8,309 research outputs found

    Power frequency interference and suppression in measurement of power transmission tower grounding resistance

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    “If you want peace, work for justice.” – Pope Paul VI This paper explores how the children’s right to be heard is implemented in the criminal proceedings in Romania and Norway. The judicial practices in the two countries are analysed in relation to four elements identified in the literature as relevant to the child’s right to be heard- space, voice, audience and influence. The two juvenile justice systems are then compared to each other, as well as to international best practices, with the final aim of identifying small-scale measures worth disseminating in Romania and Norway to strengthen the effectiveness of child’s right to be heard. The paper argues that a more effective implementation of the children’s right to be heard strengthen all the array of the children’s rights, makes the juvenile justice system more child-friendly and facilitates the transition from conflict and punitive justice towards positive peace. Keywords: right of the child to be heard, juvenile justice, children’s rights, child-friendly justic

    Empirical research on the evaluation model and method of sustainability of the open source ecosystem

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    The development of open source brings new thinking and production modes to software engineering and computer science, and establishes a software development method and ecological environment in which groups participate. Regardless of investors, developers, participants, and managers, they are most concerned about whether the Open Source Ecosystem can be sustainable to ensure that the ecosystem they choose will serve users for a long time. Moreover, the most important quality of the software ecosystem is sustainability, and it is also a research area in Symmetry. Therefore, it is significant to assess the sustainability of the Open Source Ecosystem. However, the current measurement of the sustainability of the Open Source Ecosystem lacks universal measurement indicators, as well as a method and a model. Therefore, this paper constructs an Evaluation Indicators System, which consists of three levels: The target level, the guideline level and the evaluation level, and takes openness, stability, activity, and extensibility as measurement indicators. On this basis, a weight calculation method, based on information contribution values and a Sustainability Assessment Model, is proposed. The models and methods are used to analyze the factors affecting the sustainability of Stack Overflow (SO) ecosystem. Through the analysis, we find that every indicator in the SO ecosystem is partaking in different development trends. The development trend of a single indicator does not represent the sustainable development trend of the whole ecosystem. It is necessary to consider all of the indicators to judge that ecosystem’s sustainability. The research on the sustainability of the Open Source Ecosystem is helpful for judging software health, measuring development efficiency and adjusting organizational structure. It also provides a reference for researchers who study the sustainability of software engineering

    Glueball Masses from Hamiltonian Lattice QCD

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    We calculate the masses of the 0++0^{++}, 0−−0^{--} and 1+−1^{+-} glueballs from QCD in 3+1 dimensions using an eigenvalue equation method for Hamiltonian lattice QCD developed and described elsewhere by the authors. The mass ratios become approximately constants in the coupling region 6/g2∈[6.0,6.4]6/g^2 \in [6.0,6.4], from which we estimate M(0−−)/M(0++)=2.44±0.05±0.20M(0^{--})/M(0^{++})=2.44 \pm 0.05 \pm 0.20 and M(1+−)/M(0++)=1.91±0.05±0.12M(1^{+-})/M(0^{++})=1.91 \pm 0.05 \pm 0.12.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, figures to be sent upon reques

    Formation Control for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles with Directed and Switching Topologies

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    Formation control problems for unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) swarm systems with directed and switching topologies are investigated. A general formation control protocol is proposed firstly. Then, by variable transformation, the formation problem is transformed into a consensus problem, which can be solved by a novel matrix decomposition method. Sufficient conditions to achieve formation with directed and switching topologies are provided and an explicit expression of the formation reference function is given. Furthermore, an algorithm to design the gain matrices of the protocol is presented. Finally, numerical simulations are provided to illustrate the effectiveness of the theoretical results
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