56,853 research outputs found
Labor Market Competition among Youths, White Women, and Others
We estimate substitution possibilities among a set of age-race-sex groups in the labor force. The estimates are based on cross-section data from SMSAs in 1969,and they allow us to consider how substitutable adult women are for young women or young men. The estimates are used, along with assumptions about the extent of wage rigidity and elasticities of labor supply, to simulate the direct and indirect effects of the growth of the female labor force on job opportunities for youth, assuming rigid wages for young workers, and on the wage rates of adult males, assuming these wages are flexible.
On the excitation of inertial modes in an experimental spherical Couette flow
Spherical Couette flow (flow between concentric rotating spheres) is one of
flows under consideration for the laboratory magnetic dynamos. Recent
experiments have shown that such flows may excite Coriolis restored inertial
modes. The present work aims to better understand the properties of the
observed modes and the nature of their excitation. Using numerical solutions
describing forced inertial modes of a uniformly rotating fluid inside a
spherical shell, we first identify the observed oscillations of the Couette
flow with non-axisymmetric, retrograde, equatorially anti-symmetric inertial
modes, confirming first attempts using a full sphere model. Although the model
has no differential rotation, identification is possible because a large
fraction of the fluid in a spherical Couette flow rotates rigidly. From the
observed sequence of the excited modes appearing when the inner sphere is
slowed down by step, we identify a critical Rossby number associated with a
given mode and below which it is excited. The matching between this critical
number and the one derived from the phase velocity of the numerically computed
modes shows that these modes are excited by an instability likely driven by the
critical layer that develops in the shear layer staying along the tangent
cylinder of the inner sphere.Comment: 11 pages, 17 figure
Quantum transport through single and multilayer icosahedral fullerenes
We use a tight-binding Hamiltonian and Green functions methods to calculate
the quantum transmission through single-wall fullerenes and bilayered and
trilayered onions of icosahedral symmetry attached to metallic leads. The
electronic structure of the onion-like fullerenes takes into account the
curvature and finite size of the fullerenes layers as well as the strength of
the intershell interactions depending on to the number of interacting atom
pairs belonging to adjacent shells. Misalignment of the symmetry axes of the
concentric icosahedral shells produces breaking of the level degeneracies of
the individual shells, giving rise some narrow quasi-continuum bands instead of
the localized discrete peaks of the individual fullerenes. As a result, the
transmission function for non symmetrical onions are rapidly varying functions
of the Fermi energy. Furthermore, we found that most of the features of the
transmission through the onions are due to the electronic structure of the
outer shell with additional Fano-like antiresonances arising from coupling with
or between the inner shells.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figur
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