53,133 research outputs found
Germany's preferences on the freedom of movement provisions of the Ankara Agreement: the Wirtschaftswunder and opportunity and effort of Turkish diplomacy
Why did Germany support provisions on freedom of movement for Turkish workers in the Association
Agreement between the European Economic Community (EEC) and Turkey, which was concluded in
1963? This is puzzling given that Germany was fervently opposed to other common EU measures on
legal economic migration since immigration policy was communitarized by the Amsterdam Treaty in
1999. The papers test two hypotheses. First, that the a positive economic situation induces the
German government to support common EU measures as in periods of strong growth Germany has
more open immigration policies and there is a positive relationship between open national immigration
policies and support for common EU measures. Second, a sending country (or a group of sending
countries) needs to exert diplomatic pressure on the German government in order for it to support
common EU measures on legal economic migration. For this to be successful there need to be two
conditions in place, the sending country must have the opportunity to exert influence, due to strong
historical ties with Germany or being important for geo-political reasons, and frame the need for
common EU measures on legal migration in an effective manner. The hypotheses are confirmed for
the case of Turkey and the Ankara Agreement and are used to assemble a theoretically eclectic and
generally applicable framework able to explain Germany’s support for common EU measures on legal
economic migration
Special coatings control temperature of structures
Special coatings in the form of paints that exhibit controlled ratios of sunlight absorptivity to grey-body emissivity control the temperature of structures in space flight. These finishes exhibit good resistance to ultraviolet radiation and do not discolor
Variability of black hole accretion discs: The cool, thermal disc component
We extend the model of King et al. (2004) for variability in black hole
accretion discs, by taking proper account of the thermal properties of the
disc. Because the degree of variability in the King et al. (2004) model depends
sensitively on the ratio of disc thickness to radius, H/R, it is important to
follow the time-dependence of the local disc structure as the variability
proceeds. In common with previous authors, we develop a one-zone model for the
local disc structure. We agree that radial heat advection plays an important
role in determining the inner disc structure, and also find limit-cycle
behaviour. When the stochastic magnetic dynamo model of King et al. (2004) is
added to these models, we find similar variability behaviour to before.
We are now better placed to put physical constraints on model parameters. In
particular, we find that in order to be consistent with the low degree of
variability seen in the thermal disc component of black hole binaries, we need
to limit the energy density of the poloidal field that can be produced by local
dynamo cells in the disc to less than a few percent of the energy density of
the dynamo field within the disc itself.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, accepted by MNRA
Beyond Crisis Management: The Path Towards an Effective, Pro-active and Fair European Refugee Policy. Bertelsmann Study
Europe urgently needs an effective, pro-active and fair refugee policy. Short-sighted policy-making and a narrow focus on what seemed to be in the immediate national interests have led to a conglomerate of European refugee policies. These policies are clearly ineffective and resulted in a large and partially uncontrolled refugee movement to and within Europe in 2015. Refugee flows to Europe are unlikely to subside soon, as many conflicts persist and the average duration of protracted refugee situations worldwide is on the rise. In a reaction to these circumstances, the European Com-mission has proposed a number of initiatives to reform the Common European Asylum System (CEAS). Consensus is more likely on the introduction of restrictions and sanctions rather than, for example, fair distribution systems or pooling sovereignty on the EU level by establishing a strong EU Agency of Asylum. Yet, especially pro-active solutions that meet Europe’s humanitarian responsi-bilities are necessary.
The paper puts forward policy-recommendations for a paradigm-shift from reactive to pro-active refugee policies. The overarching objective is to create further legal channels for refugees to seek protection in Europe. Measures include both national and EU-policies and are supposed to pave the way to a sustainable and coherent European refugee policy. The policy recommendations are clus-tered in five overarching themes: create safe passages to protection, improve national asylum processing and integration systems, establish further legal pathways for mixed migration, enable protection in the region of origin, and tackle the root causes of forced migration through a sustainable foreign, economic and trade policy. Finally, it has to be stressed that only if we can restore Europe’s political will to manage refugee flows together, there will be sustainable solutions in sight. Regular dialogue taking into account the different resources and histories of the countries are the way forward. If member states can incrementally alight their different national policies, a comprehensive European refugee policy may follow. Given the current political differences amongst member states, this will be a lengthy process – but certainly worth the effort
A physical model for downward burning
Elementary physical model for flammable materials combustion emphasizing downward burnin
Birth of massive black hole binaries
If massive black holes (BHs) are ubiquitous in galaxies and galaxies
experience multiple mergers during their cosmic assembly, then BH binaries
should be common albeit temporary features of most galactic bulges.
Observationally, the paucity of active BH pairs points toward binary lifetimes
far shorter than the Hubble time, indicating rapid inspiral of the BHs down to
the domain where gravitational waves lead to their coalescence. Here, we review
a series of studies on the dynamics of massive BHs in gas-rich galaxy mergers
that underscore the vital role played by a cool, gaseous component in promoting
the rapid formation of the BH binary. The BH binary is found to reside at the
center of a massive self-gravitating nuclear disc resulting from the collision
of the two gaseous discs present in the mother galaxies. Hardening by
gravitational torques against gas in this grand disc is found to continue down
to sub-parsec scales. The eccentricity decreases with time to zero and when the
binary is circular, accretion sets in around the two BHs. When this occurs,
each BH is endowed with it own small-size (< 0.01 pc) accretion disc comprising
a few percent of the BH mass. Double AGN activity is expected to occur on an
estimated timescale of < 1 Myr. The double nuclear point-like sources that may
appear have typical separation of < 10 pc, and are likely to be embedded in the
still ongoing starburst. We note that a potential threat of binary stalling, in
a gaseous environment, may come from radiation and/or mechanical energy
injections by the BHs. Only short-lived or sub-Eddington accretion episodes can
guarantee the persistence of a dense cool gas structure around the binary
necessary for continuing BH inspiral.Comment: To appear in "2007 STScI Spring Symposium: Black Holes", eds. M.
Livio & A. M. Koekemoer, Cambridge University Press, 25 pages, 12 figure
The Hubble Sequence in Groups: The Birth of the Early-Type Galaxies
The physical mechanisms and timescales that determine the morphological
signatures and the quenching of star formation of typical (~L*) elliptical
galaxies are not well understood. To address this issue, we have simulated the
formation of a group of galaxies with sufficient resolution to track the
evolution of gas and stars inside about a dozen galaxy group members over
cosmic history. Galaxy groups, which harbor many elliptical galaxies in the
universe, are a particularly promising environment to investigate morphological
transformation and star formation quenching, due to their high galaxy density,
their relatively low velocity dispersion, and the presence of a hot intragroup
medium. Our simulation reproduces galaxies with different Hubble morphologies
and, consequently, enables us to study when and where the morphological
transformation of galaxies takes place. The simulation does not include
feedback from active galactic nuclei showing that it is not an essential
ingredient for producing quiescent, red elliptical galaxies in galaxy groups.
Ellipticals form, as suspected, through galaxy mergers. In contrast with what
has often been speculated, however, these mergers occur at z>1, before the
merging progenitors enter the virial radius of the group and before the group
is fully assembled. The simulation also shows that quenching of star formation
in the still star-forming elliptical galaxies lags behind their morphological
transformation, but, once started, is taking less than a billion years to
complete. As long envisaged the star formation quenching happens as the
galaxies approach and enter the finally assembled group, due to quenching of
gas accretion and (to a lesser degree) stripping. A similar sort is followed by
unmerged, disk galaxies, which, as they join the group, are turned into the
red-and-dead disks that abound in these environments.Comment: 12 pages, 12 Figures, 1 Table, accepted for publication in AP
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