2,621 research outputs found
The effect of expected income on individual migration decisions
economic models;migration;decision making;income distribution
Occupational differentiation and exclusion in early Canadian accountancy
Canada’s 1881 census enumerators posed a range of questions that provide scope for an in–depth investigation of the identity of its accounting functionaries (accountants and bookkeepers) in that year. The significance of our findings is explained by applying the concept of closure through exclusion and occupational differentiation. We discover that Canada’s accounting community, at the dawn of professional organisation, was dominated by people originating from Great Britain & Ireland. The rural/urban divide for Canada’s accountants is the inverse of that for the population as a whole and, as in Britain, congregation occurs around the major commercial ports. Significant differentiation exists between the demographic profile of Canada’s accounting functionaries compared with its entire population and between that of accountants compared with bookkeepers. Strong evidence of exclusionary closure is revealed through an analysis of the demographic characteristics of the initial leaderships of Canada’s early accounting associations. The paper concludes by identifying opportunities for further research
The GEOSAT Follow-on (GFO) Altimeter
The NAVY GEOSAT Mission (1985-1990) demonstrated the ability of an altimeter equipped satellite to provide global measurements of mesoscale ocean features with 3 centimeter precision. The GEOSAT radar altimeter, developed by JHU/APL, was an enormous success. Built with early 1980\u27s technology, the GEOSAT altimeter weighed 191 pounds and consumed 146 watts. The GFO radar altimeter, under development by E-Systems Inc., will achieve the GEOSAT measurement capability, but at one-third the weight and one-half the power (48 pounds, excluding antenna, and 76 watts). The GFO altimeter uses the same proven linear FM waveform, pulse repetition frequency (PRF), pulse compression technique, and alpha-beta tracker design as the GEOSAT radar altimeter, but takes advantage of current RF and digital signal processing technologies to produce an instrument that is both light-weight and reliable. Also, thanks to a cooperative working relationship with JHU/APL, the GFO radar altimeter design encompasses lessons learned from both the GEOSAT and TOPEX programs. Analysis of the range, waveheight, and back-scattering cross section performance indicates that the GFO altimeter will achieve the GEOSAT performance in all areas. Finally, the GFO altimeter design encompasses features allowing economical expansion; including a C-band channel for improved range accuracy, and a 33% higher PRF for improved instrument noise performance. The GFO dual-channel altimeter would weigh 107 pounds and consume 156 watts
The Imprint of Gravitational Waves on the Cosmic Microwave Background
Long-wavelength gravitational waves can induce significant temperature
anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background. Distinguishing this from
anisotropy induced by energy density fluctuations is critical for testing
inflationary cosmology and theories of large-scale structure formation. We
describe full radiative transport calculations of the two contributions and
show that they differ dramatically at angular scales below a few degrees. We
show how anisotropy experiments probing large- and small-angular scales can
combine to distinguish the imprint due to gravitational waves.Comment: 11 pages, Penn Preprint-UPR-
Magnetic-interference patterns in Josephson junctions with d+is symmetry
The magnetic interference pattern and the spontaneous flux in unconventional
Josephson junctions of superconductors with d+is symmetry are calculated for
different reduced junction lengths and the relative factor of the d and s wave
components. This is a time reversal broken symmetry state. We study the
stability of the fractional vortex and antivortex which are spontaneously
formed and examine their evolution as we change the length and the relative
factor of d and s wave components. The asymmetry in the field modulated
diffraction pattern exists for lengths as long as L=10\lambda_J.Comment: 8 pages, 6 eps files, submitted to PR
Modelling and Prediction of Global Magnetic Disturbance in Near-Earth Space: a Case Study for Kp Index using NARX Models
Severe geomagnetic disturbances can be hazardous for mod-ern technological systems. The reliable forecast of parameters related to thestate of the magnetosphere can facilitate the mitigation of adverse effects ofspace weather. This study is devoted to the modeling and forecasting of theevolution of the Kp index related to global geomagnetic disturbances. Through-out this work the Nonlinear AutoRegressive with eXogenous inputs (NARX)methodology is applied. Two approaches are presented: i) a recursive slid-ing window approach, and ii) a direct approach. These two approaches arestudied separately and are then compared to evaluate their performances.It is shown that the direct approach outperforms the recursive approach, butboth tend to produce predictions slightly biased from the true values for lowand high disturbances
GMOS IFU observations of the stellar and gaseous kinematics in the centre of NGC 1068
We present a data cube covering the central 10 arcsec of the archetypal active galaxy NGC 1068 over a wavelength range 4200–5400 Å obtained during the commissioning of the integral field unit (IFU) of the Gemini Multi-object Spectrograph (GMOS) installed on the Gemini-North telescope. The data cube shows a complex emission line morphology in the [O iii] doublet and Hβ line. To describe this structure phenomenologically we construct an atlas of velocity components derived from multiple Gaussian component fits to the emission lines. The atlas contains many features which cannot be readily associated with distinct physical structures. While some components are likely to be associated with the expected biconical outflow, others are suggestive of high velocity flows or disc-like structures. As a first step towards interpretation, we seek to identify the stellar disc using kinematical maps derived from the Mg b absorption line feature at 5170 Å and make associations between this and gaseous components in the atlas of emission line components
Are viruses associated with disc herniation? A clinical case series
Background
There is some limited evidence for the presence of viruses in herniated disc material including a previous case series that claimed to provide “unequivocal evidence of the presence of herpes virus DNA in intervertebral disc specimens of patients with lumbar disc herniation suggesting the potential role of herpes viruses as a contributing factor to the pathogenesis of degenerative disc disease”. This study has not been replicated. The objective of our study was to determine if viruses were present in herniated disc fragments in participants with a prior history of back pain.
Methods
We recruited fifteen participants with a history of prior low-back pain prior to undergoing disc herniation surgery in the lumbar spine. Harvested disc samples were subject to next generation sequencing for detection of both RNA and DNA viral pathogens. Additionally, samples were analysed by a broadly reactive PCR targeting herpesviral DNA. Ethics approval was granted by the Human Research Ethics Committees of both Murdoch University, and St John of God Hospital, Western Australia.
Results
Of the fifteen research participants, 8 were female. Mean age was 49.4 years (SD 14.5 yrs) with a range of 24–70 years. All participants had prior back pain with mean time since first ever attack being 8.8 years (SD 8.8 yrs). No samples contained significant DNA sequences relating to known human viral agents. Inconsequential retroviral sequences were commonly found and were a mixture of putative animal and human retroviral protein coding segments. All samples were negative for herpesvirus DNA when analysed by pan-herpesvirus PCR.
Conclusions
This study found no viral pathogens in any intervertebral disc fragments of patients who had previous back pain and underwent discectomy for disc herniation and thus it is unlikely that viruses are associated with disc herniation, however given the contradiction between key studies enhanced replication of this experiment is recommended
Structural and electrical properties of c-axis oriented Y1-xCaxBa2(Cu1-yZny)3O7-delta thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition
Ca- and Zn-subsituted Y1-xCaxBa2(Cu1-yZny)O7-delta (x = 0, 0.05 and y = 0,
0.02, 0.04, 0.05) thin films were grown on SrTiO3 (100) substrates using the
pulsed laser deposition (PLD) technique. Effects of various growth parameters
on the quality of the film were studied via X-ray diffraction (XRD), atomic
force microscopy (AFM), and in-plane resistivity, rhoab(T), measurements. The
deposition temperature and oxygen partial pressure were gradually increased to
820C and 1.20 mbar respectively. Films grown under these conditions exhibited
good c-axis orientation (primarily limited by the grain size) and low values of
the extrapolated residual resistivity, rho(0), at zero temperature. The planar
hole content, p, was determined from the room temperature thermopower, S[290K],
measurements and the effects of oxygen annealing were also studied. Fully
oxygenated samples were found to be overdoped with p ~ 0.195. The
Superconducting transition temperature Tc(p), and rho(T,p) showed the expected
systematic variations with changing Zn content.Comment: Submitted to Physica C (2003
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