1,804 research outputs found
Development of the Federal Law of Gambling
The Commission on the Review of the National Policy Toward Gambling, believing that the States should have the primary responsibility for determining what forms of gambling may legally take place within their borders, recently suggested that the federal government should prevent interference by one State with the gambling policies of another, and should act to protect identifiable national interests.
Although this broad recommendation reinforces the role the federal government has traditionally played in regulating gambling, the Commission also proposed specific amendments to the cur- rent federal gambling laws. Should Congress act upon the Commission\u27s report or otherwise attempt a comprehensive review of federal gambling policy–such legislation, S. 1437, has already passed the Senate–its members ought to bring to their task a firm grasp of what the federal gambling law is, how that law developed, and what policies underlie it. This Article seeks to shed light on each of these questions
Measuring the Impact of the COVID-19 Lockdown on Crime in a Medium-Sized City in China
Objectives:
The study examines the variation in the daily incidence of eight acquisitive crimes: automobile theft, electromobile theft, motorcycle theft, bicycle theft, theft from automobiles, pickpocketing, residential burglary, and cyber-fraud before the lockdown and the duration of the lockdown for a medium-sized city in China.
Methods:
Regression discontinuity in time (RDiT) models are used to test the effect of the lockdown measures on crime by examining the daily variation of raw counts and rate.
Results:
It is indicated that in contrast to numerous violent crime categories such as domestic violence where findings have repeatedly found increases during the COVID-19 pandemic, acquisitive crimes in this city were reduced during the lockdown period for all categories, while “cyber-fraud” was found more resilient in the sense that its decrease was not as salient as for most other crime types, possibly due to people’s use of the internet during the lockdown period.
Conclusions:
The findings provide further support to opportunity theories of crime that are contingent upon the need for a motivated offender to identify a suitable target in physical space
Scalar and vector Keldysh models in the time domain
The exactly solvable Keldysh model of disordered electron system in a random
scattering field with extremely long correlation length is converted to the
time-dependent model with extremely long relaxation. The dynamical problem is
solved for the ensemble of two-level systems (TLS) with fluctuating well depths
having the discrete Z_2 symmetry. It is shown also that the symmetric TLS with
fluctuating barrier transparency may be described in terms of the planar
Keldysh model with dime-dependent random planar rotations in xy plane having
continuous SO(2) symmetry. The case of simultaneous fluctuations of the well
depth and barrier transparency is subject to non-abelian algebra. Application
of this model to description of dynamic fluctuations in quantum dots and
optical lattices is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figures. Extended version of the paper to be published
in JETP Lett 89 (2009
Finite Size Corrections for the Pairing Hamiltonian
We study the effects of superconducting pairing in small metallic grains. We
show that in the limit of large Thouless conductance one can explicitly
determine the low energy spectrum of the problem as an expansion in the inverse
number of electrons on the grain. The expansion is based on the formal exact
solution of the Richardson model. We use this expansion to calculate finite
size corrections to the ground state energy, Matveev-Larkin parameter, and
excitation energies.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur
Ground state spin and Coulomb blockade peak motion in chaotic quantum dots
We investigate experimentally and theoretically the behavior of Coulomb
blockade (CB) peaks in a magnetic field that couples principally to the
ground-state spin (rather than the orbital moment) of a chaotic quantum dot. In
the first part, we discuss numerically observed features in the magnetic field
dependence of CB peak and spacings that unambiguously identify changes in spin
S of each ground state for successive numbers of electrons on the dot, N. We
next evaluate the probability that the ground state of the dot has a particular
spin S, as a function of the exchange strength, J, and external magnetic field,
B. In the second part, we describe recent experiments on gate-defined GaAs
quantum dots in which Coulomb peak motion and spacing are measured as a
function of in-plane magnetic field, allowing changes in spin between N and N+1
electron ground states to be inferred.Comment: To appear in Proceedings of the Nobel Symposium 2000 (Physica
Scripta
Quantum dots with two electrons: Singlet-triplet transitions
The magnetic character of the ground-state of two electrons on a double
quantum dot, connected in series to left and right single-channel leads, is
considered. By solving exactly for the spectrum of the two interacting
electrons, it is found that the coupling to the continuum of propagating states
on the leads, in conjunction with the electron-electron interactions, may
result in a delocalization of the bound state of the two electrons. This, in
turn, reduces significantly the range of the Coulomb interaction parameters
over which singlet-triplet transitions can be realized. It is also found that
the coupling to the leads favors the singlet ground-state.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A nearly closed ballistic billiard with random boundary transmission
A variety of mesoscopic systems can be represented as a billiard with a
random coupling to the exterior at the boundary. Examples include quantum dots
with multiple leads, quantum corrals with different kinds of atoms forming the
boundary, and optical cavities with random surface refractive index. The
specific example we study is a circular (integrable) billiard with no internal
impurities weakly coupled to the exterior by a large number of leads with one
channel open in each lead. We construct a supersymmetric nonlinear
-model by averaging over the random coupling strengths between bound
states and channels. The resulting theory can be used to evaluate the
statistical properties of any physically measurable quantity in a billiard. As
an illustration, we present results for the local density of states.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Role of a parallel magnetic field in two dimensional disordered clusters containing a few correlated electrons
An ensemble of 2d disordered clusters with a few electrons is studied as a
function of the Coulomb energy to kinetic energy ratio r_s. Between the Fermi
system (small r_s) and the Wigner molecule (large r_s), an interaction induced
delocalization of the ground state takes place which is suppressed when the
spins are aligned by a parallel magnetic field. Our results confirm the
existence of an intermediate regime where the Wigner antiferromagnetism
defavors the Stoner ferromagnetism and where the enhancement of the Lande g
factor observed in dilute electron systems is reproduced.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Nonequilibrium theory of Coulomb blockade in open quantum dots
We develop a non-equilibrium theory to describe weak Coulomb blockade effects
in open quantum dots. Working within the bosonized description of electrons in
the point contacts, we expose deficiencies in earlier applications of this
method, and address them using a 1/N expansion in the inverse number of
channels. At leading order this yields the self-consistent potential for the
charging interaction. Coulomb blockade effects arise as quantum corrections to
transport at the next order. Our approach unifies the phase functional and
bosonization approaches to the problem, as well as providing a simple picture
for the conductance corrections in terms of renormalization of the dot's
elastic scattering matrix, which is obtained also by elementary perturbation
theory. For the case of ideal contacts, a symmetry argument immediately allows
us to conclude that interactions give no signature in the averaged conductance.
Non-equilibrium applications to the pumped current in a quantum pump are worked
out in detail.Comment: Published versio
- …