12,748 research outputs found

    Saving and Growth: A Reinterpretation

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    We examine the relationship between income growth and saving using both cross-country and household data. At the aggregate level, we find that growth Granger causes saving, but that saving does not Granger cause growth. Using household data, we find that households with predictably higher income growth save more than households with predictably low growth. We argue that standard Permanent Income models of consumption cannot explain these findings, but that a model of consumption with habit formation may. The positive effect of growth on saving implies that previous estimates of the effect of saving on growth may be overstated.

    Cosmological structure formation from soft topological defects

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    Some models have extremely low-mass pseudo-Goldstone bosons that can lead to vacuum phase transitions at late times, after the decoupling of the microwave background.. This can generate structure formation at redshifts z greater than or approx 10 on mass scales as large as M approx 10 to the 18th solar masses. Such low energy transitions can lead to large but phenomenologically acceptable density inhomogeneities in soft topological defects (e.g., domain walls) with minimal variations in the microwave anisotropy, as small as delta Y/T less than or approx 10 to the minus 6 power. This mechanism is independent of the existence of hot, cold, or baryonic dark matter. It is a novel alternative to both cosmic string and to inflationary quantum fluctuations as the origin of structure in the Universe

    Characterizations of Morse quasi-geodesics via superlinear divergence and sublinear contraction

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    We introduce and begin a systematic study of sublinearly contracting projections. We give two characterizations of Morse quasi-geodesics in an arbitrary geodesic metric space. One is that they are sublinearly contracting; the other is that they have completely superlinear divergence. We give a further characterization of sublinearly contracting projections in terms of projections of geodesic segments.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures. v2: 22 pages, 5 figures. Correction in proof of Thm 7.1. Proof of Prop 4.2 revised for improved clarity. Other minor changes per referee comments. To appear in Documenta Mathematic

    Negative curvature in graphical small cancellation groups

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    We use the interplay between combinatorial and coarse geometric versions of negative curvature to investigate the geometry of infinitely presented graphical Gr′(1/6)Gr'(1/6) small cancellation groups. In particular, we characterize their 'contracting geodesics', which should be thought of as the geodesics that behave hyperbolically. We show that every degree of contraction can be achieved by a geodesic in a finitely generated group. We construct the first example of a finitely generated group GG containing an element gg that is strongly contracting with respect to one finite generating set of GG and not strongly contracting with respect to another. In the case of classical C′(1/6)C'(1/6) small cancellation groups we give complete characterizations of geodesics that are Morse and that are strongly contracting. We show that many graphical Gr′(1/6)Gr'(1/6) small cancellation groups contain strongly contracting elements and, in particular, are growth tight. We construct uncountably many quasi-isometry classes of finitely generated, torsion-free groups in which every maximal cyclic subgroup is hyperbolically embedded. These are the first examples of this kind that are not subgroups of hyperbolic groups. In the course of our analysis we show that if the defining graph of a graphical Gr′(1/6)Gr'(1/6) small cancellation group has finite components, then the elements of the group have translation lengths that are rational and bounded away from zero.Comment: 40 pages, 14 figures, v2: improved introduction, updated statement of Theorem 4.4, v3: new title (previously: "Contracting geodesics in infinitely presented graphical small cancellation groups"), minor changes, to appear in Groups, Geometry, and Dynamic
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