3,092 research outputs found
U.S. domestic airline tickets are 12 percent cheaper on average when bought online
One of the Internet’s major influences on our daily lives is in the way that we buy, making shopping much more convenient and bringing greater choice to consumers. But how has online shopping influenced how much we pay? Using data from nearly 1/3 of U.S. domestic airline ticket transactions Anirban Sengupta and Steven N. Wiggins find that buying an airline ticket online is about 12 percent cheaper than buying the same ticket offline
Normal Form and Nekhoroshev stability for nearly-integrable Hamiltonian systems with unconditionally slow aperiodic time dependence
The aim of this paper is to extend the results of Giorgilli and Zehnder for
aperiodic time dependent systems to a case of general nearly-integrable convex
analytic Hamiltonians. The existence of a normal form and then a stability
result are shown in the case of a slow aperiodic time dependence that, under
some smallness conditions, is independent on the size of the perturbation.Comment: Corrected typo in the title and statement of Lemma 3.
Can the transformation time in phase change optical recording be improved by using femtosecond laser pulses?
CLEO/EUROPE ; EQEC European Quantum Electronics Conference, Munich ICm, Germany, 22-27 June, 2003N
The efficient computation of transition state resonances and reaction rates from a quantum normal form
A quantum version of a recent formulation of transition state theory in {\em
phase space} is presented. The theory developed provides an algorithm to
compute quantum reaction rates and the associated Gamov-Siegert resonances with
very high accuracy. The algorithm is especially efficient for
multi-degree-of-freedom systems where other approaches are no longer feasible.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex
Pressure-induced transient structural change of liquid germanium induced by high-energy picosecond laser pulses
The temporal evolution of the reflectivity of germanium at 514 nm upon irradiation with single high-energy picosecond laser pulses has been measured using a streak camera. It is found that, for a well-defined high fluence range, the reflectivity of the laser-induced molten phase attains a value of 0.85, considerably above the value reported for liquid Ge in thermal equilibrium (0.75). This behavior is consistent with a strong densification of the liquid phase remaining after the explosive vaporization of a thin surface layer. Within the specified fluence interval, this anomalously high reflectivity state is independent of the fluence and lasts tens of nanoseconds. Both characteristics point to the presence of a pressure-induced transient structural change in liquid germanium. © 2005 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewe
Testing Theories of Scarcity Pricing in the Airline Industry
This paper investigates why passengers pay substantially different fares for travel on the same airline between the same two airports. We investigate questions that are fundamentally different from those in the existing literature on airline price dispersion. We use a unique new dataset to test between two broad classes of theories regarding airline pricing. The first group of theories, as advanced by Dana (1999b) and Gale and Holmes (1993), postulates that airlines practice scarcity based pricing and predicts that variation in ticket prices is driven by differences between high demand and low demand periods. The second group of theories is that airlines practice price discrimination by using ticketing restrictions to segment customers by willingness to pay. We use a unique dataset, a census of ticket transactions from one of the major computer reservation systems, to study the relationships between fares, ticket characteristics, and flight load factors. The central advantage of our dataset is that it contains variables not previously available that permit a test of these theories. We find only mixed support for the scarcity pricing theories. Flights during high demand periods have slightly higher fares but exhibit no more fare dispersion than flights where demand is low. Moreover, the fraction of discounted advance purchase seats is only slightly higher on off-peak flights. However, ticket characteristics that are associated with second-degree price discrimination drive much of the variation in ticket pricing.
Internal displacement reactions in multicomponent oxides. Part I. Line compounds with narrow homogeneity range
As a model of an internal displacement reaction involving a ternary oxide "line" compound, the following reaction was studied at 1273 K as a function of time, t: Fe + NiTiO3 = "Ni" + "FeTiO3" Both polycrystalline and single-crystal materials were used as the starting NiTiO3 oxide. During the reaction, the Ni in the oxide compound is displaced by Fe and it precipitates as a γ-(Ni-Fe) alloy. The reaction preserves the starting ilmenite structure. The product oxide has a constant Ti concentration across the reaction zone, with variation in the concentration of Fe and Ni, consistent with ilmenite composition. In the case of single-crystal NiTiO3 as the starting oxide, the γ alloy has a "layered" structure and the layer separation is suggestive of Liesegang-type precipitation. In the case of polycrystalline NiTiO3 as the starting oxide, the alloy precipitates mainly along grain boundaries, with some particles inside the grains. A concentration gradient exists in the alloy across the reaction zone and the composition is >95 at. pct Ni at the reaction front. The parabolic rate constant for the reaction is kp = 1.3 × 10-12 m2 s-1 and is nearly the same for both single-crystal and polycrystalline oxides
Internal displacement reactions in multicomponent oxides: Part II. Oxide solid solutions of wide composition range
As models of internal displacement reactions in oxide solid solutions, the following reactions were studied at 1273 K as a function of time: Fe + NixMg1-x)O = Ni + (FexMg1-x)O Fe + (Co0.5Mg0.5)O = Co + (Fe0.5Mg0.5)O In both reactions, Ni or Co in the starting oxide is displaced by Fe and the γ-(Ni-Fe) or (Co-Fe) alloy is precipitated. In the reaction zone, composition gradients develop in both product phases, viz., the oxide and the alloy precipitate. The Ni (or Co) concentration of the alloy precipitate increases towards the reaction front. In the product oxide, the "inert" Mg diffuses toward the reaction front along with the Fe, while the Ni (or Co) diffusion is in the opposite direction, towards the Fe/boundary. The shape of the composition profiles for Mg and Fe in the product oxide suggests that cross-coefficient terms in the generalized flux equations contribute significantly to the cation flux. The parabolic rate constants of reactions involving Fe/(NixMg1-x)O decrease by nearly four orders of magnitude when x decreases from 1 to 0.1
Stability of Simple Periodic Orbits and Chaos in a Fermi -- Pasta -- Ulam Lattice
We investigate the connection between local and global dynamics in the Fermi
-- Pasta -- Ulam (FPU) -- model from the point of view of stability of
its simplest periodic orbits (SPOs). In particular, we show that there is a
relatively high mode of the linear lattice, having one
particle fixed every two oppositely moving ones (called SPO2 here), which can
be exactly continued to the nonlinear case for and whose
first destabilization, , as the energy (or ) increases for {\it
any} fixed , practically {\it coincides} with the onset of a ``weak'' form
of chaos preceding the break down of FPU recurrences, as predicted recently in
a similar study of the continuation of a very low () mode of the
corresponding linear chain. This energy threshold per particle behaves like
. We also follow exactly the properties of
another SPO (with ) in which fixed and moving particles are
interchanged (called SPO1 here) and which destabilizes at higher energies than
SPO2, since . We find that, immediately after
their first destabilization, these SPOs have different (positive) Lyapunov
spectra in their vicinity. However, as the energy increases further (at fixed
), these spectra converge to {\it the same} exponentially decreasing
function, thus providing strong evidence that the chaotic regions around SPO1
and SPO2 have ``merged'' and large scale chaos has spread throughout the
lattice.Comment: Physical Review E, 18 pages, 6 figure
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