3,789 research outputs found
Foreign Direct Investment and Education Investment in Developing Countries
We introduce a model to explain the economic rationale for the observed policy combination of a developing country (hosting foreign direct investment (FDI) through education investment (EDI)) and the interest of a multinational corporation (MNC) in the local labor quality when it contemplates FDI. Information on local labor is the source of a more efficient contract for the MNC with local labor, and the local government can benefit both agents through EDI, FDI, and information sharing. This strategy set is likely to be used by a country in the early stage of economic development. The education level chosen by the local government, however, will be higher than that which maximizes the welfare of local labor. In that sense, the government has the incentive to benefit itself and the MNC at the expense of local labor.International Relations/Trade, Labor and Human Capital,
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Vibronic mixing enables ultrafast energy flow in light-harvesting complex II.
Since the discovery of quantum beats in the two-dimensional electronic spectra of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes over a decade ago, the origin and mechanistic function of these beats in photosynthetic light-harvesting has been extensively debated. The current consensus is that these long-lived oscillatory features likely result from electronic-vibrational mixing, however, it remains uncertain if such mixing significantly influences energy transport. Here, we examine the interplay between the electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom (DoF) during the excitation energy transfer (EET) dynamics of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) with two-dimensional electronic-vibrational spectroscopy. Particularly, we show the involvement of the nuclear DoF during EET through the participation of higher-lying vibronic chlorophyll states and assign observed oscillatory features to specific EET pathways, demonstrating a significant step in mapping evolution from energy to physical space. These frequencies correspond to known vibrational modes of chlorophyll, suggesting that electronic-vibrational mixing facilitates rapid EET over moderately size energy gaps
Multi-center MICZ-Kepler systems
We present the classical solutions of the two-center MICZ-Kepler and
MICZ-Kepler-Stark systems. Then we suggest the model of multi-center
MICZ-Kepler system on the curved spaces equipped with -invariant
conformal flat metrics.Comment: 7 pages, typos corrected, refs added. Contribution to the Proceedings
of International Workshop on Classical and Quantum Integrable systems,
24-28.01.2007, Dubna, Russi
Localizing Ability of [48V] Vanadyl(IV)-Pheophorbide into Tumor
開始ページ、終了ページ: 冊子体のページ付
Infrared Imaging of the Gravitational Lens PG 1115+080 with the Subaru Telescope
We present high spatial resolution images of the gravitational-lens system PG
1115+080 taken with the near-infrared camera (CISCO) on the Subaru telescope.
The FWHM of the combined image is in the -band, yielding spatial
resolution of after a deconvolution procedure. This is a first
detection of an extended emission adjacent to the A1/A2 components, indicating
the presence of a fairly bright emission region with a characteristic angular
radius of 5 mas (40 pc). The near-infrared image of the Einstein ring
was extracted in both the and bands. The color is found to be
significantly redder than that of a synthetic model galaxy with an age of 3
Gyr, the age of the universe at the quasar redshift.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in PASJ(2000
Development of the Shinshu University Online System of General Academic Resources (SOAR)
This paper discusses the development of the Shinshu University Online System of General Academic Resources (SOAR). As a participant in the 2006-2007 Cyber Science Infrastructure (CSI) development project of the National Institute of Informatics (NII), Shinshu University is seeking to develop SOAR as an integrated academic resource system. In addition to developing an environment for providing accesstothe latest academic resources within the university, SOAR is intended to promulgate university research results and research activities, both within Japan and around the world, to a broad audience. Specifically, this system achieves mutual coordination by linking e-journals and the Web of Science to the researcher directory and the institutional repository—two system cornerstones. SOAR can be regarded as a potential model for future academic-resource systems. Although the Institutional Repository (SOAR-IR) was developed using existing software, the Researcher Directory (SOARRD) is a new system based on XML technology.ArticleProgress in Informatics. 5:137-151 (2008)journal articl
Planar CuO_2 hole density estimation in multilayered high-T_c cuprates
We report that planar CuO_2 hole densities in high-T_c cuprates are
consistently determined by the Cu-NMR Knight shift. In single- and bi-layered
cuprates, it is demonstrated that the spin part of the Knight shift K_s(300 K)
at room temperature monotonically increases with the hole density from
underdoped to overdoped regions, suggesting that the relationship of K_s(300 K)
vs. p is a reliable measure to determine p. The validity of this K_s(300 K)-p
relationship is confirmed by the investigation of the p-dependencies of
hyperfine magnetic fields and of spin susceptibility for single- and bi-layered
cuprates with tetragonal symmetry. Moreover, the analyses are compared with the
NMR data on three-layered Ba_2Ca_2Cu_3O_6(F,O)_2, HgBa_2Ca_2Cu_3O_{8+delta},
and five-layered HgBa_2Ca_4Cu_5O_{12+delta}, which suggests the general
applicability of the K_s(300 K)-p relationship to multilayered compounds with
more than three CuO_2 planes. We remark that the measurement of K_s(300 K)
enables us to separately estimate p for each CuO_2 plane in multilayered
compounds, where doped hole carriers are inequivalent between outer CuO_2
planes and inner CuO_2 planes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 2 Tables, to be published in Physical Review
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