14,570 research outputs found
China's Higher Education Expansion and its Labor Market Consequences
Using a 1/5 random draw of the 1% census of 2005, we investigate how Chinaâs higher education expansion commenced in 1999 affects the education opportunities of various population groups and how this policy affects the labor market. Treating the expansion as an experiment and using a LATE framework, we find that higher education expansion increased the probability of go to college tremendously. Different populations âbenefitâ from this policy differently however. Minority female, those from central-western region and from rural areas are less likely to benefit from it. One-child families are more responsive to this policy. Using higher education resources at the provincial level as another dimension of variation, and using a difference-in-difference strategy, we find that the education expansion decreased the within sector inequality of population with above high school (inclusive) education. This is primarily due to the increase of the income level for high school graduate. That of the college graduate deceased, but only slightly and not significantly.China, higher education expansion, LATE, difference in difference, income level
The fluctuations of the giant cluster for percolation on random split trees
A split tree of cardinality is constructed by distributing "balls" in
a subset of vertices of an infinite tree which encompasses many types of random
trees such as -ary search trees, quad trees, median-of- trees,
fringe-balanced trees, digital search trees and random simplex trees. In this
work, we study Bernoulli bond percolation on arbitrary split trees of large but
finite cardinality . We show for appropriate percolation regimes that depend
on the cardinality of the split tree that there exists a unique giant
cluster, the fluctuations of the size of the giant cluster as are described by an infinitely divisible distribution that belongs to
the class of stable Cauchy laws. This work generalizes the results for the
random -ary recursive trees in Berzunza (2015). Our approach is based on a
remarkable decomposition of the size of the giant percolation cluster as a sum
of essentially independent random variables which may be useful for studying
percolation on other trees with logarithmic height; for instance in this work
we study also the case of regular trees.Comment: 43 page
Cosmological implications of modified gravity induced by quantum metric fluctuations
We investigate the cosmological implications of modified gravities induced by
the quantum fluctuations of the gravitational metric. If the metric can be
decomposed as the sum of the classical and of a fluctuating part, of quantum
origin, then the corresponding Einstein quantum gravity generates at the
classical level modified gravity models with a nonminimal coupling between
geometry and matter. As a first step in our study, after assuming that the
expectation value of the quantum correction can be generally expressed in terms
of an arbitrary second order tensor constructed from the metric and from the
thermodynamic quantities characterizing the matter content of the Universe, we
derive the (classical) gravitational field equations in their general form. We
analyze in detail the cosmological models obtained by assuming that the quantum
correction tensor is given by the coupling of a scalar field and of a scalar
function to the metric tensor, and by a term proportional to the matter
energy-momentum tensor. For each considered model we obtain the gravitational
field equations, and the generalized Friedmann equations for the case of a flat
homogeneous and isotropic geometry. In some of these models the divergence of
the matter energy-momentum tensor is non-zero, indicating a process of matter
creation, which corresponds to an irreversible energy flow from the
gravitational field to the matter fluid, and which is direct consequence of the
nonminimal curvature-matter coupling. The cosmological evolution equations of
these modified gravity models induced by the quantum fluctuations of the metric
are investigated in detail by using both analytical and numerical methods, and
it is shown that a large variety of cosmological models can be constructed,
which, depending on the numerical values of the model parameters, can exhibit
both accelerating and decelerating behaviors.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in EPJ
Isospin symmetry breaking of K and K* mesons
We use the method of QCD sum rules to investigate the isospin symmetry
breaking of K and K* mesons. The electromagnetic effect, difference between up
and down current-quark masses and difference between up and down quark
condensates are important. We perform sum rule analyses of their masses and
decay constant differences, which are consistent with experimental values. Our
results yield Delta f_K = f_{K^0} - f_{K^\pm} = 1.5 MeV.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, one reference adde
- âŠ