12 research outputs found
The Internationalization Process of Japan\u27s Retail Market
This paper aims primarily to shed light on foreign retailers\u27 efforts to establish a presence in the Japanese market, identify the difficulties they have had in penetrating the market and, thereby, derive some hints about their strategies of breaking into overseas, in this case Japanese markets. The argument therefore first touches briefly on the structure of the Japanese retail and wholesale industry and the policies the Japanese government has adopted over the years toward both domestic and foreign retailers
Clustering of Lyman Break Galaxies at z=4 and 5 in The Subaru Deep Field: Luminosity Dependence of The Correlation Function Slope
We explored the clustering properties of Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z=4
and 5 with an angular two-point correlation function on the basis of the very
deep and wide Subaru Deep Field data. We found an apparent dependence of the
correlation function slope on UV luminosity for LBGs at both z=4 and 5. More
luminous LBGs have a steeper correlation function. To compare these
observational results, we constructed numerical mock LBG catalogs based on a
semianalytic model of hierarchical clustering combined with high-resolution
N-body simulation, carefully mimicking the observational selection effects. The
luminosity functions for LBGs predicted by this mock catalog were found to be
almost consistent with the observation. Moreover, the overall correlation
functions of LBGs were reproduced reasonably well. The observed dependence of
the clustering on UV luminosity was not reproduced by the model, unless
subsamples of distinct halo mass were considered. That is, LBGs belonging to
more massive dark haloes had steeper and larger-amplitude correlation
functions. With this model, we found that LBG multiplicity in massive dark
halos amplifies the clustering strength at small scales, which steepens the
slope of the correlation function. The hierarchical clustering model could
therefore be reconciled with the observed luminosity-dependence of the angular
correlation function, if there is a tight correlation between UV luminosity and
halo mass. Our finding that the slope of the correlation function depends on
luminosity could be an indication that massive dark halos hosted multiple
bright LBGs (abridged).Comment: 16 pages, 17 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ, Full
resolution version is available at
http://zone.mtk.nao.ac.jp/~kashik/sdf/acf/sdf_lbgacf.pd