40 research outputs found
Theory of coherent optical nonlinearities of intersubband transitions in semiconductor quantum wells
We theoretically study the coherent nonlinear response of electrons confined
in semiconductor quantum wells under the effect of an electromagnetic radiation
close to resonance with an intersubband transition. Our approach is based on
the time-dependent Schr\"odinger-Poisson equation stemming from a Hartree
description of Coulomb-interacting electrons. This equation is solved by
standard numerical tools and the results are interpreted in terms of
approximated analytical formulas. For growing intensity, we observe a redshift
of the effective resonance frequency due to the reduction of the electric
dipole moment and the corresponding suppression of the depolarization shift.
The competition between coherent nonlinearities and incoherent saturation
effects is discussed. The strength of the resulting optical nonlinearity is
estimated across different frequency ranges from mid-IR to THz with an eye to
ongoing experiments on Bose-Einstein condensation of intersubband polaritons
and to the speculative exploration of quantum optical phenomena such as
single-photon emission in the mid-IR and THz windows
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Location and survival of MNEs' subsidiaries: Agglomeration and heterogeneity of firms
Research summary
Our study provides a quasi–replication of Shaver and Flyer (2000), which was among the first studies that challenged the positive role of agglomeration in determining companies' location choice and performances, thus changing the way management scholars view companies' attitude towards agglomeration forces. We employ the same research design, specification and tests, and a different population, to discuss the generalizability of the original study. Building on the framework of Shaver and Flyer (2000), our findings offer intriguing new empirical evidence highlighting the importance of the differential between entering foreign firms and host country firms as a crucial condition in understanding agglomeration forces and adverse selection mechanisms.
Managerial summary
Our exercise confirms that agglomeration forces act differently on stronger versus weaker multinational enterprises (MNEs). However, we find that stronger MNEs tend to avoid location in highly specialized areas when they are afraid of knowledge leakages towards host country–based rivals that have enough absorptive capacity to benefit and improve their competitive advantages. Managerial implications are quite relevant. Indeed, when MNEs avoid co–location in highly specialized areas, they also limit their own access to local knowledge and other agglomeration economies, such as supply networks and qualified workforce. Thus, MNEs managers need to design and implement devices that, on the one hand prevent local leakages of their knowledge and, on the other, do not hinder their access to local unique knowledge and resources
Italia Multinazionale 2000
none3COMINOTTI R.; S. MARIOTTI; MUTINELLI M.Cominotti, R.; Mariotti, SERGIO GIOVANNI; Mutinelli, M