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This volume was assembled by two of Dr. Wantrup's students as a
complement to his textbook, Resource Conservation: Economics and
Policies. Wantrup's ideas on conservation economics continued to
evolve in ways that were never fully reflected in that text, and
although for the student of natural resource economics it is still
essential reading, to stop there is to have missed some of his most
valuable insights.
'Imagine the pride of earning the Nobel Prize for warning that CFCs
were destroying the ozone layer. Then imagine that citizens,
policymakers, and business executives heeded the warning and
transformed markets to protect the earth. This book is the story of
why we can all be optimistic about the future if we are willing to
be brave and dedicated world citizens.' MARIO MOLINA, Nobel
Laureate in Chemistry and Professor, University of California This
book tells how the Montreal Protocol, the most successful global
environmental agreement so far, stimulated the development and
worldwide transfer of technologies to protect the ozone
layer.Technology transfer is the crux of the 230 international
environmental treaties and is essential to fighting climate change.
While debate rages about obstacles to technology transfer, until
now there has been no comprehensive assessment of what actually
works to remove the obstacles. The authors, leaders in the field,
assess over 1000 technology transfer projects funded under the
Montreal Protocol's Multilateral Fund and the Global Environment
Facility, and identify lessons that can be applied to technology
transfer for climate change.
What is the importance of poetry? Why do we enjoy the experience of
tragic distress? Does Roman tragedy reflect Aristotelian poetics?
In what ways can Aristotle's "Poetics" be read and interpreted? To
what kind of use can it be put? Such are the questions discussed in
this collection of essays, which examines one of the most seminal
as well as cryptic texts of Western criticism - a text that still
triggers essential deliberations about literature and the ways in
which we relate to it.
We have a decade or less to radically slow global warming before we
risk hitting irreversible tipping points that will lock in
catastrophic climate change. The good news is that we know how to
slow global warming enough to avert disaster. Cut Super Climate
Pollutants Now! explains how a 10-year sprint to cut short-lived
"super climate pollutants" -- primarily HFC refrigerants, black
carbon (soot), and methane -- can cut the rate of global warming in
half, so we can stay in the race to net zero climate emissions by
2050.
This book is written for third-year university students in physics
and engineering at The Norwegian University of Science and
Technology. It is an introductory text to statistical mechanics
that carefully develops new concepts and ideas from basic
assumptions and established results. The prerequisites are
mathematics courses on analysis and linear algebra as well as
physics courses on classical mechanics, quantum mechanics, and
thermodynamics. The first two chapters cover basic probability
theory, Markov processes, and classical mechanics. Chapters three
through five cover ensemble theory with applications to e .g spin
systems, lattice vibrations, and black-body radiation. Chapter six
is devoted to quantum statistical mechanics and the derivation of
the Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac distribution functions. The
theory is applied to understand the fascinating white dwarfs,
semiconductors, and the quark-gluon plasma. The book is equipped
with an appendix, which covers some useful mathematical material.
Each chapter contains a number of exercises that are helpful in
understanding the concepts.
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