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Physics Today, 2003
Bubbles are familiar from daily life and occupy an important role in physics, chemistry, medicine, and technology. Nevertheless, their behavior is often surprising and unexpected—and, in many cases, still not understood.
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Bubbles are familiar from daily life and occupy an important role in physics, chemistry, medicine, and technology. Nevertheless, their behavior is often surprising and unexpected—and, in many cases, still not understood.
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ASSET BUBBLES AND OVERLAPPING GENERATIONS
, 1985The first part of this paper considers the interaction between productive and nonproductive savings in a growing economy. It employs an overlapping generations model with capital accumulation and various types of rents, and gives necessary and sufficient
J. Tirole
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Japan's Bubble, America's Bubble and China's Bubble [PDF]
This paper compares the three recent episodes of boom and bust cycles in asset prices: Japan in the late 1980s to the 1990s; the U.S. since the mid 1990s; and China during the last decade. Although we have not yet seen a collapse of Chinese property prices, the increases so far are comparable to those in the other two episodes and seem to warrant a ...
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Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Trouble
Journal of Chemical Education, 2001Soap bubbles burst when their walls thin because of evaporation or the effects of gravity. Glycerin is thought to increase the lifetime of bubbles because it is hygroscopic and very viscous. Since it is hygroscopic, it helps to prevent evaporation of the water. Its high viscosity increases the time that it takes for downward flow of the material in the
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Credit bubbles and land bubbles [PDF]
In modern macroeconomic models it is difficult to obtain explosive price bubbles on assets with positive net supply. This paper shows that it is possible to obtain explosive bubbles in certain situations when assets such as land are used as collateral and lenders are willing to lend freely against it.
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The motion of long bubbles in tubes
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 1961F. Bretherton
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Influence of Bubbles on the Energy Conversion Efficiency of Electrochemical Reactors
Joule, 2020Peter Van Der Linde+2 more
exaly
2008
A bubble may be defined loosely as a sharp rise in price of an asset or a range of assets in a continuous process, with the initial rise generating expectations of further rises and attracting new buyers — generally speculators interested in profits from trading in the asset rather than its use or earning capacity.
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A bubble may be defined loosely as a sharp rise in price of an asset or a range of assets in a continuous process, with the initial rise generating expectations of further rises and attracting new buyers — generally speculators interested in profits from trading in the asset rather than its use or earning capacity.
openaire +2 more sources