1,710 research outputs found
A Schumpeterian Growth Model with Heterogenous Firms
A common assumption in the Schumpeterian growth literature is that the innovation size is constant and identical across industries. This is in contrast with the empirical evidence which shows that: (i) the innovation size is far from being identical across industries; and (ii) the size distribution of profit returns from innovation is highly skewed toward the low value side, with a long tail on the high value side. In the present paper, we develop a Schumpeterian growth model that is consistent with this evidence. In particular, we assume that when a firm innovates, the size of its quality improvement is the result of a random draw from a Pareto distribution. This enables us to extend the class of quality-ladder growth models to encompass firm heterogeneity. We study the policy implications of this new set-up numerically and find that it is optimal to heavily subsidize R&D for plausible parameter values. Although it is optimal to tax R&D for some parameter values, this case only occurs when the steady-state rate of economic growth is very low.Schumpeterian Growth, R&D, optimal policy
The Metallicity and Reddening of Stars in the Inner Galactic Bulge
We present a preliminary analysis of K, J-K color magnitude diagrams (CMDs)
for 7 different positions on or close to the minor axis of the Milky Way at
Galactic latitudes between +0.1^\circ and -2.8^\circ. From the slopes of the
(linear) giant branches in these CMDs we derive a dependence of on
latitude for b between -0.8^\circ and -2.8^\circ of -0.085 \pm 0.033
dex/degree. When combined with the data from Tiede et al. we find for
-0.8^\circ \leq b \leq -10.3^\circ the slope in is -0.064 \pm 0.012
dex/degree. An extrapolation to the Galactic Center predicts [Fe/H] = +0.034
\pm 0.053 dex. We also derive average values for the extinction in the K band
(A_K) of between 2.15 and 0.27 for the inner bulge fields corresponding to
average values of E(J-K) of between 3.46 and 0.44. There is a well defined
linear relation between the average extinction for a field and the star-to-star
scatter in the extinction for the stars within each field. This result suggests
that the typical apparent angular scale size for an absorbing cloud is small
compared with the field size (90\arcsec on a side). Finally, from an
examination of the luminosity function of bright giants in each field we
conclude that the young component of the stellar population observed near the
Galactic center declines in density much more quickly than the overall bulge
population and is undetectable beyond 1^\circ from the Galactic center.Comment: accepted for publication in Astron. Jour. Compressed file contains
the text, 9 figures, and 6 tables prepared with AAS Latex macros v. 4.
Heavy elements Ba, La, Ce, Nd, and Eu in 56 Galactic bulge red giants
Aims. The aim of this work is the study of abundances of the heavy elements
Ba, La, Ce, Nd, and Eu in 56 bulge giants (red giant branch and red clump) with
metallicities ranging from -1.3 dex to 0.5 dex. Methods. We obtained
high-resolution spectra of our giant stars using the FLAMES-UVES spectrograph
on the Very Large Telescope. We inspected four bulge fields along the minor
axis. Results. We measure the chemical evolution of heavy elements, as a
function of metallicity, in the Galactic bulge. Conclusions. The [Ba, La, Ce,
Nd/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] ratios decrease with increasing metallicity, in which aspect
they differ from disc stars. In our metal-poor bulge stars, La and Ba are
enhanced relative to their thick disc counterpart, while in our metal-rich
bulge stars La and Ba are underabundant relative to their disc counterpart.
Therefore, this contrast between bulge and discs trends indicates that bulge
and (solar neighbourhood) thick disc stars could behave differently. An
increase in [La, Nd/Eu] with increasing metallicity, for metal-rich stars with
[Fe/H] > 0 dex, may indicate that the s-process from AGB stars starts to
operate at a metallicity around solar. Finally, [Eu/Fe] follows the
[{\alpha}/Fe] behaviour, as expected, since these elements are produced by SNe
type II.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
VLT Spectroscopy of the z=4.11 Radio Galaxy TN J1338-1942
We present optical, infrared and radio data of the z=4.11 radio galaxy TN
J1338-1942, including an intermediate resolution spectrum obtained with FORS1on
the VLT Antu telescope. TN J1338-1942 was the first z>4 radio galaxy to be
discovered in the southern hemisphere and is one of the most luminous Ly-alpha
objects in its class. The Ly-alpha and rest-frame optical emission appear
co-spatial with the brightest radio hotspot of this very asymmetric radio
source, suggesting extremely strong interaction with dense ambient clouds. The
VLT observations are sufficiently sensitive to detect the continuum flux both
blue-ward and red-ward of the Ly-alpha emission, allowing us to measure the
Ly-alpha forest continuum break (Ly-alpha 'discontinuity', D_A) and the Lyman
limit. We measure a D_A=0.37+-0.1, which is ~0.2 lower than the values found
for quasars at this redshift. We interpret this difference as possibly due to a
bias towards large D_A introduced in high--redshift quasar samples that are
selected on the basis of specific optical colors. If such a bias would exist in
optically selected quasars, - and even in samples of Lyman break galaxies -,
then the space density of both classes of object will be underestimated.
Furthermore, the average HI column density along cosmological lines of sight as
determined using quasar absorption lines would be overestimated. Because of
their radio-based selection, we argue that z>4 radio galaxies are excellent
objects for investigating D_A statistics. [abridged]Comment: 6 Pages, including 4 PostScript figures. Accepted for publication in
the Astronomy & Astrophysics Letter
Faint blue objects on the Hubble Deep Field North & South as possible nearby old halo white dwarfs
Using data derived from the deepest and finest angular resolution images of
the universe yet acquired by astronomers at optical wavelengths using the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in two postage-stamp sections of the sky (Williams
et al. 1996a,b), plus simple geometrical and scaling arguments, we demonstrate
that the faint blue population of point-source objects detected on those two
fields (M\'endez et al. 1996) could actually be ancient halo white dwarfs at
distances closer than about 2 kpc from the Sun. This finding has profound
implications, as the mass density of the detected objects would account for
about half of the missing dark matter in the Milky-Way (Bahcall and Soneira
1980), thus solving one of the most controversial issues of modern astrophysics
(Trimble 1987, Ashman 1992). The existence of these faint blue objects points
to a very large mass locked into ancient halo white dwarfs. Our estimate
indicates that they could account for as much as half of the dark matter in our
Galaxy, confirming the suggestions of the MACHO microlensing experiment (Alcock
et al. 1997). Because of the importance of this discovery, deep follow-up
observations with HST within the next two years would be needed to determine
more accurately the kinematics (tangential motions) for these faint blue old
white dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal, Part 1. 8
pages (AAS Latex macros V4.0), 1 B&W postscript figure, 2 color postscript
figure
Carbon star survey in the Local Group. VII. NGC 3109 a galaxy without a stellar halo
We present a CFH12K wide field survey of the carbon star population in and
around NGC 3109. Carbon stars, the brightest members of the intermediate-age
population, were found nearly exclusively in and near the disk of NGC 3109,
ruling out the existence of an extensive intermediate-age halo like the one
found in NGC 6822. Over 400 carbon stars identified have = -4.71,
confirming the nearly universality of mean magnitude of C star populations in
Local Group galaxies. Star counts over the field reveal that NGC 3109 is a
truncated disk shaped galaxy without an extensive stellar halo. The minor axis
star counts reach the foreground density between 4' and 5', a distance that can
be explained by an inclined disk rather than a spheroidal halo. We calculate a
global C/M ratio of 1.75 +/- 0.20, a value expected for such a metal poor
galaxy.Comment: Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Li-rich RGB stars in the Galactic Bulge
We present Lithium abundance determination for a sample of K giant stars in
the galactic bulge. The stars presented here are the only 13 stars with
detectable Lithium line (6767.18 A) among ~400 stars for which we have spectra
in this wavelength range, half of them in Baade's Window (b=-4) and half in a
field at b=-6. The stars were observed with the GIRAFFE spectrograph of
FLAMES@VLT, with a spectral resolution of R~20,000. Abundances were derived via
spectral synthesis and the results are compared with those for stars with
similar parameters, but no detectable Li line. We find 13 stars with a
detectable Li line, among which 2 have abundances A(Li)>2.7. No clear
correlations were found between the Li abundance and those of other elements.
With the exception of the two most Li rich stars, the others follow a fairly
tight A(Li)-T_eff correlation. It would seems that there must be a Li
production phase during the red giant branch (RGB), acting either on a very
short timescale, or selectively only in some stars. The proposed Li production
phase associated with the RGB bump cannot be excluded, although our targets are
significantly brighter than the predicted RGB bump magnitude for a population
at 8 kpcComment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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