7,005 research outputs found
Monetary policy and country risk
This article develops an econometric model in order to study country risk behavior forsix emerging economies (Argentina, Mexico, Russia, Thailand, Korea and Indonesia),by expanding the Country Beta Risk Model of Harvey and Zhou (1993), Erb et. al.(1996a, 1996b) and Gangemi et. al. (2000). Toward this end, we have analyzed theimpact of macroeconomic variables, especially monetary policy, upon country risk,by way of a time varying parameter approach. The results indicate an inefficient andunstable effect of monetary policy upon country risk in periods of crisis. However, thiseffect is stable in other periods, and the Favero-Giavazzi effect is not verified for alleconomies, with an opposite effect being observed in many cases.
Algebraic fidelity decay for local perturbations
From a reflection measurement in a rectangular microwave billiard with
randomly distributed scatterers the scattering and the ordinary fidelity was
studied. The position of one of the scatterers is the perturbation parameter.
Such perturbations can be considered as {\em local} since wave functions are
influenced only locally, in contrast to, e. g., the situation where the
fidelity decay is caused by the shift of one billiard wall. Using the
random-plane-wave conjecture, an analytic expression for the fidelity decay due
to the shift of one scatterer has been obtained, yielding an algebraic
decay for long times. A perfect agreement between experiment and theory has
been found, including a predicted scaling behavior concerning the dependence of
the fidelity decay on the shift distance. The only free parameter has been
determined independently from the variance of the level velocities.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Pattern selection in growing tubular tissues
International audienceTubular organs display a wide variety of surface morphologies including circumferential and longitudinal folds, square and hexagonal undulations, and finger-type protrusions. Surface morphology is closely correlated to tissue function and serves as a clinical indicator for physiological and pathological conditions, but the regulators of surface morphology remain poorly understood. Here, we explore the role of geometry and elasticity on the formation of surface patterns. We establish morphological phase diagrams for patterns selection and show that increasing the thickness or stiffness ratio between the outer and inner tubular layers induces a gradual transition from circumferential to longitudinal folding. Our results suggest that physical forces act as regulators during organogenesis and give rise to the characteristic circular folds in the esophagus, the longitudinal folds in the valves of Kerckring, the surface networks in villi, and the crypts in the large intestine
Measurement of the Higgs Boson Mass with a Linear e+e- Collider
The potential of a linear e+e- collider operated at a centre-of-mass energy
of 350 GeV is studied for the measurement of the Higgs boson mass. An
integrated luminosity of 500 fb-1 is assumed. For Higgs boson masses of 120,
150 and 180 GeV the uncertainty on the Higgs boson mass measurement is
estimated to be 40, 65 and 70 MeV, respectively. The effects of beam related
systematics, namely a bias in the beam energy measurement, the beam energy
spread and the luminosity spectrum due to beamstrahlung, on the precision of
the Higgs boson mass measurement are investigated. In order to keep the
systematic uncertainty on the Higgs boson mass well below the level of the
statistical error, the beam energy measurement must be controlled with a
relative precision better than 10-4.Comment: 19 pages, 10 Figure
Engineering soil organic matter quality: Biodiesel Co-Product (BCP) stimulates exudation of nitrogenous microbial biopolymers
Biodiesel Co-Product (BCP) is a complex organic material formed during the transesterification of lipids. We investigated the effect of BCP on the extracellular microbial matrix or ‘extracellular polymeric substance’ (EPS) in soil which is suspected to be a highly influential fraction of soil organic matter (SOM). It was hypothesised that more N would be transferred to EPS in soil given BCP compared to soil given glycerol. An arable soil was amended with BCP produced from either 1) waste vegetable oils or 2) pure oilseed rape oil, and compared with soil amended with 99% pure glycerol; all were provided with 15N labelled KNO3. We compared transfer of microbially assimilated 15N into the extracellular amino acid pool, and measured concomitant production of exopolysaccharide. Following incubation, the 15N enrichment of total hydrolysable amino acids (THAAs) indicated that intracellular anabolic products had incorporated the labelled N primarily as glutamine and glutamate. A greater proportion of the amino acids in EPS were found to contain 15N than those in the THAA pool, indicating that the increase in EPS was comprised of bioproducts synthesised de novo. Moreover, BCP had increased the EPS production efficiency of the soil microbial community (μg EPS per unit ATP) up to approximately double that of glycerol, and caused transfer of 21% more 15N from soil solution into EPS-amino acids. Given the suspected value of EPS in agricultural soils, the use of BCP to stimulate exudation is an interesting tool to consider in the theme of delivering sustainable intensification
Distribution of the S-matrix in chaotic microwave cavities with direct processes and absorption
We quantify the presence of direct processes in the S-matrix of chaotic
microwave cavities with absorption in the one-channel case. To this end the
full distribution P_S(S) of the S-matrix, i.e. S=\sqrt{R}e^{i\theta}, is
studied in cavities with time-reversal symmetry for different antenna coupling
strengths T_a or direct processes. The experimental results are compared with
random-matrix calculations and with numerical simulations based on the
Heidelberg approach including absorption. The theoretical result is a
generalization of the Poisson kernel. The experimental and the numerical
distributions are in excellent agreement with random-matrix predictions for all
cases.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Scanning Fourier Spectroscopy: A microwave analog study to image transmission paths in quantum dots
We use a microwave cavity to investigate the influence of a movable absorbing
center on the wave function of an open quantum dot. Our study shows that the
absorber acts as a position-selective probe, which may be used to suppress
those wave function states that exhibit an enhancement of their probability
density near the region where the impurity is located. For an experimental
probe of this wave function selection, we develop a technique that we refer to
as scanning Fourier spectroscopy, which allows us to identify, and map out, the
structure of the classical trajectories that are important for transmission
through the cavity.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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