53,845 research outputs found

    OAO-2 observations of C III 1909 A line in gamma 2 Velorum

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    The C III 1909 A emission line in gamma 2 Velorum was observed over a period of 24 hours in an attempt to find short period time variability. Analysis of this data found no periods in the range of 0.5 to 200 minutes, and placed an upper limit of 3% on the amplitude of the stellar pulsations. Improved spectral resolution data for this line was obtained by offsetting the OAO-2 pointing in steps of 15 seconds of arc. The line profile derived by combining this offset data with the slit function shows a definite asymmetry. Although the improved resolution gives results which are barely sufficient for comparison with the prediction from model envelopes, some information concerning the abundance of carbon and the physical conditions of the envelope can be gained

    Order Backlogs and Production Smoothing

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    Empirical examination of some aggregate manufacturing data suggests that order backlogs may help explain two puzzling facts: (1) the variability of production appears to be greater than that of demand, and (2) inventories appear to be drawn down when demand is low, built up when demand is high.

    Bubbles, Fads, and Stock Price Volatility Tests: A Partial Evaluation

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    This is a summary and interpretation of some of the literature on stock price volatility that was stimulated by Leroy and Porter (1981) and Shiller (1981a). It appears that neither small sample bias, rational bubbles nor some standard models for expected returns adequately explain stock price volatility. This suggests a role for some nonstandard models for expected returns. One possibility is "fads" models in which noise trading by naive investors is important. At present, however, there is little direct evidence that such fads play a significant role in stock price determination.

    The Insensitivity of Consumption to News About Income

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    This paper uses a variance bounds test to see whether consumption is too sensitive to news about income to be consistent with a standard permanent income model, under the maintained hypothesis that income has a unit root. It is found that, if anything, consumption is less sensitive than the model would predict. This implication is robust to the representative consumer having private information about his future income that the econometrician does not have, to wealth shocks, and to transitory consumption. This suggests the importance in future research on the model of allowing for factors that tend to make consumption smooth.

    Monetary Policy and the Volatility of Real Exchange Rates in New Zealand

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    The relationship between interest rates and exchange rates is puzzling and poorly understood. But under some standard assumptions, interest rates can be adjusted to smooth real exchange rate movements at the possible price of increased volatility in other variables. In New Zealand, estimates made under some generous suppositions about what monetary policy is able to accomplish suggest that decreasing real exchange rate volatility by about 25% would require increasing output volatility by about 10-15%, inflation volatility by about 0-15% and interest rate volatility by about 15-40%.
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