5,641 research outputs found
Nonparametric IV estimation of shape-invariant Engel curves
This paper concerns the identification and estimation of a shape-invariant Engel
curve system with endogenous total expenditure. The shape-invariant specification
involves a common shift parameter for each demographic group in a pooled
system of Engel curves. Our focus is on the identification and estimation of both
the nonparametric shape of the Engel curve and the parametric specification of the
demographic scaling parameters. We present a new identification condition, closely
related to the concept of bounded completeness in statistics. The estimation procedure
applies the sieve minimum distance estimation of conditional moment restrictions
allowing for endogeneity. We establish a new root mean squared convergence
rate for the nonparametric IV regression when the endogenous regressor has unbounded
support. Root-n asymptotic normality and semiparametric efficiency of
the parametric components are also given under a set of ‘low-level’ sufficient conditions.
Monte Carlo simulations shed lights on the choice of smoothing parameters
and demonstrate that the sieve IV estimator performs well. An application is made
to the estimation of Engel curves using the UK Family Expenditure Survey and
shows the importance of adjusting for endogeneity in terms of both the curvature
and demographic parameters of systems of Engel curves
Semi-nonparametric IV estimation of shape-invariant Engel curves
This paper studies a shape-invariant Engel curve system with endogenous total expenditure, in which the shape-invariant specification involves a common shift parameter for each demographic group in a pooled system of nonparametric Engel curves. We focus on the identification and estimation of both the nonparametric shapes of the Engel curves and the parametric specification of the demographic scaling parameters. The identification condition relates to the bounded completeness and the estimation procedure applies the sieve minimum distance estimation of conditional moment restrictions, allowing for endogeneity. We establish a new root mean squared convergence rate for the nonparametric instrumental variable regression when the endogenous regressor could have unbounded support. Root-n asymptotic normality and semiparametric efficiency of the parametric components are also given under a set of "low-level" sufficient conditions. Our empirical application using the U.K. Family Expenditure Survey shows the importance of adjusting for endogeneity in terms of both the nonparametric curvatures and the demographic parameters of systems of Engel curves
Quantum Topological Excitations: from the Sawtooth Lattice to the Heisenberg Chain
The recently elucidated structure of the delafossite YCuO reveals a
Cu-O network with nearly independent chains having different
interactions between the spins. Motivated by this result, we study the
chain for various ratios of the base-base and
base-vertex interactions. By exact diagonalization and extrapolation, we show
that the elementary excitation spectrum, which (within numerical error) is the
same for total spins and 1, has a gap only in the interval
. The gap is dispersionless
for , but has increasing -dependence as moves away from unity, related to the instability of dimers in
the ground state.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures (revtex twocolumn
Finite Temperature Behavior of Small Silicon and Tin Clusters: An Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics Study
The finite temperature behavior of small Silicon (Si, Si, and
Si) and Tin (Sn and Sn) clusters is studied using
isokinetic Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics. The lowest equilibrium
structures of all the clusters are built upon a highly stable tricapped
trigonal prism unit which is seen to play a crucial role in the finite
temperature behavior of these clusters. Thermodynamics of small tin clusters
(Sn and Sn) is revisited in light of the recent experiments on
tin clusters of sizes 18-21 [G. A. Breaux et. al. Phys. Rev. B {\bf 71} 073410
(2005)]. We have calculated heat capacities using multiple histogram technique
for Si, Sn and Si clusters. Our calculated specific heat
curves have a main peak around 2300 K and 2200 K for Si and Sn
clusters respectively. However, various other melting indicators such as root
mean square bond length fluctuations, mean square displacements show that
diffusive motion of atoms within the cluster begins around 650 K. The finite
temperature behavior of Si and Sn is dominated by isomerization
and it is rather difficult to discern the temperature range for transition
region. On the other hand, Si does show a liquid like behavior over a
short temperature range followed by the fragmentation observed around 1800 K.
Finite temperature behavior of Si and Sn show that these clusters
do not melt but fragment around 1200 K and 650 K respectively.Comment: 9 figure
Field-theory calculation of the electric dipole moment of the neutron and paramagnetic atoms
Electric dipole moments (edms) of bound states that arise from the
constituents having edms are studied with field-theoretic techniques. The
systems treated are the neutron and a set of paramagnetic atoms. In the latter
case it is well known that the atomic edm differs greatly from the electron edm
when the internal electric fields of the atom are taken into account. In the
nonrelativistic limit these fields lead to a complete suppression, but for
heavy atoms large enhancement factors are present. A general bound-state field
theory approach applicable to both the neutron and paramagnetic atoms is set
up. It is applied first to the neutron, treating the quarks as moving freely in
a confining spherical well. It is shown that the effect of internal electric
fields is small in this case. The atomic problem is then revisited using
field-theory techniques in place of the usual Hamiltonian methods, and the
atomic enhancement factor is shown to be consistent with previous calculations.
Possible application of bound-state techniques to other sources of the neutron
edm is discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
An analytical treatment of in-plane magnetotransport in the Falicov-Sievert model
We derive an analytical expression which allows efficient computation of the
effect of all the Fermi surface trajectories induced by a combination of Bragg
scattering and magnetic breakdown on the in-plane components of the resistivity
tensor. The particular network of coupled orbits which we consider was first
formulated by Falicov and Sievert, who studied the problem numerically. Our
approach, based upon a method used previously to derive an analytical solution
for interlayer transport, allows us to show that the conductivity tensor can be
written as a sum of a matrix representing the effect of total magnetic
breakdown and one representing a combination of complex electronic
trajectories, and we find a compact expression for the in-plane components of
the resistivity tensor that can be evaluated straightforwardly.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The inverse-Compton ghost HDF 130 and the giant radio galaxy 6C 0905+3955: matching an analytic model for double radio source evolution
We present new GMRT observations of HDF 130, an inverse-Compton (IC) ghost of
a giant radio source that is no longer being powered by jets. We compare the
properties of HDF 130 with the new and important constraint of the upper limit
of the radio flux density at 240 MHz to an analytic model. We learn what values
of physical parameters in the model for the dynamics and evolution of the radio
luminosity and X-ray luminosity (due to IC scattering of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB)) of a Fanaroff-Riley II (FR II) source are able to describe a
source with features (lobe length, axial ratio, X-ray luminosity, photon index
and upper limit of radio luminosity) similar to the observations. HDF 130 is
found to agree with the interpretation that it is an IC ghost of a powerful
double-lobed radio source, and we are observing it at least a few Myr after jet
activity (which lasted 5--100 Myr) has ceased. The minimum Lorentz factor of
injected particles into the lobes from the hotspot is preferred to be
for the model to describe the observed quantities well,
assuming that the magnetic energy density, electron energy density, and lobe
pressure at time of injection into the lobe are linked by constant factors
according to a minimum energy argument, so that the minimum Lorentz factor is
constrained by the lobe pressure. We also apply the model to match the features
of 6C 0905+3955, a classical double FR II galaxy thought to have a low-energy
cutoff of in the hotspot due to a lack of hotspot
inverse-Compton X-ray emission. The models suggest that the low-energy cutoff
in the hotspots of 6C 0905+3955 is , just slightly above
the particles required for X-ray emission.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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