259 research outputs found
Does Antidumping Use Contribute to Trade Liberalization? An Empirical Analysis
Some supporters of antidumping have argued that this procedure serves as a kind of "safety valve" for protectionist pressure.This paper examines whether there is any empirical evidence that the use of antidumping actions has contributed to tariff reductions in a sample of 35 developing and developed countries.There is very little evidence that such a relationship might exist among the 27 developing countries in the sample.We do find some weak but inconsistent evidence for antidumping helping liberalization efforts in the experience of developed countries, which have been the traditional users of antidumping.Antidumping;Trade Liberalization;Commercial Policy
Does Antidumping Use Contribute to Trade Liberalization? An Empirical Analysis
Some supporters of antidumping have argued that this procedure serves as a kind of "safety valve" for protectionist pressure.This paper examines whether there is any empirical evidence that the use of antidumping actions has contributed to tariff reductions in a sample of 35 developing and developed countries.There is very little evidence that such a relationship might exist among the 27 developing countries in the sample.We do find some weak but inconsistent evidence for antidumping helping liberalization efforts in the experience of developed countries, which have been the traditional users of antidumping.
Quantum, Stochastic, and Pseudo Stochastic Languages with Few States
Stochastic languages are the languages recognized by probabilistic finite
automata (PFAs) with cutpoint over the field of real numbers. More general
computational models over the same field such as generalized finite automata
(GFAs) and quantum finite automata (QFAs) define the same class. In 1963, Rabin
proved the set of stochastic languages to be uncountable presenting a single
2-state PFA over the binary alphabet recognizing uncountably many languages
depending on the cutpoint. In this paper, we show the same result for unary
stochastic languages. Namely, we exhibit a 2-state unary GFA, a 2-state unary
QFA, and a family of 3-state unary PFAs recognizing uncountably many languages;
all these numbers of states are optimal. After this, we completely characterize
the class of languages recognized by 1-state GFAs, which is the only nontrivial
class of languages recognized by 1-state automata. Finally, we consider the
variations of PFAs, QFAs, and GFAs based on the notion of inclusive/exclusive
cutpoint, and present some results on their expressive power.Comment: A new version with new results. Previous version: Arseny M. Shur,
Abuzer Yakaryilmaz: Quantum, Stochastic, and Pseudo Stochastic Languages with
Few States. UCNC 2014: 327-33
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Design and Fabrication of a Radiation-Hard 500-MHz Digitizer Using Deep Submicron Technology
The proposed International Linear Collider (ILC) will use tens of thousands of beam position monitors (BPMs) for precise beam alignment. The signal from each BPM is digitized and processed for feedback control. We proposed the development of an 11-bit (effective) digitizer with 500 MHz bandwidth and 2 G samples/s. The digitizer was somewhat beyond the state-of-the-art. Moreover we planned to design the digitizer chip using the deep-submicron technology with custom transistors that had proven to be very radiation hard (up to at least 60 Mrad). The design mitigated the need for costly shielding and long cables while providing ready access to the electronics for testing and maintenance. In FY06 as we prepared to submit a chip with test circuits and a partial ADC circuit we found that IBM had changed the availability of our chosen IC fabrication process (IBM 6HP SiGe BiCMOS), making it unaffordable for us, at roughly 3 times the previous price. This prompted us to change our design to the IBM 5HPE process with 0.35 µm feature size. We requested funding for FY07 to continue the design work and submit the first prototype chip. Unfortunately, the funding was not continued and we will summarize below the work accomplished so far
Weak localization of Dirac fermions in graphene beyond the diffusion regime
We develop a microscopic theory of the weak localization of two-dimensional
massless Dirac fermions which is valid in the whole range of classically weak
magnetic fields. The theory is applied to calculate magnetoresistance caused by
the weak localization in graphene and conducting surfaces of bulk topological
insulators.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Higher-order mutual coherence of optical and matter waves
We use an operational approach to discuss ways to measure the higher-order
cross-correlations between optical and matter-wave fields. We pay particular
attention to the fact that atomic fields actually consist of composite
particles that can easily be separated into their basic constituents by a
detection process such as photoionization. In the case of bosonic fields, that
we specifically consider here, this leads to the appearance in the detection
signal of exchange contributions due to both the composite bosonic field and
its individual fermionic constituents. We also show how time-gated counting
schemes allow to isolate specific contributions to the signal, in particular
involving different orderings of the Schr\"odinger and Maxwell fields.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Competition between quantum-liquid and electron-solid phases in intermediate Landau levels
On the basis of energy calculations we investigate the competition between
quantum-liquid and electron-solid phases in the Landau levels n=1,2, and 3 as a
function of their partial filling factor. Whereas the quantum-liquid phases are
stable only in the vicinity of quantized values 1/(2s+1) of the partial filling
factor, an electron solid in the form of a triangular lattice of clusters with
a few number of electrons (bubble phase) is energetically favorable between
these fillings. This alternation of electron-solid phases, which are insulating
because they are pinned by the residual impurities in the sample, and quantum
liquids displaying the fractional quantum Hall effect explains a recently
observed reentrance of the integral quantum Hall effect in the Landau levels
n=1 and 2. Around half-filling of the last Landau level, a uni-directional
charge density wave (stripe phase) has a lower energy than the bubble phase.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures; calculation of exact exchange potential for
n=1,2,3 included, energies of electron-solid phases now calculated with the
help of the exact potential, and discussion of approximation include
Generation of atom-photon entangled states in atomic Bose-Einstein condensate via electromagnetically induced transparency
In this paper, we present a method to generate continuous-variable-type
entangled states between photons and atoms in atomic Bose-Einstein condensate
(BEC). The proposed method involves an atomic BEC with three internal states, a
weak quantized probe laser and a strong classical coupling laser, which form a
three-level Lambda-shaped BEC system. We consider a situation where the BEC is
in electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) with the coupling laser being
much stronger than the probe laser. In this case, the upper and intermediate
levels are unpopulated, so that their adiabatic elimination enables an
effective two-mode model involving only the atomic field at the lowest internal
level and the quantized probe laser field. Atom-photon quantum entanglement is
created through laser-atom and inter-atomic interactions, and two-photon
detuning. We show how to generate atom-photon entangled coherent states and
entangled states between photon (atom) coherent states and atom-(photon-)
macroscopic quantum superposition (MQS) states, and between photon-MQS and
atom-MQS states.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Effects of in vitro purging with 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide on the hematopoietic and microenvironmental elements of human bone marrow
We describe the effects of 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide (4-HC) on the hematopoietic and stromal elements of human bone marrow. Marrow cells were exposed to 4-HC and then assayed for mixed (CFU-Mix), erythroid (BFU-E), granulomonocytic (CFU-GM), and marrow fibroblast (CFU-F) colony-forming cells and studied in the long-term marrow culture (LTMC) system. The inhibition of colony formation by 4-HC was dose and cell-concentration dependent. The cell most sensitive to 4-HC was CFU-Mix (ID50 31 mumol/L) followed by BFU-E (ID50 41 mumol/L), CFU-GM (ID50 89 mumol/L), and CFU-F (ID50 235 mumol/L). In LTMC, a dose-related inhibition of CFU-GM production was noted. Marrows treated with 300 mumol/L 4-HC were completely depleted of CFU-GM but were able to generate these progenitors in LTMC. Marrow stromal progenitors giving rise to stromal layers in LTMC, although less sensitive to 4-HC cytotoxicity, were damaged by 4-HC also in a dose-related manner. Marrows treated with 4-HC up to 300 mumol/L, gave rise to stromal layers composed of fibroblasts, endothelial cells, adipocytes, and macrophages. Cocultivation experiments with freshly isolated autologous hematopoietic cells showed that stromal layers derived from 4-HC-treated marrows were capable of sustaining the long-term production of CFU-GM as well as controls
Density correlations and dynamical Casimir emission of Bogoliubov phonons in modulated atomic Bose-Einstein condensates
We present a theory of the density correlations that appear in an atomic
Bose-Einstein condensate as a consequence of the dynamical Casimir emission of
pairs of Bogoliubov phonons when the atom-atom scattering length is modulated
in time. Different regimes as a function of the temporal shape of the
modulation are identified and a simple physical picture of the phenomenon is
discussed. Analytical expressions for the density correlation function are
provided for the most significant limiting cases. This theory is able to
explain some unexpected features recently observed in numerical calculations of
Hawking radiation from analog black holes
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