16,404 research outputs found
Decreasing Opportunities for Low-Wage Workers: The Role of the Nondiscrimination Law for Employer-Provided Health Insurance
As of 1978, the favorable tax treatment of fringe benefits, including health insurance, has been regulated via a nondiscrimination clause such that low-wage, full-time workers must be offered health insurance (and other benefits) that are offered to higher-wage workers by the firm. Part-time workers may be excluded from coverage, however, creating incentives for firms to hire some types of workers part time to deny them coverage. We hypothesize that firms will hire fewer workers whose relative costs have increased, that is, low-wage workers. These workers will be less likely to work for firms that offer coverage, and those that do will be more likely to work part time without being eligible for the firmâs health insurance benefits. We use the 1988 and 1993 Employee Benefits Supplements to the Current Population Surveys and an employer premium imputation to examine these hypotheses. Both the descriptive and multivariate analysis are consistent with our hypotheses. We predict the probability of working for a firm that offers health insurance to decrease as premiums increase for both high- and low-wage workers. An increase in the premium is also associated with a decrease in the probability of part-time work, but an even greater decrease in the joint probability of part-time work with eligibility for health insurance.
Experimental Studies of the NaCs 53Î 0 and a3ÎŁ+ States
We report high resolution measurements of 372 NaCs 53Î 0(v, J) ro-vibrational level energies in the range 0 †v †22. The data have been used to construct NaCs 53Î 0 potential energy curves using the RydbergâKlein-Rees and inverted perturbation approximation methods. Bound-free 53Î 0(v, J) â 1(a)3ÎŁ+ emission has also been measured, and is used to determine the repulsive wall of the 1(a)3ÎŁ+ state and the 53Î 0 â 1(a)3ÎŁ+ relative transition dipole moment function. Hyperfine structure in the 53Î 0 state has not been observed in this experiment. This null result is explained using a simple vector coupling model
Collisional Transfer of Population and Orientation in NaK
We report current work to study transfer of population and orientation in collisions of NaK molecules with argon and potassium atoms using polarization labeling (PL) and laser- induced fluorescence (LIF) spectroscopy. In the PL experiment, a circularly polarized pump laser excites a specific NaK A1ÎŁ +(v 0=16, J 0 ) â X1ÎŁ +(v 00=0, J 0 ± 1) transition, creating an orientation (non-uniform MJ0 level distribution) in both levels. The linearly polarized probe laser is scanned over various 31Î (v, J 0±1) â A1ÎŁ +(v 0=16, J 0 ) transitions. The probe laser passes through a crossed linear polarizer before detection, and signal is recorded if the probe laser polarization has been modified by the vapor (which occurs when it comes into resonance with an oriented level). Using both spectroscopic methods, analysis of weak collisional satellite lines adjacent to these directly populated lines, as a function of argon buffer gas pressure and cell temperature, allows us to discern separately the effects collisions with argon atoms and potassium atoms have on the population and orientation of the molecule. In addition, code has been written which provides a theoretical analysis of the process, through a solution of the density matrix equations of motion for the system
Polarization Spectroscopy and Collisions in NaK
We report current work to study transfer of population and orientation in collisions of NaK molecules with argon and potassium atoms using polarization labeling (PL) and laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) spectroscopy. In the PL experiment, a circularly polarized pump laser excites a specific NaK A1ÎŁ +(v=16, J) â X1ÎŁ +(v=0, J ± 1) transition, creating an orientation (non-uniform MJ level distribution) in both levels. The linear polarized probe laser is scanned over various 3 1Î (v=8, J 0 ± 1) â A1ÎŁ +(v=16, J 0 ) transitions. The probe laser passes through a crossed linear polarizer before detection, and signal is recorded if the probe laser polarization has been modified by the vapor (which occurs when it comes into resonance with an oriented level). In addition to strong direct transitions (J 0 = J), we also observe weak collisional satellite lines (J 0 = J ±n with n = 1, 2, 3, ...) indicating that orientation is transferred to adjacent rotational levels during a collision. An LIF experiment (with linear polarized pump and probe beams) gives information on the collisional transfer of population. From these data, cross sections for both processes can be determined. We experimentally distinguish collisions of NaK with argon atoms from collisions with alkali atoms
Chemical Abundances of the Damped Lya Systems at z>1.5
We present chemical abundance measurements for 19 damped lya systems observed
with HIRES on the 10m W.M. Keck Telescope. Our principal goal is to investigate
the abundance patterns of the damped systems and thereby determine the
underlying physical processes which dominate their chemical evolution. We place
particular emphasis on gauging the relative importance of two complementary
effects often invoked to explain the damped lya abundances: (1) nucleosynthetic
enrichment from Type II supernovae and (2) an ISM-like dust depletion pattern.
Similar to the principal results of Lu et al. (1996), our observations lend
support both for dust depletion and Type II SN enrichment. Specifically, the
observed overabundance of Zn/Fe and underabundance of Ni/Fe relative to solar
abundances suggest significant dust depletion within the damped lya systems.
Meanwhile, the relative abundances of Al, Si, and Cr vs. Fe are consistent with
both dust depletion and Type II supernova enrichment. Our measurements of Ti/Fe
and the Mn/Fe measurements from Lu et al. (1996), however, cannot be explained
by dust depletion and indicate an underlying Type II SN pattern. Finally, the
observed values of [S/Fe] are inconsistent with the combined effects of dust
depletion and the nucleosynthetic yields expected for Type II supernovae. This
last result emphasizes the need for another physical process to explain the
damped lya abundance patterns.
We also examine the metallicity of the damped lya systems both with respect
to Zn/H and Fe/H. Our results confirm previous surveys by Pettini and
collaborators, i.e., [] = -1.15 +/- 0.15 dex. [abridged]Comment: 18 pages, 4 embedded figures, 20 additional figures. Accepted to the
Astrophysical Journal 10/20/98. Uses Latex2e, emualteapj.sty, and
onecolfloat.st
CII* Absorption in Damped Lyman Alpha Systems: (II) A New Window on the Star Formation History of the Universe
Starting from the SFR per unit physical area, determined for DLAs using the C
II* method, we obtain the SFR per unit comoving volume at 3, and
find that it agrees with that for the Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). Though the
mass of produced stars indicated by the SFRs is consistent with the current
densities of known stellar populations, the mass of metals produced by =2.5
is 30 times larger than detected in absorption in DLAs. The most likely
solutions to this ``missing metals'' problem is that star formation occurs in
compact bulge regions. We search for evidence of feedback and find no
correlations between the SFR per unit area and N(H I), but possible
correlations between SFR per unit area and low-ion velocity width and SFR per
unit area and metal abundance. We show that (a) the correlation between cooling
rate and dust-to-gas ratio is positive evidence for grain photoelectric
heating, (b) the CMB does not significantly populate the C II excited
fine-structure states, and (c) the ratio of CII* to resonance-line optical
depths is a sensitive probe of the multi-phase structure of the DLA gas. We
address recent arguments that DLAs are comprised only of WNM gas, and show them
to be inconclusive. Despite the rough agreement between SFR per unit comoving
volume for DLAs and LBGs, current evidence indicates these are distinct
populations
Comparing Segmentation by Time and by Motion in Visual Search: An fMRI Investigation
Abstract
Brain activity was recorded while participants engaged in a difficult visual search task for a target defined by the spatial configuration of its component elements. The search displays were segmented by time (a preview then a search display), by motion, or were unsegmented. A preparatory network showed activity to the preview display, in the time but not in the motion segmentation condition. A region of the precuneus showed (i) higher activation when displays were segmented by time or by motion, and (ii) correlated activity with larger segmentation benefits behaviorally, regardless of the cue. Additionally, the results revealed that success in temporal segmentation was correlated with reduced activation in early visual areas, including V1. The results depict partially overlapping brain networks for segmentation in search by time and motion, with both cue-independent and cue-specific mechanisms.</jats:p
Resonance-like piezoelectric electron-phonon interaction in layered structures
We show that mismatch of the piezoelectric parameters between layers of
multiple-quantum well structures leads to modification of the electron-phonon
interaction. In particular, short-wavelength phonons propagating perpendicular
to the layers with wavevector close to , where is the period of
the structure, induce a strong smoothly-varying component of the
piezo-potential. As a result, they interact efficiently with 2D electrons. It
is shown, that this property leads to emission of collimated
quasi-monochromatic beams of high-frequency acoustic phonons from hot electrons
in multiple-quantum well structures. We argue that this effect is responsible
for the recently reported monochromatic transverse phonon emission from
optically excited GaAs/AlAs superlattices, and provide additional experimental
evidences of this.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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Agroforestry: integrating apple and arable production as an approach to reducing copper use in organic and low-input apple production
Integrating top fruit production into an agroforestry system, where trees are integrated with arable crop production may have a beneficial effect on the control of plant pathogens such as scab (Venturia inaequalis). Apple yields and pest and disease levels were assessed in a novel apple/arable agroforestry system in Suffolk, and compared with a modern local organic orchard in 2012. Despite 2012 being a very bad year for apple production in the UK, apple yields in the agroforestry system appeared to be comparable with standard figures when scaled up from 2.5% land area under apple production to 100% apples, and even at just 2.5% cover, outperformed the organic orchard used for comparison. Initial indications are that scab levels were over twice as high in the organic orchard than in the agroforestry, indicating that this approach may offer some potential in reducing copper use in organic apple production. However, further research will be required to confirm these early results
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