10,361 research outputs found
A Cosmic Microwave Background feature consistent with a cosmic texture
The Cosmic Microwave Background provides our most ancient image of the
Universe and our best tool for studying its early evolution. Theories of high
energy physics predict the formation of various types of topological defects in
the very early universe, including cosmic texture which would generate hot and
cold spots in the Cosmic Microwave Background. We show through a Bayesian
statistical analysis that the most prominent, 5 degree radius cold spot
observed in all-sky images, which is otherwise hard to explain, is compatible
with having being caused by a texture. From this model, we constrain the
fundamental symmetry breaking energy scale to be phi_0 ~ 8.7 x 10^(15) GeV. If
confirmed, this detection of a cosmic defect will probe physics at energies
exceeding any conceivable terrestrial experiment.Comment: Accepted by Science. Published electronically via Science Express on
25 October 2007, http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/114869
Bias corrections for probit and logit models with two-way fixed effects
In this article, we present the user-written commands probitfe and logitfe, which fit probit and logit panel-data models with individual and time unobserved effects. Fixed-effects panel-data methods that estimate the unobserved effects can be severely biased because of the incidental parameter problem (Neyman and Scott, 1948, Econometrica 16: –32). We tackle this problem using the analytical and jackknife bias corrections derived in Fernández-Val and Weidner (2016, Journal of Econometrics 192: 291–312) for panels where the two dimensions (N and T) are moderately large. We illustrate the commands with an empirical application to international trade and a Monte Carlo simulation calibrated to this application
Nitric Oxide Accumulation: The Evolutionary Trigger for Phytopathogenesis
Many publications highlight the importance of nitric oxide (NO) in plant–bacteria interactions, either in the promotion of health and plant growth or in pathogenesis. However, the role of NO in the signaling between bacteria and plants and in the fate of their interaction, as well as the reconstruction of their interactive evolution, remains largely unknown. Despite the complexity of the evolution of life on Earth, we explore the hypothesis that denitrification and aerobic respiration were responsible for local NO accumulation, which triggered primordial antagonistic biotic interactions, namely the first phytopathogenic interactions. N-oxides, including NO, could globally accumulate via lightning synthesis in the early anoxic ocean and constitute pools for the evolution of denitrification, considered an early step of the biological nitrogen cycle. Interestingly, a common evolution may be proposed for components of denitrification and aerobic respiration pathways, namely for NO and oxygen reductases, a theory compatible with the presence of low amounts of oxygen before the great oxygenation event (GOE), which was generated by Cyanobacteria. During GOE, the increase in oxygen caused the decrease of Earth’s temperature and the consequent increase of oxygen dissolution and availability, making aerobic respiration an increasingly dominant trait of the expanding mesophilic lifestyle. Horizontal gene transfer was certainly important in the joint expansion of mesophily and aerobic respiration. First denitrification steps lead to NO formation through nitrite reductase activity, and NO may further accumulate when oxygen binds NO reductase, resulting in denitrification blockage. The consequent transient NO surplus in an oxic niche could have been a key factor for a successful outcome of an early denitrifying prokaryote able to scavenge oxygen by NO/oxygen reductase or by an independent heterotrophic aerobic respiration pathway. In fact, NO surplus could result in toxicity causing “the first disease” in oxygen- producing Cyanobacteria. We inspected in bacteria the presence of sequences similar to the NO-producing nitrite reductase nirS gene of Thermus thermophilus, an extreme thermophilic aerobe of the Thermus/Deinococcus group, which constitutes an ancient lineage related to Cyanobacteria. In silico analysis revealed the relationship between the presence of nirS genes and phytopathogenicity in Gram-negative bacteria.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
The WMAP cold spot
The WMAP cold spot was found by applying spherical wavelets to the first year
WMAP data. An excess of kurtosis of the wavelet coefficient was observed at
angular scales of around 5 degrees. This excess was shown to be inconsistent
with Gaussian simulations with a p-value of around 1%. A cold spot centered at
(b = -57, l = 209) was shown to be the main cause of this deviation. Several
hypotheses were raised to explain the origin of the cold spot. After performing
a Bayesian template fit a collapsing cosmic texture was found to be the most
probable hypothesis explaining the spot. Here we review the properties of the
cold spot and the possible explanations.Comment: To appear in the "Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V " Proceedings
of the VIII Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society (SEA) held
in Santander, July 7-11, 200
- …