22,986 research outputs found
Erratum: Luminosity function, sizes and FR dichotomy of radio-loud AGN
This erratum corrects a number of formulae containing mistakes in the paper
'Luminosity function, sizes and FR dichotomy of radio-loud AGN', 2007, MNRAS,
v. 381, p.1548. The corrections do not alter any of the conclusions in the
original paper.Comment: single page, no figures, erratum to MNRAS, 2007, v. 381, p. 154
Gender-Job Satisfaction Differences across Europe: An Indicator for Labor Market Modernization
In 14 member states of the European Union, women's relative to men's levels of job satisfaction are compared by using data of the European Household Community Panel. The countries under consideration can be assigned to three different groups. Denmark, Finland and the Netherlands do not show significant gender-job satisfaction differences. In contrast, in Portugal men are more satisfied with their jobs than women. However, in the vast majority of the investigated countries female workers show a significantly higher level of job satisfaction. As the majority of women are disadvantaged compared to men in the labor market, the findings clearly demonstrate a gender-job satisfaction paradox in these countries. From this point of view, only Denmark, Finland and the Netherlands display gender-job satisfaction equality. The results suggest that objective (socio-economic and institutional) determinants of labor market statuses and subjective (assessed and evaluated) perspectives are mutually complementary. The more restrictive the labor market access and process is for women, the more likely a gender-job satisfaction paradox is to emerge in any country. With regard to the process of labor market modernization, the results support the hypotheses that equal opportunities for women and men like in Scandinavian countries and also partially in the Netherlands implicate that the gender-job satisfaction paradox does not appear anymore due to a fading-out process over past decades.Cross-national comparison; Gender-job satisfaction paradox; Labor supply; Labor market modernization
Chiral -exchange NN-potentials: Results for diagrams proportional to g_A^4 and g_A^6
We calculate in (two-loop) chiral perturbation theory the local NN-potentials
generated by the three-pion exchange diagrams proportional to g_A^4 and g_A^6.
Surprisingly, we find that the total isoscalar central -exchange
potential vanishes identically. The individually largest -exchange
potentials are of isoscalar spin-spin, isovector central and isoscalar tensor
type. For these potentials simple analytical expressions can be given. The
strength of these dominant -exchange potentials at r=1.0 fm is 4.6 MeV,
2.9 MeV and 1.4 MeV, respectively. Furthermore, we observe that the spin-spin
and tensor potentials due to the diagrams proportional to g_A^6 do not exist in
the infinite nucleon mass limit.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Chiral -exchange NN-potentials: Two-loop contributions
We calculate in heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory the local
NN-potentials generated by the two-pion exchange diagrams at two-loop order. We
give explicit expressions for the mass-spectra (or imaginary parts) of the
corresponding isoscalar and isovector central, spin-spin and tensor
NN-amplitudes. We find from two-loop two-pion exchange a sizeable isoscalar
central repulsion which amounts to MeV at fm. There is a
similarly strong isovector central attraction which however originates mainly
from the third order low energy constants entering the chiral -scattering amplitude. We also evaluate the one-loop -exchange diagram
with two second order chiral -vertices proportional to the low
energy constants as well as the first relativistic 1/M-correction
to the -exchange diagrams with one such vertex. The diagrammatic results
presented here are relevant components of the chiral NN-potential at
next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Edge vulnerability in neural and metabolic networks
Biological networks, such as cellular metabolic pathways or networks of
corticocortical connections in the brain, are intricately organized, yet
remarkably robust toward structural damage. Whereas many studies have
investigated specific aspects of robustness, such as molecular mechanisms of
repair, this article focuses more generally on how local structural features in
networks may give rise to their global stability. In many networks the failure
of single connections may be more likely than the extinction of entire nodes,
yet no analysis of edge importance (edge vulnerability) has been provided so
far for biological networks. We tested several measures for identifying
vulnerable edges and compared their prediction performance in biological and
artificial networks. Among the tested measures, edge frequency in all shortest
paths of a network yielded a particularly high correlation with vulnerability,
and identified inter-cluster connections in biological but not in random and
scale-free benchmark networks. We discuss different local and global network
patterns and the edge vulnerability resulting from them.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Biological Cybernetic
The cosomological evolution of the environments of powerful radio galaxies
We present the results from the analysis of 26 extragalactic radio sources of
type FRII which were observed with the VLA at 5 GHz and around the 1.4 GHz
band. The sources were selected to have redshifts in the range ,
radio powers between and angular size . We found
that the depolarisation and the rms variations in the rotation measure
increased with redshift. The flux values obtained from the observations were
used to derive by means of analytical modelling the jet--power, density of the
central environment, age of the source and its lobe pressure and the results
were then compared with the observations. We find no significant correlations
with the density parameter suggesting that the depolarisation and the rms
variations in the rotation measure are indicative of the environment becoming
more disordered rather than denser. The age and size of a source are correlated
and both were found to be independent of redshift and radio--power. Jet--power
strongly correlated with the radio--power. The lobe pressure was found to be
anti--correlated with size which could explain why there are no sources beyond
a few Mpc in size. We found no significant correlation between size and density
which demonstrates that the sample is a fair representation of the population.Comment: 2 pages, Cozumel AGN 2003 conference proceeding
Ion-retarding lens improves the abundance sensitivity of tandem mass spectrometers
Ion-retarding lens which increases the abundance sensitivity of tandem magnetic-analyzer mass spectrometers measures isotopes of low abundance in mass positions adjacent to isotopes of high abundance. The lens increases the abundance sensitivity for isotopes lying farther from high abundance isotopes than the energy cutoff of the lens
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