17,979 research outputs found
Axiomatic Digital Topology
The paper presents a new set of axioms of digital topology, which are easily
understandable for application developers. They define a class of locally
finite (LF) topological spaces. An important property of LF spaces satisfying
the axioms is that the neighborhood relation is antisymmetric and transitive.
Therefore any connected and non-trivial LF space is isomorphic to an abstract
cell complex. The paper demonstrates that in an n-dimensional digital space
only those of the (a, b)-adjacencies commonly used in computer imagery have
analogs among the LF spaces, in which a and b are different and one of the
adjacencies is the "maximal" one, corresponding to 3n\"i1 neighbors. Even these
(a, b)-adjacencies have important limitations and drawbacks. The most important
one is that they are applicable only to binary images. The way of easily using
LF spaces in computer imagery on standard orthogonal grids containing only
pixels or voxels and no cells of lower dimensions is suggested
Risk Rationing in China Rural Credit Markets
The purpose of this paper is to provide a specific test of Boucher, Carter et al. (2008) framework on risk rationing. The data were collected through a survey of 730 farm households in Shaanxi province conducted in November 2010. We compare factor associated with risk rationed, quantity rationed and price rationed farmers. Seemingly unrelated regressions are performed using risk rationing, quantity rationing and price rationing measure as the dependent variable and measures of demography, wealth, income, year of farming and risk aversion as independent variables. We apply seemingly unrelated regression, cluster analysis and cross tabulation in the study. According to a seemingly unrelated regression, we find existing risk rationing is due to risk-based behavior by borrowers. A cross tabulation results support the proposition by Boucher, Carter et al showing the financial wealthy is risk rationed and relatively land-poor is risk rationed. This paper is believed to be among the first empirical validation of the risk rationing theory.Risk rationing, credit market, china, Marketing, Risk and Uncertainty,
Understanding Hot-Electron Generation and Plasmon Relaxation in Metal Nanocrystals: Quantum and Classical Mechanisms
Generation of energetic (hot) electrons is an intrinsic property of any
plasmonic nanostructure under illumination. Simultaneously, a striking
advantage of metal nanocrystals over semiconductors lies in their very large
absorption cross sections. Therefore, metal nanostructures with strong and
tailored plasmonic resonances are very attractive for photocatalytic
applications. However, the central questions regarding plasmonic hot electrons
are how to quantify and extract the optically-excited energetic electrons in a
nanocrystal. We develop a theory describing the generation rates and the
energy-distributions of hot electrons in nanocrystals with various geometries.
In our theory, hot electrons are generated owing to surfaces and hot spots. The
formalism predicts that large optically-excited nanocrystals show the
excitation of mostly low-energy Drude electrons, whereas plasmons in small
nanocrystals involve mostly hot electrons. The energy distributions of
electrons in an optically-excited nanocrystal show how the quantum many-body
state in small particles evolves towards the classical state described by the
Drude model when increasing nanocrystal size. We show that the rate of surface
decay of plasmons in nanocrystals is directly related to the rate of generation
of hot electrons. Based on a detailed many-body theory involving kinetic
coefficients, we formulate a simple scheme describing the plasmon's dephasing.
In most nanocrystals, the main decay mechanism of a plasmon is the Drude
friction-like process and the secondary path comes from generation of hot
electrons due to surfaces and electromagnetic hot spots. This latter path
strongly depends on the size, shape and material of the nanocrystal,
correspondingly affecting its efficiency of hot-electron production. The
results in the paper can be used to guide the design of plasmonic nanomaterials
for photochemistry and photodetectors.Comment: 90 pages, 21 figures, including Supplementary Informatio
Negative reflections of electromagnetic waves in chiral media
We investigate the reflection properties of electromagnetic/optical waves in
isotropic chiral media. When the chiral parameter is strong enough, we show
that an unusual \emph{negative reflection} occurs at the interface of the
chiral medium and a perfectly conducting plane, where the incident wave and one
of reflected eigenwaves lie in the same side of the boundary normal. Using such
a property, we further demonstrate that such a conducting plane can be used for
focusing in the strong chiral medium. The related equations under paraxial
optics approximation are deduced. In a special case of chiral medium, the
chiral nihility, one of the bi-reflections disappears and only single reflected
eigenwave exists, which goes exactly opposite to the incident wave. Hence the
incident and reflected electric fields will cancel each other to yield a zero
total electric field. In another word, any electromagnetic waves entering the
chiral nihility with perfectly conducting plane will disappear.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Stabilization of the Electroweak Scale in 3-3-1 Models
One way of avoiding the destabilization of the electroweak scale through a
strong coupled regime naturally occurs in models with a Landau-like pole at the
TeV scale. Hence, the quadratic divergence contributions to the scalar masses
are not considered as a problem anymore since a new nonperturbative dynamic
emerges at the TeV scale. This scale should be an intrinsic feature of the
models and there is no need to invoke any other sort of protection for the
electroweak scale. In some models based on the gauge symmetry, a nonperturbative dynamics arise and it stabilizes
the electroweak scale.Comment: 10 pages. Version with some improvements and corrections in the tex
Dimension on Discrete Spaces
In this paper we develop some combinatorial models for continuous spaces. In
this spirit we study the approximations of continuous spaces by graphs,
molecular spaces and coordinate matrices. We define the dimension on a discrete
space by means of axioms, and the axioms are based on an obvious geometrical
background. This work presents some discrete models of n-dimensional Euclidean
spaces, n-dimensional spheres, a torus and a projective plane. It explains how
to construct new discrete spaces and describes in this connection several
three-dimensional closed surfaces with some topological singularities
It also analyzes the topology of (3+1)-spacetime. We are also discussing the
question by R. Sorkin [19] about how to derive the system of simplicial
complexes from a system of open covering of a topological space S.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, Latex. Figures are not included, available from
the author upon request. Preprint SU-GP-93/1-1. To appear in "International
Journal of Theoretical Physics
Experience versus Talent Shapes the Structure of the Web
We use sequential large-scale crawl data to empirically investigate and
validate the dynamics that underlie the evolution of the structure of the web.
We find that the overall structure of the web is defined by an intricate
interplay between experience or entitlement of the pages (as measured by the
number of inbound hyperlinks a page already has), inherent talent or fitness of
the pages (as measured by the likelihood that someone visiting the page would
give a hyperlink to it), and the continual high rates of birth and death of
pages on the web. We find that the web is conservative in judging talent and
the overall fitness distribution is exponential, showing low variability. The
small variance in talent, however, is enough to lead to experience
distributions with high variance: The preferential attachment mechanism
amplifies these small biases and leads to heavy-tailed power-law (PL) inbound
degree distributions over all pages, as well as over pages that are of the same
age. The balancing act between experience and talent on the web allows newly
introduced pages with novel and interesting content to grow quickly and surpass
older pages. In this regard, it is much like what we observe in high-mobility
and meritocratic societies: People with entitlement continue to have access to
the best resources, but there is just enough screening for fitness that allows
for talented winners to emerge and join the ranks of the leaders. Finally, we
show that the fitness estimates have potential practical applications in
ranking query results
Intrinsic Spin Hall Effect in the presence of Extrinsic Spin-Orbit Scattering
Intrinsic and extrinsic spin Hall effects are considered together on an equal
theoretical footing for the Rashba spin-orbit coupling in two-dimensional (2D)
electron and hole systems, using the diagrammatic method for calculating the
spin Hall conductivity. Our analytic theory for the 2D holes shows the expected
lowest-order additive result for the spin Hall conductivity. But, the 2D
electrons manifest a very surprising result, exhibiting a non-analyticity in
the Rashba coupling strength where the strictly extrinsic spin Hall
conductivity (for ) cannot be recovered from the
limit of the combined theory. The theoretical results are discussed in the
context of existing experimental results.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Livelihood Disruption and Venture Creation: Entrepreneurship as Technology Adoption A Comparison between Kentucky and Shaanxi Farmers
In the US, The Tobacco Transition Payment Program, also called the "tobacco buy-out," helps tobacco quota holders and producers transition to the free market. In China, the transaction of Land Use Rights providing farmersâ ability to buy or sell Land Use Rights has been seriously considered by the Chinese government. The uncertainty in household income and changes in economic environment during the US Tobacco Transition Payment Program and the Chinese Land Use Rights Regime lead many individuals into entrepreneurial activities. Entrepreneurship often means making changes in livelihood activities that involve substantial risks to income. While the rewards may be substantial, transactions costs may make decisions irreversible. This paper draws a comparison between entrepreneurship and technology adoption. Adopting a new production technology also involves substantial risks. The economics of technology adoption is a well developed literature with many accepted and testable models. Most prominent are the theories of learning by using and learning by doing. We review the technology adoption literature, drawing out lessons for entrepreneurship research. We then apply an âentrepreneurship as technology adoptionâ model to a unique dataset collected in Kentucky, US and in Shaanxi province, China. Using a sample of 702 Kentucky farmers at the time of the buyout and 730 Chinese farmers, we test several of the implications of this model and compare significant results between Kentucky and Shaanxi farmers. This study finds that both farmers in Kentucky and Shaanxi with a strong social network are more likely to become entrepreneurs. Kentucky farmers with low income are more likely to start new businesses. The finding supports the âpushâ hypothesis as farmers with low income are pushed into starting a new business. The human capital factor is strongly associated with Shaanxi farmerâs entrepreneurial decision.Farm Management, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
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