between higher education and graduate entrepreneurship. While highlighting the importance of the EI research, the paper establishes the need for a re-focused research agenda; one that is conceptually robust and with a focus on the student journey from higher education to graduate entrepreneur
Extending electron orbital precession to the molecular case: Can orbital alignment be used to observe wavepacket dynamics?
The complexity of ultrafast molecular photoionization presents an obstacle to
the modelling of pump-probe experiments. Here, a simple optimized model of
atomic rubidium is combined with a molecular dynamics model to predict
quantitatively the results of a pump-probe experiment in which long range
rubidium dimers are first excited, then ionized after a variable delay. The
method is illustrated by the outline of two proposed feasible experiments and
the calculation of their outcomes. Both of these proposals use Feshbach 87Rb2
molecules. We show that long-range molecular pump-probe experiments should
observe spin-orbit precession given a suitable pump-pulse, and that the
associated high-frequency beat signal in the ionization probability decays
after a few tens of picoseconds. If the molecule was to be excited to only a
single fine structure state state, then a low-frequency oscillation in the
internuclear separation would be detectable through the timedependent
ionization cross section, giving a mechanism that would enable observation of
coherent vibrational motion in this molecule.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, PRA submissio
Optimal experiment design revisited: fair, precise and minimal tomography
Given an experimental set-up and a fixed number of measurements, how should
one take data in order to optimally reconstruct the state of a quantum system?
The problem of optimal experiment design (OED) for quantum state tomography was
first broached by Kosut et al. [arXiv:quant-ph/0411093v1]. Here we provide
efficient numerical algorithms for finding the optimal design, and analytic
results for the case of 'minimal tomography'. We also introduce the average
OED, which is independent of the state to be reconstructed, and the optimal
design for tomography (ODT), which minimizes tomographic bias. We find that
these two designs are generally similar. Monte-Carlo simulations confirm the
utility of our results for qubits. Finally, we adapt our approach to deal with
constrained techniques such as maximum likelihood estimation. We find that
these are less amenable to optimization than cruder reconstruction methods,
such as linear inversion.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Detection of FeO towards SgrB2
We have observed the J=5-4 ground state transition of FeO at a frequency of
153 GHz towards a selection of galactic sources.
Towards the galactic center source SgrB2, we see weak absorption at
approximately the velocity of other features towards this source (62 km
s LSR).
Towards other sources, the results were negative as they were also for
MgOH(3-2) and FeC(6-5). We tentatively conclude that the absorption seen toward
SgrB2 is due to FeO in the hot ( 500 K) relatively low density absorbing
gas known to be present in this line of sight.
This is the first (albeit tentative) detection of FeO or any iron--containing
molecule in the interstellar gas. Assuming the observed absorption to be due to
FeO, we estimate [FeO]/[SiO] to be of order or less than 0.002 and
[FeO]/[H] of order . This is compatible with our negative
results in other sources.
Our results suggest that the iron liberated from grains in the shocks
associated with SgrB2 remains atomic and is not processed into molecular form.Comment: 1 postscrit figure,10 page
Umklapp scattering of pairs in BCS superconductivity theory
The BCS theory of superconductivity is extended to recognize pairing of
electrons by both normal and umklapp scattering. Application of the variational
approach shows that coexistence of normal and umklapp scattering frustrates
superconductivity.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. to be published in Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matte
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