3,730 research outputs found
Brown Backstops versus the Green Paradox (Revision of CentER DP 2011-076)
Anticipated and unilateral climate policies are ineffective when fossil fuel owners respond by shifting supply intertemporally (the green paradox) or spatially (carbon leakage). These mechanisms rely crucially on the exhaustibility of fossil fuels. We analyze the effect of anticipated and unilateral climate policies on emissions in a simple model with two fossil fuels: one scarce and dirty (oil), the other abundant and dirtier (coal). We derive conditions for a ’green orthodox’: anticipated climate policy may reduce current emissions, and unilateral measures may unintentionally reduce emissions in other countries. Calibrations suggest that intertemporal carbon leakage (between -3% and 1%) is less of a concern than spatial leakage (19-39%).carbon tax;green paradox;exhaustible resource;backstop;climate change
The Distribution of Energy-Intensive Sectors in the US
We study the in uence of energy endowments on the location of energy-intensive industries. We use data on manufacturing sectors in 50 US states from 2002 until 2008, with detailed information on state endowments of coal, natural gas, oil and hydropower and sectoral fuel and electricity intensities. The effect of energy on industry location is statistically and economically significant. A one standard deviation increase in energy en- dowments per capita increases the activity of energy-intensive industries by about 20%.industry location;factor endowments;energy;Heckscher-Ohlin model
Event-based simulation of quantum physics experiments
We review an event-based simulation approach which reproduces the statistical
distributions of wave theory not by requiring the knowledge of the solution of
the wave equation of the whole system but by generating detection events
one-by-one according to an unknown distribution. We illustrate its
applicability to various single photon and single neutron interferometry
experiments and to two Bell test experiments, a single-photon
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen experiment employing post-selection for photon pair
identification and a single-neutron Bell test interferometry experiment with
nearly detection efficiency.Comment: Lectures notes of the Advanced School on Quantum Foundations and Open
Quantum Systems, Jo\~ao Pessoa, Brazil, July 2012, edited by T. M.
Nieuwenhuizen et al, World Scientific, to appea
Event-by-event simulation of experiments to create entanglement and violate Bell inequalities
We discuss a discrete-event, particle-based simulation approach which
reproduces the statistical distributions of Maxwell's theory and quantum theory
by generating detection events one-by-one. This event-based approach gives a
unified cause-and-effect description of quantum optics experiments such as
single-photon Mach-Zehnder interferometer, Wheeler's delayed choice, quantum
eraser, double-slit, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bohm and Hanbury Brown-Twiss
experiments, and various neutron interferometry experiments at a level of
detail which is not covered by conventional quantum theoretical descriptions.
We illustrate the approach by application to single-photon
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bohm experiments and single-neutron interferometry
experiments that violate a Bell inequality.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1208.236
Discrete-event simulation of uncertainty in single-neutron experiments
A discrete-event simulation approach which provides a cause-and-effect
description of many experiments with photons and neutrons exhibiting
interference and entanglement is applied to a recent single-neutron experiment
that tests (generalizations of) Heisenberg's uncertainty relation. The
event-based simulation algorithm reproduces the results of the quantum
theoretical description of the experiment but does not require the knowledge of
the solution of a wave equation nor does it rely on concepts of quantum theory.
In particular, the data satisfies uncertainty relations derived in the context
of quantum theory
Event-based simulation of neutron experiments: interference, entanglement and uncertainty relations
We discuss a discrete-event simulation approach, which has been shown to give
a unified cause-and-effect description of many quantum optics and
single-neutron interferometry experiments. The event-based simulation algorithm
does not require the knowledge of the solution of a wave equation of the whole
system, yet reproduces the corresponding statistical distributions by
generating detection events one-by-one. It is showm that single-particle
interference and entanglement, two important quantum phenomena, emerge via
information exchange between individual particles and devices such as beam
splitters, polarizers and detectors. We demonstrate this by reproducing the
results of several single-neutron interferometry experiments, including one
that demonstrates interference and one that demonstrates the violation of a
Bell-type inequality. We also present event-based simulation results of a
single neutron experiment designed to test the validity of Ozawa's universally
valid error-disturbance relation, an uncertainty relation derived using the
theory of general quantum measurements.Comment: Invited paper presented at the EmQM13 Workshop on Emergent Quantum
Mechanics, Austrian Academy of Sciences (October 3-6, 2013, Vienna
N-body/SPH study of the evolution of dwarf galaxies in a cluster environment
Using an N-body/SPH code, we explore the scenario in which a dwarf elliptical
galaxy (dE) is subjected to ram-pressure stripping due to the intracluster
medium (ICM). Our simulations show that while (i) smaller dEs lose their ISM
almost immediately after entering the cluster, (ii) more massive dEs are able
to retain their gas for considerable timespans.Comment: 1 page, no figures, poster contribution to the Splinter Meeting
"Galaxies in interaction" at the joint meeting of the Czech Astronomical
Society and the Astronomische Gesellschaft (20-25 Sept. 2004, Prague, Czech
Republic
Irrelevance of Bell's Theorem for experiments involving correlations in space and time: a specific loophole-free computer-example
John Bell is generally credited to have accomplished the remarkable "proof"
that any theory of physics, which is both Einstein-local and "realistic"
(counterfactually definite), results in a strong upper bound to the
correlations that are measured in space and time. He thus predicts that
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen experiments cannot violate Bell- type inequalities. We
present a counterexample to this claim, based on discrete-event computer
simulations. Our model-results fully agree with the predictions of quantum
theory for Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bohm experiments and are free of the
detection- or a coincidence-loophole
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