13,103 research outputs found
Can informality explain inequality? The case of Mexico, 1987-1999
In this paper we contrast the impact of the income gap between formal and informal sector on Mexico's income inequality to alternative explanations. Unlike previous studies we take a time series approach to analyze the determinants of income inequality for the period 1987-1999. We find that an increase in the wage gap between the formal and the informal sector and in the wage gap between the higher educated and the lower educated people leads to an increase in inequality. Inequality seems to be counter-cyclical, that is, an increase in output leads to a reduction in inequality. An unexpected result is that inequality declines when output is below its long term trend. We obtained mixed results about the role played by prices and inflation on inequality
Using ultra-thin parylene films as an organic gate insulator in nanowire field-effect transistors
We report the development of nanowire field-effect transistors featuring an
ultra-thin parylene film as a polymer gate insulator. The room temperature,
gas-phase deposition of parylene is an attractive alternative to oxide
insulators prepared at high temperatures using atomic layer deposition. We
discuss our custom-built parylene deposition system, which is designed for
reliable and controlled deposition of <100 nm thick parylene films on III-V
nanowires standing vertically on a growth substrate or horizontally on a device
substrate. The former case gives conformally-coated nanowires, which we used to
produce functional -gate and gate-all-around structures. These give
sub-threshold swings as low as 140 mV/dec and on/off ratios exceeding at
room temperature. For the gate-all-around structure, we developed a novel
fabrication strategy that overcomes some of the limitations with previous
lateral wrap-gate nanowire transistors. Finally, we show that parylene can be
deposited over chemically-treated nanowire surfaces; a feature generally not
possible with oxides produced by atomic layer deposition due to the surface
`self-cleaning' effect. Our results highlight the potential for parylene as an
alternative ultra-thin insulator in nanoscale electronic devices more broadly,
with potential applications extending into nanobioelectronics due to parylene's
well-established biocompatible properties
Inferring the eccentricity distribution
Standard maximum-likelihood estimators for binary-star and exoplanet
eccentricities are biased high, in the sense that the estimated eccentricity
tends to be larger than the true eccentricity. As with most non-trivial
observables, a simple histogram of estimated eccentricities is not a good
estimate of the true eccentricity distribution. Here we develop and test a
hierarchical probabilistic method for performing the relevant meta-analysis,
that is, inferring the true eccentricity distribution, taking as input the
likelihood functions for the individual-star eccentricities, or samplings of
the posterior probability distributions for the eccentricities (under a given,
uninformative prior). The method is a simple implementation of a hierarchical
Bayesian model; it can also be seen as a kind of heteroscedastic deconvolution.
It can be applied to any quantity measured with finite precision--other orbital
parameters, or indeed any astronomical measurements of any kind, including
magnitudes, parallaxes, or photometric redshifts--so long as the measurements
have been communicated as a likelihood function or a posterior sampling.Comment: Ap
Multiple Components of the Luminous Compact X-ray Source at the Edge of Holmberg II observed by ASCA and ROSAT
We report the results of the analysis of ASCA/ROSAT observations of the
compact luminous X-ray source found at the edge of the nearby star-forming
dwarf galaxy Holmberg II (UGC 4305).Our ASCA spectrum revealed that the X-ray
emission extends to the hard band and can be best described by a power-law with
a photon spectral index of 1.9. The ASCA spectrum does not fit with a
multi-color disk blackbody. The joint ASCA-ROSAT spectrum suggests two
components to the spectrum: the hard power-law component and a warm thermal
plasma kT~0.3[keV]. An additional absorption over that of our galaxy is
required. The wobble correction of the ROSAT HRI image has clearly unveiled the
existence of an extended component which amounts to 27+/-5% of the total X-ray
emission.
These observations indicate that there are more than one component in the
X-ray emission. The properties of the point-like component is indicative of an
accretion onto an intermediate mass blackhole, unless a beaming is taking
place. We argue that the extended component does not come from electron
scattering and/or reflection by scattered optically-thick clouds of the central
radiation. Possible explanations of this X-ray source include multiple
supernova remnants feeding an intermediate-mass blackhole. (abridged)Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures accepted to Astronomical Journa
A new method for the spectroscopic identification of stellar non-radial pulsation modes. II. Mode identification of the Delta Scuti star FG Virginis
We present a mode identification based on new high-resolution time-series
spectra of the non-radially pulsating Delta Scuti star FG~Vir (HD 106384, V =
6.57, A5V). From 2002 February to June a global Delta Scuti Network (DSN)
campaign, utilizing high-resolution spectroscopy and simultaneous photometry
has been conducted for FG~Vir in order to provide a theoretical pulsation
model. In this campaign we have acquired 969 Echelle spectra covering 147 hours
at six observatories. The mode identification was carried out by analyzing line
profile variations by means of the Fourier parameter fit method, where the
observational Fourier parameters across the line are fitted with theoretical
values. This method is especially well suited for determining the azimuthal
order m of non-radial pulsation modes and thus complementary with the method of
Daszynska-Daszkiewicz (2002) which does best at identifying the degree l. 15
frequencies between 9.2 and 33.5 c/d were detected spectroscopically. We
determined the azimuthal order m of 12 modes and constrained their harmonic
degree l. Only modes of low degree (l <= 4) were detected, most of them having
axisymmetric character mainly due to the relatively low projected rotational
velocity of FG Vir. The detected non-axisymmetric modes have azimuthal orders
between -2 and 1. We derived an inclination of 19 degrees, which implies an
equatorial rotational rate of 66 km/s.Comment: 14 pages, 26 figure
The influence of self-citation corrections on Egghe's g index
The g index was introduced by Leo Egghe as an improvement of Hirsch's index h
for measuring the overall citation record of a set of articles. It better takes
into account the highly skewed frequency distribution of citations than the h
index. I propose to sharpen this g index by excluding the self-citations. I
have worked out nine practical cases in physics and compare the h and g values
with and without self-citations. As expected, the g index characterizes the
data set better than the h index. The influence of the self-citations appears
to be more significant for the g index than for the h index.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Scientometric
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