696 research outputs found
THE VALUE OF WATER AS AN URBAN CLUB GOOD: A MATCHING APPROACH TO HOA-PROVIDED LAKES
Urban lakes located in arid environments require large quantities of water to maintain their water levels, with much of this water associated with high opportunity costs. Many of these lakes are manmade and provide various amenities to surrounding residents. In this paper we use matching techniques to recover the average capitalized value of lakes to surrounding communities and differentiate between community members and adjacent households to recover heterogeneous treatment effects. Importantly, we consider the role of both unobservable and observable features of matching to recover heterogeneous capitalization across lake communities. Our results suggest that the capitalized value of lakes to community residents is highly heterogeneous and ranges from an annual value of -20 per homeowner per acre foot of water. These results suggest that small changes in water pricing could remove the surplus benefits of lakes to community residents.Matching, Treatment effects, Urban lakes, Capitalization, Environmental Economics and Policy, Political Economy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Coherent hard x-rays from attosecond pulse train-assisted harmonic generation
High-order harmonic generation from atomic systems is considered in the
crossed fields of a relativistically strong infrared laser and a weak
attosecond-pulse train of soft x-rays. Due to one-photon ionization by the
x-ray pulse, the ionized electron obtains a starting momentum that compensates
the relativistic drift which is induced by the laser magnetic field, and allows
the electron to efficiently emit harmonic radiation upon recombination with the
atomic core in the relativistic regime. In this way, short pulses of coherent
hard x-rays of up to 40 keV energy and 10 as duration can be brought about
Phase-matched coherent hard x-rays from relativistic high-order harmonic generation
High-order harmonic generation (HHG) with relativistically strong laser
pulses is considered employing electron ionization-recollisions from multiply
charged ions in counterpropagating, linearly polarized attosecond pulse trains.
The propagation of the harmonics through the medium and the scaling of HHG into
the multi-kilo-electronvolt regime are investigated. We show that the phase
mismatch caused by the free electron background can be compensated by an
additional phase of the emitted harmonics specific to the considered setup
which depends on the delay time between the pulse trains. This renders feasible
the phase-matched emission of harmonics with photon energies of several tens of
kilo-electronvolt from an underdense plasma
Is There Evidence that Legislative Ambition Matches Development? Evaluating the Factors Influencing Wind Energy Development
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Under-the-barrier dynamics in laser-induced relativistic tunneling
The tunneling dynamics in relativistic strong-field ionization is
investigated with the aim to develop an intuitive picture for the relativistic
tunneling regime. We demonstrate that the tunneling picture applies also in the
relativistic regime by introducing position dependent energy levels. The
quantum dynamics in the classically forbidden region features two time scales,
the typical time that characterizes the probability density's decay of the
ionizing electron under the barrier (Keldysh time) and the time interval which
the electron spends inside the barrier (Eisenbud-Wigner-Smith tunneling time).
In the relativistic regime, an electron momentum shift as well as a spatial
shift along the laser propagation direction arise during the under-the-barrier
motion which are caused by the laser magnetic field induced Lorentz force. The
momentum shift is proportional to the Keldysh time, while the wave-packet's
spatial drift is proportional to the Eisenbud-Wigner-Smith time. The signature
of the momentum shift is shown to be present in the ionization spectrum at the
detector and, therefore, observable experimentally. In contrast, the signature
of the Eisenbud-Wigner-Smith time delay disappears at far distances for pure
quasistatic tunneling dynamics
Estimating the Price Elasticity of Demand for Water with Quasi Experimental Methods
There is a growing recognition in both the professional and popular literatures that water scarcity is a key policy issue that is especially important in arid, urban settings with the prospects for shortfalls in water availability due to the effects of climate change. Those evaluating these types of water problems usually conclude prices must be reformed so that incentives facing water users change to reflect this scarcity. Demand functions provide the basic economic relationships required to understand how water use will respond to such changes. This paper proposes a new method for estimating the price elasticity of demand that meets policy needs and can accommodate the presence of increasing block pricing structures.Water Demand Elasticity, Quasi Experiment, Climate Change, Consumer/Household Economics, Demand and Price Analysis, Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Computational relativistic quantum dynamics and its application to relativistic tunneling and Kapitza-Dirac scattering
Computational methods are indispensable to study the quantum dynamics of
relativistic light-matter interactions in parameter regimes where analytical
methods become inapplicable. We present numerical methods for solving the
time-dependent Dirac equation and the time-dependent Klein-Gordon equation and
their implementation on high performance graphics cards. These methods allow us
to study tunneling from hydrogen-like highly charged ions in strong laser
fields and Kapitza-Dirac scattering in the relativistic regime
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