56,647 research outputs found
Enhanced thermoelectric figure of merit in vertical graphene junctions
In this work, we investigate thermoelectric properties of junctions
consisting of two partially overlapped graphene sheets coupled to each other in
the cross-plane direction. It is shown that because of the weak van-der Waals
interactions between graphene layers, the phonon conductance in these junctions
is strongly reduced, compared to that of single graphene layer structures,
while their electrical performance is weakly affected. By exploiting this
effect, we demonstrate that the thermoelectric figure of merit can reach values
higher than 1 at room temperature in junctions made of gapped graphene
materials, for instance, graphene nanoribbons and graphene nanomeshes. The
dependence of thermoelectric properties on the junction length is also
discussed. This theoretical study hence suggests an efficient way to enhance
thermoelectric efficiency of graphene devices.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitte
Vietnam Inbound M&A Activity: the Role of Government Policy and Regulatory Environment
With a robust recent history of reform and opening, joining of the World Trade Organization, and negotiating a myriad of regional and global trade agreements, Vietnam has emerged as a promising destination for foreign direct investment(FDI) and cross-border mergers and acquisitions (M&A). In this paper, we providean overview of Vietnam’s inbound mergers and acquisitions and review the twomain driving forces of inbound M&A, which are the legal framework reformprocess and the equitization of State-owned enterprises. We close by providingdirections for future research in the area of cross-border M&As
Discontinuity of the Lempert function of the spectral ball
We give some further criteria for continuity or discontinuity of the Lempert
funtion of the spectral ball , with respect to one or both of its
arguments, in terms of cyclicity the matrices involved.Comment: 12 pages; the converse to theorem 1.3, mistakenly claimed in v1 & 2,
excised from v3, is now proved in some case
On surrogate loss functions and -divergences
The goal of binary classification is to estimate a discriminant function
from observations of covariate vectors and corresponding binary
labels. We consider an elaboration of this problem in which the covariates are
not available directly but are transformed by a dimensionality-reducing
quantizer . We present conditions on loss functions such that empirical risk
minimization yields Bayes consistency when both the discriminant function and
the quantizer are estimated. These conditions are stated in terms of a general
correspondence between loss functions and a class of functionals known as
Ali-Silvey or -divergence functionals. Whereas this correspondence was
established by Blackwell [Proc. 2nd Berkeley Symp. Probab. Statist. 1 (1951)
93--102. Univ. California Press, Berkeley] for the 0--1 loss, we extend the
correspondence to the broader class of surrogate loss functions that play a key
role in the general theory of Bayes consistency for binary classification. Our
result makes it possible to pick out the (strict) subset of surrogate loss
functions that yield Bayes consistency for joint estimation of the discriminant
function and the quantizer.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AOS595 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
MODELLING GLOBAL DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE:RESULTS FOR JAPAN
In earlier papers (McKibbin and Nguyen (2001, (2002)) we introduced demographic features into the MSG3 model of the world economy, following the approach of Bryant and McKibbin (2001). In this paper we use the same theoretical technique to develop a series of models based on a consistent database from a simple two country symmetric theoretical model to the complete 4 country MSG3 model, which represents the empirical characteristics of Japan, United States, Rest of OECD and Rest of World. We explore a stylized decline in fertility similar to that experienced by Japan since the 1950 (exactly the same shock as the stylized shock used in Bryant (2004)). We first explore the properties of the theoretical model with both a global and a single country shock. This gives similar results to that found in the basic framework underlying the Bryant (2004) approach. We then move from the simplest fully optimizing framework to increasing add complexity to the model until we build a model of Japan. We explore the same shock across the models of increasing complexity in this paper and compare our results to the Bryant approach. We find that although the basic insights from the sequences of theoretical papers in the Brooking-ANU project continue to hold, the quantitative results change significantly as the model is adapted to have more characteristics of Japan. In a final section, we use the complete model to explore the likely impacts on Japan of the demographic change already experienced from 1970 and look to the likely changes to be experienced out to 2040.
Optimal Online Selection of a Monotone Subsequence: a Central Limit Theorem
Consider a sequence of independent random variables with a common
continuous distribution , and consider the task of choosing an increasing
subsequence where the observations are revealed sequentially and where an
observation must be accepted or rejected when it is first revealed. There is a
unique selection policy that is optimal in the sense that it
maximizes the expected value of , the number of selected
observations. We investigate the distribution of ; in particular,
we obtain a central limit theorem for and a detailed
understanding of its mean and variance for large . Our results and methods
are complementary to the work of Bruss and Delbaen (2004) where an analogous
central limit theorem is found for monotone increasing selections from a finite
sequence with cardinality where is a Poisson random variable that is
independent of the sequence.Comment: 26 page
Superfluid Properties of the Inner Crust of Neutron Stars
Superfluid properties of the inner crust matter of neutron stars, formed by
nuclear clusters immersed in a dilute neutron gas, are analysed in a self-
consistent HFB approach. The calculations are performed with two pairing
forces, fixed so as to obtain in infinite nuclear matter the pairing gaps
provided by the Gogny force or by induced interactions. It is shown that the
nuclear clusters can either suppress or enhance the pairing correlations inside
the inner crust matter, depending on the density of the surrounding neutrons.
The profile of the pairing field in the inner crust is rather similar for both
pairing forces, but the values of the pairing gaps are drastically reduced for
the force which simulates the polarisation effects in infinite neutron matter.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Corrected typos and new format. To appear in
Phys. Rev.
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