9,246 research outputs found
Military Expenditure and Economic Activity: The Colombian Case
We enhance a standard RBC model to account for military expenditure and the costs of an internal conflict or war. The model captures the natural trade-off in military expenditure: crowding out of private consumption and investment but less destruction (and, therefore, higher marginal productivity) of private capital (and labor). Hence, military expenditure below (above) a certain threshold generates a positive (negative) net benefit in terms of output. The model is calibrated to an annual frequency using Colombian data. We find that an increase in military expenditure of 1% GDP (the current policy of Colombian authorities) increases investment and output above the steady state during several periods, before the shock fades away. Even though consumption falls on impact (to open up space for the additional military expenditure and private investment), it increases above its stationary trend after three periods, remains on positive grounds thereafter, and the cumulated net gain is positive.Real business cycle, stationary state, military expenditure, crowding-out, productivity shock
Aspects of reduction and transformation of Lagrangian systems with symmetry
This paper contains results on geometric Routh reduction and it is a
continuation of a previous paper where a new class of transformations is
introduced between Lagrangian systems obtained after Routh reduction. In
general, these reduced Lagrangian systems have magnetic force terms and are
singular in the sense that the Lagrangian does not depend on some velocity
components. The main purpose of this paper is to show that the Routh reduction
process itself is entirely captured by the application of such a new
transformation on the initial Lagrangian system with symmetry.Comment: To appear in Journal of Geometric Mechanic
SOLUBILIZATION OF P-ALKYLPHENOLS IN PLURONICS F-68 AND F-127 MICELLES: PARTITION COEFFICIENTS AND EFFECT OF SOLUTE ON THE AGGREGATE STRUCTURE
IndexaciĂłn: Web of Science; Scielo.The partition of a series of substituted phenols between water and polymer micelles formed by Pluronic F-68 and F-127 has been studied. The formation of micelles by these block copolymers has been evidenced by steady-state fluorescence and dynamic light scattering. The data show that micelles and larger aggregates are formed above the critical micelle concentration. In presence of p-alkylphenols a micelle rearrangement occurs that leads to the formation of just one and large aggregate. This effect depends both on polymer and phenols structures. The partition coefficients and the standard free energies of transfer from the aqueous to the micellar phases were determined. The incremental free energy for a methylene group are 2.88 kJ mol-1 and 1.65 kJ mol-1 for F-127 and F-68, respectively. This difference is explained in terms of the core sizes that are determined by the length of the PPO block.http://ref.scielo.org/xfqmx
Investigating the origin of time with trapped ions
Even though quantum systems in energy eigenstates do not evolve in time, they
can exhibit correlations between internal degrees of freedom in such a way that
one of the internal degrees of freedom behaves like a clock variable, and
thereby defines an internal time, that parametrises the evolution of the other
degrees of freedom. This situation is of great interest in quantum cosmology
where the invariance under reparametrisation of time implies that the temporal
coordinate dissapears and is replaced by the Wheeler-DeWitt constraint. Here we
show that this paradox can be investigated experimentally using the exquisite
control now available on moderate size quantum systems. We describe in detail
how to implement such an experimental demonstration using the spin and motional
degrees of freedom of a single trapped ion.Comment: 5 page
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Adverse Childhood Experiences in Medical Students: Implications for Wellness.
ObjectiveThe primary purpose of the study was to assess the prevalence of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) in a cohort of third-year medical students and characterize their childhood protective factors.MethodsThe authors developed a web-based anonymous survey distributed to all third-year medical students in one school (N = 98). The survey included the 10-item ACE Study questionnaire, a list of childhood protective factors (CPF) and questions to assess students' perception of the impact of ACEs on their physical and mental health. The medical school's IRB approved the student survey as an exempt study. The authors computed descriptive and comparative statistical analyses.ResultsEighty-six of 98 students responded (88% response rate). Forty-four students (51%) reported at least one ACE exposure and 10 (12%) reported ≥ 4 exposures. The latter were all female. The average difference in the ACE score between male and female medical students was - 1.1 (independent t test with unequal variances t(57.7) = - 2.82, P = .007). Students with an ACE score of ≥ 4 were significantly more likely to report a moderate or significant effect on their mental health, compared with students with scores ≤ 3 (chi-square test, P = < .0001). Most students reported high levels of CPF (median score = 13 of a maximum score = 14). ACEs and CPF were inversely associated (Pearson correlation = - 0.32, P = .003).ConclusionsA sizeable minority of medical students reported exposure to multiple ACEs. If replicated, findings suggest a significant vulnerability of these medical students to health risk behaviors and physical and mental health problems during training and future medical practice
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