13,828 research outputs found
The age-metallicity dependence for white dwarfs
We present a theoretical study on the metallicity dependence of the
initialtofinal mass relation and its influence on white dwarf age
determinations. We compute a grid of evolutionary sequences from the main
sequence to K on the white dwarf cooling curve, passing through
all intermediate stages. During the thermally-pulsing asymptotic giant branch
no third dredge-up episodes are considered and thus the photospheric C/O ratio
is below unity for sequences with metallicities larger than . We
consider initial metallicities from to , accounting for
stellar populations in the galactic disk and halo, with initial masses below
. We found a clear dependence of the shape of the
initialtofinal mass relation with the progenitor metallicity, where metal
rich progenitors result in less massive white dwarf remnants, due to an
enhancement of the mass loss rates associated to high metallicity values. By
comparing our theoretical computations with semi empirical data from globular
and old open clusters, we found that the observed intrinsic mass spread can be
accounted for by a set of initialtofinal mass relations characterized by
different metallicity values. Also, we confirm that the lifetime spent before
the white dwarf stage increases with metallicity. Finally, we estimate the mean
mass at the top of the white dwarf cooling curve for three globular clusters
NGC 6397, M4 and 47 Tuc, around , characteristic of old stellar
populations. However, we found different values for the progenitor mass, lower
for the metal poor cluster, NGC 6397, and larger for the younger and metal rich
cluster 47 Tuc, as expected from the metallicity dependence of the
initialtofinal mass relation.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Data Assimilation by Artificial Neural Networks for an Atmospheric General Circulation Model: Conventional Observation
This paper presents an approach for employing artificial neural networks (NN)
to emulate an ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) as a method of data assimilation.
The assimilation methods are tested in the Simplified Parameterizations
PrimitivE-Equation Dynamics (SPEEDY) model, an atmospheric general circulation
model (AGCM), using synthetic observational data simulating localization of
balloon soundings. For the data assimilation scheme, the supervised NN, the
multilayer perceptrons (MLP-NN), is applied. The MLP-NN are able to emulate the
analysis from the local ensemble transform Kalman filter (LETKF). After the
training process, the method using the MLP-NN is seen as a function of data
assimilation. The NN were trained with data from first three months of 1982,
1983, and 1984. A hind-casting experiment for the 1985 data assimilation cycle
using MLP-NN were performed with synthetic observations for January 1985. The
numerical results demonstrate the effectiveness of the NN technique for
atmospheric data assimilation. The results of the NN analyses are very close to
the results from the LETKF analyses, the differences of the monthly average of
absolute temperature analyses is of order 0.02. The simulations show that the
major advantage of using the MLP-NN is better computational performance, since
the analyses have similar quality. The CPU-time cycle assimilation with MLP-NN
is 90 times faster than cycle assimilation with LETKF for the numerical
experiment.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, monthly weather revie
Dynamic Ethnic Fractionalization and Economic Growth in the Transition Economies from 1989 to 2007
In their survey of the literature on ethnic fractionalization and economic performance, Alesina and La Ferrara (JEL 2005) identify two main directions for future research. One is to improve the measurement of diversity and the other to treat diversity as an endogenous variable. This paper tries to address these two issues: it investigates the effects of ethnic fractionalization on economic growth across countries using unique time-varying measures. We first replicate the finding of a weak effect of exogenous diversity on growth and then we show that accounting for how diversity changes over time and treating it as an endogenous variable makes a difference. Once diversity is instrumented (with lagged diversity and latitude), it shows a significant negative impact on economic growth which is robust to different specifications, polarization measures, econometric estimators, as well as to the use of an index of ethnic-religious-linguistic fractionalization.ethnic diversity, fractionalization, polarization, growth
Dynamic Ethnic Fractionalization and Economic Growth
In their survey of the literature on ethnic fractionalization and economic performance, Alesina and La Ferrara (JEL 2005) identify two main directions for future research. One is to improve the measurement of diversity and the other to treat diversity as an endogenous variable. This paper tries to address these two issues. We study the effects of ethnic fractionalization on economic growth using unique time-varying measures across countries, for 26 transition economies from 1989 to 2007. Our main conclusion is that we can replicate the most recent results from the literature and show that static (exogenous) diversity is not robustly related to growth. However, when we account empirically for how ethnic diversity changes over time and treat it as an endogenous variable, our estimates show that it is negatively related to growth an effect which is robust to different estimators, specifications, and fractionalization measures. --ethnic diversity,fractionalization,polarization,growth
Analysis of dependence among size, rate and duration in internet flows
In this paper we examine rigorously the evidence for dependence among data
size, transfer rate and duration in Internet flows. We emphasize two
statistical approaches for studying dependence, including Pearson's correlation
coefficient and the extremal dependence analysis method. We apply these methods
to large data sets of packet traces from three networks. Our major results show
that Pearson's correlation coefficients between size and duration are much
smaller than one might expect. We also find that correlation coefficients
between size and rate are generally small and can be strongly affected by
applying thresholds to size or duration. Based on Transmission Control Protocol
connection startup mechanisms, we argue that thresholds on size should be more
useful than thresholds on duration in the analysis of correlations. Using
extremal dependence analysis, we draw a similar conclusion, finding remarkable
independence for extremal values of size and rate.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AOAS268 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
White Dwarfs In Ngc6397 And M4: Constraints On The Physics Of Crystallization
We explore the physics of crystallization in the dense Coulomb plasma of the deep interiors of white dwarf stars using the color-magnitude diagram and luminosity function constructed from Hubble Space Telescope photometry of the globular cluster M 4 and compare it with our results for proper motion cleaned Hubble Space Telescope photometry of the globular cluster NGC 6397. We demonstrate that the data are consistent with a binary mixture of carbon and oxygen crystallizing at a value of Gamma higher than the theoretical value for a One Component Plasma (OCP). We show that this result is in line with the latest Molecular Dynamics simulations for binary mixtures of C/O. We discuss implications for future work.Astronom
Long-distance entanglement and quantum teleportation in XX spin chains
Isotropic XX models of one-dimensional spin-1/2 chains are investigated with
the aim to elucidate the formal structure and the physical properties that
allow these systems to act as channels for long-distance, high-fidelity quantum
teleportation. We introduce two types of models: I) open, dimerized XX chains,
and II) open XX chains with small end bonds. For both models we obtain the
exact expressions for the end-to-end correlations and the scaling of the energy
gap with the length of the chain. We determine the end-to-end concurrence and
show that model I) supports true long-distance entanglement at zero
temperature, while model II) supports {\it ``quasi long-distance''}
entanglement that slowly falls off with the size of the chain. Due to the
different scalings of the gaps, respectively exponential for model I) and
algebraic in model II), we demonstrate that the latter allows for efficient
qubit teleportation with high fidelity in sufficiently long chains even at
moderately low temperatures.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
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