2,491 research outputs found
What Is the Case for Paid Maternity Leave?
Paid maternity leave has gained greater salience in the past few decades as mothers have increasingly entered the workforce. Indeed, the median number of weeks of paid leave to mothers among OECD countries was 14 in 1980, but had risen to 42 by 2011. We assess the case for paid maternity leave, focusing on parents' responses to a series of policy reforms in Norway which expanded paid leave from 18 to 35 weeks (without changing the length of job protection). Our first empirical result is that none of the reforms seem to crowd out unpaid leave. Each reform increases the amount of time spent at home versus work by roughly the increased number of weeks allowed. Since income replacement was 100% for most women, the reforms caused an increase in mother's time spent at home after birth, without a reduction in family income. Our second set of empirical results reveals the expansions had little effect on a wide variety of outcomes, including children's school outcomes, parental earnings and participation in the labor market in the short or long run, completed fertility, marriage or divorce. Not only is there no evidence that each expansion in isolation had economically significant effects, but this null result holds even if we cumulate our estimates across all expansions from 18 to 35 weeks. Our third finding is that paid maternity leave has negative redistribution properties. The program makes regressive transfers both from ineligibles to eligibles and within the group of eligible mothers. Since there was no crowd out of unpaid leave, the extra leave benefits amounted to a pure leisure transfer, primarily to middle and upper income families. Finally, we investigate the financial costs of the extensions in paid maternity leave. We find these reforms had little impact on parents' future tax payments and benefit receipt. As a result, the large increases in public spending on maternity leave imply a considerable increase in taxes, at a cost to economic efficiency. Taken together, our findings suggest the generous extensions to paid leave were costly, had no measurable effect on outcomes and poor redistribution properties. In a time of harsh budget realities, our findings have important implications for countries that are considering future expansions or contractions in the duration of paid leave
X-ray and Radio Interactions in the Cores of Cooling Flow Clusters
We present high resolution ROSAT x-ray and radio observations of three
cooling flow clusters containing steep spectrum radio sources at their cores.
All three systems exhibit strong signs of interaction between the radio plasma
and the hot intracluster medium. Two clusters, A133 and A2626, show enhanced
x-ray emission spatially coincident with the radio source whereas the third
cluster, A2052, exhibits a large region of x-ray excess surrounding much of the
radio source. Using 3-D numerical simulations, we show that a perturbed jet
propagating through a cooling flow atmosphere can give rise to amorphous radio
morphologies, particularly in the case where the jet was ``turned off'' and
allowed to age passively. In addition, the simulated x-ray surface brightness
produced both excesses and deficits as seen observationally.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A
Host Galaxies of Type Ia Supernovae from the Nearby Supernova Factory
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of galaxies hosting
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) observed by the Nearby Supernova Factory
(SNfactory). Combining GALEX UV data with optical and near infrared photometry,
we employ stellar population synthesis techniques to measure SN Ia host galaxy
stellar masses, star-formation rates (SFRs), and reddening due to dust. We
reinforce the key role of GALEX UV data in deriving accurate estimates of
galaxy SFRs and dust extinction. Optical spectra of SN Ia host galaxies are
fitted simultaneously for their stellar continua and emission lines fluxes,
from which we derive high precision redshifts, gas-phase metallicities, and
Halpha-based SFRs. With these data we show that SN Ia host galaxies present
tight agreement with the fiducial galaxy mass-metallicity relation from SDSS
for stellar masses log(M_*/M_Sun)>8.5 where the relation is well-defined. The
star-formation activity of SN Ia host galaxies is consistent with a sample of
comparable SDSS field galaxies, though this comparison is limited by systematic
uncertainties in SFR measurements. Our analysis indicates that SN Ia host
galaxies are, on average, typical representatives of normal field galaxies.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Host Galaxy Properties and Hubble Residuals of Type Ia Supernovae from the Nearby Supernova Factory
We examine the relationship between Type Ia Supernova (SN Ia) Hubble
residuals and the properties of their host galaxies using a sample of 115 SNe
Ia from the Nearby Supernova Factory (SNfactory). We use host galaxy stellar
masses and specific star-formation rates fitted from photometry for all hosts,
as well as gas-phase metallicities for a subset of 69 star-forming (non-AGN)
hosts, to show that the SN Ia Hubble residuals correlate with each of these
host properties. With these data we find new evidence for a correlation between
SN Ia intrinsic color and host metallicity. When we combine our data with those
of other published SN Ia surveys, we find the difference between mean SN Ia
brightnesses in low and high mass hosts is 0.077 +- 0.014 mag. When viewed in
narrow (0.2 dex) bins of host stellar mass, the data reveal apparent plateaus
of Hubble residuals at high and low host masses with a rapid transition over a
short mass range (9.8 <= log(M_*/M_Sun) <= 10.4). Although metallicity has been
a favored interpretation for the origin of the Hubble residual trend with host
mass, we illustrate how dust in star-forming galaxies and mean SN Ia progenitor
age both evolve along the galaxy mass sequence, thereby presenting equally
viable explanations for some or all of the observed SN Ia host bias.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Nearby Supernova Factory Observations of SN 2007if: First Total Mass Measurement of a Super-Chandrasekhar-Mass Progenitor
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2007if, an
overluminous (M_V = -20.4), red (B-V = 0.16 at B-band maximum), slow-rising
(t_rise = 24 days) type Ia supernova in a very faint (M_g = -14.10) host
galaxy. A spectrum at 5 days past B-band maximum light is a direct match to the
super-Chandrasekhar-mass candidate SN Ia 2003fg, showing Si II and C II at
~9000 km/s. A high signal-to-noise co-addition of the SN spectral time series
reveals no Na I D absorption, suggesting negligible reddening in the host
galaxy, and the late-time color evolution has the same slope as the Lira
relation for normal SNe Ia. The ejecta appear to be well mixed, with no strong
maximum in I-band and a diversity of iron-peak lines appearing in
near-maximum-light spectra. SN2007 if also displays a plateau in the Si II
velocity extending as late as +10 days, which we interpret as evidence for an
overdense shell in the SN ejecta. We calculate the bolometric light curve of
the SN and use it and the \ion{Si}{2} velocity evolution to constrain the mass
of the shell and the underlying SN ejecta, and demonstrate that SN2007 if is
strongly inconsistent with a Chandrasekhar-mass scenario. Within the context of
a "tamped detonation" model appropriate for double-degenerate mergers, and
assuming no host extinction, we estimate the total mass of the system to be 2.4
+/- 0.2 solar masses, with 1.6 +/- 0.1 solar masses of nickel-56 and with
0.3-0.5 solar masses in the form of an envelope of unburned carbon/oxygen. Our
modeling demonstrates that the kinematics of shell entrainment provide a more
efficient mechanism than incomplete nuclear burning for producing the low
velocities typical of super-Chandrasekhar-mass SNeIa.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, emulateapj format; v2 fixed some
typos and added a reference; v3 included minor copy-editing changes + fixed
typos in Figure 9, Table 4; accepted to Ap
The Cluster of Galaxies Abell 970
We present a dynamical analysis of the galaxy cluster Abell 970 based on a
new set of radial velocities measured at ESO, Pic du Midi and Haute-Provence
observatories. Our analysis indicates that this cluster has a substructure and
is out of dynamical equilibrium. This conclusion is also supported by
differences in the positions of the peaks of the surface density distribution
and X-ray emission, as well as by the evidence of a large scale velocity
gradient in the cluster. We also found a discrepancy between the masses
inferred with the virial theorem and with the X-ray emission, what is expected
if the galaxies and the gas inside the cluster are not in hydrostatic
equilibrium. Abell 970 has a modest cooling flow, as is expected if it is out
of equilibrium as suggested by Allen (1998). We propose that cooling flows may
have an intermittent behavior, with phases of massive cooling flows being
followed by phases without significant cooling flows after the acretion of a
galaxy group massive enough to disrupt the dynamical equilibrium in the center
of the clusters. A massive cooling flow will be established again, after a new
equilibrium is achieved.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, submitted to A&
Comment: A View from the Bench Regarding Byron White, Federalism and the Greatest Generation(s) By Professor Martin S. Flaherty
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