10,430 research outputs found
Reply to 'Comment on "Detuning effects in the one-photon mazer" '
We refute in this Reply the criticisms made by M. Abdel-Aty [Phys. Rev. A 70,
047801 (2004)]. We show that none of them are founded and we demonstrate very
explicitly what is wrong in the arguments developed by this author.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
LABOR ADJUSTMENT AND GRADUAL REFORM: IS COMMITMENT IMPORTANT?
We analyze a model in which a government uses a second best policy to affect the reallocation of labor, following a change in relative prices. We consider two extreme cases, in which the government has either unlimited or negligible ability to commit to future actions. We explain why the ability to make commitments may be unimportant, and we illustrate this conjecture with numerical examples. For either assumption about commitment ability, the equilibrium policy involves gradual liberalization. The dying sector is protected during the transition to a free market, in order to decrease the amount of unemployment Our results are sensitive to the assumptions about migration.adjustment costs, dynamic tariffs, time inconsistency, Markov perfection, Labor and Human Capital,
The Political Economy of Declining Industries: Senescent Industry Collapse Revisited
One of the most robust empirical regularities in the political economy of trade is the persistence of protection. This paper explains persistent protection in terms of the interaction between industry adjustment, lobbying, and the political response. Faced with a trade shock, owners of industry-specific factors can undertake costly adjustment, or they can lobby politicians for protection and thereby mitigate the need for adjustment. The choice depends on the returns from adjusting relative to lobbying. By introducing an explicit lobbying process, it can be shown that the level of tariffs is an increasing function of past tariffs. Since current adjustment diminishes future lobbying intensity, and protection reduces adjustment, current protection raises future protection. This simple lobbying feedback effect has an important dynamic resource allocation effect: declining industries contract more slowly over time and never fully adjust. In addition, the model makes clear that the type of collapse predicted by Cassing and Hillman (1986) is only possible under special conditions, such as a fixed cost to lobbying. The paper also considers the symmetric case of lobbying in growing industries.
Multilateralism cursed by bilateralism: Japan’s Role at the International Whaling Commission
We propose a new categorization of international organizations to account for the fact that within multilateral international organizations, states may engage in “enticement” strategies in order to advance their policy preferences. Thus, to the traditional multilateral/bilateral categorizations we substitute a hard multilateral/soft multilateral and reciprocal bilateral/bilateral taxonomy. For illustration purposes, we use the well-known case study of Japan and the International Whaling Commission (IWC). Using a modified gravity model to analyze Japan’s Official Development Assistance from 1973-2005, we find that Japan has a very traditional – and generous – assistance policy broadly defined, but when it comes to the IWC, some of the general principles driving the aid policy are put aside to possibly influence vote outcomes. Given this finding, we conclude that the IWC is best categorized as a soft multilateral organization.
Chemical abundances of fast-rotating massive stars. I. Description of the methods and individual results
Aims: Recent observations have challenged our understanding of rotational
mixing in massive stars by revealing a population of fast-rotating objects with
apparently normal surface nitrogen abundances. However, several questions have
arisen because of a number of issues, which have rendered a reinvestigation
necessary; these issues include the presence of numerous upper limits for the
nitrogen abundance, unknown multiplicity status, and a mix of stars with
different physical properties, such as their mass and evolutionary state, which
are known to control the amount of rotational mixing. Methods: We have
carefully selected a large sample of bright, fast-rotating early-type stars of
our Galaxy (40 objects with spectral types between B0.5 and O4). Their
high-quality, high-resolution optical spectra were then analysed with the
stellar atmosphere modelling codes DETAIL/SURFACE or CMFGEN, depending on the
temperature of the target. Several internal and external checks were performed
to validate our methods; notably, we compared our results with literature data
for some well-known objects, studied the effect of gravity darkening, or
confronted the results provided by the two codes for stars amenable to both
analyses. Furthermore, we studied the radial velocities of the stars to assess
their binarity. Results: This first part of our study presents our methods and
provides the derived stellar parameters, He, CNO abundances, and the
multiplicity status of every star of the sample. It is the first time that He
and CNO abundances of such a large number of Galactic massive fast rotators are
determined in a homogeneous way.Comment: accepted for publication by A&
On transport in quantum Hall systems with constrictions
Motivated by recent experimental findings, we study transport in a simple
phenomenological model of a quantum Hall edge system with a gate-voltage
controlled constriction lowering the local filling factor. The current
backscattered from the constriction is seen to arise from the matching of the
properties of the edge-current excitations in the constriction () and
bulk () regions. We develop a hydrodynamic theory for bosonic edge
modes inspired by this model, finding that a competition between two tunneling
process, related by a quasiparticle-quasihole symmetry, determines the fate of
the low-bias transmission conductance. In this way, we find satisfactory
explanations for many recent puzzling experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Limits of sensing temporal concentration changes by single cells
Berg and Purcell [Biophys. J. 20, 193 (1977)] calculated how the accuracy of
concentration sensing by single-celled organisms is limited by noise from the
small number of counted molecules. Here we generalize their results to the
sensing of concentration ramps, which is often the biologically relevant
situation (e.g. during bacterial chemotaxis). We calculate lower bounds on the
uncertainty of ramp sensing by three measurement devices: a single receptor, an
absorbing sphere, and a monitoring sphere. We contrast two strategies, simple
linear regression of the input signal versus maximum likelihood estimation, and
show that the latter can be twice as accurate as the former. Finally, we
consider biological implementations of these two strategies, and identify
possible signatures that maximum likelihood estimation is implemented by real
biological systems.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Limits of feedback control in bacterial chemotaxis
Inputs to signaling pathways can have complex statistics that depend on the
environment and on the behavioral response to previous stimuli. Such behavioral
feedback is particularly important in navigation. Successful navigation relies
on proper coupling between sensors, which gather information during motion, and
actuators, which control behavior. Because reorientation conditions future
inputs, behavioral feedback can place sensors and actuators in an operational
regime different from the resting state. How then can organisms maintain proper
information transfer through the pathway while navigating diverse environments?
In bacterial chemotaxis, robust performance is often attributed to the zero
integral feedback control of the sensor, which guarantees that activity returns
to resting state when the input remains constant. While this property provides
sensitivity over a wide range of signal intensities, it remains unclear how
other parameters affect chemotactic performance, especially when considering
that the swimming behavior of the cell determines the input signal. Using
analytical models and simulations that incorporate recent experimental
evidences about behavioral feedback and flagellar motor adaptation we identify
an operational regime of the pathway that maximizes drift velocity for various
environments and sensor adaptation rates. This optimal regime is outside the
dynamic range of the motor response, but maximizes the contrast between run
duration up and down gradients. In steep gradients, the feedback from
chemotactic drift can push the system through a bifurcation. This creates a
non-chemotactic state that traps cells unless the motor is allowed to adapt.
Although motor adaptation helps, we find that as the strength of the feedback
increases individual phenotypes cannot maintain the optimal operational regime
in all environments, suggesting that diversity could be beneficial.Comment: Corrected one typo. First two authors contributed equally. Notably,
there were various typos in the values of the parameters in the model of
motor adaptation. The results remain unchange
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