2,243 research outputs found
Forecasting with real-time macroeconomic data: the ragged-edge problem and revisions
Real-time macroeconomic data are typically incomplete for today and the immediate past (?ragged edge?) and subject to revision. To enable more timely forecasts the recent missing data have to be dealt with. In the context of the U.S. leading index we assess four alternatives,paying explicit attention to publication lags and data revisions.
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Scenario drivers (1970-2050): Climate and hydrological alterations
This study was carried out to support and enhance a series of global studies assessing contemporary and future changes in nutrient export from watersheds (Global Nutrient Export from Watersheds (NEWS)). Because hydrography is one of the most important drivers in nutrient transport, it was essential to establish how climatic changes and direct human activities (primarily irrigation and reservoir operations) affect the hydrological cycle. Contemporary and future hydrography was established by applying a modified version of a global water balance and transport model (WBMplus) driven by present and future climate forcing, as described in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment scenarios (1970-2050). WBMplus represents a major upgrade to previous WBM implementations by incorporating irrigational water uptake and reservoir operations in a single modeling framework. Contemporary simulations were carried out by using both observed climate forcings from the Climate Research Unit of East Anglia (CRU) data sets and from Global Circulation Model (GCM) simulations that are comparable to the future simulations from the same GCM forcings. Future trends in three key human activities (land use, irrigation, and reservoirs operation for hydropower) were taken from the Integrated Model to Assess the Global Environment (IMAGE). The reservoir operation required establishing a realistic distribution of future reservoirs since the IMAGE model provided only the hydropower potentials for the different future scenarios
ISO spectroscopy of circumstellar dust in 14 Herbig Ae/Be systems: towards an understanding of dust processing
We present Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) spectra of fourteen isolated
Herbig Ae/Be (HAEBE) stars, to study the characteristics of their circumstellar
dust. These spectra show large star-to-star differences, in the emission
features of both carbon-rich and oxygen-rich dust grains. The IR spectra were
combined with photometric data ranging from the UV through the optical into the
sub-mm region. We defined two key groups, based upon the spectral shape of the
infrared region. The derived results can be summarized as follows: (1) the
continuum of the IR to sub-mm region of all stars can be reconstructed by the
sum of a power-law and a cool component, which can be represented by a black
body. Possible locations for these components are an optically thick,
geometrically thin disc (power-law component) and an optically thin flared
region (black body); (2) all stars have a substantial amount of cold dust
around them, independent of the amount of mid-IR excess they show; (3) also the
near-IR excess is unrelated to the mid-IR excess, indicating different
composition/location of the emitting material; (4) remarkably, some sources
lack the silicate bands; (5) apart from amorphous silicates, we find evidence
for crystalline silicates in several stars, some of which are new detections;
(6) PAH bands are present in at least 50% of our sample, and their appearance
is slightly different from PAHs in the ISM; (7) PAH bands are, with one
exception, not present in sources which only show a power-law continuum in the
IR; their presence is unrelated to the presence of the silicate bands; (8) the
dust in HAEBE stars shows strong evidence for coagulation; this dust processing
is unrelated to any of the central star properties (such as age, spectral type
and activity).Comment: 15 pages, accepted by A&
ISO spectroscopy of circumstellar dust in the Herbig Ae systems AB Aur and HD 163296
Using both the Short- and Long-wavelength Spectrometers on board the Infrared
Space Observatory (ISO), we have obtained infrared spectra of the Herbig Ae
systems AB Aur and HD 163296. In addition, we obtained ground-based N band
images of HD 163296. Our results can be summarized as follows: (1) The main
dust components in AB Aur are amorphous silicates, iron oxide and PAHs; (2) The
circumstellar dust in HD 163296 consists of amorphous silicates, iron oxide,
water ice and a small fraction of crystalline silicates; (3) The infrared
fluxes of HD 163296 are dominated by solid state features; (4) The colour
temperature of the underlying continuum is much cooler in HD 163296 than in AB
Aur, pointing to the existence of a population of very large (mm sized) dust
grains in HD 163296; (5) The composition and degree of crystallization of
circumstellar dust are poorly correlated with the age of the central star. The
processes of crystallization and grain growth are also not necessarily coupled.
This means that either the evolution of circumstellar dust in protoplanetary
disks happens very rapidly (within a few Myr), or that this evolution is
governed by factors other than stellar mass and age.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
On the interplay between flaring and shadowing in disks around Herbig Ae/Be stars
Based on the SED, Herbig stars have been categorized into two observational
groups, reflecting their overall disk structure: group I members have disks
with a higher degree of flaring than their group II counterparts. We
investigate the 5-35 um Spitzer IRS spectra of a sample of 13 group I sources
and 20 group II sources. We focus on the continuum emission to study the
underlying disk geometry. We have determined the [30/13.5] and [13.5/7]
continuum flux ratios. The 7-um flux excess with respect to the stellar
photosphere is measured, as a marker for the strength of the near-IR emission
produced by the inner disk. We have compared our data to self-consistent
passive-disk model spectra, for which the same quantities were derived. We
confirm the literature result that the difference in continuum emission between
group I and II sources can largely be explained by a different amount of small
dust grains. However, we report a strong correlation between the [30/13.5] and
[13.5/7] flux ratios for Meeus group II sources. Moreover, the [30/13.5] flux
ratio decreases with increasing 7-um excess for all targets in the sample. To
explain these correlations with the models, we need to introduce an artificial
scaling factor for the inner disk height. In roughly 50% of the Herbig Ae/Be
stars in our sample, the inner disk must be inflated by a factor 2 to 3 beyond
what hydrostatic calculations predict. The total disk mass in small dust grains
determines the degree of flaring. We conclude, however, that for any given disk
mass in small dust grains, the shadowing of the outer (tens of AU) disk is
determined by the scale height of the inner disk (1 AU). The inner disk
partially obscures the outer disk, reducing the disk surface temperature. Here,
for the first time, we prove these effects observationally.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted by A&
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