8,497 research outputs found
Comparative Risk Aversion: A Formal Approach with Applications to Saving Behaviors
We consider a formal approach to comparative risk aversion and applies it to intertemporal choice models. This allows us to ask whether standard classes of utility functions, such as those inspired by Kihlstrom and Mirman [15], Selden [26], Epstein and Zin [9] and Quiggin [24] are well-ordered in terms of risk aversion. Moreover, opting for this model-free approach allows us to establish new general results on the impact of risk aversion on savings behaviors. In particular, we show that risk aversion enhances precautionary savings, clarifying the link that exists between the notions of prudence and risk aversion.Risk aversion, Savings behaviors, Precautionary savings
Next-to-next-to-leading-order epsilon expansion for a Fermi gas at infinite scattering length
We extend previous work on applying the epsilon-expansion to universal
properties of a cold, dilute Fermi gas in the unitary regime of infinite
scattering length. We compute the ratio xi = mu/epsilon_F of chemical potential
to ideal gas Fermi energy to next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in
epsilon=4-d, where d is the number of spatial dimensions. We also explore the
nature of corrections from the order after NNLO.Comment: 28 pages, 14 figure
Correlation functions and dissipation in hot QCD
A recently proposed generating functional allows the construction of the full
set of n-point Green functions in QCD at high temperature and at distances
larger than 1/gT. One may then learn how the system maintains its thermal
equilibrium in the quantum field theory approach, i.e. which process
compensates for the important dissipation due to collisions. This system may be
characterized by quantities which have a classical limit. One finds that the
fluctuations of the coloured field are not gaussian ones. A comparison is made
with the semi-classical approach where a random noise is the source of
fluctuations.Comment: 21 pages, latex 2e, no figure Comments added in Introduction, in Sec
Mixed finite elements for numerical weather prediction
We show how two-dimensional mixed finite element methods that satisfy the
conditions of finite element exterior calculus can be used for the horizontal
discretisation of dynamical cores for numerical weather prediction on
pseudo-uniform grids. This family of mixed finite element methods can be
thought of in the numerical weather prediction context as a generalisation of
the popular polygonal C-grid finite difference methods. There are a few major
advantages: the mixed finite element methods do not require an orthogonal grid,
and they allow a degree of flexibility that can be exploited to ensure an
appropriate ratio between the velocity and pressure degrees of freedom so as to
avoid spurious mode branches in the numerical dispersion relation. These
methods preserve several properties of the C-grid method when applied to linear
barotropic wave propagation, namely: a) energy conservation, b) mass
conservation, c) no spurious pressure modes, and d) steady geostrophic modes on
the -plane. We explain how these properties are preserved, and describe two
examples that can be used on pseudo-uniform grids: the recently-developed
modified RT0-Q0 element pair on quadrilaterals and the BDFM1-\pdg element pair
on triangles. All of these mixed finite element methods have an exact 2:1 ratio
of velocity degrees of freedom to pressure degrees of freedom. Finally we
illustrate the properties with some numerical examples.Comment: Revision after referee comment
A generating functional for ultrasoft amplitudes in hot QCD
The effective amplitudes for gluon momentum p<<gT in hot QCD exhibit damping
as a result of collisions. The whole set of n-point amplitudes is shown to be
generated from one functional K(x,y;A), in addition to the induced current
j(x;A).Comment: 7 pages, no figure (some comments added
New counterexamples on Ritt operators, sectorial operators and R-boundedness
Let be a Schauder decomposition on some Banach space . We
prove that if is not -Schauder, then there exists a Ritt
operator which is a multiplier with respect to , such
that the set is not -bounded. Likewise we prove that
there exists a bounded sectorial operator of type on which is a
multiplier with respect to , such that the set is not -bounded
Functional calculus for a bounded -semigroup on Hilbert space
We introduce a new Banach algebra of bounded
analytic functions on
which is an analytic version of the Figa-Talamenca-Herz algebras on . Then we prove that the negative generator of any bounded
-semigroup on Hilbert space admits a bounded (natural) functional
calculus . We prove that this
is an improvement of the bounded functional calculus recently devised by Batty-Gomilko-Tomilov on a certain Besov
algebra of analytic functions on ,
by showing that and . In
the Banach space setting, we give similar results for negative generators of
-bounded -semigroups. The study of
requires to deal with Fourier multipliers on the Hardy space and we establish new results on this topic
Comparative Risk Aversion: A Formal Approach with Applications to Saving Behaviors
We consider a formal approach to comparative risk aversion and applies it to intertemporal choice models. This allows us to ask whether standard classes of utility functions, such as those inspired by Kihlstrom and Mirman [15], Selden [26], Epstein and Zin [9] and Quiggin [24] are well-ordered in terms of risk aversion. Moreover, opting for this model-free approach allows us to establish new general results on the impact of risk aversion on savings behaviors. In particular, we show that risk aversion enhances precautionary savings, clarifying the link that exists between the notions of prudence and risk aversion
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