150 research outputs found
Innovation, specialization and growth in a model of structural change
The aim of this paper is to investigate the nexus between demand patterns and innovation as it stems from research efforts and the extent of specialization. In the proposed model an innovation race conducted by entrants investing in research and development against established incumbents raises productivity at the industry level and leads to a shift in the aggregate demand pattern and consequently to a redistribution of the profit fund among industries and a restructuring of the production process in each industry. The paper argues that the degree of development as reflected in a demand share distribution is characterized by a corresponding distribution of specialized sectors that becomes more even across industries as the development process proceeds and investigates the consequences in terms of economic growth.
Magnetic field effects on the finite-frequency noise and ac conductance of a Kondo quantum dot out of equilibrium
We present analytic results for the finite-frequency current noise and the
nonequilibrium ac conductance for a Kondo quantum dot in presence of a magnetic
field. Using the real-time renormalization group method, we determine the line
shape close to resonances and show that while all resonances in the ac
conductance are broadened by the transverse spin relaxation rate, the noise at
finite field additionally involves the longitudinal rate as well as sharp kinks
resulting in singular derivatives. Our results provide a consistent theoretical
description of recent experimental data for the emission noise at zero magnetic
field, and we propose the extension to finite field for which we present a
detailed prediction.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Anomalous isotopic effect near the charge-ordering quantum criticality
Within the Hubbard-Holstein model, we evaluate the various crossover lines
marking the opening of pseudogaps in the cuprates, which, in our scenario, are
ruled by the proximity to a charge-ordering quantum criticality (stripe
formation). We provide also an analysis of their isotopic dependencies, as
produced by critical fluctuations. We find no isotopic shift of the temperature
marked as a reduction of the quasiparticle density of states in various
experiments, and a substantial positive shift of the pseudogap-formation
temperature . We infer that the superconducting critical temperature
has almost no shift in the optimally- and overdoped regimes while it has a
small negative isotopic shift in the underdoped, which increses upon
underdoping. We account also for the possible dynamical nature of the
charge-ordering transition, and explain in this way the spread of the values of
and its of isotopic shift, obtained with experimental probes having
different characteristic timescales.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Weblogs in Higher Education - Why Do Students (Not) Blog?
Positive impacts on learning through blogging, such as active knowledge construction and reflective writing, have been reported. However, not many students use weblogs in informal contexts, even when appropriate facilities are offered by their universities. While motivations for blogging have been subject to empirical studies, little research has addressed the issue of why students choose not to blog. This paper presents an empirical study undertaken to gain insights into the decision making process of students when deciding whether to keep a blog or not. A better understanding of students' motivations for (not) blogging may help decision makers at universities in the process of selecting, introducing, and maintaining similar services. As informal learning gains increased recognition, results of this study can help to advance appropriate designs of informal learning contexts in Higher Education. The method of ethnographic decision tree modelling was applied in an empirical study conducted at the Vienna University of Technology, Austria. Since 2004, the university has been offering free weblog accounts for all students and staff members upon entering school, not bound to any course or exam. Qualitative, open interviews were held with 3 active bloggers, 3 former bloggers, and 3 nonâ bloggers to elicit their decision criteria. Decision tree models were developed out of the interviews. It turned out that the modelling worked best when splitting the decision process into two parts: one model representing decisions on whether to start a weblog at all, and a second model representing criteria on whether to continue with a weblog once it was set up. The models were tested for their validity through questionnaires developed out of the decision tree models. 30 questionnaires have been distributed to bloggers, former bloggers and nonâ bloggers. Results show that the main reasons for students not to keep a weblog include a preference for direct (online) communication, and concerns about the loss of privacy through blogging. Furthermore, the results indicate that intrinsic motivation factors keep students blogging, whereas stopping a weblog is mostly attributable to external factors
Spin-orbital Kondo decoherence by environmental effects in capacitively coupled quantum dot devices
Strong correlation effects in a capacitively coupled double quantum-dot setup
were previously shown to provide the possibility of both entangling spin-charge
degrees of freedom and realizing efficient spin-filtering operations by static
gate-voltage manipulations. Motivated by the use of such a device for quantum
computing, we study the influence of electromagnetic noise on a general
spin-orbital Kondo model, and investigate the conditions for observing
coherent, unitary transport, crucial to warrant efficient spin manipulations.
We find a rich phase diagram, where low-energy properties sensitively depend on
the impedance of the external environment and geometric parameters of the
system. Relevant energy scales related to the Kondo temperature are also
computed in a renormalization-group treatment, allowing to assess the
robustness of the device against environmental effects.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Minor modifications in V
Interaction flow method for many-fermion systems
We propose an interaction flow scheme that sums up the perturbation expansion
of many-particle systems by successively increasing the interaction strength.
It combines the unbiasedness of renormalization group methods with the
simplicity of straight-forward perturbation theory. Applying the scheme to
fermions in one dimension and to the two-dimensional Hubbard model we find that
at one-loop level and low temperatures there is ample agreement with previous
one-loop renormalization group approaches. We furthermore present results for
the momentum-dependence of spin, charge and pairing interactions in the
two-dimensional Hubbard model.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
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