20,799 research outputs found
A Quantitative Analysis of Pricing Behavior In California’s Wholesale Electricity Market During Summer 2000
During the Summer of 2000, wholesale electricity prices in California were nearly 500% higher than they were during the same months in 1998 or 1999. This price explosion was unexpected and has called into question whether electricity restructuring will bring the benefits of competition promised to consumers. The purpose of this paper is to examine the factors that explain this increase in wholesale electricity prices. We simulate competitive benchmark prices for Summer of 2000 taking account of all relevant supply and demand factors --- gas prices, demand, imports from other states, and emission permit prices. We then compare the simulated competitive benchmark prices with the actual prices observed. We find that there is a large gap between our benchmark competitive prices and observed prices, suggesting that the prices observed during summer 2000 reflect, in part, the exercise of market power by suppliers. We then proceed to examine supplier behavior during high-price hours. We find evidence that suppliers withheld supply from the market that would have been profitable for price-taking firms to sell at the market price.electricity, market power, deregulation
Long and short arc altitude determination for GEOS-C
The accuracy with which the GEOS-C altitude may be estimated over long (7 day) and short (40 minute) orbital arcs is investigated. Over the long are excellent agreement was attained between a simulation of the orbit determination process and a covariance analysis. Both approaches yielded RMS altitude errors of about 1.5 meters over the Caribbean calibration area and approximately 7.5 meters overall. The geopotential was identified as the largest error source. For the short arc, the covariance analysis revealed that the propagated altitude error is linearly dependent upon station survey component errors which are also the largest source of altitude errors. An Appendix contains the mathematics of covariance analysis as applied to orbit determination
Strategies for estimating the marine geoid from altimeter data
In processing altimeter data from a spacecraft borne altimeter to estimate the fine structure of the marine geoid, a problem is encountered. In order to describe the geoid fine structure, a large number of parameters must be employed and it is not possible to simultaneously estimate all of them. Unless the parameterization exhibits good orthogonality in the data, serious aliasing results. From simulation studies it has been found that amongst several competing parameterizations, the mean free air gravity anomaly model (i.e., Stokes' formula) exhibited promising geoid recovery characteristics. Using covariance analysis techniques, this report provides quantitative measures of the orthogonality properties associated with the above mentioned parameterization. It has been determined that a 5 deg x 5 deg area mean free air gravity anomaly can be estimated with an uncertainty of 1 mgal (40 cm undulation) provided that all free air gravity anomalies within a spherical radius of 10 arc degrees are simultaneously estimated
Strategies for estimating the marine geoid from altimeter data
Altimeter data from a spacecraft borne altimeter was processed to estimate the fine structure of the marine geoid. Simulation studies show that, among several competing parameterizations, the mean free air gravity anomaly model exhibited promising geoid recovery characteristics. Using covariance analysis techniques, quantitative measures of the orthogonality properties are investigated
Light Weakly Coupled Axial Forces: Models, Constraints, and Projections
We investigate the landscape of constraints on MeV-GeV scale, hidden U(1)
forces with nonzero axial-vector couplings to Standard Model fermions. While
the purely vector-coupled dark photon, which may arise from kinetic mixing, is
a well-motivated scenario, several MeV-scale anomalies motivate a theory with
axial couplings which can be UV-completed consistent with Standard Model gauge
invariance. Moreover, existing constraints on dark photons depend on products
of various combinations of axial and vector couplings, making it difficult to
isolate the effects of axial couplings for particular flavors of SM fermions.
We present a representative renormalizable, UV-complete model of a dark photon
with adjustable axial and vector couplings, discuss its general features, and
show how some UV constraints may be relaxed in a model with nonrenormalizable
Yukawa couplings at the expense of fine-tuning. We survey the existing
parameter space and the projected reach of planned experiments, briefly
commenting on the relevance of the allowed parameter space to low-energy
anomalies in pi^0 and 8-Be* decay.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. v2: format changed to JHEP, typos
fixed, references adde
Bounds on minors of binary matrices
We prove an upper bound on sums of squares of minors of {+1, -1} matrices.
The bound is sharp for Hadamard matrices, a result due to de Launey and Levin
(2009), but our proof is simpler. We give several corollaries relevant to
minors of Hadamard matrices, and generalise a result of Turan on determinants
of random {+1,-1} matrices.Comment: 9 pages, 1 table. Typo corrected in v2. Two references and Theorem 2
added in v
Dipole formation at metal/PTCDA interfaces: Role of the Charge Neutrality Level
The formation of a metal/PTCDA (3, 4, 9, 10-perylenetetracarboxylic
dianhydride) interface barrier is analyzed using weak-chemisorption theory. The
electronic structure of the uncoupled PTCDA molecule and of the metal surface
is calculated. Then, the induced density of interface states is obtained as a
function of these two electronic structures and the interaction between both
systems. This induced density of states is found to be large enough (even if
the metal/PTCDA interaction is weak) for the definition of a Charge Neutrality
Level for PTCDA, located 2.45 eV above the highest occupied molecular orbital.
We conclude that the metal/PTCDA interface molecular level alignment is due to
the electrostatic dipole created by the charge transfer between the two solids.Comment: 6 page
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