1,915 research outputs found
Comparing Willingness-to-Pay Estimates from Experimental Auctions with Mailed Surveys Incorporating Cheap Talk
Willingness-to-pay (WTP) results from experimental auctions are compared to those from cheap-talk and conventional surveys for branded beef products in Canada. It is found that while the cheap-talk survey appears to mitigate hypothetical bias compared to the conventional survey, cheap-talk survey WTP remains higher than that in experimental auctions.Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,
Formation and Disruption of Cosmological Low Mass Objects
We investigate the evolution of cosmological low mass (low virial
temperature) objects and the formation of the first luminous objects. First,
the `cooling diagram' for low mass objects is shown. We assess the cooling rate
taking into account the contribution of H_2, which is not in chemical
equilibrium generally, with a simple argument of time scales. The reaction
rates and the cooling rate of H_2 are taken from the recent results by Galli &
Palla (1998). Using this cooling diagram, we also estimate the formation
condition of luminous objects taking into account the supernova (SN) disruption
of virialized clouds. We find that the mass of the first luminous object is
several times 10^7 solar mass, because smaller objects may be disrupted by the
SNe before they become luminous. Metal pollution of low mass (Ly-alpha) clouds
also discussed. The resultant metallicity of the clouds is about 1/1000 of the
solar metallicity.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, To appear in ApJ
Discriminating among theories of spiral structure using Gaia DR2
We compare the distribution in position and velocity of nearby stars from the
Gaia DR2 radial velocity sample with predictions of current theories for
spirals in disc galaxies. Although the rich substructure in velocity space
contains the same information, we find it more revealing to reproject the data
into action-angle variables, and we describe why resonant scattering would be
more readily identifiable in these variables. We compute the predicted changes
to the phase space density, in multiple different projections, that would be
caused by a simplified isolated spiral pattern, finding widely differing
predictions from each theory. We conclude that the phase space structure
present in the Gaia data shares many of the qualitative features expected in
the transient spiral mode model. We argue that the popular picture of
apparently swing-amplified spirals results from the superposition of a few
underlying spiral modes.Comment: Revised version accepted to appear in MNRAS. Some significant
improvements. A full resolution version of Fig 4 is available from
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~sellwood/mult_res.pd
The Frequency of Rapid Rotation Among K Giant Stars
We present the results of a search for unusually rapidly rotating giant stars
in a large sample of K giants (~1300 stars) that had been spectroscopically
monitored as potential targets for the Space Interferometry Mission's
Astrometric Grid. The stars in this catalog are much fainter and typically more
metal-poor than those of other catalogs of red giant star rotational
velocities, but the spectra generally only have signal-to-noise (S/N) of
~20-60, making the measurement of the widths of individual lines difficult. To
compensate for this, we have developed a cross-correlation method to derive
rotational velocities in moderate S/N echelle spectra to efficiently probe this
sample for rapid rotator candidates. We have discovered 28 new red giant rapid
rotators as well as one extreme rapid rotator with a vsini of 86.4 km/s. Rapid
rotators comprise 2.2% of our sample, which is consistent with other surveys of
brighter, more metal-rich K giant stars. Although we find that the temperature
distribution of rapid rotators is similar to that of the slow rotators, this
may not be the case with the distributions of surface gravity and metallicity.
The rapid rotators show a slight overabundance of low gravity stars and as a
group are significantly more metal-poor than the slow rotators, which may
indicate that the rotators are tidally-locked binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 25 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables.
Tables 1 and 2 are provided in their full form as plain text ancillary file
What a Tangled Web We Weave: Hermus as the Northern Extension of the Phoenix Stream
We investigate whether the recently discovered Phoenix stream may be part of a much longer stream that includes the previously discovered Hermus stream. Using a simple model of the Galaxy with a disk, bulge, and a spherical dark matter halo, we show that a nearly circular orbit, highly inclined with respect to the disk, can be found that fits the positions, orientations, and distances of both streams. While the two streams are somewhat misaligned in the sense that they do not occupy the same plane, nodal precession due to the Milky Way disk potential naturally brings the orbit into line with each stream in the course of half an orbit. We consequently consider a common origin for the two streams as plausible. Based on our best-fitting orbit, we make predictions for the positions, distances, radial velocities, and proper motions along each stream. If our hypothesis is borne out by measurements, then at â183° (â235° with respect to the Galactic center) and â76 kpc in length, PhoenixâHermus would become the longest cold stream yet found. This would make it a particularly valuable new probe of the shape and mass of the Galactic halo out to â20 kpc
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