19,484 research outputs found
The effect of small inter-pulsar distance variations in stochastic gravitational wave background searches with Pulsar Timing Arrays
One of the primary objectives for Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTAs) is to detect a
stochastic background generated by the incoherent superposition of
gravitational waves (GWs), in particular from the cosmic population of
supermassive black hole binaries. Current stochastic background searches assume
that pulsars in a PTA are separated from each other and the Earth by many GW
wavelengths. As more millisecond pulsars are discovered and added to PTAs, some
may be separated by only a few radiation wavelengths or less, resulting in
correlated GW phase changes between close pulsars in the array. Here we
investigate how PTA overlap reduction functions (ORFs), up to quadrupole order,
are affected by these additional correlated phase changes, and how they are in
turn affected by relaxing the assumption that all pulsars are equidistant from
the solar system barycenter. We find that in the low frequency GW background
limit of ~Hz, and for pulsars at varying distances from the
Earth, that these additional correlations only affect the ORFs by a few percent
for pulsar pairs at large angular separations, as expected. However when nearby
(order 100 pc) pulsars are separated by less than a few degrees, the correlated
phase changes can introduce variations of a few tens of percent in the
magnitude of the isotropic ORF, and much larger fractional differences in the
anisotropic ORFs-- up to 188 in the , ORF for equidistant pulsars
separated by 3 degrees. In fact, the magnitude of most of the anisotropic ORFs
is largest at small, but non-zero, pulsar separations. Finally, we write down a
small angle approximation for the correlated phase changes which can easily be
implemented in search pipelines, and for completeness, examine the behavior of
the ORFs for pulsars which lie at a radiation wavelength from the Earth.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, submitted to PR
Are Italians Willing to Pay for Agricultural Environmental Safety? A Stated Choice Approach
The widespread use of pesticides in agriculture provides a particularly complex pattern of multidimensional negative side-effects, ranging from food safety related effects to the deterioration of farmland ecosystems. The assessment of the economic implications of such negative processes is fraught with many uncertainties. This paper presents results of an empirical study recently conducted in the North of Italy aimed at estimating the value of reducing the multiple impacts of pesticide use. This type of analysis is rather novel in Italy. A statistical technique known as choice modelling is used here in combination with contingent valuation techniques. The experimental design of choice modelling provides a natural tool for tackling simultaneously the economic dimensions of several negative environmental effects associated with agrochemicals use. In particular, the paper addresses the reduction of farmland biodiversity, groundwater contamination and human intoxication. The resulting estimates show that, on average, Italians consumers are prone to accept substantial price mark-ups for agricultural goods (in particular, foodstuff) produced in environmentally benign ways.pesticide risks, food safety, willingness-to-pay, choice modeling, contingent valuation, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Willingness to Pay for Agricultural Environmental Safety: Evidence from a Survey of Milan, Italy, Residents
The widespread use of pesticides in agriculture provides a particularly complex pattern of multidimensional negative side-effects, ranging from food safety related effects to the deterioration of farmland ecosystems. The assessment of the economic implications of such negative processes is fraught with many uncertainties. This paper presents results of an empirical study recently conducted in the North of Italy aimed at estimating the value of reducing the multiple impacts of pesticide use. A statistical technique known as conjoint choice experiment is used here in combination with contingent valuation techniques. The experimental design of choice modelling provides a natural tool to attach a monetary value to negative environmental effects associated with agrochemicals use. In particular, the paper addresses the reduction of farmland biodiversity, groundwater contamination and human intoxication. The resulting estimates show that, on average, respondents are prone to accept substantial willingness to pay premia for agricultural goods (in particular, foodstuff) produced in environmentally benign ways.Pesticide risks, Food safety, Willingness-to-pay, Choice modeling, Contingent valuation
Distributed soft thresholding for sparse signal recovery
In this paper, we address the problem of distributed sparse recovery of
signals acquired via compressed measurements in a sensor network. We propose a
new class of distributed algorithms to solve Lasso regression problems, when
the communication to a fusion center is not possible, e.g., due to
communication cost or privacy reasons. More precisely, we introduce a
distributed iterative soft thresholding algorithm (DISTA) that consists of
three steps: an averaging step, a gradient step, and a soft thresholding
operation. We prove the convergence of DISTA in networks represented by regular
graphs, and we compare it with existing methods in terms of performance,
memory, and complexity.Comment: Revised version. Main improvements: extension of the convergence
theorem to regular graphs; new numerical results and comparisons with other
algorithm
Sustainability of Urban Sprawl: Environmental-Economic Indicators for the Analysis of Mobility Impact in Italy
Sound empirical and quantitative analysis on the relationship between different patterns of urban expansion and environmental or social costs of mobility are still very rare in Europe and the few studies available provide only a qualitative discussion on this. Recently, Camagni et al. (2002) have performed an empirical analysis on the metropolitan area of Milan, aimed at establishing whether different patterns of urban expansion generate different levels of land consumption and heterogeneous impacts of urban mobility. Results confirm the expectation that higher environmental impact of mobility is associated with more extensive and sprawling urban development, more recent urbanisation processes and residential specialisation. The present paper enlarges further the empirical analysis to seven Italian metropolitan areas (namely, Bari, Florence, Naples, Padua, Perugia, Potenza and Turin) to corroborate previous results for the Italian context. The novelty of the present paper is threefold. Firstly, we are interested in exploring the changes occurred to the intensity of the mobility impact across a ten-year period, from 1981 to 1991, corresponding to the Italian economic boom years. Secondly, using an econometric analysis in cross-section, we consider several metropolitan areas at once, being therefore able to explore whether there are significant differences in the way the model explains variations in the mobility impact across various Italian urban areas. Finally, we propose a conceptual interpretation of the causal chain in the explanation of the mobility impact intensity and we test it using Causal Path Analysis.Urban mobility, Sprawl, Environmental sustainability, Collective costs
Entanglement control in hybrid optomechanical systems
We demonstrate the control of entanglement in a hybrid optomechanical system
comprising an optical cavity with a mechanical end-mirror and an intracavity
Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). Pulsed laser light (tuned within realistic
experimental conditions) is shown to induce an almost sixfold increase of the
atom-mirror entanglement and to be responsible for interesting dynamics between
such mesoscopic systems. In order to assess the advantages offered by the
proposed control technique, we compare the time-dependent dynamics of the
system under constant pumping with the evolution due to the modulated laser
light.Comment: Published versio
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