19,721 research outputs found
R&D and Technology Transfer: Firm-Level Evidence from Chinese Industry
The capacity of developing economies to narrow the gap in living standards with the OECD nations depends critically on their ability to imitate and innovate new technologies. Toward this end, developing economies have access to three avenues of technological advance: technology transfer, domestic R&D, and foreign direct investment. This paper examines the contributions of each of these avenues, as well as their interactions, to productivity and knowledge production within Chinese industry. Based on a large data set for China’s large and medium-size enterprises, the estimation results show that technology transfer – whether domestic or foreign – affects productivity only through its interactions with in-house R&D. Foreign direct investment does not appear to facilitate the adoption of market-mediated foreign technology transfer. Firms wishing to produce patentable knowledge do not benefit from technology transfer; patentable knowledge is created exclusively through in-house R&D operations.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/39968/3/wp582.pd
Itinerant ferromagnetism in 1D two-component Fermi gases
We study a one-dimensional two-component atomic Fermi gas with an infinite
intercomponent contact repulsion. It is found that adding an attractive
resonant odd-wave interaction breaking the rotational symmetry one can make the
ground state ferromagnetic. A promising system for the observation of this
itinerant ferromagnetic state is a 1D gas of K atoms, where 3D -wave
and -wave Feshbach resonances are very close to each other and the 1D
confinement significantly reduces the inelastic decay.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, with 6 pages supplemental materia
Universal Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid phases in one-dimensional strongly attractive SU(N) fermionic cold atoms
A simple set of algebraic equations is derived for the exact low-temperature
thermodynamics of one-dimensional multi-component strongly attractive fermionic
atoms with enlarged SU(N) spin symmetry and Zeeman splitting. Universal
multi-component Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) phases are thus determined. For
linear Zeeman splitting, the physics of the gapless phase at low temperatures
belongs to the universality class of a two-component asymmetric TLL
corresponding to spin-neutral N-atom composites and spin-(N-1)/2 single atoms.
The equation of states is also obtained to open up the study of multi-component
TLL phases in 1D systems of N-component Fermi gases with population imbalance.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Spatiotemporal Calibration of Atmospheric Nitrogen Dioxide Concentration Estimates From an Air Quality Model for Connecticut
A spatiotemporal calibration and resolution refinement model was fitted to
calibrate nitrogen dioxide (NO) concentration estimates from the Community
Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model, using two sources of observed data on
NO that differed in their spatial and temporal resolutions. To refine the
spatial resolution of the CMAQ model estimates, we leveraged information using
additional local covariates including total traffic volume within 2 km,
population density, elevation, and land use characteristics. Predictions from
this model greatly improved the bias in the CMAQ estimates, as observed by the
much lower mean squared error (MSE) at the NO monitor sites. The final
model was used to predict the daily concentration of ambient NO over the
entire state of Connecticut on a grid with pixels of size 300 x 300 m. A
comparison of the prediction map with a similar map for the CMAQ estimates
showed marked improvement in the spatial resolution. The effect of local
covariates was evident in the finer spatial resolution map, where the
contribution of traffic on major highways to ambient NO concentration
stands out. An animation was also provided to show the change in the
concentration of ambient NO over space and time for 1994 and 1995.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, supplementary materia
Stacked-ring electrostatic ion guide
In 1969 Bahr, Gerlich, and Teloy introduced an rf device that consisted of a stack of ring electrodes, with charge sign alternation between neighboring rings, to store or transport ions. Here we propose to operate such a device with electrostatic potentials rather than rf potentials: ions that move axially along the center of the guide are thereby subjected to an oscillating electrical potential similar to the sinusoidal rf potential in familiar rf-only multipole ion guides. The oscillating potential of the stacked-ring static ion guide focuses ions by exerting a field gradient force on the ions so as to push ions toward the central axis where the field is weakest. The stacked-ring ion guide produces an effectively static “pseudopotential” that is much steeper at the edge (potential varies as er) compared to a quadrupole or octupole guide (for which the potential varies as r2 or r6, where r is radial position) and that is much flatter near the center of the guide (for potentially higher ion flux). Advantages of the new ion guide include static rather than rf potential, low electrical noise, a large field-free region near the central axis of the guide, and simple mechanical construction. A disadvantage of the stacked-ring ion guide is that high ion axial kinetic energy is required; ions with axial kinetic energy that is too low may be trapped in the shallow pseudopotential well between adjacent ring electrodes
The Heine-Stieltjes correspondence and the polynomial approach to the standard pairing problem
A new approach for solving the Bethe ansatz (Gaudin-Richardson) equations of
the standard pairing problem is established based on the Heine-Stieltjes
correspondence. For pairs of valence nucleons on different
single-particle levels, it is found that solutions of the Bethe ansatz
equations can be obtained from one (k+1)x(k+1) and one (n-1)x(k+1) matrices,
which are associated with the extended Heine-Stieltjes and Van Vleck
polynomials, respectively. Since the coefficients in these polynomials are free
from divergence with variations in contrast to the original Bethe ansatz
equations, the approach thus provides with a new efficient and systematic way
to solve the problem, which, by extension, can also be used to solve a large
class of Gaudin-type quantum many-body problems and to establish a new
efficient angular momentum projection method for multi-particle systems.Comment: ReVTeX, 4 pages, no figur
Wilson ratio of Fermi gases in one dimension
We calculate the Wilson ratio of the one-dimensional Fermi gas with spin
imbalance. The Wilson ratio of attractively interacting fermions is solely
determined by the density stiffness and sound velocity of pairs and of excess
fermions for the two-component Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) phase. The ratio
exhibits anomalous enhancement at the two critical points due to the sudden
change in the density of states. Despite a breakdown of the quasiparticle
description in one dimension, two important features of the Fermi liquid are
retained, namely the specific heat is linearly proportional to temperature
whereas the susceptibility is independent of temperature. In contrast to the
phenomenological TLL parameter, the Wilson ratio provides a powerful parameter
for testing universal quantum liquids of interacting fermions in one, two and
three dimensions.Comment: 5+2 pages, 4+1 figures, Eq. (4) is proved, figures were refine
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