9,242 research outputs found
Policy Endogeneity and the Effects of Trade on the Environment
This paper reviews recent work on the implications of endogenous policy for the effects of trade on the environment and the sustainability of renewable resource stocks. A recognition that pollution policy is endogenous has had a major impact on the trade and environment literature and has reversed some of the previously established empirical findings. Work on pollution has proceeded faster than work on renewable resources. I suggest some directions for future work in this area.pollution, international trade and the environment, renewable resources, globalization, Environmental Economics and Policy, International Relations/Trade,
Development of a refrigeration system for lunar surface and spacecraft applications
An evaluation of refrigeration devices suitable for potential lunar surface and spacecraft applications was performed. The following conclusions were reached: (1) the vapor compression system is the best overall refrigeration system for lunar surface and spacecraft applications and the single phase radiator system is generally preferred for earth orbit applications, (2) the vapor compression cycle may have some application for simultaneous heating and cooling, (3) a Stirling cycle refrigerator was selected for the manned cabin of the space shuttle, and (4) significant increases in payload heat rejection can be obtained by a kit vapor compression refrigerator added to the shuttle R-21 loop. The following recommendations were made: (1) a Stirling cycle refrigerator may be used for food freezer and biomedical sample storage, (2) the best system for a food freezer/experiments compartment for an earth orbit space station has not been determined, (3) a deployed radiator system can be designed for large heat loads in earth orbit
Salt stabilizer for preventing chlorine depletion and increasing shelf-life of potable water - A concept
Proposed concept, based on law of mass action uses addition of salt to increase chlorine ions produced in sodium hydrochlorite solutions, thereby increasing solution shelf-life. This technique is not costly. Usefulness will be determined by acceptability of salt in product undergoing long shelf-life
Space-suit carbon dioxide absorption system: A concept
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide within a space suit is maintained at safe levels by regenerating carbon dioxide with potassium hydroxide solution on board spacecraft or by portable units
The graceful exit in pre-big bang string cosmology
We re-examine the graceful exit problem in the pre-big bang scenario of
string cosmology, by considering the most general time-dependent classical
correction to the Lagrangian with up to four derivatives. By including possible
forms for quantum loop corrections we examine the allowed region of parameter
space for the coupling constants which enable our solutions to link smoothly
the two asymptotic low-energy branches of the pre-big bang scenario, and
observe that these solutions can satisfy recently proposed entropic bounds on
viable singularity free cosmologies.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, JHEP class. Added new section on the classical
correction and reference
Cosmological perturbations and the transition from contraction to expansion
We investigate both analytically and numerically the evolution of scalar
perturbations generated in models which exhibit a smooth transition from a
contracting to an expanding Friedmann universe. We find that the resulting
spectral index in the late radiation dominated universe depends on which of the
or \ variables passes regularly through the transition. The
results can be parameterized through the exponent defining the rate of
contraction of the universe. For we find that there are no stable
cases where both variables are regular during the transition. In particular,
for , we find that the resulting spectral index is close to scale
invariant if is regular, whereas it has a steep blue behavior if
is regular. We also show that as long as , perturbations arising
from the Bardeen potential remain small during contraction in the sense that
there exists a gauge in which all the metric and matter perturbation variables
are small.Comment: 30 pages, 16 figures. Version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. Slight
modifications, but no change in the conclusio
Duality in cosmological perturbation theory
Cosmological perturbation equations derived from low-energy effective actions
are shown to be invariant under a duality transformation reminiscent of
electric-magnetic, strong-weak coupling, S-duality. A manifestly
duality-invariant approximation for perturbations far outside the horizon is
introduced, and it is argued to be useful even during a high curvature epoch.
Duality manifests itself through a remnant symmetry acting on the classical
moduli of cosmological models, and implying lower bounds on the number and
energy density of produced particles.Comment: 14 pages, LATEX, no figure
Verification test results of Apollo stabilization and control systems during undocked operations
The results are presented of analysis and simulation testing of both the Skylark 1 reaction control system digital autopilot (RCS DAP) and the thrust vector control (TVC) autopilot for use during the undocked portions of the Apollo/Soyuz Test Project Mission. The RCS DAP testing was performed using the Skylab Functional Simulator (SLFS), a digital computer program capable of simulating the Apollo and Skylab autopilots along with vehicle dynamics including bending and sloshing. The model is used to simulate three-axis automatic maneuvers along with pilot controlled manual maneuvers using the RCS DAP. The TVC autopilot was tested in two parts. A classical stability analysis was performed on the vehicle considering the effects of structural bending and sloshing when under control of the TVC autopilot. The time response of the TVC autopilot was tested using the SLFS. Results indicate that adequate performance stability margins can be expected for the CSM/DM configuration when under the control of the Apollo control systems tested
Trade, Growth and the Environment
For the last ten years environmentalists and the trade policy community have engaged in a heated debate over the environmental consequences of liberalized trade. The debate was originally fueled by negotiations over the North American Free Trade Agreement and the Uruguay round of GATT negotiations, both of which occurred at a time when concerns over global warming, species extinction and industrial pollution were rising. Recently it has been intensified by the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and proposals for future rounds of trade negotiations. The debate has often been unproductive. It has been hampered by the lack of a common language and also suffered from little recourse to economic theory and empirical evidence. The purpose of this essay is set out what we currently know about the environmental consequences of economic growth and international trade. We critically review both theory and empirical work to answer three basic questions. What do we know about the relationship between international trade, economic growth and the environment? How can this evidence help us evaluate ongoing policy debates? Where do we go from here?
Cooling systems for satellite remote sensing instrumentation
The characteristics of a cryogenic cooling system for the Pollution Monitoring Satellite (PMS) are discussed. Studies were conducted to make the following determinations: (1) the characteristics and use of proven and state-of-the-art cryogenic cooling systems for six specified ranges of performance, (2) the system most applicable for each of the six cooling categories, and (3) conceptual designs for candidate system for each of the six representative cooling categories. The six cooling categories of electrical loads are defined. The desired mission life for the cooling system is two years with both continuous and intermittent operating conditions
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