13,795 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Productivity and equity returns: A century of evidence for 9 OECD countries
The share market boom in the 1990s is often linked to the acceleration in labour
productivity over the same period. This paper explores the suggestions that labour productivity
may be an inaccurate measure of firmâs cash flow which underlies equity valuations, and that
innovations in productivity in the 1990s may have had only have temporary effects on capital
productivity, the key element of the more correct measure of cash flow. Using a century of data for
the OECD countries it is shown empirically that the link of productivity to share returns is indeed
strongest for capital productivity, but generally the link is weaker that is sometimes maintained in
the literature
Combinatorial Structure of the Deterministic Seriation Method with Multiple Subset Solutions
Seriation methods order a set of descriptions given some criterion (e.g.,
unimodality or minimum distance between similarity scores). Seriation is thus
inherently a problem of finding the optimal solution among a set of
permutations of objects. In this short technical note, we review the
combinatorial structure of the classical seriation problem, which seeks a
single solution out of a set of objects. We then extend those results to the
iterative frequency seriation approach introduced by Lipo (1997), which finds
optimal subsets of objects which each satisfy the unimodality criterion within
each subset. The number of possible solutions across multiple solution subsets
is larger than , which underscores the need to find new algorithms and
heuristics to assist in the deterministic frequency seriation problem.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Gaps below strange star crusts
The gap caused by a strong electric field between the quark surface and
nuclear crust of a strange star is studied in an improved model including
gravity and pressure as well as electrostatic forces. The transition from gap
to crust is followed in detail. The properties of the gap are investigated for
a wide range of parameters assuming both color-flavor locked and non
color-flavor locked strange star cores. The maximally allowed crust density is
generally lower than that of neutron drip. Finite temperature is shown to
increase the gap width, but the effect is significant only at extreme
temperatures. Analytical approximations are derived and shown to provide useful
fits to the numerical results.Comment: 12 pages incl. 14 figures. To appear in Physical Review
Oxidation resistant porous material for transpiration cooled vanes
Porous metal sheet with controlled permeability was made by space winding and diffusion bonding fine wire. Two iron-chromium-aluminum alloys and three-chromium alloys were used: GE 1541 (Fe-Cr-Al-Y), H 875 (Fe-Cr-Al-Si), TD Ni Cr, DH 245 (Ni-Cr-Al-Si) and DH 242 (Ni-Cr-Si-Cb). GE 1541 and H 875 were shown in initial tests to have greater oxidation resistance than the other candidate alloys and were therefore tested more extensively. These two materials were cyclic furnace oxidation tested in air at 1800 and 2000 F for accumulated exposure times of 4, 16, 64, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, and and 600 hours. Oxidation weight gain, permeability change and mechanical properties were determined after exposure. Metallographic examination was performed to determine effects of exposure on the porous metal and electron beam weld joints of porous sheet to IN 100 strut material. Hundred hour stress rupture life and tensile tests were performed at 1800 F. Both alloys had excellent oxidation resistance and retention of mechanical properties and appear suitable for use as transpiration cooling materials in high temperature gas turbine engines
Genetic Improvement of Livestock for Organic Farming Systems
Organic farming which experienced a constant rise over the last two decades is a system based on sustainability and on a concept tending towards functional integrity. Legislation as well as the wish to produce separately from conventional farming raise the question whether organic farming should be conducted completely apart from conventional farming or not. This paper discusses the aspects that affect animal breeding under these circumstances, e.g., maintaining genetic diversity by using local breeds and possible GĂE interactions which might occur when breeds adapted to conventional farming systems are used in organic farming. Ways of modelling GĂE are presented, moreover examples of GĂE in dairy cattle, swine, and poultry are given. Trends in selection index theoryâdesigning multi-trait breeding goals including functional traits on one hand, and developing methods for using customised selection indices on the other handâsupport breeding work for organic farming systems. It is concluded that before the technical issues can be addressed, all parties involved, farmers, consumers as well as legislators, have to agree on the socio-cultural conditions under which organic farming should be conducted
Charge order in Magnetite. An LDA+ study
The electronic structure of the monoclinic structure of FeO is
studied using both the local density approximation (LDA) and the LDA+. The
LDA gives only a small charge disproportionation, thus excluding that the
structural distortion should be sufficient to give a charge order. The LDA+
results in a charge disproportion along the c-axis in good agreement with the
experiment. We also show how the effective can be calculated within the
augmented plane wave methods
Spin squeezing and precision probing with light and samples of atoms in the gaussian approximation
We consider an ensemble of trapped atoms interacting with a continuous wave
laser field. For sufficiently polarized atoms and for a polarized light field,
we may approximate the non-classical components of the collective spin angular
momentum operator for the atoms and the Stokes vectors of the field by
effective position and momentum variables for which we assume a gaussian state.
Within this approximation, we present a theory for the squeezing of the atomic
spin by polarization rotation measurements on the probe light. We derive
analytical expressions for the squeezing with and without inclusion of the
noise effects introduced by atomic decay and by photon absorption. The theory
is readily adapted to the case of inhomogeneous light-atom coupling [A. Kuzmich
and T.A.B. Kennedy, Phys. Rev. Lett. Vol. 92, 030407 (2004)]. As a special
case, we show how to formulate the theory for an optically thick sample by
slicing the gas into pieces each having only small photon absorption
probability. Our analysis of a realistic probing and measurement scheme shows
that it is the maximally squeezed component of the atomic gas that determines
the accuracy of the measurement.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Observation of force-detected nuclear magnetic resonance in a homogeneous field
We report the experimental realization of BOOMERANG (better observation of magnetization, enhanced resolution, and no gradient), a sensitive and general method of magnetic resonance. The prototype millimeter-scale NMR spectrometer shows signal and noise levels in agreement with the design principles. We present H-1 and F-19 NMR in both solid and liquid samples, including time-domain Fourier transform NMR spectroscopy, multiple-pulse echoes, and heteronuclear J spectroscopy. By measuring a H-1-F-19 J coupling, this last experiment accomplishes chemically specific spectroscopy with force-detected NMR. In BOOMERANG, an assembly of permanent magnets provides a homogeneous field throughout the sample, while a harmonically suspended part of the assembly, a detector, is mechanically driven by spin-dependent forces. By placing the sample in a homogeneous field, signal dephasing by diffusion in a field gradient is made negligible, enabling application to liquids, in contrast to other force-detection methods. The design appears readily scalable to ”m-scale samples where it should have sensitivity advantages over inductive detection with microcoils and where it holds great promise for application of magnetic resonance in biology, chemistry, physics, and surface science. We briefly discuss extensions of the BOOMERANG method to the ”m and nm scales
- âŠ