9,747 research outputs found
Preference Erosion and Multilateral Trade Liberalization
Because of concern that OECD tariff reductions will translate into worsening export performance for the least developed countries, trade preferences have proven a stumbling block to developing country support for multilateral liberalization. We examine the actual scope for preference erosion, including an econometric assessment of the actual utilization, and also the scope for erosion estimated by modeling full elimination of OECD tariffs and hence full MFN liberalization-based preference erosion. Preferences are underutilized due to administrative burdenâestimated to be at least 4 percent on averageâreducing the magnitude of erosion costs significantly. For those products where preferences are used (are of value), the primary negative impact follows from erosion of EU preferences. This suggests the erosion problem is primarily bilateral rather than a WTO-based concern.preference erosion, GSP, WTO, Doha Round, trade and development
Transport in the metallic regime of Mn doped III-V Semiconductors
The standard model of Mn doping in GaAs is subjected to a coherent potential
approximation (CPA) treatment. Transport coefficients are evaluated within the
linear response Kubo formalism. Both normal (NHE) and anomalous contributions
(AHE) to the Hall effect are examined. We use a simple model density of states
to describe the undoped valence band. The CPA bandstructure evolves into a spin
split band caused by the exchange scattering with Mn dopants. This gives
rise to a strong magnetoresistance, which decreases sharply with temperature.
The temperature () dependence of the resistance is due to spin disorder
scattering (increasing with ), CPA bandstructure renormalization and charged
impurity scattering (decreasing with ). The calculated transport
coefficients are discussed in relation to experiment, with a view of assessing
the overall trends and deciding whether the model describes the right physics.
This does indeed appear to be case, bearing in mind that the hopping limit
needs to be treated separately, as it cannot be described within the band CPA.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Mediators of change in the stigmatization of depression among Caucasian and Asian populations
Public stigma negatively impacts public health by discouraging people with depression from seeking help. In North America, Asians reliably report higher levels of stigma and lower levels of help-seeking than do Caucasians. The reasons for this discrepancy and possible methods of reducing this have, however, rarely been explored. In Study 1, undergraduate students (n = 573) completed several questionnaires related to public stigma, values and ideological beliefs, attitudes and beliefs regarding people with depression and perceived norms. At least one week afterward, participants completed the second part of Study 1, where they were presented with contrived articles highlighting a biological cause for depression, a contextual causal for depression, or hope for recovery from depression, or were assigned to a control condition. Asian participants reported higher levels of stigma and increased desired social distance from people with depression compared to Caucasian participants. This difference was mediated by perceived norms, social dominance orientation, conservatism, and the belief that people with depression brings shame to their families. The articles presented were largely ineffective in reducing stigma or desired social distance. In Study 2, undergraduate students (n = 287), were presented with one of four anti-stigma videos with two actresses portraying a student with depression and a professor, respectively. The videos used the concept of social proof to effect change and presented either positive or negative descriptive norms. All videos were effective in reducing preferred social distance towards people with depression relative to the control condition for Asians, but not Caucasians. The effectiveness of the positive descriptive norm video was mediated through perceived norms, empathy, and self-efficacy. The effectiveness of the negative norm video was mediated through perceived norms and empathy only. Differences in preferred social distance between Asian and Caucasian participants were no longer significant. The findings can help guide interventions encouraging social engagement with people with depression among Asian student populations. Manipulating social norms and increasing self-efficacy may be especially effective, while changing attitudes may be less important in an Asian student population
Semi-Classical Wavefunction Perspective to High-Harmonic Generation
We introduce a semi-classical wavefunction (SCWF) model for strong-field
physics and attosecond science. When applied to high harmonic generation (HHG),
this formalism allows one to show that the natural time-domain separation of
the contribution of ionization, propagation and recollisions to the HHG process
leads to a frequency-domain factorization of the harmonic yield into these same
contributions, for any choice of atomic or molecular potential. We first derive
the factorization from the natural expression of the dipole signal in the
temporal domain by using a reference system, as in the quantitative
rescattering (QRS) formalism [J. Phys. B. 43, 122001 (2010)]. Alternatively, we
show how the trajectory component of the SCWF can be used to express the
factorization, which also allows one to attribute individual contributions to
the spectrum to the underlying trajectories
Magnetic structures of Mn3-xFexSn2: an experimental and theoretical study
We investigate the magnetic structure of Mn3-xFexSn2 using neutron powder
diffraction experiments and electronic structure calculations. These alloys
crystallize in the orthorhombic Ni3Sn2 type of structure (Pnma) and comprise
two inequivalent sites for the transition metal atoms (4c and 8d) and two Sn
sites (4c and 4c). The neutron data show that the substituting Fe atoms
predominantly occupy the 4c transition metal site and carry a lower magnetic
moment than Mn atoms. Four kinds of magnetic structures are encountered as a
function of temperature and composition: two simple ferromagnetic structures
(with the magnetic moments pointing along the b or c axis) and two canted
ferromagnetic arrangements (with the ferromagnetic component pointing along the
b or c axis). Electronic structure calculations results agree well with the
low-temperature experimental magnetic moments and canting angles throughout the
series. Comparisons between collinear and non-collinear computations show that
the canted state is stabilized by a band mechanism through the opening of a
hybridization gap. Synchrotron powder diffraction experiments on Mn3Sn2 reveal
a weak monoclinic distortion at low temperature (90.08 deg at 175 K). This
lowering of symmetry could explain the stabilization of the c-axis canted
ferromagnetic structure, which mixes two orthorhombic magnetic space groups, a
circumstance that would otherwise require unusually large high-order terms in
the spin Hamiltonian.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Black hole-neutron star mergers: effects of the orientation of the black hole spin
The spin of black holes in black hole-neutron star (BHNS) binaries can have a
strong influence on the merger dynamics and the postmerger state; a wide
variety of spin magnitudes and orientations are expected to occur in nature. In
this paper, we report the first simulations in full general relativity of BHNS
mergers with misaligned black hole spin. We vary the spin magnitude from a/m=0
to a/m=0.9 for aligned cases, and we vary the misalignment angle from 0 to 80
degrees for a/m=0.5. We restrict our study to 3:1 mass ratio systems and use a
simple Gamma-law equation of state. We find that the misalignment angle has a
strong effect on the mass of the postmerger accretion disk, but only for angles
greater than ~ 40 degrees. Although the disk mass varies significantly with
spin magnitude and misalignment angle, we find that all disks have very similar
lifetimes ~ 100ms. Their thermal and rotational profiles are also very similar.
For a misaligned merger, the disk is tilted with respect to the final black
hole's spin axis. This will cause the disk to precess, but on a timescale
longer than the accretion time. In all cases, we find promising setups for
gamma-ray burst production: the disks are hot, thick, and hyperaccreting, and a
baryon-clear region exists above the black hole.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
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