Your search
Results 198 resources
-
The spontaneous symmetry breaking phenomena applied to Quantum Finance considers that the martingale state in the stock market corresponds to a ground (vacuum) state if we express the financial equations in the Hamiltonian form. The original analysis for this phenomena completely ignores the kinetic terms in the neighborhood of the minimal of the potential terms. This is correct in most of the cases. However, when we deal with the martingale condition, it comes out that the kinetic terms can also behave as potential terms and then reproduce a shift on the effective location of the vacuum (martingale). In this paper, we analyze the effective symmetry breaking patterns and the connected vacuum degeneracy for these special circumstances. Within the same scenario, we analyze the connection between the flow of information and the multiplicity of martingale states, providing in this way powerful tools for analyzing the dynamic of the stock markets.
-
The prevalence of microplastics in the environment has become a major global conservation issue. One primary source of environmental microplastics is personal care and cosmetic products (PCCPs) containing microbeads. The market availability of PCCPs containing microbeads and the level of contamination of coastal sediments by microplastics was studied in one of the most densely populated cities in the world, Macao in China. We found that PCCPs containing microbeads are still widely available for sale in the region, with over 70% of surveyed PCCPs containing at least one type of microbeads as an ingredient, with polyethylene (PE) being the most common one. In an estimate, the use of PCCPs in the territory may release over 37 billion microbeads per year into the environment via wastewater treatment plants. The density of microplastics in coastal sediments varied between 259 and 1,743 items/L of sediment, amongst the highest reported in the world. The fraction of < 1 mm was the most abundant, representing an average of 98.6% of the total, and correlated positively with the abundance of larger sized fragments. The results show that although environmental pollution with microplastics released from PCCPs usage is significant, other sources, namely fragmentation of larger plastic debris, likely contribute more to the issue. The study highlights the magnitude of the problem at a local level and suggests possible mitigating strategies.
Explore
USJ Theses and Dissertations
-
Doctorate Theses
(2)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(1)
- Science (1)
-
School of Education
(1)
- Education (1)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(1)
- Master Dissertations (67)
Academic Units
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(29)
- Adérito Marcos (7)
- Carlos Caires (1)
- Filipe Afonso (3)
- Gérald Estadieu (1)
- José Simões (4)
- Nuno Rocha (1)
- Nuno Soares (6)
-
Faculty of Business and Law
(13)
- Alessandro Lampo (1)
- Alexandre Lobo (9)
- Florence Lei (2)
- Ivan Arraut (1)
- Jenny Phillips (2)
- Sergio Gomes (1)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(5)
- Angus Kuok (1)
- Michael Lai (1)
- Vitor Santos Teixeira (2)
-
Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy
(31)
- Andrew Leong (6)
- Cyril Law (2)
- Edmond Eh (1)
- Fausto Gomez (1)
- Franz Gassner (2)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (4)
- Judette Gallares (1)
- Stephen Morgan (8)
- Thomas Cai (1)
-
Institute for Data Engineering and Sciences
(10)
- George Du Wencai (10)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(18)
- Ágata Alveirinho Dias (5)
- Chan Shek Kiu (1)
- David Gonçalves (5)
- Karen Tagulao (2)
- Raquel Vasconcelos (1)
- Shirley Siu (1)
- Thomas Lei (1)
- Wenhong Qiu (1)
-
Macau Ricci Institute
(4)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (2)
- Stephen Rothlin (2)
-
School of Education
(21)
- Elisa Monteiro (1)
- Keith Morrison (10)
- Kiiko Ikegami (3)
- Miranda Chi Kuan Mak (1)
- Rochelle Ge (1)
- Susannah Sun (3)
Resource type
- Book (11)
- Book Section (15)
- Conference Paper (14)
- Journal Article (57)
- Magazine Article (5)
- Manuscript (1)
- Newspaper Article (9)
- Presentation (10)
- Radio Broadcast (2)
- Report (4)
- Thesis (70)