10,363 research outputs found
COPYRIGHTS, COMPETITION AND DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF THE MUSIC INDUSTRY
The economic importance of copyright industries in developed market economies has been well documented. Although less important in developing countries, this is likely to change with the growing weight of the service sector in these economies and its importance for their closer integration into the global market economy. This paper analyses the relationship between the copyright and income generation in the audio-visual sector, in particular music, and argues that the appropriate copyright administration is essential in creating the conditions for a viable music industry in developing countries. However, an effective copyright regime is not, by itself, sufficient to guarantee a flourishing music industry, and other institutional arrangements will be needed in countries looking to better exploit their musical resources.
Constraining and Dark Energy with Gamma-Ray Bursts
An relationship with a small
scatter for current -ray burst (GRB) data was recently reported, where
is the beaming-corrected -ray energy and
is the peak energy in the local observer frame. By considering this
relationship for a sample of 12 GRBs with known redshift, peak energy, and
break time of afterglow light curves, we constrain the mass density of the
universe and the nature of dark energy. We find that the mass density
(at the confident level) for a flat
universe with a cosmological constant, and the parameter of an assumed
static dark-energy equation of state ().
Our results are consistent with those from type Ia supernovae. A larger sample
established by the upcoming {\em Swift} satellite is expected to provide
further constraints.Comment: 8 pages including 4 figures, to appear in ApJ Letters, typos
correcte
New model for surface fracture induced by dynamical stress
We introduce a model where an isotropic, dynamically-imposed stress induces
fracture in a thin film. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we study how the
integrated fragment distribution function depends on the rate of change and
magnitude of the imposed stress, as well as on temperature. A mean-field
argument shows that the system becomes unstable for a critical value of the
stress. We find a striking invariance of the distribution of fragments for
fixed ratio of temperature and rate of change of the stress; the interval over
which this invariance holds is determined by the force fluctuations at the
critical value of the stress.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, 4 figures available upon reques
Current-induced membrane discharge
Possible mechanisms for over-limiting current (OLC) through aqueous
ion-exchange membranes (exceeding diffusion limitation) have been debated for
half a century. Flows consistent with electro-osmotic instability (EOI) have
recently been observed in microfluidic experiments, but the existing theory
neglects chemical effects and remains to be quantitatively tested. Here, we
show that charge regulation and water self-ionization can lead to OLC by
"current-induced membrane discharge" (CIMD), even in the absence of fluid flow.
Salt depletion leads to a large electric field which expels water co-ions,
causing the membrane to discharge and lose its selectivity. Since salt co-ions
and water ions contribute to OLC, CIMD interferes with electrodialysis (salt
counter-ion removal) but could be exploited for current-assisted ion exchange
and pH control. CIMD also suppresses the extended space charge that leads to
EOI, so it should be reconsidered in both models and experiments on OLC.Comment: 4.5 page
Electronic Structure of New LiFeAs High-Tc Superconductor
We present results of it ab initio LDA calculations of electronic structure
of "next generation" layered ironpnictide High-Tc superconductor LiFeAs
(Tc=18K). Obtained electronic structure of LiFeAs is very similar to recently
studied ReOFeAs (Re=La,Ce,Pr,Nd,Sm) and AFe2As2 (A=Ba,Sr) compounds. Namely
close to the Fermi level its electronic properties are also determined ma inly
by Fe 3d-orbitals of FeAs4 two-dimensional layers. Band dispersions of LiFeAs
are very similar to the LaOFeAs and BaFe2As2 systems as well as the shape of
the Fe-3d density o f states and Fermi surface.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures; Electronic structure improved with respect to new
experimental crystal structure dat
Electron-phonon interaction in the t-J model
We derive a t-J model with electron-phonon coupling from the three-band
model, considering modulation of both hopping and Coulomb integrals by phonons.
While the modulation of the hopping integrals dominates, the modulation of the
Coulomb integrals cannot be neglected. The model explains the experimentally
observed anomalous softening of the half-breathing mode upon doping and a
weaker softening of the breathing mode. It is shown that other phonons are not
strongly influenced, and, in particular, the coupling to a buckling mode is not
strong in this model.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 3 eps figures; final version with minor correction
Collective Modes of Massive Dirac Fermions in Armchair Graphene Nanoribbons
We report the plasmon dispersion characteristics of intrinsic and extrinsic
armchair graphene nanoribbons of atomic width N = 5 using a p_z-orbital tight
binding model with third-nearest-neighbor (3nn) coupling. The coupling
parameters are obtained by fitting the 3nn dispersions to that of an extended
Huckel theory. The resultant massive Dirac Fermion system has a band gap E_g
\approx 64 meV. The extrinsic plasmon dispersion relation is found to approach
a common dispersion curve as the chemical potential increases, whereas
the intrinsic plasmon dispersion relation is found to have both energy and
momentum thresholds. We also report an analytical model for the extrinsic
plasmon group velocity in the q \rightarrow 0 limit
Techniques for Observing Binaries in Other Galaxies
I present an overview of the techniques used for detecting and following up
binaries in nearby galaxies and present the current census of extragalactic
binaries, with a focus on eclipsing systems. The motivation for looking in
other galaxies is the use of eclipsing binaries as distance indicators and as
probes of the most massive stars.Comment: 5 pages, 1 table, to appear in the proceedings of the IAUS 282 on
"From Interacting Binaries to Exoplanets: Essential Modelling Tools"
(Tatranska Lomnica, Slovakia, July 2011), Cambridge University Pres
Three-loop HTL QCD thermodynamics
The hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory (HTLpt) framework is used to
calculate the thermodynamic functions of a quark-gluon plasma to three-loop
order. This is the highest order accessible by finite temperature perturbation
theory applied to a non-Abelian gauge theory before the high-temperature
infrared catastrophe. All ultraviolet divergences are eliminated by
renormalization of the vacuum, the HTL mass parameters, and the strong coupling
constant. After choosing a prescription for the mass parameters, the three-loop
results for the pressure and trace anomaly are found to be in very good
agreement with recent lattice data down to , which are
temperatures accessible by current and forthcoming heavy-ion collision
experiments.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures; corresponds with published version in JHE
Local Ranking Problem on the BrowseGraph
The "Local Ranking Problem" (LRP) is related to the computation of a
centrality-like rank on a local graph, where the scores of the nodes could
significantly differ from the ones computed on the global graph. Previous work
has studied LRP on the hyperlink graph but never on the BrowseGraph, namely a
graph where nodes are webpages and edges are browsing transitions. Recently,
this graph has received more and more attention in many different tasks such as
ranking, prediction and recommendation. However, a web-server has only the
browsing traffic performed on its pages (local BrowseGraph) and, as a
consequence, the local computation can lead to estimation errors, which hinders
the increasing number of applications in the state of the art. Also, although
the divergence between the local and global ranks has been measured, the
possibility of estimating such divergence using only local knowledge has been
mainly overlooked. These aspects are of great interest for online service
providers who want to: (i) gauge their ability to correctly assess the
importance of their resources only based on their local knowledge, and (ii)
take into account real user browsing fluxes that better capture the actual user
interest than the static hyperlink network. We study the LRP problem on a
BrowseGraph from a large news provider, considering as subgraphs the
aggregations of browsing traces of users coming from different domains. We show
that the distance between rankings can be accurately predicted based only on
structural information of the local graph, being able to achieve an average
rank correlation as high as 0.8
- …
