8,423 research outputs found
Demographic Change, Social Security Systems, and Savings
In theory, improvements in healthy life expectancy should generate increases in the average age of retirement, with little effect on savings rates. In many countries, however, retirement incentives in social security programs prevent retirement ages from keeping pace with changes in life expectancy, leading to an increased need for life-cycle savings. Analyzing a cross-country panel of macroeconomic data, we find that increased longevity raises aggregate savings rates in countries with universal pension coverage and retirement incentives, though the effect disappears in countries with pay-as-you-go systems and high replacement rates
Topological Twistons in Crystalline Polyethylene
We introduce an alternate model to describe twistons in crystalline
polyethylene. The model couples torsional and longitudinal degrees of freedom
and appears as an extension of a model that describes only the torsional
motion. We find exact solutions that describe stable topological twistons, in
good agreement with the torsional and longitudinal interactions in
polyethylene.Comment: Latex, 10 pages; some stylistic corrections, to appear in Chemical
Physics Letter
Demographic Change, Social Security Systems, and Savings
In theory, improvements in healthy life expectancy should generate increases in the average age of retirement, with little effect on savings rates. In many countries, however, retirement incentives in social security programs prevent retirement ages from keeping pace with changes in life expectancy, leading to an increased need for life-cycle savings. Analyzing a cross-country panel of macroeconomic data, we find that increased longevity raises aggregate savings rates in countries with universal pension coverage and retirement incentives, though the effect disappears in countries with pay-as-you-go systems and high replacement rates.
Crescent Singularities in Crumpled Sheets
We examine the crescent singularity of a developable cone in a setting
similar to that studied by Cerda et al [Nature 401, 46 (1999)]. Stretching is
localized in a core region near the pushing tip and bending dominates the outer
region. Two types of stresses in the outer region are identified and shown to
scale differently with the distance to the tip. Energies of the d-cone are
estimated and the conditions for the scaling of core region size R_c are
discussed. Tests of the pushing force equation and direct geometrical
measurements provide numerical evidence that core size scales as R_c ~ h^{1/3}
R^{2/3}, where h is the thickness of sheet and R is the supporting container
radius, in agreement with the proposition of Cerda et al. We give arguments
that this observed scaling law should not represent the asymptotic behavior.
Other properties are also studied and tested numerically, consistent with our
analysis.Comment: 13 pages with 8 figures, revtex. To appear in PR
Tsirelson's bound and Landauer's principle in a single-system game
We introduce a simple single-system game inspired by the
Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) game. For qubit systems subjected to unitary
gates and projective measurements, we prove that any strategy in our game can
be mapped to a strategy in the CHSH game, which implies that Tsirelson's bound
also holds in our setting. More generally, we show that the optimal success
probability depends on the reversible or irreversible character of the gates,
the quantum or classical nature of the system and the system dimension. We
analyse the bounds obtained in light of Landauer's principle, showing the
entropic costs of the erasure associated with the game. This shows a connection
between the reversibility in fundamental operations embodied by Landauer's
principle and Tsirelson's bound, that arises from the restricted physics of a
unitarily-evolving single-qubit system.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, typos correcte
Madrid: Literary Fiction and the Imaginary Urban Destination
This study selects novels from French and Spanish language traditions, which may not be available to English-speakers, in order to determine if specific aspects throw light on our understanding of Madrid as a destination. Marc Lambron's L'Impromptu de Madrid and Antonio Munoz Molina’s Mysteries of Madrid are taken as proof of the influence the narrative can exert on social daily life and consumption. Narrative foregrounds the fictions which are at stake in imagining the city as destination and also provides a vehicle for presenting the much broader social forces that converge in the author at the time of imagining and writing
Spontaneous curvature cancellation in forced thin sheets
In this paper we report numerically observed spontaneous vanishing of mean
curvature on a developable cone made by pushing a thin elastic sheet into a
circular container. We show that this feature is independent of thickness of
the sheet, the supporting radius and the amount of deflection. Several variants
of developable cone are studied to examine the necessary conditions that lead
to the vanishing of mean curvature. It is found that the presence of
appropriate amount of radial stress is necessary. The developable cone geometry
somehow produces the right amount of radial stress to induce just enough radial
curvature to cancel the conical azimuthal curvature. In addition, the circular
symmetry of supporting container edge plays an important role. With an
elliptical supporting edge, the radial curvature overcompensates the azimuthal
curvature near the minor axis and undercompensates near the major axis. Our
numerical finding is verified by a crude experiment using a reflective plastic
sheet. We expect this finding to have broad importance in describing the
general geometrical properties of forced crumpling of thin sheets.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, revtex
- …
