5,939 research outputs found
City-regionalism as a politics of collective provision : regional transport infrastructure in Denver, USA
The rise of the city-region concept has focused attention on the nature of territorial politics underpinning city-regionalism. This paper investigates the relationship between territorial politics, city-regionalism and the collective provision of mass transport infrastructure in the USA. It deploys a case study of the Denver region, examining the state and governance structures driving forward FasTracks, a long-term project to expand the Denver Regional Transportation Districtâs light and commuter rail system. FasTracks represents a programme to retrofit the Denver city-region for integrated mass transit but its funding has fostered tensions around new regionalist governance arrangements. The paper uses the findings of the case study to reflect upon the balance of bottomâup versus topâdown geopolitical forces shaping the landscape of city-regionalism in the USA. It emphasises the variety of ways in which struggles around infrastructure provision shape the emergence of new city-regionalist structures inside the competition state
Critical Viscosity Exponent for Fluids: What Happend to the Higher Loops
We arrange the loopwise perturbation theory for the critical viscosity
exponent , which happens to be very small, as a power series in
itself and argue that the effect of loops beyond two is negligible.
We claim that the critical viscosity exponent should be very closely
approximated by .Comment: 9 pages and 3 figure
Nonequilibrium tricriticality in one dimension
We show the existence of a nonequilibrium tricritical point induced by a
repulsive interaction in one dimensional asymmetric exclusion process. The
tricritical point is associated with the particle-hole symmetry breaking
introduced by the repulsion. The phase diagram and the crossover in the
neighbourhood of the tricritical point for the shock formation at one of the
boundaries are determined.Comment: 6 pages; 4 figure
Magnetic reconnection in plasma under inertial confinement fusion conditions driven by heat flux effects in Ohm's law
In the interaction of high-power laser beams with solid density plasma there
are a number of mechanisms that generate strong magnetic fields. Such fields
subsequently inhibit or redirect electron flows, but can themselves be advected
by heat fluxes, resulting in complex interplay between thermal transport and
magnetic fields.We show that for heating by multiple laser spots reconnection
of magnetic field lines can occur, mediated by these heat fluxes, using a fully
implicit 2D Vlasov-Fokker-Planck code. Under such conditions, the reconnection
rate is dictated by heat flows rather than Alfv\`enic flows. We find that this
mechanism is only relevant in a high plasma. However, the Hall
parameter can be large so that thermal transport is
strongly modified by these magnetic fields, which can impact longer time scale
temperature homogeneity and ion dynamics in the system
On the third order structure function for rotating 3D homogeneous turbulent flow
A form for the two-point third order structure function has been calculated
for three dimensional homogeneous incompressible slowly rotating turbulent
fluid. It has been argued that it may possibly hint at the initiation of the
phenomenon of two-dimensionalisation of the 3D incompressible turbulence owing
to rotation.Comment: This revised version corrects some serious flaws in the discussions
after the equation (2) and the equation (13) of the earlier version. Some
typos are also correcte
Reunion of random walkers with a long range interaction: applications to polymers and quantum mechanics
We use renormalization group to calculate the reunion and survival exponents
of a set of random walkers interacting with a long range and a short
range interaction. These exponents are used to study the binding-unbinding
transition of polymers and the behavior of several quantum problems.Comment: Revtex 3.1, 9 pages (two-column format), 3 figures. Published version
(PRE 63, 051103 (2001)). Reference corrections incorporated (PRE 64, 059902
(2001) (E
Nutrition-risk pregnancies and its association with birth outcomes: findings from a community-based intervention in India
Background: The intervention is a part of a maternal and child nutrition project, operational in three districts of West Bengal, India. The current paper focuses on the identification of ânutrition risk pregnanciesâ at the community level and to determine the associations of the risk factors with birth outcomes like low-birth weight and pre-term birth.Methods: A cohort of 468 pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in their 1st trimester were identified from 74 sub-health centers from 3 diversified blocks of West Bengal, India. Five key intervention strategies were followed in order to achieve desired pregnancy weight gain birth outcomes, like low-birth weight, pre-term birth was analyzed in relation to ânutrition risk pregnanciesâ.Results: About 22.2% of the pregnant women in severe thin body mass index (BMI) categories gave birth to low-birth weight children and about 33.3% had pre-term deliveries compared to pregnant women with normal BMI with 16.8% and 18.8% low-birth and pre-term deliveries respectively. Among the nutrition risk factors, 1st weight at the time of pregnancy registration (95% CI, p=0.04), gestational weight gain (95% CI, p=0.002), were significantly associated with low-birth weight children. Gestational weight gain was also significantly associated with pre-term births (95% CI, p=0.009).Conclusions: Gestational weight gain beyond or less than recommended range may pre-dispose to low-birth weight and pre-term births. Since this factor could be managed through the existing, public health service delivery systems and family-based inputs, efforts should be geared towards identifying the risk factors and working towards appropriate weight gain.
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