11,126 research outputs found
Costly Enforcement of Property Rights and the Coase Theorem
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties go to court to remove the ambiguity or bargain and settle privately, they incur enforcement costs. When the parties bargain, a version of the Coase theorem holds. Despite the additional costs of going to court, other ex post ine.ciencies, and the absence of incomplete information, however, going to court may be an equilibrium or ex ante Pareto-superior over settlement; this is especially true in dynamic settings whereby a court decision saves on future enforcement costs. When the parties do not negotiate and go to court the Coase theorem ceases to hold, and a simple rule for the initial assignment of rights maximizes net surplus.
Giant ultrafast Kerr effect in type-II superconductors
We study the ultrafast Kerr effect and high-harmonic generation in type-II
superconductors by formulating a new model for a time-varying electromagnetic
pulse normally incident on a thin-film superconductor. It is found that type-II
superconductors exhibit exceptionally large due to the progressive
destruction of Cooper pairs, and display high-harmonic generation at low
incident intensities, and the highest nonlinear susceptibility of all known
materials in the THz regime. Our theory opens up new avenues for accessible
analytical and numerical studies of the ultrafast dynamics of superconductors
On the Topological Nature of the Hawking Temperature of Black Holes
In this work we determine that the Hawking temperature of black holes
possesses a purely topological nature. We find a very simple but powerful
formula, based on a topological invariant known as the Euler characteristic,
which is able to provide the exact Hawking temperature of any two-dimensional
black hole -- and in fact of any metric that can be dimensionally reduced to
two dimensions -- in any given coordinate system, introducing a covariant way
to determine the temperature only using virtually trivial computations. We
apply the topological temperature formula to several known black hole systems
as well as to the Hawking emission of solitons of integrable equations.Comment: Updated version with more relevant reference
Universal quantum Hawking evaporation of integrable two-dimensional solitons
We show that any soliton solution of an arbitrary two-dimensional integrable
equation has the potential to eventually evaporate and emit the exact analogue
of Hawking radiation from black holes. From the AKNS matrix formulation of
integrability, we show that it is possible to associate a real spacetime metric
tensor which defines a curved surface, perceived by the classical and quantum
fluctuations propagating on the soliton. By defining proper scalar invariants
of the associated Riemannian geometry, and introducing the conformal anomaly,
we are able to determine the Hawking temperatures and entropies of the
fundamental solitons of the nonlinear Schroedinger, KdV and sine-Gordon
equations. The mechanism advanced here is simple, completely universal and can
be applied to all integrable equations in two dimensions, and is easily
applicable to a large class of black holes of any dimensionality, opening up
totally new windows on the quantum mechanics of solitons and their deep
connections with black hole physics
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