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The 12th Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics carried on the
tradition, started in 1978, of bringing together scientists working
in all regimes of nuclear dynamics. This broad range of related
topics allows the researcher attending the Workshop to be exposed
to work that normally would be considered outside his/her field,
but could po tentially add a new dimension to the understanding of
his/her work. At Snowbird, we brought together experimentalists
working with heavy ion beams from 10 MeV/nucleon up to 200 GeV
/nucleon and theoretical physicists working in diverse areas
ranging from antisymmetrized fermionic dynamics to perturbative
quantum chromo dynamics. Fu ture work at RHIC was discussed also,
with presentations from several of the experimen tal groups. In
addition, several talks addressed issues of cross-disciplinary
relevance, from the study of water-drop-collisions, to the
multi-fragmentation of buckyballs. Clearly the field of nuclear
dynamics has a bright future. The understanding of the nuclear
equation of state in all of its manifestations is being expanded on
all fronts both theoretically and experimentally. Future Workshops
on Nuclear Dynamics will certainly have much progress to report.
Gary D. Westfall Wolfgang Bauer Michigan State Universzty v
PREVIOUS WORKSHOPS The following table contains a list of the dates
and locations of the previous Winter Workshops on Nuclear Dynamics
as well as the members of the organizing committees. The
chairpersons of the conferences are underlined."
The Economics of Audit Quality focuses on market mechanisms which
protect quality in the provision of services by audit firms. By
providing a better understanding of these market mechanisms, it
helps in defining the content of rules and the function of
regulatory bodies in facilitating and strengthening the protective
operation of the market. An analysis at a more general level is
provided in the three chapters making up Part 1. In the four
chapters of Part 2, on the other hand, this analysis is applied to
a particular problem to determine how non-audit services often
provided by auditors to their audit clients should be regulated.
Finally, Chapter 8 contains a summary of the analysis and
conclusions of the work. The conclusion with regard to non-audit
services is that their provision generates beneficial effects in
terms of costs, technical competence, professional judgment and
competition and, moreover, need not prejudice auditor independence
or the quality of these services. This assessment leads, in the
normative sphere, to recommending a legislative policy aimed at
facilitating the development and use of safeguards provided by the
free action of market forces. Regulation should thus aim to enable
the parties - audit firms, self-regulatory bodies and audit clients
- to discover, through competitive market interaction, both the
most efficient mix of services and the corresponding quality
safeguards, adjusting for the costs and benefits of each
possibility. Particular emphasis is placed on the role played by
fee income diversification and the enhancement through disclosure
rules of market incentives to diversify.
The 12th Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics carried on the
tradition, started in 1978, of bringing together scientists working
in all regimes of nuclear dynamics. This broad range of related
topics allows the researcher attending the Workshop to be exposed
to work that normally would be considered outside his/her field,
but could po tentially add a new dimension to the understanding of
his/her work. At Snowbird, we brought together experimentalists
working with heavy ion beams from 10 MeV/nucleon up to 200 GeV
/nucleon and theoretical physicists working in diverse areas
ranging from antisymmetrized fermionic dynamics to perturbative
quantum chromo dynamics. Fu ture work at RHIC was discussed also,
with presentations from several of the experimen tal groups. In
addition, several talks addressed issues of cross-disciplinary
relevance, from the study of water-drop-collisions, to the
multi-fragmentation of buckyballs. Clearly the field of nuclear
dynamics has a bright future. The understanding of the nuclear
equation of state in all of its manifestations is being expanded on
all fronts both theoretically and experimentally. Future Workshops
on Nuclear Dynamics will certainly have much progress to report.
Gary D. Westfall Wolfgang Bauer Michigan State Universzty v
PREVIOUS WORKSHOPS The following table contains a list of the dates
and locations of the previous Winter Workshops on Nuclear Dynamics
as well as the members of the organizing committees. The
chairpersons of the conferences are underlined."
The study of nuclear dynamics is now in one of its most interesting
phases. The theory is in the process of establishing an
increasingly reliable transport description of heavy ion reactions
from the initial violent phase dominated by first collisions to the
more thermalized later stages of the reaction. This is true for the
low-to-medium energy reactions, where the dynamics is formulated in
terms of nucleonic, or in general hadronic, degrees of freedom. And
it is also becoming a reality in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion
reactions, where partonic elementary degrees of freedom have to be
used. Experiments are now able to 'utilize the existing
accelerators and multiparticle detec tion systems to conduct
unprecedented studies of heavy-ion collisions on an event-by-event
basis. In addition, the field anticipates the completion of the
construction of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider and the
proposed upgrade of the National Superconducting Cyclotron
Laboratory, promising qualitatively new data for the near future.
All of these efforts are basically directed to the exploration of
the change the nuclear medium provides for the properties and
interactions of individual nucleons and, ultimately, the
exploration of the nuclear matter phase diagram. The investigation
of this phase dia gram, including all of the interesting phase
transitions predicted from theoretical grounds, is the focus of
most of the theoretical and experimental investigations of nuclear
dynamics conducted today."
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