880 research outputs found
Human Capital, Demographics, and Growth across the US States 1920-1990
This paper finds robust evidence that age structure matters for subsequent growth in per capita income across the US states 1920-1990. The age groups 25-65 year are positively related to subsequent per capita income growth. Another conclusion is that the average years of schooling affects subsequent per capita income growth positively when age structure is controlled for. Moreover, the estimated speed of convergence (see e.g. Barro and Sala-i-Martin, 1992) increases substantially when schooling and age structure are held constant in the income growth regressions.Demographics; Human capital; Regions; Growth; Convergence
General contact mechanics theory for randomly rough surfaces with application to rubber friction
We generalize the Persson contact mechanics and rubber friction theory to the
case where both surfaces have surface roughness. The solids can be rigid,
elastic or viscoelastic, and can be homogeneous or layered. We calculate the
contact area, the viscoelastic contribution to the friction force, and the
average interfacial separation as a function of the sliding speed and the
nominal contact pressure. We illustrate the theory with numerical results for a
rubber block sliding on a road surface. We find that with increasing sliding
speed, the influence of the roughness on the rubber block decreases, and for
typical sliding speeds involved in tire dynamics it can be neglected
On the validity of the method of reduction of dimensionality: area of contact, average interfacial separation and contact stiffness
It has recently been suggested that many contact mechanics problems between
solids can be accurately studied by mapping the problem on an effective one
dimensional (1D) elastic foundation model. Using this 1D mapping we calculate
the contact area and the average interfacial separation between elastic solids
with nominally flat but randomly rough surfaces. We show, by comparison to
exact numerical results, that the 1D mapping method fails even qualitatively.
We also calculate the normal interfacial stiffness and compare it with the
result of an analytical study. We attribute the failure of the elastic
foundation model to the neglect of the long-range elastic coupling between the
asperity contact regions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 29 reference
Role of surface roughness in superlubricity
We study the sliding of elastic solids in adhesive contact with flat and
rough interfaces. We consider the dependence of the sliding friction on the
elastic modulus of the solids. For elastically hard solids with planar surfaces
with incommensurate surface structures we observe extremely low friction
(superlubricity), which very abruptly increases as the elastic modulus
decreases. We show that even a relatively small surface roughness may
completely kill the superlubricity state.Comment: 11 pages, 17 figures, format revte
Lithium atom storage in nanoporous cellulose via surface induced breakage
We demonstrate a physical mechanism that enhances a splitting of diatomic
at cellulose surfaces. The origin of this splitting is a possible
surface induced diatomic excited state resonance repulsion. The atomic Li is
then free to form either physical or chemical bonds with the cellulose surface
and even diffuse into the cellulose layer structure. This allows for an
enhanced storage capacity of atomic Li in nanoporous celluloseComment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Non-Perturbative Theory for Dispersion Self-Energy of Atoms
We go beyond the approximate series-expansions used in the dispersion theory
of finite size atoms. We demonstrate that a correct, and non-perturbative,
theory dramatically alters the dispersion selfenergies of atoms. The
non-perturbed theory gives as much as 100% corrections compared to the
traditional series expanded theory for the smaller noble gas atoms.Comment: 3 pages, no figures, 1 tabl
Resonance Interaction Induced by Metal Surfaces Catalyses Atom Pair Breakage
We present the theory for retarded resonance interaction between two
identical atoms at arbitrary positions near a metal surface. The dipole-dipole
resonance interaction force that binds isotropically excited atom pairs
together in free space may turn repulsive close to an ideal (totally
reflecting) metal surface. On the other hand, close to an infinitely permeable
surface it may turn more attractive. We illustrate numerically how the
dipole-dipole resonance interaction between two oxygen atoms near a metal
surface may provide a repulsive energy of the same order of magnitude as the
ground-state binding energy of an oxygen molecule. As a complement we also
present results from density-functional theory.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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