35,412 research outputs found
Three Dimensional Gauge Theory with Topological and Non-topological Mass: Hamiltonian and Lagrangian Analysis
Three dimensional (abelian) gauged massive Thirring model is bosonized in the
large fermion mass limit. A further integration of the gauge field results in a
non-local theory. A truncated version of that is the Maxwell Chern Simons (MCS)
theory with a conventional mass term or MCS Proca theory. This gauge invariant
theory is completely solved in the Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formalism, with
the spectra of the modes determined. Since the vector field constituting the
model is identified (via bosonization) to the fermion current, the charge
current algebra, including the Schwinger term is also computed in the MCS Proca
model.Comment: Eight pages, Latex, No figures
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Corruption in public finances, and the effects on inflation, taxation, and growth
In this paper, we study the effects of bureaucratic corruption on inflation, taxation, and growth. Here corruption takes three forms: (i) it reduces the tax revenues that are raised from households, (ii) it inflates the volume of government spending, and (iii) it reduces the productivity of ‘effective’ government expenditure. Our policy experiments reveal that the effect of (i) is to increase both seigniorage and the income tax rate, and to decrease the steady-state growth rate. The effect of (ii) is to increase seigniorage, which leads to lower growth, although the effect on the income tax rate is ambiguous. The effect of (iii) is to increase seigniorage and decrease the income tax rate. The former yields a lower growth rate, while the latter has an ambiguous effect on growth. These findings,
from our unified framework involving corruption in public finances, could rationalise the apparently conflicting evidence on the impact of corruption on economic growth provided in the literature, highlighting the presence of conditional corruption effects
Fast Separable Non-Local Means
We propose a simple and fast algorithm called PatchLift for computing
distances between patches (contiguous block of samples) extracted from a given
one-dimensional signal. PatchLift is based on the observation that the patch
distances can be efficiently computed from a matrix that is derived from the
one-dimensional signal using lifting; importantly, the number of operations
required to compute the patch distances using this approach does not scale with
the patch length. We next demonstrate how PatchLift can be used for patch-based
denoising of images corrupted with Gaussian noise. In particular, we propose a
separable formulation of the classical Non-Local Means (NLM) algorithm that can
be implemented using PatchLift. We demonstrate that the PatchLift-based
implementation of separable NLM is few orders faster than standard NLM, and is
competitive with existing fast implementations of NLM. Moreover, its denoising
performance is shown to be consistently superior to that of NLM and some of its
variants, both in terms of PSNR/SSIM and visual quality
Ground state properties of the bond alternating spin- anisotropic Heisenberg chain
Ground state properties, dispersion relations and scaling behaviour of spin
gap of a bond alternating spin- anisotropic Heisenberg chain have
been studied where the exchange interactions on alternate bonds are
ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AFM) in two separate cases. The
resulting models separately represent nearest neighbour (NN) AFM-AFM and AFM-FM
bond alternating chains. Ground state energy has been estimated analytically by
using both bond operator and Jordan-Wigner representations and numerically by
using exact diagonalization. Dispersion relations, spin gap and several ground
state orders have been obtained. Dimer order and string orders are found to
coexist in the ground state. Spin gap is found to develop as soon as the
non-uniformity in alternating bond strength is introduced in the AFM-AFM chain
which further remains non-zero for the AFM-FM chain. This spin gap along with
the string orders attribute to the Haldane phase. The Haldane phase is found to
exist in most of the anisotropic region similar to the isotropic point.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
The existence and persistence of household financial hardship
We investigate the existence and persistence of financial hardship at the household level using data from the British Household Panel Survey. Our modelling strategy makes three important contributions to the existing literature on household finances. Firstly, we model nine different types of household financial problems within a joint framework, allowing for correlation in the random effects across the nine equations. Secondly, we develop a dynamic framework in order to model the persistence of financial problems over time by extending our multi-equation framework to allow the presence or otherwise of different types of financial problems in the previous time period to influence the probability that the household currently experiences such problems. Our third contribution relates to the possibility that experiencing financial problems may be correlated with sample attrition. We model missing observations in the panel in order to allow for such attrition. Our findings reveal interesting variations in the determinants of experiencing different types of financial problems including demographic and regional differences. Our findings also highlight persistence in experiencing financial problems over time as well as the role that saving on a regular basis in previous time periods can play in mitigating current financial problems
Altitude distributions of and radiations from certain oxygen and nitrogen metastable constituents Scientific report
Altitude distributions of and airglow emissions by certain oxygen and nitrogen metastable constituent
QGP Susceptibilities from PNJL Model
An improved version of the PNJL model is used to calculate various
thermodynamical quantities, {\it viz.}, quark number susceptibility, isospin
susceptibility, specific heat, speed of sound and conformal measure. Comparison
with Lattice data is found to be encouraging.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, poster presented at Quark Matter'0
Neutrino Emissivity of Dense Stars
The neutrino emissivity of compact stars is investigated in this work. We
consider stars consisting of nuclear as well as quark matter for this purpose.
Different models are used to calculate the composition of nuclear and quark
matter and the neutrino emissivity. Depending on the model under consideration,
the neutrino emissivity of nuclear as well as quark matter varies over a wide
range. We find that for nuclear matter, the direct URCA processes are allowed
for most of the relativistic models without and with strange baryons, whereas
for the nonrelativistic models this shows a strong dependence on the type of
nuclear interaction employed. When the direct URCA processes are allowed, the
neutrino emissivity of hadronic matter is larger than that of the quark matter
by several orders of magnitude. We also find that the neutrino emissivity
departs from behavior when the temperature is larger than the difference
in the Fermi momenta of the particles, participating in the neutrino-producing
reactions.Comment: Latex file. 5 figures available on request. accepted in Int. J. Mod.
Phys.
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