12,027 research outputs found
Wage-setting Behavior in France: Additional Evidence from an Ad-hoc Survey
We investigate the wage-setting behavior of French companies using an ad-hoc survey conducted specifically for this study. Our main results are the following. i) Wages are changed infrequently. The mean duration of wage contracts is one year. Wage changes occur at regular intervals during the year and are concentrated in January and July. ii) We find a lower degree of downward real wage rigidity and nominal wage rigidity in France compared to the European average. iii) About one third of companies have an internal policy to grant wage increases according to inflation. iv) When companies are faced with adverse shocks, only a partial response is transmitted into prices. Companies also adopt cost-cutting strategies. The wage of newly hired employees plays an important role in this adjustment.Wage Rigidity, Wage-setting Behavior, Survey Data.
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy of Suspended Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes
We have performed low-temperature STM measurements on single-wall carbon
nanotubes that are freely suspended over a trench. The nanotubes were grown by
CVD on a Pt substrate with predefined trenches etched into it. Atomic
resolution was obtained on the freestanding portions of the nanotubes.
Spatially resolved spectroscopy on the suspended portion of both metallic and
semiconducting nanotubes was also achieved, showing a Coulomb-staircase
behavior superimposed on the local density of states. The spacing of the
Coulomb blockade peaks changed with tip position reflecting a changing tip-tube
capacitance
Spacecraft attitude control for a solar electric geosynchronous transfer mission
A study of the Attitude Control System (ACS) is made for a solar electric propulsion geosynchronous transfer mission. The basic mission considered is spacecraft injection into a low altitude, inclined orbit followed by low thrust orbit changing to achieve geosynchronous orbit. Because of the extended thrusting time, the mission performance is a strong function of the attitude control system. Two attitude control system design options for an example mission evolve from consideration of the spacecraft configuration, the environmental disturbances, and the probable ACS modes of operation. The impact of these design options on other spacecraft subsystems is discussed. The factors which must be considered in determining the ACS actuation and sensing subsystems are discussed. The effects of the actuation and sensing subsystems on the mission performance are also considered
A new look at the Plebanski-Demianski family of solutions
The Plebanski-Demianski metric, and those that can be obtained from it by
taking coordinate transformations in certain limits, include the complete
family of space-times of type D with an aligned electromagnetic field and a
possibly non-zero cosmological constant. Starting with a new form of the line
element which is better suited both for physical interpretation and for
identifying different subfamilies, we review this entire family of solutions.
Our metric for the expanding case explicitly includes two parameters which
represent the acceleration of the sources and the twist of the repeated
principal null congruences, the twist being directly related to both the
angular velocity of the sources and their NUT-like properties. The
non-expanding type D solutions are also identified. All special cases are
derived in a simple and transparent way.Comment: 33 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Search for magnetic fields in particle-accelerating colliding-wind binaries
Some colliding-wind massive binaries, called particle-accelerating
colliding-wind binaries (PACWB), exhibit synchrotron radio emission, which is
assumed to be generated by a stellar magnetic field. However, no measurement of
magnetic fields in these stars has ever been performed. We aim at quantifying
the possible stellar magnetic fields present in PACWB to provide constraints
for models. We gathered 21 high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations of
9 PACWB available in the ESPaDOnS, Narval and HarpsPol archives. We analysed
these observations with the Least Squares Deconvolution method. We separated
the binary spectral components when possible. No magnetic signature is detected
in any of the 9 PACWB stars and all longitudinal field measurements are
compatible with 0 G. We derived the upper field strength of a possible field
that could have remained hidden in the noise of the data. While the data are
not very constraining for some stars, for several stars we could derive an
upper limit of the polar field strength of the order of 200 G. We can therefore
exclude the presence of strong or moderate stellar magnetic fields in PACWB,
typical of the ones present in magnetic massive stars. Weak magnetic fields
could however be present in these objects. These observational results provide
the first quantitative constraints for future models of PACWB.Comment: Accepted in A&
Performance of the SERT 2 spacecraft after 4 and one-half years in space
The SERT 2 satellite, launched in February, 1970, has recently been reactivated after being dormant for a year. The satellite orientation was changed to spin stabilization in 1973 and the satellite is now coning such that the active side of the solar arrays move into and out of the sun every 23 days. There is sufficient power to operate the ion thrusters for seven days of this cycle. The 2 ion thruster system was successfully operated; the electrical short in the accelerating grids had cleared during the year long dormant phase
Mapping the Dirac point in gated bilayer graphene
We have performed low temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy
measurements on exfoliated bilayer graphene on SiO2. By varying the back gate
voltage we observed a linear shift of the Dirac point and an opening of a band
gap due to the perpendicular electric field. In addition to observing a shift
in the Dirac point, we also measured its spatial dependence using spatially
resolved scanning tunneling spectroscopy. The spatial variation of the Dirac
point was not correlated with topographic features and therefore we attribute
its shift to random charged impurities.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Spatially resolved spectroscopy of monolayer graphene on SiO2
We have carried out scanning tunneling spectroscopy measurements on
exfoliated monolayer graphene on SiO to probe the correlation between its
electronic and structural properties. Maps of the local density of states are
characterized by electron and hole puddles that arise due to long range
intravalley scattering from intrinsic ripples in graphene and random charged
impurities. At low energy, we observe short range intervalley scattering which
we attribute to lattice defects. Our results demonstrate that the electronic
properties of graphene are influenced by intrinsic ripples, defects and the
underlying SiO substrate.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, extended versio
The Mr 28,000 gap junction proteins from rat heart and liver are different but related
The sequence of the amino-terminal 32 residues of the rat heart Mr 28,000 gap junction protein presented here allows, for the first time, a sequence comparison of gap junctional proteins from different tissues (heart and liver). Comparison of the rat heart gap junction protein sequence and that available from rat liver reveals 43% sequence identity and conservative changes at an additional 25% of the positions. Both proteins exhibit a hydrophobic domain which could represent a transmembrane span of the junction. This result unequivocally demonstrates the existence of at least two forms of the gap junction protein. As yet, no homology is evident between the gap junctional proteins of either heart or liver and main intrinsic protein from rat eye lens
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