5,815 research outputs found
Minimum Wages and Employment
This paper investigates the effect of minimum wages on employment using a panel of US state-based data. We estimate a minimalist dynamic version of the specification implied by neo-classical theory. We find statistically and economically significant effects of minimum wages on youth employment. Unlike many other studies we find also significant effects on aggregate state employment. These results re-establish the conventional wisdom as existing before the work of Card-Krueger-Katz. The paper meets the methodological criticisms of this sort of panel study made by CKK. An important econometric innovation in this paper is to produce estimates allowing for cross-sectional correlation, which offers unbiased inference and potential efficiency gains.minimum wage; panel data; cross-sectional correlation; factor analysis
Ledoux-Convection in Protoneutron Stars --- a Clue to Supernova Nucleosynthesis?
Two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of the deleptonization of a newly
formed neutron star were performed. Driven by negative lepton fraction and
entropy gradients, convection starts near the neutrinosphere about 20-30 ms
after core bounce, but moves deeper into the protoneutron star, and after about
one second the whole protoneutron star is convective. The deleptonization of
the star proceeds much faster than in the corresponding spherically symmetrical
model because the lepton flux and the neutrino luminosities increase by up to a
factor of two. The convection below the neutrinosphere raises the
neutrinospheric temperatures and mean energies of the emitted neutrinos by
10-20%. This can have important implications for the supernova explosion
mechanism and changes the detectable neutrino signal from the Kelvin-Helmholtz
cooling of the protoneutron star. In particular, the enhanced electron neutrino
flux relative to the electron antineutrino flux during the early post-bounce
evolution might solve the overproduction problem of certain elements in the
neutrino-heated ejecta in models of type-II supernova explosions.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, 8 postscript figures, uses epsf.sty. To appear in
ApJ 473 (Letters), 1996 December 1
Role of isospin physics in supernova matter and neutron stars
We investigate the liquid-gas phase transition of hot protoneutron stars
shortly after their birth following supernova explosion and the composition and
structure of hyperon-rich (proto)neutron stars within a relativistic mean-field
model where the nuclear symmetry energy has been constrained from the measured
neutron skin thickness of finite nuclei. Light clusters are abundantly formed
with increasing temperature well inside the neutrino-sphere for an uniform
supernova matter. Liquid-gas phase transition is found to suppress the cluster
yield within the coexistence phase as well as decrease considerably the
neutron-proton asymmetry over a wide density range. We find symmetry energy has
a modest effect on the boundaries and the critical temperature for the
liquid-gas phase transition, and the composition depends more sensitively on
the number of trapped neutrinos and temperature of the protoneutron star. The
influence of hyperons in the dense interior of stars makes the overall equation
of state soft. However, neutrino trapping distinctly delays the appearance of
hyperons due to abundance of electrons. We also find that a softer symmetry
energy further makes the onset of hyperon less favorable. The resulting
structures of the (proto)neutron stars with hyperons and with liquid-gas phase
transition are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, RevTe
Dynamics and neutrino signal of black hole formation in non-rotating failed supernovae. II. progenitor dependence
We study the progenitor dependence of the black hole formation and its
associated neutrino signals from the gravitational collapse of non-rotating
massive stars, following the preceding study on the single progenitor model in
Sumiyoshi et al. (2007). We aim to clarify whether the dynamical evolution
toward the black hole formation occurs in the same manner for different
progenitors and to examine whether the characteristic of neutrino bursts is
general having the short duration and the rapidly increasing average energies.
We perform the numerical simulations by general relativistic neutrino-radiation
hydrodynamics to follow the dynamical evolution from the collapse of
pre-supernova models of 40Msun and 50Msun toward the black hole formation via
contracting proto-neutron stars. For the three progenitor models studied in
this paper, we found that the black hole formation occurs in ~0.4-1.5 s after
core bounce through the increase of proto-neutron star mass together with the
short and energetic neutrino burst. We found that density profile of progenitor
is important to determine the accretion rate onto the proto-neutron star and,
therefore, the duration of neutrino burst. We compare the neutrino bursts of
black hole forming events from different progenitors and discuss whether we can
probe clearly the progenitor and/or the dense matter.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamics and neutrino signal of black hole formation in non-rotating failed supernovae. I. EOS dependence
We study the black hole formation and the neutrino signal from the
gravitational collapse of a non-rotating massive star of 40 Msun. Adopting two
different sets of realistic equation of state (EOS) of dense matter, we perform
the numerical simulations of general relativistic neutrino-radiation
hydrodynamics under the spherical symmetry. We make comparisons of the core
bounce, the shock propagation, the evolution of nascent proto-neutron star and
the resulting re-collapse to black hole to reveal the influence of EOS. We also
explore the influence of EOS on the neutrino emission during the evolution
toward the black hole formation. We find that the speed of contraction of the
nascent proto-neutron star, whose mass increases fast due to the intense
accretion, is different depending on the EOS and the resulting profiles of
density and temperature differ significantly. The black hole formation occurs
at 0.6-1.3 sec after bounce when the proto-neutron star exceeds its maximum
mass, which is crucially determined by the EOS. We find that the average
energies of neutrinos increase after bounce because of rapid temperature
increase, but at different speeds depending on the EOS. The duration of
neutrino emission up to the black hole formation is found different according
to the different timing of re-collapse. These characteristics of neutrino
signatures are distinguishable from those for ordinary proto-neutron stars in
successful core-collapse supernovae. We discuss that a future detection of
neutrinos from black-hole-forming collapse will contribute to reveal the black
hole formation and to constrain the EOS at high density and temperature.Comment: 32 pages, 33 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Women, the Recession, and the Impending Economic Recovery
Would female investment bankers, mortgage lenders, and chief executive officers have taken the same risks given the same expected returns? Maybe not. The purpose of this article is to explore the impact of the U.S. recession on women and to help readers gain useful knowledge about women’s role in the economy
73-Cents? This doesn’t feel like progress
Faculty Opinion article in the Hamline Magazine, a publication of Hamline University
Capital Mobility for Developing Countries May Not Be So High
International capital flows to developing countries have taken on considerable policy importance in recent years. There is disagreement, however, about whether financial capital mobility has become so high that developing countries have little ability to sterilize capital flows. This paper reviews several popular methods of estimating the degree of capital mobility for developing countries and shows that they are subject to potentially important upward biases due to inappropriate assumptions concerning the roles of domestic inflation and sterilization. Corrections for these factors can cut estimates of capital mobility by one half or more.sterilization; capital mobility; developing countries
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