6,020 research outputs found
Second thoughts on second moments : panel evidence on asset-based models of currency crises
The literature on speculative attacks has been given new impetus by the collapse of the European currency arrangements beginning in 1992, by the Mexican peso crisis and after-effects in 1994, and most recently by speculative attacks across Asia. One stand of this literature stresses the importance of imbalances in stocks of monetary and financial aggregates rather than traditional"flow"factors, arguing that massive, volatile capital flows have become a dominant feature of the global landscape, and that exchange-rate levels and current accounts have not proved convincing as proximate causes of crises. The authors test two popular asset-based models of speculative attacks -- Krugman and Rotemberg (1992) and Calvo and Mendoza (1995) -- especially their emphasis on the second moments of monetary aggregates. Analyzing monthly panels of appropriate countries in three regions, they find evidence for the importance of money/reserve ratios predicted by both models, and their variance as predicted by Calvo and Mendoza. But the variance of velocity does not appear to be important, casting some doubt on the Krugman-Rotemberg target zone framework and the interpretation of the Calvo-Mendoza results.Fiscal&Monetary Policy,Payment Systems&Infrastructure,Environmental Economics&Policies,Insurance&Risk Mitigation,Economic Theory&Research,Economic Theory&Research,Fiscal&Monetary Policy,Macroeconomic Management,Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Stabilization
Timber roof structure for outdoor auditorium in Parque Paraiso, San Blas (Madrid)
p. 468-475A timber shell structure is designed to provide covering for an outdoor auditorium in
Madrid (Spain). The covering comprises five independent overlapped marquees with
similar shape but diverse dimensions. The surface geometry of each marquee is defined by a hyperbolic paraboloid, with its boundaries delimited by elliptical curves in horizontal
projection. Structural section for the timber shell is a composite section with several
staggered layers of straight sawn timber planks, arranged in two orthogonal directions
following the straight skew lines of the hyperbolic paraboloid. Over them two continuous
top layers are arranged which provides bracing for the structure and support for the
waterproofing material. Each layer is laid over the previous one, bolted and glued with
polyurethane adhesive. Special characteristics of the design analysis and detailed erection process are described. The designed solution provides lightweight roofing with a powerful and original image, short construction time and reasonable budget.Anton, A.; Meijide, AG.; Corbal, JJ. (2009). Timber roof structure for outdoor auditorium in Parque Paraiso, San Blas (Madrid). Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/653
Optimizing stellarators for large flows
Plasma flow is damped in stellarators because they are not intrinsically
ambipolar, unlike tokamaks, in which the flux-surface averaged radial electric
current vanishes for any value of the radial electric field. Only
quasisymmetric stellarators are intrinsically ambipolar, but exact
quasisymmetry is impossible to achieve in non-axisymmetric toroidal
configurations. By calculating the violation of intrinsic ambipolarity due to
deviations from quasisymmetry, one can derive criteria to assess when a
stellarator can be considered quasisymmetric in practice, i.e. when the flow
damping is weak enough. Let us denote by a small parameter that
controls the size of a perturbation to an exactly quasisymmetric magnetic
field. Recently, it has been shown that if the gradient of the perturbation is
sufficiently small, the flux-surface averaged radial electric current scales as
for any value of the collisionality. It was also argued that when
the gradient of the perturbation is large, the quadratic scaling is replaced by
a more unfavorable one. In this paper, perturbations with large gradients are
rigorously treated. In particular, it is proven that for low collisionality a
perturbation with large gradient yields, at best, an deviation
from quasisymmetry. Heuristic estimations in the literature incorrectly
predicted an deviation.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Plasma Physics and Controlled
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Flow damping in stellarators close to quasisymmetry
Quasisymmetric stellarators are a type of optimized stellarators for which
flows are undamped to lowest order in an expansion in the normalized Larmor
radius. However, perfect quasisymmetry is impossible. Since large flows may be
desirable as a means to reduce turbulent transport, it is important to know
when a stellarator can be considered to be sufficiently close to quasisymmetry.
The answer to this question depends strongly on the size of the spatial
gradients of the deviation from quasisymmetry and on the collisionality regime.
Recently, formal criteria for closeness to quasisymmetry have been derived in a
variety of situations. In particular, the case of deviations with large
gradients was solved in the regime. Denoting by a parameter
that gives the size of the deviation from quasisymmetry, it was proven that
particle fluxes do not scale with , as typically claimed, but
with . It was also shown that ripple wells are not necessarily the main
cause of transport. This paper reviews those works and presents a new result in
another collisionality regime, in which particles trapped in ripple wells are
collisional and the rest are collisionless.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Plasma Physics and Controlled
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The effect of tangential drifts on neoclassical transport in stellarators close to omnigeneity
In general, the orbit-averaged radial magnetic drift of trapped particles in
stellarators is non-zero due to the three-dimensional nature of the magnetic
field. Stellarators in which the orbit-averaged radial magnetic drift vanishes
are called omnigeneous, and they exhibit neoclassical transport levels
comparable to those of axisymmetric tokamaks. However, the effect of deviations
from omnigeneity cannot be neglected in practice. For sufficiently low
collision frequencies (below the values that define the regime), the
components of the drifts tangential to the flux surface become relevant. This
article focuses on the study of such collisionality regimes in stellarators
close to omnigeneity when the gradient of the non-omnigeneous perturbation is
small. First, it is proven that closeness to omnigeneity is required to
preserve radial locality in the drift-kinetic equation for collisionalities
below the regime. Then, it is shown that neoclassical transport is
determined by two layers in phase space. One of the layers corresponds to the
regime and the other to the superbanana-plateau regime. The
importance of the superbanana-plateau layer for the calculation of the
tangential electric field is emphasized, as well as the relevance of the latter
for neoclassical transport in the collisionality regimes considered in this
paper. In particular, the tangential electric field is essential for the
emergence of a new subregime of superbanana-plateau transport when the radial
electric field is small. A formula for the ion energy flux that includes the
regime and the superbanana-plateau regime is given. The energy
flux scales with the square of the size of the deviation from omnigeneity.
Finally, it is explained why below a certain collisionality value the
formulation presented in this article ceases to be valid.Comment: 36 pages. Version to be published in Plasma Physics and Controlled
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