4,233 research outputs found
What factors contributed to changes in employment during and after the Great Recession?
Unemployment increased drastically over the course of the Great Recession from 4.5 percent prior to the recession to 10 percent at its peak in October 2009. Since then, the unemployment rate has come down steadily, and it stood at 5.8 percent in November 2014. Based on existing analyses and some new evidence, this paper establishes that much of the change in unemployment during the Great Recession and during the recovery can be attributed to cyclical factors rather than structural factors. The paper then presents new suggestive evidence to quantify the employment impacts of various counter-cyclical policies introduced during this time. We conduct a counter-factual and find that employment would have been between 4.2 percent and 4.5 percent lower had it not been because of the spending in Medicaid injected in local economies by the Recovery Act. In addition, we conduct a differences-in-differences and triple difference analysis, which suggests that the Work Opportunity Tax Credits increased the likelihood of employment by about 4.7 percent for disconnected youth but had no effect on disabled and unemployed veterans. Finally, we also find evidence that suggests that the Hiring Incentive to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act increased employment of the unemployed by 2.6 percent and that the reemployment reforms introduced in 2012 as part of the UI extensions increased employment by 6 percent for the long-term unemployed
Cohomology of acting on the space of bilinear differential operators on the superspace
We compute the first cohomology of the ortosymplectic Lie superalgebra
on the (1,1)-dimensional real superspace with
coefficients in the superspace of bilinear
differential operators acting on weighted densities. This work is the simplest
superization of a result by Bouarroudj [Cohomology of the vector fields Lie
algebras on acting on bilinear differential operators,
International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics
(2005), {\bf 2}; N 1, 23-40]
NLL Corrections for B-Meson Radiative Exclusive Decays
We calculate the next-to-leading corrections to the branching ratio of
exclusive decay. The renormalization scale dependence is
reduced compared to the leading logarithmic result but there remains a
dependence on a cutoff parameter of the hadronic model. The calculated
corrections increase the predicted branching ratio by about 10%, but it remains
in agreement with the experimental value.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
The QCD Coupling Constant
This paper presents a summary of the current status of determinations of the
strong coupling constant alpha_s. A detailed description of the definition,
scale dependence and inherent theoretical ambiguities is given. The various
physical processes that can be used to determine alpha_s are reviewed and
attention is given to the uncertainties, both theoretical and experimental.Comment: 56 page
Ternary q-Virasoro-Witt Hom-Nambu-Lie algebras
In this paper we construct ternary -Virasoro-Witt algebras which
-deform the ternary Virasoro-Witt algebras constructed by Curtright, Fairlie
and Zachos using enveloping algebra techniques. The ternary
Virasoro-Witt algebras constructed by Curtright, Fairlie and Zachos depend on a
parameter and are not Nambu-Lie algebras for all but finitely many values of
this parameter. For the parameter values for which the ternary Virasoro-Witt
algebras are Nambu-Lie, the corresponding ternary -Virasoro-Witt algebras
constructed in this article are also Hom-Nambu-Lie because they are obtained
from the ternary Nambu-Lie algebras using the composition method. For other
parameter values this composition method does not yield Hom-Nambu Lie algebra
structure for -Virasoro-Witt algebras. We show however, using a different
construction, that the ternary Virasoro-Witt algebras of Curtright, Fairlie and
Zachos, as well as the general ternary -Virasoro-Witt algebras we construct,
carry a structure of ternary Hom-Nambu-Lie algebra for all values of the
involved parameters
Crystallographically oriented magnetic ZnFe2O4 nanoparticles synthesized by Fe implantation into ZnO
In this paper, a correlation between structural and magnetic properties of Fe
implanted ZnO is presented. High fluence Fe^+ implantation into ZnO leads to
the formation of superparamagnetic alpha-Fe nanoparticles. High vacuum
annealing at 823 K results in the growth of alpha-Fe particles, but the
annealing at 1073 K oxidized the majority of the Fe nanoparticles. After a long
term annealing at 1073 K, crystallographically oriented ZnFe2O4 nanoparticles
were formed inside ZnO with the orientation relationship of
ZnFe2O4(111)[110]//ZnO(0001)[1120]. These ZnFe2O4 nanoparticles show a
hysteretic behavior upon magnetization reversal at 5 K.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, accepted by J. Phys. D: Appl. Phy
Hom-Lie color algebra structures
This paper introduces the notion of Hom-Lie color algebra, which is a natural
general- ization of Hom-Lie (super)algebras. Hom-Lie color algebras include
also as special cases Lie (super) algebras and Lie color algebras. We study the
homomorphism relation of Hom-Lie color algebras, and construct new algebras of
such kind by a \sigma-twist. Hom-Lie color admissible algebras are also defined
and investigated. They are finally classified via G-Hom-associative color
algebras, where G is a subgroup of the symmetric group S_3.Comment: 16 page
Theory of band gap bowing of disordered substitutional II-VI and III-V semiconductor alloys
For a wide class of technologically relevant compound III-V and II-VI
semiconductor materials AC and BC mixed crystals (alloys) of the type
A(x)B(1-x)C can be realized. As the electronic properties like the bulk band
gap vary continuously with x, any band gap in between that of the pure AC and
BC systems can be obtained by choosing the appropriate concentration x, granted
that the respective ratio is miscible and thermodynamically stable. In most
cases the band gap does not vary linearly with x, but a pronounced bowing
behavior as a function of the concentration is observed. In this paper we show
that the electronic properties of such A(x)B(1-x)C semiconductors and, in
particular, the band gap bowing can well be described and understood starting
from empirical tight binding models for the pure AC and BC systems. The
electronic properties of the A(x)B(1-x)C system can be described by choosing
the tight-binding parameters of the AC or BC system with probabilities x and
1-x, respectively. We demonstrate this by exact diagonalization of finite but
large supercells and by means of calculations within the established coherent
potential approximation (CPA). We apply this treatment to the II-VI system
Cd(x)Zn(1-x)Se, to the III-V system In(x)Ga(1-x)As and to the III-nitride
system Ga(x)Al(1-x)N.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
The FIRST-Optical-VLA Survey for Lensed Radio Lobes
We present results from a survey for gravitationally lensed radio lobes.
Lensed lobes are a potentially richer source of information about galaxy mass
distributions than lensed point sources, which have been the exclusive focus of
other recent surveys. Our approach is to identify radio lobes in the FIRST
catalog and then search optical catalogs for coincident foreground galaxies,
which are candidate lensing galaxies. We then obtain higher-resolution images
of these targets at both optical and radio wavelengths, and obtain optical
spectra for the most promising candidates. We present maps of several radio
lobes that are nearly coincident with galaxies. We have not found any new and
unambiguous cases of gravitational lensing. One radio lobe in particular, FOV
J0743+1553, has two hot spots that could be multiple images produced by a
z=0.19 spiral galaxy, but the lensing interpretation is problematic.Comment: 38 pages, 18 figures, aastex, accepted to A
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