14,235 research outputs found
Urban fiscal austerity, infrastructure provision and the struggle for regional transit in 'Motor City'
Studies suggest that urban fiscal crises trigger the institutional separation of strategic services from general purpose municipal functions. Traditional reformists have highlighted the economic benefits of regional approaches. Global austerity has created fiscal problems for central cities and suburbs alike, transforming the motives for regional solutions. This paper examines how the City of Detroit engineered a new regional arrangement with the surrounding suburbs to raise debt for the delivery of mass transit infrastructure. It represents a dual 'spatial fix' in the form of (i) a 'state territorial fix' providing fiscally stressed municipalities access to municipal bond markets and (ii) a 'speculative spatial fix' that benefits the Detroit growth coalition by linking regional mass transit to the prospect of land-use intensification. © The Author 2014
Multi-orbital bosons in bipartite optical lattices
We study interacting bosons in a two dimensional bipartite optical lattice.
By focusing on the regime where the first three excited bands are nearly
degenerate we derive a three orbital tight-binding model which captures the
most relevant features of the bandstructure. In addition, we also derive a
corresponding generalized Bose-Hubbard model and solve it numerically under
different situations, both with and without a confining trap. It is especially
found that the hybridization between sublattices can strongly influence the
phase diagrams and in a trap enable even appearances of condensed phases
intersecting the same Mott insulating plateaus.Comment: Minor change
Periodic Structure of the Exponential Pseudorandom Number Generator
We investigate the periodic structure of the exponential pseudorandom number
generator obtained from the map that acts on the set
CB damping of primordial gravitational waves and the fine-tuning of the CB temperature anisotropy
Damping of primordial gravitational waves due to the anisotropic stress
contribution owing to the cosmological neutrino background (CB) is
investigated in the context of a radiation-to-matter dominated Universe.
Besides its inherent effects on the gravitational wave propagation, the
inclusion of the CB anisotropic stress into the dynamical equations also
affects the tensor mode contribution to the anisotropy of the cosmological
microwave background (CB) temperature. Given that the fluctuations of
the CB temperature in the (ultra)relativistic regime are driven by a
multipole expansion, the mutual effects on the gravitational waves and on the
CB are obtained through a unified prescription for a
radiation-to-matter dominated scenario. The results are confronted with some
preliminary results for the radiation dominated scenario. Both scenarios are
supported by a simplified analytical framework, in terms of a scale independent
dynamical variable, , that relates cosmological scales, , and the
conformal time, . The background relativistic (hot dark) matter
essentially works as an effective dispersive medium for the gravitational waves
such that the damping effect is intensified for the Universe evolving to the
matter dominated era. Changes on the temperature variance owing to the
inclusion of neutrino collision terms into the dynamical equations result into
spectral features that ratify that the multipole expansion coefficients
's die out for .Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
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