10,230 research outputs found
Transaction services, inflation, and welfare
This paper is motivated by empirical observations on the comovements of currency velocity, inflation, and the relative size of the credit services sector. We document these comovements and incorporate into a monetary growth model a credit services sector that provides services that help people economize on money. Our model makes two new contributions. First, we show that direct evidence on the appropriately defined credit service sector for the United States is consistent with the welfare cost measured using an estimated money demand schedule. Second, we provide welfare cost of inflation estimates that have some new features.Inflation (Finance) ; Welfare
Spatial fluctuations of a surviving particle in the trapping reaction
We consider the trapping reaction, , where and particles
have a diffusive dynamics characterized by diffusion constants and .
The interaction with particles can be formally incorporated in an effective
dynamics for one particle as was recently shown by Bray {\it et al}. [Phys.
Rev. E {\bf 67}, 060102 (2003)]. We use this method to compute, in space
dimension , the asymptotic behaviour of the spatial fluctuation,
, for a surviving particle in the perturbative regime,
, for the case of an initially uniform distribution of
particles. We show that, for , with
. By contrast, the fluctuations of paths constrained to return to
their starting point at time grow with the larger exponent 1/3. Numerical
tests are consistent with these predictions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
The structure of one-relator relative presentations and their centres
Suppose that G is a nontrivial torsion-free group and w is a word in the
alphabet G\cup\{x_1^{\pm1},...,x_n^{\pm1}\} such that the word w' obtained from
w by erasing all letters belonging to G is not a proper power in the free group
F(x_1,...,x_n). We show how to reduce the study of the relative presentation
\^G= to the case n=1. It turns out that an
"n-variable" group \^G can be constructed from similar "one-variable" groups
using an explicit construction similar to wreath product. As an illustration,
we prove that, for n>1, the centre of \^G is always trivial. For n=1, the
centre of \^G is also almost always trivial; there are several exceptions, and
all of them are known.Comment: 15 pages. A Russian version of this paper is at
http://mech.math.msu.su/department/algebra/staff/klyachko/papers.htm . V4:
the intoduction is rewritten; Section 1 is extended; a short introduction to
Secton 5 is added; some misprints are corrected and some cosmetic
improvements are mad
Invisibility and perfect absorption of all-dielectric metasurfaces originated from the transverse Kerker effect
Dielectric metasurfaces perform unique photonics effects and serve as the
engine of nowadays light-matter technologies. Here, we suggest theoretically
and demonstrate experimentally the realization of a high transparency effect in
a novel type of all-dielectric metasurface, where each constituting meta-atom
of the lattice presents the so-called transverse Kerker effect. In contrast to
Huygens' metasurfaces, both phase and amplitude of the incoming wave remain
unperturbed at the resonant frequency and, consequently, our metasurface
totally operates in the invisibility regime. We prove experimentally, for the
microwave frequency range, that both phase and amplitude of the transmitted
wave from the metasurface remain almost unaffected. Finally, we demonstrate
both numerically and experimentally and explain theoretically in detail a novel
mechanism to achieve perfect absorption of the incident light enabled by the
resonant response of the dielectric metasurfaces placed in the vicinity of a
conducting substrate. In the subdiffractive limit, we show the aforementioned
effects are mainly determined by the optical response of the constituting
meta-atoms rather than the collective lattice contributions. With the spectrum
scalability, our findings can be incorporated in engineering devices for energy
harvesting, nonlinear phenomena and filters applications.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Competing orders II: the doped quantum dimer model
We study the phases of doped spin S=1/2 quantum antiferromagnets on the
square lattice, as they evolve from paramagnetic Mott insulators with valence
bond solid (VBS) order at zero doping, to superconductors at moderate doping.
The interplay between density wave/VBS order and superconductivity is
efficiently described by the quantum dimer model, which acts as an effective
theory for the total spin S=0 sector. We extend the dimer model to include
fermionic S=1/2 excitations, and show that its mean-field, static gauge field
saddle points have projective symmetries (PSGs) similar to those of `slave'
particle U(1) and SU(2) gauge theories. We account for the non-perturbative
effects of gauge fluctuations by a duality mapping of the S=0 dimer model. The
dual theory of vortices has a PSG identical to that found in a previous paper
(L. Balents et al., cond-mat/0408329) by a duality analysis of bosons on the
square lattice. The previous theory therefore also describes fluctuations
across superconducting, supersolid and Mott insulating phases of the present
electronic model. Finally, with the aim of describing neutron scattering
experiments, we present a phenomenological model for collective S=1 excitations
and their coupling to superflow and density wave fluctuations.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures; part I is cond-mat/0408329; (v2) changed title
and added clarification
Consistent Batalin--Fradkin quantization of Infinitely Reducible First Class Constraints
We reconsider the problem of BRST quantization of a mechanics with infinitely
reducible first class constraints. Following an earlier recipe [Phys. Lett. B
381, 105, (1996)], the original phase space is extended by purely auxiliary
variables, the constraint set in the enlarged space being first stage of
reducibility. The BRST charge involving only a finite number of ghost variables
is explicitly constructed.Comment: 5 pages, LaTex. Minor corrections including the title. The version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
WISE colours and star-formation in the host galaxies of radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1
We investigate the mid-infrared properties of the largest (42 objects) sample
of radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1 (RL NLS1) collected to date, using data
from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). We analyse the mid-IR
colours of these objects and compare them to what is expected from different
combinations of AGN and galaxy templates. We find that, in general, the
host-galaxy emission gives an importan contribution to the observed mid-IR flux
in particular at the longest wavelengths (W3, at 12micron, and W4, at
22micron). In about half of the sources (22 objects) we observe a very red
mid-IR colour (W4-W3>2.5) that can be explained only using a starburst galaxy
template (M82). Using the 22micron luminosities, corrected for the AGN
contribution, we have then estimated the star-formation rate for 20 of these
"red" RL NLS1, finding values ranging from 10 to 500 Msun/y. For the RL NLS1
showing bluer colours, instead, we cannot exclude the presence of a
star-forming host galaxy although, on average, we expect a lower star-formation
rate. Studying the radio (1.4GHz) to mid-IR (22micron) flux ratios of the RL
NLS1 in the sample we found that in ~10 objects the star-forming activity could
represent the most important component also at radio frequencies, in addition
(or in alternative) to the relativistic jet. We conclude that both the mid-IR
and the radio emission of RL NLS1 are a mixture of different components,
including the relativistic jet, the dusty torus and an intense star-forming
activity.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
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