5,746 research outputs found

    The 2001 survey of commercial banks in the Tenth Federal Reserve District : changes and challenges

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    Periodically, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City surveys District bankers for their views on a variety of matters. In February 2001, we solicited banker opinion on a number of topics pertaining to deposit and loan competition, management and staffing challenges, Internet banking activities, funding options, operational issues, the effects of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, and near-term prospects. ; This essay briefly discusses the Tenth District’s geography, economics, and demographics and thereby provides context for the survey responses we received. It introduces subsequent articles that describe in more detail responses to survey topics. It also sets out the survey methodology and describes the applicability of survey results to the entire population of Tenth District banks. Broadly speaking, survey results can be generalized for all Tenth District banks. ; We also review what bankers told us about their environment, competition, and future challenges. The representative bank in the District is family owned and locally controlled. The economic and competitive environment that District banks face depends, in part, on growth prospects and diversification opportunities of the bank's communities. The most intense loan and deposits competitors are other community banks. Problems that most challenge survey respondents involve basic aspects of successfully managing a bank: funding, income sources, and meeting competition. Despite identifying many problems, all but a few bankers expect their banks will remain in business and succeed.Federal Reserve District, 10th ; Banks and banking

    Examining the PM6 semiempirical method for pKa prediction across a wide range of oxyacids

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    The pK~a~ estimation ability of the semiempirical PM6 method was evaluated across a broad range of oxyacids and compared to results obtained using the SPARC software program. Compound classes under consideration included acetic acids, alicyclic and aromatic heterocyclic acids, benzoic acids, boronic acids, hydroxamic acids, oximes, peroxides, peroxyacids, phenols, α-saturated acids, α-saturated alcohols, sulfinic acids, α-unsaturated acids, and α-unsaturated alcohols. PM6 accurately predicts the acidity of acetic and benzoic acids and their derivatives, but is less reliable for alicyclic and aromatic heterocyclic acids and phenols. α-Saturated acids are reliably modeled by PM6 except for polyacid derivatives with α-alcohol moieties. α-Saturated alcohols only appear to yield reliable PM6 results where an α-hydroxy or α-alkoxy moiety is absent. Carboxylic acids with simple α-alkene unsaturation are well approximated by PM6 except where alkyne α-unsaturation or α-carboxylation are also present. The PM6 and SPARC methods exhibit approximately equal pKa prediction performance for the acetic, alicyclic, and benzoic acids. SPARC outperforms PM6 on the peroxides, peroxyacids, phenols, and α-saturated acids and α-saturated alcohols. pKa values for boron, nitrogen, and sulfur oxyacids do not appear to be reliably estimated by either the PM6 or SPARC methods. The findings will help guide the potential appropriateness of results from the PM6 pK~a~ estimation method for waste treatment and environmental fate investigations

    Extending the semi-empirical PM6 method for carbon oxyacid pKa prediction to sulfonic acids: Application towards congener-specific estimates for the environmentally and toxicologically relevant C1 through C8 perfluoroalkyl derivatives

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    A positive bias in the semi-empirical PM6 method for estimating pKa values of sulfonic acids was corrected by a correlation developed between non-adjusted PM6 pKa values and the corresponding experimentally obtained/estimated acidity constants for a range of representative alkyl, aryl, and halogen substituted sulfonic acids. Application of this correction to PM6 values allows for extension of this computational method to a new acid functional group

    A Spherical Plasma Dynamo Experiment

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    We propose a plasma experiment to be used to investigate fundamental properties of astrophysical dynamos. The highly conducting, fast-flowing plasma will allow experimenters to explore systems with magnetic Reynolds numbers an order of magnitude larger than those accessible with liquid-metal experiments. The plasma is confined using a ring-cusp strategy and subject to a toroidal differentially rotating outer boundary condition. As proof of principle, we present magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the proposed experiment. When a von K\'arm\'an-type boundary condition is specified, and the magnetic Reynolds number is large enough, dynamo action is observed. At different values of the magnetic Prandtl and Reynolds numbers the simulations demonstrate either laminar or turbulent dynamo action

    Les Crustacés Anomoures du Musée royal du Congo belge

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    Variational Monte Carlo Calculations of 3^3H and 4^4He with a relativistic Hamiltonian - II

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    In relativistic Hamiltonians the two-nucleon interaction is expressed as a sum of v~ij\tilde{v}_{ij}, the interaction in the Pij=0{\bf P}_{ij}=0 rest frame, and the ``boost interaction'' δv(Pij)\delta v({\bf P}_{ij}) which depends upon the total momentum Pij{\bf P}_{ij} and vanishes in the rest frame. The δv\delta v can be regarded as a sum of four terms: δvRE\delta v_{RE}, δvLC\delta v_{LC}, δvTP\delta v_{TP} and δvQM\delta v_{QM}; the first three originate from the relativistic energy-momentum relation, Lorentz contraction and Thomas precession, while the last is purely quantum. The contributions of δvRE\delta v_{RE} and δvLC\delta v_{LC} have been previously calculated with the variational Monte Carlo method for 3^3H and 4^4He. In this brief note we report the results of similar calculations for the contributions of δvTP\delta v_{TP} and δvQM\delta v_{QM}. These are found to be rather small.Comment: 7 pages, P-94-09-07

    Percolation-induced exponential scaling in the large current tails of random resistor networks

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    There is a renewed surge in percolation-induced transport properties of diverse nano-particle composites (cf. RSC Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Series, Paul O'Brien Editor-in-Chief). We note in particular a broad interest in nano-composites exhibiting sharp electrical property gains at and above percolation threshold, which motivated us to revisit the classical setting of percolation in random resistor networks but from a multiscale perspective. For each realization of random resistor networks above threshold, we use network graph representations and associated algorithms to identify and restrict to the percolating component, thereby preconditioning the network both in size and accuracy by filtering {\it a priori} zero current-carrying bonds. We then simulate many realizations per bond density and analyze scaling behavior of the complete current distribution supported on the percolating component. We first confirm the celebrated power-law distribution of small currents at the percolation threshold, and second we confirm results on scaling of the maximum current in the network that is associated with the backbone of the percolating cluster. These properties are then placed in context with global features of the current distribution, and in particular the dominant role of the large current tail that is most relevant for material science applications. We identify a robust, exponential large current tail that: 1. persists above threshold; 2. expands broadly over and dominates the current distribution at the expense of the vanishing power law scaling in the small current tail; and 3. by taking second moments, reproduces the experimentally observed power law scaling of bulk conductivity above threshold

    The Proposed Model Rules of Professional Conduct: What Hath the ABA Wrought?

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