28,312 research outputs found
Macroeconomic consequences of global endogenous migration: a general equilibrium analysis
In this paper, we analyze the consequences of endogenous migration flows over the coming decades in a dynamic general equilibrium model of the world economy. Such an approach has two major benefits. First, it offers a global perspective on the economic consequences of international migration flows by taking into account effects on both the destination and the origin regions. Second, by allowing migration flows to be related to economic fundamentals, they are determined endogenously in the model. We proceed by estimating the determinants of migration in an econometric model and then endogenizing migration flows by introducing the estimated relationships between demographic and income developments in our world model. We show that (i) migration could have a substantial impact on GDP growth in sending and destination regions; (ii) endogenizing migration induces important changes in the volume and the distribution of migration flows between regions compared to the United-Nations projections; (iii) the size of these flows, although substantial, will not be sufficient to counteract the impact of population ageing in the receiving regions.CGEM, Migration, International capital flows.
Metallicity Evolution in the Early Universe
Observations of the damped Lya systems provide direct measurements on the
chemical enrichment history of neutral gas in the early universe. In this
Letter, we present new measurements for four damped Lya systems at high
redshift. Combining these data with [Fe/H] values culled from the literature,
we investigate the metallicity evolution of the universe from z~1.5-4.5.
Contrary to our expectations and the predictions of essentially every chemical
evolution model, the N(HI)-weighted mean [Fe/H] metallicity exhibits minimal
evolution over this epoch. For the individual systems, we report tentative
evidence for an evolution in the unweighted [Fe/H] mean and the scatter in
[Fe/H] with the higher redshift systems showing lower scatter and lower typical
[Fe/H] values. We also note that no damped Lya system has [Fe/H] < -2.7 dex.
Finally, we discuss the potential impact of small number statistics and dust on
our conclusions and consider the implications of these results on chemical
evolution in the early universe.Comment: 6 pages, 2 encapsulated figures, Latex2e, uses emulateapj.sty and
onecolfloat.sty. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters: Feb 28, 200
Quantum Algorithms for Matrix Products over Semirings
In this paper we construct quantum algorithms for matrix products over
several algebraic structures called semirings, including the (max,min)-matrix
product, the distance matrix product and the Boolean matrix product. In
particular, we obtain the following results.
We construct a quantum algorithm computing the product of two n x n matrices
over the (max,min) semiring with time complexity O(n^{2.473}). In comparison,
the best known classical algorithm for the same problem, by Duan and Pettie,
has complexity O(n^{2.687}). As an application, we obtain a O(n^{2.473})-time
quantum algorithm for computing the all-pairs bottleneck paths of a graph with
n vertices, while classically the best upper bound for this task is
O(n^{2.687}), again by Duan and Pettie.
We construct a quantum algorithm computing the L most significant bits of
each entry of the distance product of two n x n matrices in time O(2^{0.64L}
n^{2.46}). In comparison, prior to the present work, the best known classical
algorithm for the same problem, by Vassilevska and Williams and Yuster, had
complexity O(2^{L}n^{2.69}). Our techniques lead to further improvements for
classical algorithms as well, reducing the classical complexity to
O(2^{0.96L}n^{2.69}), which gives a sublinear dependency on 2^L.
The above two algorithms are the first quantum algorithms that perform better
than the -time straightforward quantum algorithm based on
quantum search for matrix multiplication over these semirings. We also consider
the Boolean semiring, and construct a quantum algorithm computing the product
of two n x n Boolean matrices that outperforms the best known classical
algorithms for sparse matrices. For instance, if the input matrices have
O(n^{1.686...}) non-zero entries, then our algorithm has time complexity
O(n^{2.277}), while the best classical algorithm has complexity O(n^{2.373}).Comment: 19 page
Kinetic description of charmonium production in high-energy nuclear collisions
We study the evolution of charmonia as they collide with the constituents of
the fireball produced in high-energy nucleus-nucleus collisions. The latter
evolves in a manner controlled by the equation of state as given by lattice
QCD, and is constructed in such a way that the observed hadronic spectra are
correctly reproduced. A kinetic description of charmonium interactions with
both quark-gluon and hadronic degrees of freedom allows to study in detail the
evolution in different regimes, controlled by collision energy, kinematics and
geometry. The data collected at the CERN-SPS accelerator are well described and
new estimates for J/psi production at BNL-RHIC are presented.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, 13 .eps figure
Angular momentum evolution in laser-plasma accelerators
The transverse properties of an electron beam are characterized by two
quantities, the emittance which indicates the electron beam extend in the phase
space and the angular momentum which allows for non-planar electron
trajectories. Whereas the emittance of electron beams produced in laser- plasma
accelerator has been measured in several experiments, their angular momentum
has been scarcely studied. It was demonstrated that electrons in laser-plasma
accelerator carry some angular momentum, but its origin was not established.
Here we identify one source of angular momentum growth and we present
experimental results showing that the angular momentum content evolves during
the acceleration
Fokker-Planck type equations with Sobolev diffusion coefficients and BV drift coefficients
In this paper we give an affirmative answer to an open question mentioned in
[Le Bris and Lions, Comm. Partial Differential Equations 33 (2008),
1272--1317], that is, we prove the well-posedness of the Fokker-Planck type
equations with Sobolev diffusion coefficients and BV drift coefficients.Comment: 11 pages. The proof has been modifie
Structure Function of Polymer Nematic Liquid Crystals: A Monte Carlo Simulation
We present a Monte Carlo simulation of a polymer nematic for varying volume
fractions, concentrating on the structure function of the sample. We achieve
nematic ordering with stiff polymers made of spherical monomers that would
otherwise not form a nematic state. Our results are in good qualitative
agreement with theoretical and experimental predictions, most notably the
bowtie pattern in the static structure function.Comment: 10 pages, plain TeX, macros included, 3 figures available from
archive. Published versio
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