7,459 research outputs found
Stock assessment diagnostics for South Atlantic swordfish
Catch and catch per unit effort are used to fit a biomass dynamic stock assessment model. A variety of
diagnostics are then used to check for violations of model assumptions and to explore the information in
the data. Potential problems are identified and ways to overcome or avoid them discussed.Versión del edito
Stock assessment diagnostics for North Atlantic swordfish
Catch and catch per unit effort are used to fit a biomass dynamic stock assessment model. A variety of
diagnostics are then used to check for violations of model assumptions and to explore the information in
the data. Potential problems are identified and ways to overcome or avoid them discussed.Versión del edito
Kobe II strategy matrices for North Atlantic swordfish based on catch, fishing mortality and harvest control rules.
Scientific stock assessment advice given by the SCRS is presented in the form of the Kobe II
Strategy Matrix (K2SM). Traditionally the K2SM shows the probabilities by year for different
catches of achieving the management objective of ensuring that the stock biomass is greater
than BMSY and fishing mortality less than FMSY. However, a K2SM can also be used, as in this
paper, to help guide discussion about choice of reference points for use as part of a Harvest
Control Rule.Versión del edito
Quantum Monte Carlo Algorithm Based on Two-Body Density Functional Theory for Fermionic Many-Body Systems: Application to 3He
We construct a quantum Monte Carlo algorithm for interacting fermions using
the two-body density as the fundamental quantity. The central idea is mapping
the interacting fermionic system onto an auxiliary system of interacting
bosons. The correction term is approximated using correlated wave functions for
the interacting system, resulting in an effective potential that represents the
nodal surface. We calculate the properties of 3He and find good agreement with
experiment and with other theoretical work. In particular, our results for the
total energy agree well with other calculations where the same approximations
were implemented but the standard quantum Monte Carlo algorithm was usedComment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Implementation of a harvest control rule for northern Atlantic albacore
A Harvest Control Rule was developed for North Atlantic albacore during the 2013 assessment,
this paper documents the procedure used.Versión del edito
Response of thin-film SQUIDs to applied fields and vortex fields: Linear SQUIDs
In this paper we analyze the properties of a dc SQUID when the London
penetration depth \lambda is larger than the superconducting film thickness d.
We present equations that govern the static behavior for arbitrary values of
\Lambda = \lambda^2/d relative to the linear dimensions of the SQUID. The
SQUID's critical current I_c depends upon the effective flux \Phi, the magnetic
flux through a contour surrounding the central hole plus a term proportional to
the line integral of the current density around this contour. While it is well
known that the SQUID inductance depends upon \Lambda, we show here that the
focusing of magnetic flux from applied fields and vortex-generated fields into
the central hole of the SQUID also depends upon \Lambda. We apply this
formalism to the simplest case of a linear SQUID of width 2w, consisting of a
coplanar pair of long superconducting strips of separation 2a, connected by two
small Josephson junctions to a superconducting current-input lead at one end
and by a superconducting lead at the other end. The central region of this
SQUID shares many properties with a superconducting coplanar stripline. We
calculate magnetic-field and current-density profiles, the inductance
(including both geometric and kinetic inductances), magnetic moments, and the
effective area as a function of \Lambda/w and a/w.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, revised for Phys. Rev. B, the main revisions
being to denote the effective flux by \Phi rather than
Measuring Cosmological Parameters with the JVAS and CLASS Gravitational Lens Surveys
The JVAS (Jodrell Bank-VLA Astrometric Survey) and CLASS (Cosmic Lens All-Sky
Survey) are well-defined surveys containing about ten thousand flat-spectrum
radio sources. For many reasons, flat-spectrum radio sources are particularly
well-suited as a population from which one can obtain unbiased samples of
gravitational lenses. These are by far the largest gravitational (macro)lens
surveys, and particular attention was paid to constructing a cleanly-defined
sample for the survey itself and for the underlying luminosity function. Here
we present the constraints on cosmological parameters, particularly the
cosmological constant, derived from JVAS and combine them with constraints from
optical gravitational lens surveys, `direct' measurements of ,
and the age of the universe, and constraints derived from CMB
anisotropies, before putting this final result into the context of the latest
results from other, independent cosmological tests.Comment: LaTeX, 9 pages, 6 PostScript figures, uses texas.sty. To appear in
the Proceedings of the 19th Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics and
Cosmology (CD-ROM). Paper version available on request. Actual poster (A0 and
A4 versions) available from
http://multivac.jb.man.ac.uk:8000/helbig/research/publications/info/
texas98.htm
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