9,720 research outputs found
Measuring the Radiative Histories of QSOs with the Transverse Proximity Effect
Since the photons that stream from QSOs alter the ionization state of the gas
they traverse, any changes to a QSO's luminosity will produce
outward-propagating ionization gradients in the surrounding intergalactic gas.
This paper shows that at redshift z~3 the gradients will alter the gas's
Lyman-alpha absorption opacity enough to produce a detectable signature in the
spectra of faint background galaxies. By obtaining noisy (S:N~4) low-resolution
(~7A) spectra of a several dozen background galaxies in an R~20' field
surrounding an isotropically radiating 18th magnitude QSO at z=3, it should be
possible to detect any order-of-magnitude changes to the QSO's luminosity over
the previous 50--100 Myr and to measure the time t_Q since the onset of the
QSO's current luminous outburst with an accuracy of ~5 Myr for t_Q<~50 Myr.
Smaller fields-of-view are acceptable for shorter QSO lifetimes. The major
uncertainty, aside from cosmic variance, will be the shape and orientation of
the QSO's ionization cone. This can be determined from the data if the number
of background sources is increased by a factor of a few. The method will then
provide a direct test of unification models for AGN.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ. 16 page
The Eastwood-Singer gauge in Einstein spaces
Electrodynamics in curved spacetime can be studied in the Eastwood--Singer
gauge, which has the advantage of respecting the invariance under conformal
rescalings of the Maxwell equations. Such a construction is here studied in
Einstein spaces, for which the Ricci tensor is proportional to the metric. The
classical field equations for the potential are then equivalent to first
solving a scalar wave equation with cosmological constant, and then solving a
vector wave equation where the inhomogeneous term is obtained from the gradient
of the solution of the scalar wave equation. The Eastwood--Singer condition
leads to a field equation on the potential which is preserved under gauge
transformations provided that the scalar function therein obeys a fourth-order
equation where the highest-order term is the wave operator composed with
itself. The second-order scalar equation is here solved in de Sitter spacetime,
and also the fourth-order equation in a particular case, and these solutions
are found to admit an exponential decay at large time provided that
square-integrability for positive time is required. Last, the vector wave
equation in the Eastwood-Singer gauge is solved explicitly when the potential
is taken to depend only on the time variable.Comment: 13 pages. Section 6, with new original calculations, has been added,
and the presentation has been improve
Heating in the Accreted Neutron Star Ocean: Implications for Superburst Ignition
We perform a self-consistent calculation of the thermal structure in the
crust of a superbursting neutron star. In particular, we follow the
nucleosynthetic evolution of an accreted fluid element from its deposition into
the atmosphere down to a depth where the electron Fermi energy is 20 MeV. We
include temperature-dependent continuum electron capture rates and realistic
sources of heat loss by thermal neutrino emission from the crust and core. We
show that, in contrast to previous calculations, electron captures to excited
states and subsequent gamma-emission significantly reduce the local heat loss
due to weak-interaction neutrinos. Depending on the initial composition these
reactions release up to a factor of 10 times more heat at densities < 10^{11}
g/cc than obtained previously. This heating reduces the ignition depth of
superbursts. In particular, it reduces the discrepancy noted by Cumming et al.
between the temperatures needed for unstable 12C ignition on timescales
consistent with observations and the reduction in crust temperature from Cooper
pair neutrino emission.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, the Astrophysical Journal, in press (scheduled
for v. 662). Revised from v1 in response to referee's comment
A population and harvest intensity estimate for Sooty Shearwater, Puflinus griseus, on Taukihepa (Big South Cape), New Zealand
We estimated the total number of burrow entrances, chicks and total population size of the Sooty Shearwater, Puffinusgriseus, colony on Taukihepa (Big South Cape), the largest of the 36 Titi Islands where Titi (Sooty Shcarwater chicks) are harvested. Between 1999 and 2005
we surveyed six manu (family birded areas) as well as a colony in the interior forested region on the island, measuring entrance density and burrow occupancy and habitat variables, as well as recording birders' harvest intensity. We found little support for any relationship between habitat variables and entrance density on the surveyed manu. Therefore we used a detailed aerial image to map areas and extrapolate these estimates to island totals and a simple population model, incorporating known demographic parameters to calculate the total population size. We estimated that the island contains 1.67 million (95% CI: 1.47-1.88) burrow entrances and 1.12 million (0.959-1.28) breeding pairs, equating to a total of 5.31 million (95% CI: 3.98-6.77) juveniles, pre-breeders and adults associated with the island. Assuming the harvest intensity on the surveyed manu 0.18% (0.16-0.21) was similar elsewhere on the unsurveyed but harvested region of the island, we estimated that ofthe 807000 (712000-901 000) fledging chicks on the island, 137000 (105000-173000) are harvested each year. These findings highlight the importance of the island both in terms of total Sooty Shearwater population in New Zealand and to the
Rakiura Maori who harvest the Titi
The State and Poverty Alleviation in Advanced Capitalist Democracies
We analyze the impact of the state on the incidence of poverty in the working-age population of 14 advanced capitalist democracies between 1970 and 1997 using an unbalanced panel design. We utilize poverty measures based on micro-level data from the Luxembourg Income Study in conjunction with pooled time series data from the Huber, Ragin and Stephens (1997) database. We argue that economic factors including de-industrialization and unemployment largely explain pre-tax, pre-transfer poverty rates of the working age population in advanced capitalist states. These rates, however, are theoretical as advanced democracies redistribute resources through taxes and transfers. We show that the extent of redistribution (measured as poverty reduction via taxes and transfers) is explained directly by welfare state generosity as well as constitutional structure (number of veto points) and the strength of the left, both in unions and in government
The Welfare State and Gender Equality
This paper examines the determinants of several indicators of economic well being of women. The feminist literature has suggested that women's well being is best measured through both the economic status of women and power relations vis-à-vis men. Barbara Hobson has proposed that the percentage of single mothers in poverty and married women's income as a proportion of both spouses' income effectively measure economic status and power relations. The dependent variables are calculated from micro data available in the Luxembourg Income Survey (LIS) archive, which now contains enough countries and time points to allow multivariate statistical analysis with a sufficiently large number of independent variables to test a broad range of hypotheses on the determinants of gender egalitarian outcomes while controlling for other possible determinants. In the case of poverty among single mothers, the LIS data also allow us to go beyond Hobson's single indicator to investigate the extent to which government action is responsible for poverty reduction. Hence, we analyze 4 dependent variables: 1) pre tax and transfer poverty rates among single mothers, 2) reductions in single mothers' poverty due to taxes and transfers, 3) post tax and transfer poverty rates among single mothers, and 4) women's wages relative to spouses' wages. In these analyses, we test feminist theories along with theories of economic structure, labor market institutions, state structure and political power
First Results from the Large Area Lyman Alpha Survey
We report on a new survey for z=4.5 Lyman alpha sources, the Large Area Lyman
Alpha (LALA) survey. Our survey achieves an unprecedented combination of volume
and sensitivity by using narrow-band filters on the new 8192x8192 pixel CCD
Mosaic Camera at the 4 meter Mayall telescope of Kitt Peak National
Observatory.
Well-detected sources with flux and equivalent width matching known high
redshift Lyman alpha galaxies (i.e., observed equivalent width above 80
Angstroms and line+continuum flux between 2.6e-17 and 5.2e-17 erg/cm^2/sec in
an 80 Angstrom filter) have an observed surface density corresponding to 11000
+- 700 per square degree per unit redshift at z=4.5. Spatial variation in this
surface density is apparent on comparison between counts in 6561 and 6730
Angstrom filters.
Early spectroscopic followup results from the Keck telescope included three
sources meeting our criteria for good Lyman alpha candidates. Of these, one is
confirmed as a z=4.52 source, while another remains consistent with either
z=4.55 or z=0.81. We infer that 30 to 50% of our good candidates are bona fide
Lyman alpha emitters, implying a net density of about 4000 Lyman alpha galaxies
per square degree per unit redshift.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures (3 .ps files), uses AASTeX 4. Submitted to The
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Energy Momentum Pseudo-Tensor of Relic Gravitational Wave in Expanding Universe
We study the energy-momentum pseudo-tensor of gravitational wave, and examine
the one introduced by Landau-Lifshitz for a general gravitational field and the
effective one recently used in literature. In short wavelength limit after
Brill-Hartle average, both lead to the same gauge invariant stress tensor of
gravitational wave. For relic gravitational waves in the expanding universe, we
examine two forms of pressure, and , and trace the
origin of their difference to a coupling between gravitational waves and the
background matter. The difference is shown to be negligibly small for most of
cosmic expansion stages starting from inflation. We demonstrate that the wave
equation is equivalent to the energy conservation equation using the pressure
that includes the mentioned coupling.Comment: 15 pages, no figure, Accepted by PR
The Very Highly Ionized Broad Absorption Line System of the QSO SBS1542+541
We have analyzed the broad absorption line system of the bright (V=16.5)
high-redshift (z=2.361) QSO SBS1542+541 using UV spectra from the HST FOS along
with optical data from the MMT and the Steward Observatory 2.3m telescope.
These spectra give continuous wavelength coverage from 1200 to 8000 Angstroms,
corresponding to 340 to 2480 Angstroms in the QSO rest frame. This object
therefore offers a rare opportunity to study broad absorption lines in the
rest-frame extreme UV. We find that the absorption system is dominated by very
high-ionization species, including O VI, NeVIII, and SiXII. We also identify
apparently saturated broad Lyman-series lines of order Ly-gamma and higher.
There is strong evidence for partial occultation of the QSO emission source,
particularly from the higher-order Lyman lines which indicate a covered
fraction less than 0.2. Overall, the data suggest a correlation between a
larger covered fraction and a higher state of ionization. We suggest that the
different covered fractions can be explained by either a special line of sight
through a disk-like geometry or by the existence of density fluctuations of a
factor >2 in the BAL gas. Our photoionization models of the system indicate a
large column density and high ionization state similar to that found in X-ray
``warm absorbers''.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, to be published in Ap
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