67,858 research outputs found
Structural verification for GAS experiments
The purpose of this paper is to assist the Get Away Special (GAS) experimenter in conducting a thorough structural verification of its experiment structural configuration, thus expediting the structural review/approval process and the safety process in general. Material selection for structural subsystems will be covered with an emphasis on fasteners (GSFC fastener integrity requirements) and primary support structures (Stress Corrosion Cracking requirements and National Space Transportation System (NSTS) requirements). Different approaches to structural verifications (tests and analyses) will be outlined especially those stemming from lessons learned on load and fundamental frequency verification. In addition, fracture control will be covered for those payloads that utilize a door assembly or modify the containment provided by the standard GAS Experiment Mounting Plate (EMP). Structural hazard assessment and the preparation of structural hazard reports will be reviewed to form a summation of structural safety issues for inclusion in the safety data package
The homotopy fixed point spectra of profinite Galois extensions
Let E be a k-local profinite G-Galois extension of an E_infty-ring spectrum A
(in the sense of Rognes). We show that E may be regarded as producing a
discrete G-spectrum. Also, we prove that if E is a profaithful k-local
profinite extension which satisfies certain extra conditions, then the forward
direction of Rognes's Galois correspondence extends to the profinite setting.
We show the function spectrum F_A((E^hH)_k, (E^hK)_k) is equivalent to the
homotopy fixed point spectrum ((E[[G/H]])^hK)_k where H and K are closed
subgroups of G. Applications to Morava E-theory are given, including showing
that the homotopy fixed points defined by Devinatz and Hopkins for closed
subgroups of the extended Morava stabilizer group agree with those defined with
respect to a continuous action and in terms of the derived functor of fixed
points.Comment: 60 Page
Biotechnological developments, socio-technical processes and materiality : the affordances and constraints of ‘social innovation'
Peer reviewedPreprin
Simulating a Multiproduct Barter Exchange Economy
We describe a multiproduct barter trading experiment in which students exchange real goods in an open market based on their own personal preference. The experiment is designed for simulating a pure exchange market in order to demonstrate the role of money and its functions in real economies by showing the limitations and inefficiencies of the traditional barter economy. In addition, the simulation is very effective in highlighting some of the key features that an object that serves as money needs to possess in order to function as an efficient medium of exchange, unit of account, and store of value.Roles of Money, Functions of Money, Barter, Exchange Economy, Medium of Exchange, Store of Value, Unit of Account, Experiment, Efficient and Inefficient Medium of Exchange, Types of Money, Fiat Money, Commodity Money, Features of Money, Homogeneity, Divisibility, Durability, Storability, Portability, Scarcity, Efficiency versus Equity, Information Cost
The Effects of Funding Costs and Risk on Banks' Lending Rates
After falling for over a decade, the major banks' net interest margins appear to have stabilised in a relatively narrow range in recent years. In the early part of the financial crisis, margins fell to the bottom of this range, reflecting an increase in debt funding costs. Margins have since recovered a little, to around the middle of the range, as a result of some repricing of lending rates relative to these costs. In addition to the increase in the cost of debt funding, there have been other drivers of the rise in lending rates relative to the cash rate. First, the banks have increased their equity funding, which is more costly than debt finance. Second, risk margins on loans have risen to account for higher expected losses.funding costs; lending rates; interest rates; risk pricing
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