82,277 research outputs found
Explaining Growth in Dutch Agriculture: Prices, Public R&D, and Technological Change
This paper analyzes the sources of growth of Dutch agriculture (arable, meat, and dairy sectors). Because the time series data (1950-1997) are non-stationary and not cointegrated, it is argued that a model estimated in first differences should be used. Estimated price elasticities turn out to be very inelastic, both in the short-run and the long-run. The direct distortionary effect of price support has therefore been rather limited. However, price support has an important indirect effect by improving the sectors investment possibilities and therewith the capital stock. Public R&D expenditure mainly affected agriculture by contributing to yield improvement therewith favoring intensification of production.growth, technology, cointegration, non-stationarity, agricultural policy, Agribusiness, Q18, O13,
Conservation relations and anisotropic transmission resonances in one-dimensional PT-symmetric photonic heterostructures
We analyze the optical properties of one-dimensional (1D) PT-symmetric
structures of arbitrary complexity. These structures violate normal unitarity
(photon flux conservation) but are shown to satisfy generalized unitarity
relations, which relate the elements of the scattering matrix and lead to a
conservation relation in terms of the transmittance and (left and right)
reflectances. One implication of this relation is that there exist anisotropic
transmission resonances in PT-symmetric systems, frequencies at which there is
unit transmission and zero reflection, but only for waves incident from a
single side. The spatial profile of these transmission resonances is symmetric,
and they can occur even at PT-symmetry breaking points. The general
conservation relations can be utilized as an experimental signature of the
presence of PT-symmetry and of PT-symmetry breaking transitions. The uniqueness
of PT-symmetry breaking transitions of the scattering matrix is briefly
discussed by comparing to the corresponding non-Hermitian Hamiltonians.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Steady-State Ab Initio Laser Theory for N-level Lasers
We show that Steady-state Ab initio Laser Theory (SALT) can be applied to
find the stationary multimode lasing properties of an N-level laser. This is
achieved by mapping the N-level rate equations to an effective two-level model
of the type solved by the SALT algorithm. This mapping yields excellent
agreement with more computationally demanding N-level time domain solutions for
the steady state
SU(2) WZW D-branes and quantized worldvolume U(1) flux on S^2
We discuss possible D-brane configurations on SU(2) group manifolds in the
sigma model approach. When we turn the boundary conditions of the spacetime
fields into the boundary gluing conditions of chiral currents, we find that for
all D-branes except the spherical D2-branes, the gluing matrices R^a_{b} depend
on the fields, so the chiral Kac-Moody symmetry is broken, but conformal
symmetry is maintained. Matching the spherical D2-branes derived from the sigma
model with those from the boundary state approach we obtain a U(1) field
strength that is consistent with flux quantization.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, several corrections (the previous version was not
approved by the first two authors
Fast Spectral Clustering Using Autoencoders and Landmarks
In this paper, we introduce an algorithm for performing spectral clustering
efficiently. Spectral clustering is a powerful clustering algorithm that
suffers from high computational complexity, due to eigen decomposition. In this
work, we first build the adjacency matrix of the corresponding graph of the
dataset. To build this matrix, we only consider a limited number of points,
called landmarks, and compute the similarity of all data points with the
landmarks. Then, we present a definition of the Laplacian matrix of the graph
that enable us to perform eigen decomposition efficiently, using a deep
autoencoder. The overall complexity of the algorithm for eigen decomposition is
, where is the number of data points and is the number of
landmarks. At last, we evaluate the performance of the algorithm in different
experiments.Comment: 8 Pages- Accepted in 14th International Conference on Image Analysis
and Recognitio
Domestic well vulnerability to drought duration and unsustainable groundwater management in California's Central Valley
Millions of Californians access drinking water via domestic wells, which are vulnerable to drought and unsustainable groundwater management. Groundwater overdraft and the possibility of longer drought duration under climate change threatens domestic well reliability, yet we lack tools to assess the impact of such events. Here, we leverage 943 469 well completion reports and 20 years of groundwater elevation data to develop a spatially-explicit domestic well failure model covering California's Central Valley. Our model successfully reproduces the spatial distribution of observed domestic well failures during the severe 2012-2016 drought (n = 2027). Next, the impact of longer drought duration (5-8 years) on domestic well failure is evaluated, indicating that if the 2012-2016 drought would have continued into a 6 to 8 year long drought, a total of 4037-5460 to 6538-8056 wells would fail. The same drought duration scenarios with an intervening wet winter in 2017 lead to an average of 498 and 738 fewer well failures. Additionally, we map vulnerable wells at high failure risk and find that they align with clusters of predicted well failures. Lastly, we evaluate how the timing and implementation of different projected groundwater management regimes impact groundwater levels and thus domestic well failure. When historic overdraft persists until 2040, domestic well failures range from 5966 to 10 466 (depending on the historic period considered). When sustainability is achieved progressively between 2020 and 2040, well failures range from 3677 to 6943, and from 1516 to 2513 when groundwater is not allowed to decline after 2020
Forecast Rationality and Monetary Policy Frameworks: Evidence from UK Interest Rate Forecasts
This paper explores the heterogeneity and rationality of professional forecasts at both short and long forecast horizons. We employ disaggregated survey data for forecasts of three-month inter-bank rates and ten-year gilt yields for the period 1989-2006. We find evidence of heterogeneity among forecasters. Moreover, forecasts violate both the unbiasedness and orthogonality conditions of the rational expectations hypothesis. The majority of biased forecasts underestimate the future spot rate. The rationality of forecasts varies across maturities and forecast horizons with short horizon and short maturity forecasts exhibiting more rationality. It also varies across sub-periods corresponding to different monetary policy frameworks. We produce evidence indicating that both monetary policy actions and elements of communication policy have information content regarding the rationality of forecasts. Changes in official bank rates and disagreement, as recorded in the minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee, influence the rationality of forecasts. The publication of inflation reports has no effect
Coherent Perfect Absorbers: Time-reversed Lasers
We show that an arbitrary body or aggregate can be made perfectly absorbing
at discrete frequencies if a precise amount of dissipation is added under
specific conditions of coherent monochromatic illumination. This effect arises
from the interaction of optical absorption and wave interference, and
corresponds to moving a zero of the elastic S-matrix onto the real wavevector
axis. It is thus the time-reversed process of lasing at threshold. The effect
is demonstrated in a simple Si slab geometry illuminated in the 500-900 nm
range. Coherent perfect absorbers are novel linear optical elements, absorptive
interferometers, which may be useful for controlled optical energy transfer.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Variational formulas of higher order mean curvatures
In this paper, we establish the first variational formula and its
Euler-Lagrange equation for the total -th mean curvature functional
of a submanifold in a general Riemannian manifold
for . As an example, we prove that closed
complex submanifolds in complex projective spaces are critical points of the
functional , called relatively -minimal submanifolds,
for all . At last, we discuss the relations between relatively -minimal
submanifolds and austere submanifolds in real space forms, as well as a special
variational problem.Comment: 13 pages, to appear in SCIENCE CHINA Mathematics 201
Parity-Time Symmetry Breaking beyond One Dimension: The Role of Degeneracy
We consider the role of degeneracy in Parity-Time (PT) symmetry breaking for
non-hermitian wave equations beyond one dimension. We show that if the spectrum
is degenerate in the absence of T-breaking, and T is broken in a generic manner
(without preserving other discrete symmetries), then the standard PT-symmetry
breaking transition does not occur, meaning that the spectrum is complex even
for infinitesimal strength of gain and loss. However the realness of the entire
spectrum can be preserved over a finite interval if additional discrete
symmetries X are imposed when T is broken, if X decouple all degenerate modes.
When this is true only for a subset of the degenerate spectrum, there can be a
partial PT transition in which this subset remains real over a finite interval
of T-breaking. If the spectrum has odd-degeneracy, a fraction of the degenerate
spectrum can remain in the symmetric phase even without imposing additional
discrete symmetries, and they are analogous to dark states in atomic physics.
These results are illustrated by the example of different T-breaking
perturbations of a uniform dielectric disk and sphere, and a group theoretical
analysis is given in the disk case. Finally, we show that multimode coupling is
capable of restoring the T-symmetric phase at finite T-breaking. We also
analyze these questions when the parity operator is replaced by another spatial
symmetry operator and find that the behavior can be qualitatively different.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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