2,222 research outputs found
MK Dons FC and AFC Wimbledon: moving the goalposts and rising from the ashes
This case study provides an insight into a unique and unprecedented event in English professional football: the relocation of a major club to a completely different geographical area.
The ruling, in 2002, was hugely controversial, and effectively spawned two entirely new entities: MK Dons FC, who took the place of Wimbledon FC in the Football League and based themselves in Milton Keynes, 60 miles away from the original club; and AFC Wimbledon, a fan- owned ‘phoenix’ club which started again at the bottom of the football pyramid and is located near to Wimbledon FC’s original home.
Despite their creation resulting from the same event, the two newly created clubs are notable for their contrasting ownership models and the reaction they have received from both the media and the wider football community in Great Britain
On the characterisation of a Bragg spectrometer with X-rays from an ECR source
Narrow X-ray lines from helium-like argon emitted from a dedicated ECR source
have been used to determine the response function of a Bragg crystal
spectrometer equipped with large area spherically bent silicon (111) or quartz
(10) crystals. The measured spectra are compared with simulated ones
created by a ray-tracing code based on the expected theoretical crystal's
rocking curve and the geometry of the experimental set-up.Comment: Version acceptee (NIM
Relationship marketing in 140 characters or less: the case of community trusts in English football
MK Dons FC and AFC Wimbledon: moving the goalposts and rising from the ashes
The aim of this paper will be to compare a franchise and fan-ownership model within a European sports team context, and conclude what the key learnings are for sport managers. In particular, the paper will examine an unprecedented event in English football, the relocation of a major professional club to a completely different geographical area and the resulting creation of an additional fan-owned 'phoenix club'
Notes on noncommutative supersymmetric gauge theory on the fuzzy supersphere
In these notes we review Klimcik's construction of noncommutative gauge
theory on the fuzzy supersphere. This theory has an exact SUSY gauge symmetry
with a finite number of degrees of freedom and thus in principle it is amenable
to the methods of matrix models and Monte Carlo numerical simulations. We also
write down in this article a novel fuzzy supersymmetric scalar action on the
fuzzy supersphere
Facility Location in Evolving Metrics
Understanding the dynamics of evolving social or infrastructure networks is a
challenge in applied areas such as epidemiology, viral marketing, or urban
planning. During the past decade, data has been collected on such networks but
has yet to be fully analyzed. We propose to use information on the dynamics of
the data to find stable partitions of the network into groups. For that
purpose, we introduce a time-dependent, dynamic version of the facility
location problem, that includes a switching cost when a client's assignment
changes from one facility to another. This might provide a better
representation of an evolving network, emphasizing the abrupt change of
relationships between subjects rather than the continuous evolution of the
underlying network. We show that in realistic examples this model yields indeed
better fitting solutions than optimizing every snapshot independently. We
present an -approximation algorithm and a matching hardness result,
where is the number of clients and the number of time steps. We also
give an other algorithms with approximation ratio for the variant
where one pays at each time step (leasing) for each open facility
A new perspective on matter coupling in 2d quantum gravity
We provide compelling evidence that a previously introduced model of
non-perturbative 2d Lorentzian quantum gravity exhibits (two-dimensional)
flat-space behaviour when coupled to Ising spins. The evidence comes from both
a high-temperature expansion and from Monte Carlo simulations of the combined
gravity-matter system. This weak-coupling behaviour lends further support to
the conclusion that the Lorentzian model is a genuine alternative to Liouville
quantum gravity in two dimensions, with a different, and much `smoother'
critical behaviour.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures (postscript
Hadronic shift in pionic hydrogen
The hadronic shift in pionic hydrogen has been redetermined to be
\,eV by X-ray
spectroscopy of ground state transitions applying various energy calibration
schemes. The experiment was performed at the high-intensity low-energy pion
beam of the Paul Scherrer Institut by using the cyclotron trap and an
ultimate-resolution Bragg spectrometer with bent crystals.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Relativistic calculations of pionic and kaonic atoms hyperfine structure
We present the relativistic calculation of the hyperfine structure in pionic
and kaonic atoms. A perturbation method has been applied to the Klein-Gordon
equation to take into account the relativistic corrections. The perturbation
operator has been obtained \textit{via} a multipole expansion of the nuclear
electromagnetic potential. The hyperfine structure of pionic and kaonic atoms
provide an additional term in the quantum electrodynamics calculation of the
energy transition of these systems. Such a correction is required for a recent
measurement of the pion mass
Precision determination of the dpi -> NN transition strength at threshold
An unusual but effective way to determine at threshold the dpi -> NN
transition strength is to exploit the hadronic ground-state broadening in
pionic deuterium, accessible by x-ray spectroscopy. The broadening is dominated
by the true absorption channel dpi- -> nn, which is related to s-wave pion
production pp -> dpi+ by charge symmetry and detailed balance. Using the exotic
atom circumvents the problem of Coulomb corrections to the cross section as
necessary in the production experiments. Our dedicated measurement finds
(1171+23/-49) meV for the broadening yielding (252+5/-11) \mub.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
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