11,887 research outputs found
On the (De)Stabilizing Effect of Public Debt in a Ramsey Model with Heterogeneous Agents
We introduce public debt in a Ramsey model with heterogenous agents and a public spending externality affecting utility which is financed by income tax and public debt. We show that public debt considered as a fixed portion of GDP can have a stabilizing or destabilizing effect depending on some fundamental elasticities. When the public spending externality is weak and the elasticity of capital labor substitution is low enough, public debt can only be destabilizing, generating damped or persistent macroeconomic fluctuations. Whereas when the public spending externality and the elasticity of capital labor substitution are strong enough, public debt can be stabilizing, driving to monotone convergence an economy experiencing damped or persistent fluctuations without debt
Screening of the quantum-confined Stark effect in AlN/GaN nanowire superlattices by Germanium doping
We report on electrostatic screening of polarization-induced internal
electric fields in AlN/GaN nanowire heterostructures with Germanium-doped GaN
nanodiscs embedded between AlN barriers. The incorporation of Germanium at
concentrations above shifts the photoluminescence
emission energy of GaN nanodiscs to higher energies accompanied by a decrease
of the photoluminescence decay time. At the same time, the thickness-dependent
shift in emission energy is significantly reduced. In spite of the high donor
concentration a degradation of the photoluminescence properties is not
observed.Comment: Manuscript including Supplemental material (15 pages, 5 figures
Detection of thermal X-ray emission in the halo of the plerionic supernova remnant G21.5-0.9
The detection of a soft thermal X-ray component in the spectrum of a bright
knot in the halo of the plerion G21.5-0.9 is reported. Using a collisional
ionization equilibrium model for an hot optically thin plasma, a temperature
kev, a mass of 0.3--1.0 M and a density of 1.6-6
cm is derived. The spectral analysis suggests a possible overabundance
of Silicon with respect to the solar value in the knot; if this will be
confirmed this object may be a clump of shocked ejecta.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Adv.Sp.Res. in press, proc of COSPAR Session E1.4
"Young Neutron Stars and Supernova Remnants",
http://www.astropa.unipa.it/Library/OAPA_preprints/ns.ps.g
Suzaku X-ray Spectra and Pulse Profile Variations during the Superorbital Cycle of LMC X-4
We present results from spectral and temporal analyses of Suzaku and RXTE
observations of the high mass X-ray binary LMC X-4. Using the full 13 years of
available RXTE/ASM data, we apply the ANOVA and Lomb normalized Periodogram
methods to obtain an improved superorbital period measurement of 30.32 +/- 0.04
days. The phase-averaged X-ray spectra from Suzaku observations during the high
state of the superorbital period can be modeled in the 0.6--50 keV band as the
combination of a power-law with Gamma ~ 0.6 and a high-energy cutoff at ~ 25
keV, a blackbody with kT_BB ~ 0.18 keV, and emission lines from Fe K_alpha, O
VIII, and Ne IX (X Lyalpha). Assuming a distance of 50 kpc, The source has
luminosity L_X ~ 3 x 10^38 ergs s^-1 in the 2--50 keV band, and the luminosity
of the soft (blackbody) component is L_BB ~ 1.5 x 10^37 ergs s^-1. The energy
resolved pulse profiles show single-peaked soft (0.5-1 keV) and hard (6-10 keV)
pulses but a more complex pattern of medium (2-10 keV) pulses;
cross-correlation of the hard with the soft pulses shows a phase shift that
varies between observations. We interpret these results in terms of a picture
in which a precessing disk reprocesses the hard X-rays and produces the
observed soft spectral component, as has been suggested for the similar sources
Her X-1 and SMC X-1.Comment: 13 emulateapj pages, 11 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication
in Ap
The Shifting Origins of International Law
Both state-centrism and Euro-centrism are under challenge in international law today and this double challenge, this work argues, is being fruitfully mirrored back into the study of the history of international law. It examines, in the first section, the effects of the rise of positivism as a method of norm-identification and the role of methodological nationalism over the study of the history of international law in the modern foundational period of international law. This is extended by an examination of how this bequeathed a double exclusionary bias regarding time and space to the study of the history of international law as well as a reiterative focus on a series of canonical events and authors to the exclusion of others such as those related to the Islamic history of international law. In the second section, the analysis turns to address why this state of historiographical affairs is changing, specifically highlighting intra-disciplinary developments within the field of the history of international law and the effects that the “international turn in the writing of history” is having on the writing of a new history of international law for a global age. The conclusion reflects on some of the tasks ahead by providing a series of historiographical signposts for the history of international law as a field of new research
Derivation of the Planck Spectrum for Relativistic Classical Scalar Radiation from Thermal Equilibrium in an Accelerating Frame
The Planck spectrum of thermal scalar radiation is derived suggestively
within classical physics by the use of an accelerating coordinate frame. The
derivation has an analogue in Boltzmann's derivation of the Maxwell velocity
distribution for thermal particle velocities by considering the thermal
equilibrium of noninteracting particles in a uniform gravitational field. For
the case of radiation, the gravitational field is provided by the acceleration
of a Rindler frame through Minkowski spacetime. Classical zero-point radiation
and relativistic physics enter in an essential way in the derivation which is
based upon the behavior of free radiation fields and the assumption that the
field correlation functions contain but a single correlation time in thermal
equilibrium. The work has connections with the thermal effects of acceleration
found in relativistic quantum field theory.Comment: 23 page
A QSO survey via optical variability and zero proper motion in the M92 field. IV. More QSOs due to improved photometry
We continue the QSO search in the 10 square degrees Schmidt field around M92
based on variability and proper motion (VPM) constraints. We have re-reduced
162 digitised B plates with a time-baseline of more than three decades and have
considerably improved both the photometric accuracy and the star-galaxy
separation at B>19. QSO candidates are selected and marked with one out of
three degrees of priority based on the statistical significance of their
measured variability and zero proper motion. Spectroscopic follow-up
observations of 84 new candidates with B>19 revealed an additional 37 QSOs and
7 Seyfert1s. In particular, all 92 high-priority candidates are
spectroscopically classified now; among them are 70 QSOs and 9 Seyfert1s
(success rate 86%). We expect that 87% (55%) of all QSOs with B<19.0 (19.8) are
contained in this high-priority subsample. For the combined sample of
high-priority and medium-priority objects, a completeness of 89% is estimated
up to B_lim=19.5. The sample of all AGNs detected in the framework of the VPM
search in the M92 field contains now 95 QSOs and 14 Seyfert1s with B<19.9.
Although the VPM QSOs were selected by completely different criteria, their
properties do not significantly differ from those of QSOs found by more
traditional optical survey techniques. In particular, the spectra and the
optical broad band colours do not provide any hints on a substantial population
of red QSOs up to the present survey limit.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
The nature of the X-ray halo of the plerion G21.5-0.9 unveiled by XMM-Newton and Chandra
The nature of the radio-quiet X-ray halo around the plerionic SNR G21.5-0.9
is under debate. On the basis of spatial and spectral analysis of a large
Chandra and XMM-Newton dataset of this source, we have developed a
self-consistent scenario which explains all the observational features. We
found that the halo is composed by diffuse extended emission due to dust
scattering of X-rays from the plerion, by a bright limb which traces particle
acceleration in the fast forward shock of the remnant, and by a bright spot
(the ``North Spur'') which may be a knot of ejecta in adiabatic expansion. By
applying a model of interaction between the PWN, the SNR and supernova
environment, we argue that G21.5-0.9 progenitor may be of Type IIP or Ib/Ic,
and that the remnant may be young (200-1000 yr).Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted by A&A, also avalaible at
http://www.astropa.unipa.it/Library/OAPA_preprints/fb2870.ps.g
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