3,365 research outputs found
Educational loans and attitudes towards risk
We explore the relationship between willingness to take financial risk and the probability of taking
out a loan for educational purposes as well as the influence of risk attitudes on the size of the loan using data
drawn from the U.S. Survey of Consumer Finances. The findings suggest a positive relationship between
individualsâ willingness to take financial risk and the probability of taking out a loan for educational purposes.
Similarly, individualsâ willingness to take financial risk appears to be an important determinant of the size of the
educational loan. The findings suggest that non-white individuals and individuals from less wealthy
backgrounds are less likely to finance education through loans which could potentially increase inequalities in
education and income if such individuals are deterred from investing in human capital
High pressure effects in fluorinated HgBa2Ca2Cu3O(8+d)
We have measured the pressure sensitivity of Tc in fluorinated
HgBa2Ca2Cu3O(8+d) (Hg-1223) ceramic samples with different F contents, applying
pressures up to 30 GPa. We obtained that Tc increases with increasing pressure,
reaching different maximum values, depending on the F doping level, and
decreases for a further increase of pressure. A new high Tc record (166 K +/- 1
K) was achieved by applying pressure (23 GPa) in a fluorinated Hg-1223 sample
near the optimum doping level. Our results show that all our samples are at the
optimal doping, and that fluorine incorporation decreases the crystallographic
-parameter concomitantly increasing the maximum attainable Tc. This effect
reveals that the compression of the axes is one of the keys that controls
the Tc of high temperature superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
State-of-the-art techniques for calculating spectral functions in models for correlated materials
The dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) has become a standard technique for
the study of strongly correlated models and materials overcoming some of the
limitations of density functional approaches based on local approximations. An
important step in this method involves the calculation of response functions of
a multiorbital impurity problem which is related to the original model.
Recently there has been considerable progress in the development of techniques
based on the density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) and related matrix
product states (MPS) implying a substantial improvement to previous methods. In
this article we review some of the standard algorithms and compare them to the
newly developed techniques, showing examples for the particular case of the
half-filled two-band Hubbard model.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to be published in EPL Perspective
Kondo Screening and Magnetic Ordering in Frustrated UNi4B
UNi4B exhibits unusual properties and, in particular, a unique
antiferromagnetic arrangement involving only 2/3 of the U sites. Based on the
low temperature behavior of this compound, we propose that the remaining 1/3 U
sites are nonmagnetic due to the Kondo effect. We derive a model in which the
coexistence of magnetic and nonmagnetic U sites is the consequence of the
competition between frustration of the crystallographic structure and
instability of the 5f moments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Using genetic algorithms to generate test sequences for complex timed systems
The generation of test data for state based specifications is a computationally expensive process. This problem is magnified if we consider that time con- straints have to be taken into account to govern the transitions of the studied system. The main goal of this paper is to introduce a complete methodology, sup- ported by tools, that addresses this issue by represent- ing the test data generation problem as an optimisa- tion problem. We use heuristics to generate test cases. In order to assess the suitability of our approach we consider two different case studies: a communication protocol and the scientific application BIPS3D. We give details concerning how the test case generation problem can be presented as a search problem and automated. Genetic algorithms (GAs) and random search are used to generate test data and evaluate the approach. GAs outperform random search and seem to scale well as the problem size increases. It is worth to mention that we use a very simple fitness function that can be eas- ily adapted to be used with other evolutionary search techniques
Charge transfer excitons in optical absorption spectra of C60-dimers and polymers
Charge-transfer (CT) exciton effects are investigated for the optical
absorption spectra of crosslinked C60 systems by using the intermediate exciton
theory. We consider the C60-dimers, and the two (and three) molecule systems of
the C60-polymers. We use a tight-binding model with long-range Coulomb
interactions among electrons, and the model is treated by the Hartree-Fock
approximation followed by the single-excitation configuration interaction
method. We discuss the variations in the optical spectra by changing the
conjugation parameter between molecules. We find that the total CT-component
increases in smaller conjugations, and saturates at the intermediate
conjugations. It decreases in the large conjugations. We also find that the
CT-components of the doped systems are smaller than those of the neutral
systems, indicating that the electron-hole distance becomes shorter in the
doped C60-polymers.Comment: Figures should be requested to the autho
Schwarzschild black holes can wear scalar wigs
We study the evolution of a massive scalar field surrounding a Schwarzschild
black hole and find configurations that can survive for arbitrarily long times,
provided the black hole or the scalar field mass is small enough. In
particular, both ultra-light scalar field dark matter around supermassive black
holes and axion-like scalar fields around primordial black holes can survive
for cosmological times. Moreover, these results are quite generic, in the sense
that fairly arbitrary initial data evolves, at late times, as a combination of
those long-lived configurations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Elaborations on the String Dual to N=1 SQCD
In this paper we make further refinements to the duality proposed between N=1
SQCD and certain string (supergravity plus branes) backgrounds, working in the
regime of comparable large number of colors and flavors. Using the string
theory solutions, we predict different field theory observables and phenomena
like Seiberg duality, gauge coupling and its running, the behavior of Wilson
and 't Hooft loops, anomalous dimensions of the quark superfields, quartic
superpotential coupling and its running, continuous and discrete anomaly
matching. We also give evidence for the smooth interpolation between higgsed
and confining vacua. We provide several matchings between field theory and
string theory computations.Comment: 44 pages, 6 figures. References added, minor rewritings, published
versio
Interlayer Magnetic Frustration in Quasi-stoichiometric Li1-xNi1+xO2
Susceptibility, high-field magnetization and submillimeter wave electron spin
resonance measurements of layered quasi-stoichiometric Li1-xNi1+xO2 are
reported and compared to isomorphic NaNiO2. A new mechanism of magnetic
frustration induced by the excess Ni ions always present in the Li layers is
proposed. We finally comment on the possible realization of an orbital liquid
state in this controversial compound.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.B, Rapid Com
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Left-right mental timeline is robust to visuospatial and verbal interference
We test the robustness of American college studentsâ mentaltimeline to dual tasks that have interfered with spatial andverbal reasoning in prior work. We focus on the left-right axisfor representing sequences of events. We test Americancollege students, who read from left to right. We test forautomatic space-time mappings using two established space-time association tasks. We find that their tendency toassociate earlier events with the left side of space and laterevents with the right remains under conditions of visuospatialand verbal interference. We find this both when participantsmade time judgments about linguistic and non-linguisticstimuli. We discuss the relationship between these results andthose obtained for mental timelines that result from learningnew metaphors in language (Hendricks & Boroditsky, 2015),and the effects of the same interference tasks on number tasks(mental number-line and counting; van Dijck et al., 2009;Frank et al., 2012)
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