3,111 research outputs found
Denial and distancing in discourses of development: shadow of the 'Third World' in New Zealand
Anxieties about development in New Zealand show up in a deep-rooted fear of the 'Third World' in the country. We examine how the term 'Third World' is deployed in media discourses in economic, social and environmental contexts and how this deployment results in a 'discursive distancing' from anything associated with the 'Third World'. Such distancing demonstrates a fragile national identity that struggles with the contradictions between the nation's desire to be part of the 'First World' of global capitalism and the growing disparities in health and wealth within it. The shadow of the 'Third World' prevents New Zealand from confronting the realities of its own inequities, which in turn comes in the way of a sound development agenda
From linear to non-linear scales: analytical and numerical predictions for the weak lensing convergence
Weak lensing convergence can be used directly to map and probe the dark mass
distribution in the universe. Building on earlier studies, we recall how the
statistics of the convergence field are related to the statistics of the
underlying mass distribution, in particular to the many-body density
correlations. We describe two model-independent approximations which provide
two simple methods to compute the probability distribution function, pdf, of
the convergence. We apply one of these to the case where the density field can
be described by a log-normal pdf. Next, we discuss two hierarchical models for
the high-order correlations which allow one to perform exact calculations and
evaluate the previous approximations in such specific cases. Finally, we apply
these methods to a very simple model for the evolution of the density field
from linear to highly non-linear scales. Comparisons with the results obtained
from numerical simulations, obtained from a number of different realizations,
show excellent agreement with our theoretical predictions. We have probed
various angular scales in the numerical work and considered sources at 14
different redshifts in each of two different cosmological scenarios, an open
cosmology and a flat cosmology with non-zero cosmological constant. Our
simulation technique employs computations of the full 3-d shear matrices along
the line of sight from the source redshift to the observer and is complementary
to more popular ray-tracing algorithms. Our results therefore provide a
valuable cross-check for such complementary simulation techniques, as well as
for our simple analytical model, from the linear to the highly non-linear
regime.Comment: 20 pages, final version published in MNRA
Planck 2013 results. XXII. Constraints on inflation
We analyse the implications of the Planck data for cosmic inflation. The Planck nominal mission temperature anisotropy measurements, combined with the WMAP large-angle polarization, constrain the scalar spectral index to be ns = 0:9603 _ 0:0073, ruling out exact scale invariance at over 5_: Planck establishes an upper bound on the tensor-to-scalar ratio of r < 0:11 (95% CL). The Planck data thus shrink the space of allowed standard inflationary models, preferring potentials with V00 < 0. Exponential potential models, the simplest hybrid inflationary models, and monomial potential models of degree n _ 2 do not provide a good fit to the data. Planck does not find statistically significant running of the scalar spectral index, obtaining dns=dln k = 0:0134 _ 0:0090. We verify these conclusions through a numerical analysis, which makes no slowroll approximation, and carry out a Bayesian parameter estimation and model-selection analysis for a number of inflationary models including monomial, natural, and hilltop potentials. For each model, we present the Planck constraints on the parameters of the potential and explore several possibilities for the post-inflationary entropy generation epoch, thus obtaining nontrivial data-driven constraints. We also present a direct reconstruction of the observable range of the inflaton potential. Unless a quartic term is allowed in the potential, we find results consistent with second-order slow-roll predictions. We also investigate whether the primordial power spectrum contains any features. We find that models with a parameterized oscillatory feature improve the fit by __2 e_ _ 10; however, Bayesian evidence does not prefer these models. We constrain several single-field inflation models with generalized Lagrangians by combining power spectrum data with Planck bounds on fNL. Planck constrains with unprecedented accuracy the amplitude and possible correlation (with the adiabatic mode) of non-decaying isocurvature fluctuations. The fractional primordial contributions of cold dark matter (CDM) isocurvature modes of the types expected in the curvaton and axion scenarios have upper bounds of 0.25% and 3.9% (95% CL), respectively. In models with arbitrarily correlated CDM or neutrino isocurvature modes, an anticorrelated isocurvature component can improve the _2 e_ by approximately 4 as a result of slightly lowering the theoretical prediction for the ` <_ 40 multipoles relative to the higher multipoles. Nonetheless, the data are consistent with adiabatic initial conditions
Scaling in Gravitational Clustering, 2D and 3D Dynamics
Perturbation Theory (PT) applied to a cosmological density field with
Gaussian initial fluctuations suggests a specific hierarchy for the correlation
functions when the variance is small. In particular quantitative predictions
have been made for the moments and the shape of the one-point probability
distribution function (PDF) of the top-hat smoothed density. In this paper we
perform a series of systematic checks of these predictions against N-body
computations both in 2D and 3D with a wide range of featureless power spectra.
In agreement with previous studies, we found that the reconstructed PDF-s work
remarkably well down to very low probabilities, even when the variance
approaches unity. Our results for 2D reproduce the features for the 3D
dynamics. In particular we found that the PT predictions are more accurate for
spectra with less power on small scales. The nonlinear regime has been explored
with various tools, PDF-s, moments and Void Probability Function (VPF). These
studies have been done with unprecedented dynamical range, especially for the
2D case, allowing in particular more robust determinations of the asymptotic
behaviour of the VPF. We have also introduced a new method to determine the
moments based on the factorial moments. Results using this method and taking
into account the finite volume effects are presented.Comment: 13 pages, Latex file, 9 Postscript Figure
Remote-scope Promotion: Clarified, Rectified, and Verified
Modern accelerator programming frameworks, such as OpenCL, organise threads into work-groups. Remote-scope promotion (RSP) is a language extension recently proposed by AMD researchers that is designed to enable applications, for the first time, both to optimise for the common case of intra-work-group communication (using memory scopes to provide consistency only within a work-group) and to allow occasional inter-work-group communication (as required, for instance, to support the popular load-balancing idiom of work stealing). We present the first formal, axiomatic memory model of OpenCL extended with RSP. We have extended the Herd memory model simulator with support for OpenCL kernels that exploit RSP, and used it to discover bugs in several litmus tests and a work-stealing queue, that have been used previously in the study of RSP. We have also formalised the proposed GPU implementation of RSP. The formalisation process allowed us to identify bugs in the description of RSP that could result in well-synchronised programs experiencing memory inconsistencies. We present and prove sound a new implementation of RSP that incorporates bug fixes and requires less non-standard hardware than the original implementation. This work, a collaboration between academia and industry, clearly demonstrates how, when designing hardware support for a new concurrent language feature, the early application of formal tools and techniques can help to prevent errors, such as those we have found, from making it into silicon
New approaches to probing Minkowski functionals
We generalize the concept of the ordinary skew-spectrum to probe the effect of non-Gaussianity
on the morphology of cosmic microwave background (CMB) maps in several domains: in
real space (where they are commonly known as cumulant-correlators), and in harmonic and
needlet bases. The essential aim is to retain more information than normally contained in these
statistics, in order to assist in determining the source of any measured non-Gaussianity, in the
same spirit as Munshi & Heavens skew-spectra were used to identify foreground contaminants
to the CMB bispectrum in Planck data. Using a perturbative series to construct the Minkowski
functionals (MFs), we provide a pseudo-C based approach in both harmonic and needlet
representations to estimate these spectra in the presence of a mask and inhomogeneous noise.
Assuming homogeneous noise, we present approximate expressions for error covariance for
the purpose of joint estimation of these spectra. We present specific results for four different
models of primordial non-Gaussianity local, equilateral, orthogonal and enfolded models, as
well as non-Gaussianity caused by unsubtracted point sources. Closed form results of nextorder
corrections to MFs too are obtained in terms of a quadruplet of kurt-spectra. We also
use the method of modal decomposition of the bispectrum and trispectrum to reconstruct the
MFs as an alternative method of reconstruction of morphological properties of CMB maps.
Finally, we introduce the odd-parity skew-spectra to probe the odd-parity bispectrum and its
impact on the morphology of the CMB sky. Although developed for the CMB, the generic
results obtained here can be useful in other areas of cosmology
CMB Constraints on Primordial non-Gaussianity from the Bispectrum (f_{NL}) and Trispectrum (g_{NL} and \tau_{NL}) and a New Consistency Test of Single-Field Inflation
We outline the expected constraints on non-Gaussianity from the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) with current and future experiments, focusing on
both the third (f_{NL}) and fourth-order (g_{NL} and \tau_{NL}) amplitudes of
the local configuration or non-Gaussianity. The experimental focus is the
skewness (two-to-one) and kurtosis (two-to-two and three-to-one) power spectra
from weighted maps. In adition to a measurement of \tau_{NL} and g_{NL} with
WMAP 5-year data, our study provides the first forecasts for future constraints
on g_{NL}. We describe how these statistics can be corrected for the mask and
cut-sky through a window function, bypassing the need to compute linear terms
that were introduced for the previous-generation non-Gaussianity statistics,
such as the skewness estimator. We discus the ratio A_{NL} =
\tau_{NL}/(6f_{NL}/5)^2 as an additional test of single-field inflationary
models and discuss the physical significance of each statistic. Using these
estimators with WMAP 5-Year V+W-band data out to l_{max}=600 we constrain the
cubic order non-Gaussianity parameters \tau_{NL}, and g_{NL} and find -7.4 <
g_{NL}/10^5 < 8.2 and -0.6 < \tau_{NL}/10^4 < 3.3 improving the previous
COBE-based limit on \tau_{NL} < 10^8 nearly four orders of magnitude with WMAP.Comment: 15 pages. 14 figure
Secondary anisotropies in CMB, skew-spectra and Minkowski Functionals
Secondary contributions to the anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), such as the integrated Sachs–Wolfe (ISW) effect, the thermal Sunyaev–Zel’dovich (tSZ) effect, and the effect of gravitational lensing, have distinctive non-Gaussian signatures, and full descriptions therefore require information beyond that contained in their power spectra. The Minkowski Functionals (MF) are well-known as tools for quantifying any departure from Gaussianity and are affected by noise and other sources of confusion in a differentway from the usual methods based on higher-order moments or polyspectra, thus providing complementary tools for CMB analysis and cross-validation of results. In this paper we use the recently introduced skew-spectra associated with the MFs to probe the topology of CMB maps to probe the secondary non-Gaussianity as a function of beam smoothing in order to separate various contributions. We devise estimators for these spectra in the presence of realistic observational masks and present expressions for their covariance as a function of instrumental noise. Specific results are derived for the mixed ISW-lensing and tSZ-lensing bispectra as well as contamination due to point sources for noise levels that correspond to the Planck (143 GHz channel) and Experimental Probe of Inflationary Cosmology (EPIC; 150 GHz channel) experiments. The cumulative signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) for one-point generalized skewness parameters can reach an order of O(10) for Planck and two orders of magnitude higher forEPIC, i.e. O(103). We also find that these three skew-spectra are correlated, having correlation coefficients r ∼ 0.5–1.0; higher l modes are more strongly correlated. Although the values of S/N increase with decreasing noise, the triplets of skew-spectra that determine the MFs become more correlated; the S/N of lensing-induced skew-spectra are smaller compared to that of a frequency-cleaned tSZ map
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