3,924 research outputs found
Linear degree growth in lattice equations
We conjecture recurrence relations satisfied by the degrees of some
linearizable lattice equations. This helps to prove linear growth of these
equations. We then use these recurrences to search for lattice equations that
have linear growth and hence are linearizable
Dynamics of horizontal-like maps in higher dimension
We study the regularity of the Green currents and of the equilibrium measure
associated to a horizontal-like map in C^k, under a natural assumption on the
dynamical degrees. We estimate the speed of convergence towards the Green
currents, the decay of correlations for the equilibrium measure and the
Lyapounov exponents. We show in particular that the equilibrium measure is
hyperbolic. We also show that the Green currents are the unique invariant
vertical and horizontal positive closed currents. The results apply, in
particular, to Henon-like maps, to regular polynomial automorphisms of C^k and
to their small pertubations.Comment: Dedicated to Professor Gennadi Henkin on the occasion of his 65th
birthday, 37 pages, to appear in Advances in Mat
The binding constraint on firms'growth in developing countries
Firms in developing countries face numerous and serious constraints on their growth, ranging from corruption to lack of infrastructure to inability to access finance. Countries lack the resources to remove all the constraints at once and so would be better off removing the most binding one first. This paper uses data from World Bank Enterprise Surveys in 2006-10 to identify the most binding constraints on firm operations in developing countries. While each country faces a different set of constraints, these constraints also vary by firm characteristics, especially firm size. Across all countries, access to finance is among the most binding constraints; other obstacles appear to matter much less. This result is robust for all regions. Smaller firms must rely more on their own funds to invest and would grow significantly faster if they had greater access to external funds. As a result, a low level of financial development skews the firm size distribution by increasing the relative share of small firms. The results suggest that financing constraints play a significant part in explaining the"missing middle"-- the failure of small firms in developing countries to grow into medium-size or large firms.Access to Finance,Environmental Economics&Policies,Microfinance,Debt Markets,Banks&Banking Reform
On "the authentic damping mechanism" of the phonon damping model
Some general features of the phonon damping model are presented. It is
concluded that the fits performed within this model have no physical content
A theorem of Tits type for compact Kahler manifolds
We prove a theorem of Tits type about automorphism groups for compact Kahler
manifolds, which has been conjectured in the paper [KOZ].Comment: Inventiones Mathematicae (to appear), 11 page
Molecular Gas in the Powerful Radio Galaxies 3C~31 and 3C~264: Major or Minor Mergers?
We report the detection of CO~() and CO~()
emission from the central regions (--) of the two
powerful radio galaxies 3C~31 and 3C~264. Their individual CO emission exhibits
a double-horned line profile that is characteristic of an inclined rotating
disk with a central depression at the rising part of its rotation curve. The
inferred disk or ring distributions of the molecular gas is consistent with the
observed presence of dust disks or rings detected optically in the cores of
both galaxies. For a CO to H conversion factor similar to that of our
Galaxy, the corresponding total mass in molecular hydrogen gas is in 3C~31 and in 3C~264. Despite their relatively large molecular-gas masses
and other peculiarities, both 3C~31 and 3C~264, as well as many other powerful
radio galaxies in the (revised) 3C catalog, are known to lie within the
fundamental plane of normal elliptical galaxies. We reason that if their gas
originates from the mergers of two gas-rich disk galaxies, as has been invoked
to explain the molecular gas in other radio galaxies, then both 3C~31 and
3C~264 must have merged a long time (a few billion years or more) ago but their
remnant elliptical galaxies only recently (last tens of millions of years or
less) become active in radio. Instead, we argue that the cannibalism of
gas-rich galaxies provides a simpler explanation for the origin of molecular
gas in the elliptical hosts of radio galaxies. Given the transient nature of
their observed disturbances, these galaxies probably become active in radio
soon after the accretion event when sufficient molecular gas agglomerates in
their nuclei.Comment: 16 pages, 1 JPEG figure attached, accepted for publication in ApJ
Agent-Based Modeling of Intracellular Transport
We develop an agent-based model of the motion and pattern formation of
vesicles. These intracellular particles can be found in four different modes of
(undirected and directed) motion and can fuse with other vesicles. While the
size of vesicles follows a log-normal distribution that changes over time due
to fusion processes, their spatial distribution gives rise to distinct
patterns. Their occurrence depends on the concentration of proteins which are
synthesized based on the transcriptional activities of some genes. Hence,
differences in these spatio-temporal vesicle patterns allow indirect
conclusions about the (unknown) impact of these genes.
By means of agent-based computer simulations we are able to reproduce such
patterns on real temporal and spatial scales. Our modeling approach is based on
Brownian agents with an internal degree of freedom, , that represents
the different modes of motion. Conditions inside the cell are modeled by an
effective potential that differs for agents dependent on their value .
Agent's motion in this effective potential is modeled by an overdampted
Langevin equation, changes of are modeled as stochastic transitions
with values obtained from experiments, and fusion events are modeled as
space-dependent stochastic transitions. Our results for the spatio-temporal
vesicle patterns can be used for a statistical comparison with experiments. We
also derive hypotheses of how the silencing of some genes may affect the
intracellular transport, and point to generalizations of the model
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