4,631 research outputs found
International Human Capital Formation, Brain Drain and Brain Gain: A conceptual Framework
A two-country, two-period model of international migration highlights microeconomic foundations for examining the interrelation between brain drain, brain gain and the location of human capital formation, at home or abroad. Ex ante choices regarding where to study depend on relative qualities of university systems, individuals' abilities, sunk educational investment costs, government grants, and expected employment prospects in both countries. The analysis underscores an inherently widerange of conceivable positive or negative effects on domestic net welfare. These changes depend critically on the foregoing factors, as well as the optimal design of educational grant schemes, given eventual informational imperfections regarding individuals' capabilities.
Habitable planets around the star Gl 581?
Radial velocity surveys are now able to detect terrestrial planets at
habitable distance from M-type stars. Recently, two planets with minimum masses
below 10 Earth masses were reported in a triple system around the M-type star
Gliese 581. Using results from atmospheric models and constraints from the
evolution of Venus and Mars, we assess the habitability of planets Gl 581c and
Gl 581d and we discuss the uncertainties affecting the habitable zone (HZ)
boundaries determination. We provide simplified formulae to estimate the HZ
limits that may be used to evaluate the astrobiological potential of
terrestrial exoplanets that will hopefully be discovered in the near future.
Planets Gl 581c and 'd' are near, but outside, what can be considered as the
conservative HZ. Planet 'c' receives 30% more energy from its star than Venus
from the Sun, with an increased radiative forcing caused by the spectral energy
distribution of Gl 581. Its habitability cannot however be positively ruled out
by theoretical models due to uncertainties affecting cloud properties.
Irradiation conditions of planet 'd' are comparable with those of early Mars.
Thanks to the warming effect of CO2-ice clouds planet 'd' might be a better
candidate for the first exoplanet known to be potentially habitable. A mixture
of various greenhouse gases could also maintain habitable conditions on this
planet.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics (2007) accepted for publicatio
An approach to anomalous diffusion in the n-dimensional space generated by a self-similar Laplacian
We analyze a quasi-continuous linear chain with self-similar distribution of
harmonic interparticle springs as recently introduced for one dimension
(Michelitsch et al., Phys. Rev. E 80, 011135 (2009)). We define a continuum
limit for one dimension and generalize it to dimensions of the
physical space. Application of Hamilton's (variational) principle defines then
a self-similar and as consequence non-local Laplacian operator for the
-dimensional space where we proof its ellipticity and its accordance (up to
a strictly positive prefactor) with the fractional Laplacian
. By employing this Laplacian we establish a
Fokker Planck diffusion equation: We show that this Laplacian generates
spatially isotropic L\'evi stable distributions which correspond to L\'evi
flights in -dimensions. In the limit of large scaled times the obtained distributions exhibit an algebraic decay independent from the initial distribution
and spacepoint. This universal scaling depends only on the ratio of
the dimension of the physical space and the L\'evi parameter .Comment: Submitted manuscrip
International Human Capital Formation, Brain Drain and Brain Gain: A conceptual Framework
A two-country, two-period model of international migration highlights microeconomic foundations for examining the interrelation between brain drain, brain gain and the location of human capital formation, at home or abroad. Ex ante choices regarding where to study depend on relative qualities of university systems, individuals' abilities, sunk educational investment costs, government grants, and expected employment prospects in both countries. The analysis underscores an inherently widerange of conceivable positive or negative effects on domestic net welfare. These changes depend critically on the foregoing factors, as well as the optimal design of educational grant schemes, given eventual informational imperfections regarding individuals' capabilities
Superconducting instability in the Holstein-Hubbard model: A numerical renormalization group study
We have studied the d-wave pairing-instability in the two-dimensional
Holstein-Hubbard model at the level of a full fluctuation exchange
approximation which treats both Coulomb and electron-phonon (EP) interaction
diagrammatically on an equal footing. A generalized numerical renormalization
group technique has been developed to solve the resulting self-consistent field
equations. The -wave superconducting phase diagram shows an optimal T_c at
electron concentration ~ 0.9 for the purely electronic Hubbard system. The
EP interaction suppresses the d-wave T_c which drops to zero when the
phonon-mediated on-site attraction becomes comparable to the on-site
Coulomb repulsion . The isotope exponent is negative in this model
and small compared to the classical BCS value or compared
to typical observed values in non-optimally doped cuprate superconductors.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX + 3 PS figures include
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