8,554 research outputs found
Carrier-Concentration Dependence of the Pseudogap Ground State of Superconducting Bi2Sr2-xLaxCuO6+delta Revealed by 63,65Cu-Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in Very High Magnetic Fields
We report the results of the Knight shift by 63,65Cu-nuclear-magnetic
resonance (NMR) measurements on single-layered copper-oxide
Bi2Sr2-xLaxCuO6+delta conducted under very high magnetic fields up to 44 T. The
magnetic field suppresses superconductivity completely and the pseudogap ground
state is revealed. The 63Cu-NMR Knight shift shows that there remains a finite
density of states (DOS) at the Fermi level in the zero-temperature limit, which
indicates that the pseudogap ground state is a metallic state with a finite
volume of Fermi surface. The residual DOS in the pseudogap ground state
decreases with decreasing doping (increasing x) but remains quite large even at
the vicinity of the magnetically ordered phase of x > 0.8, which suggests that
the DOS plunges to zero upon approaching the Mott insulating phase.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
A Contracting, Turbulent, Starless Core in the Serpens Cluster
We present combined single-dish and interferometric CS(2--1) and N2H+(1--0)
observations of a compact core in the NW region of the Serpens molecular cloud.
The core is starless according to observations from optical to millimeter
wavelengths and its lines have turbulent widths and ``infall asymmetry''. Line
profile modeling indicates supersonic inward motions v_in>0.34 km/s over an
extended region L>12000AU. The high infall speed and large extent exceeds the
predictions of most thermal ambipolar diffusion models and points to a more
dynamical process for core formation. A short (dynamic) timescale, ~1e5
yr=L/v_in, is also suggested by the low N2H+ abundance ~1e-10.Comment: 11 pages including 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
The black holes of radio galaxies during the "Quasar Era": Masses, accretion rates, and evolutionary stage
We present an analysis of the AGN broad-line regions of 6 powerful radio
galaxies at z>~2 (HzRGs) with rest-frame optical imaging spectroscopy obtained
at the VLT. All galaxies have luminous (L(H-alpha)=few x 10^44 erg s^-1),
spatially unresolved H-alpha line emission with FWHM>= 10,000 km s^-1 at the
position of the nucleus, suggesting their AGN are powered by supermassive black
holes with masses of few x 10^9 M_sun and accretion luminosities of a few
percent of the Eddington luminosity. In two galaxies we also detect the BLRs in
H-beta, suggesting relatively low extinction of A_V~1 mag, which agrees with
constraints from X-ray observations. By relating black hole and bulge mass, we
find a possible offset towards higher black-hole masses of at most ~0.6 dex
relative to nearby galaxies at a given host mass, although each individual
galaxy is within the scatter of the local relationship. If not entirely from
systematic effects, this would then suggest that the masses of the host
galaxies have increased by at most a factor ~4 since z~2 relative to the
black-hole masses, perhaps through accretion of satellite galaxies or because
of a time lag between star formation in the host galaxy and AGN fueling. We
also compare the radiative and mechanical energy output (from jets) of our
targets with predictions of recent models of "synthesis" or "grand unified" AGN
feedback, which postulate that AGN with similar radiative and mechanical energy
output rates to those found in our HzRGs may be nearing the end of their period
of active growth. We discuss evidence that they may reach this stage at the
same time as their host galaxies.Comment: A&A in pres
Relaxing credit constraints in emerging economies: the impact of public loans on the performance of Brazilian manufacturers
Especially in developing countries credit constraints are often perceived as one of the most important market frictions constraining firm innovation and growth. Huge amounts of public money are being devoted to the removal of such constraints but their effectiveness is still subject to an intense policy debate. This paper contributes to this debate by analysing the effects of the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) loans. It finds that, before receiving BNDES support, granted firms are indeed more credit constrained than comparable non-granted firms. It also finds that BNDES support allows granted firms to achieve the same level of performance as similar non-granted firms that are not credit constrained. However, it does not allow granted firms to outperform similar non-granted ones
Seasonal adjustment and the business cycle in unemployment
Several recent studies show that seasonal variation and cyclical variation in unemployment are correlated. A common finding is that seasonality tends to differ across the business cycle stages of recessions and expansions. Since seasonal adjustment methods assume that the two sources of variation can somehow be separated, the present study examines the impact of seasonal adjustment on the analysis of cyclical patterns. Seasonally adjusted quarterly unemployment data for 5 G-7 countries are modeled by a Smooth Transition Autoregression [STAR] while the corresponding unadjusted data are modeled by a so-called Seasonal STAR [SEASTAR]. A comparison of the implied estimated peaks and troughs shows that there is substantial agreement on the business cycle chronologies, albeit that for seasonally adjusted data recessionary periods tend to last longer
The Origin of B-Type Runaway Stars: Non-LTE Abundances as a Diagnostic
There are two accepted mechanisms to explain the origin of runaway OB-type
stars: the Binary Supernova Scenario (BSS), and the Cluster Ejection Scenario
(CES). In the former, a supernova explosion within a close binary ejects the
secondary star, while in the latter close multi-body interactions in a dense
cluster cause one or more of the stars to be ejected from the region at high
velocity. Both mechanisms have the potential to affect the surface composition
of the runaway star. TLUSTY non-LTE model atmosphere calculations have been
used to determine atmospheric parameters and carbon, nitrogen, magnesium and
silicon abundances for a sample of B-type runaways. These same analytical tools
were used by Hunter et al. (2009) for their analysis of 50 B-type open cluster
Galactic stars (i.e. non-runaways). Effective temperatures were deduced using
the silicon-ionization balance technique, surface gravities from Balmer line
profiles and microturbulent velocities derived using the Si spectrum. The
runaways show no obvious abundance anomalies when compared with stars in the
open clusters. The runaways do show a spread in composition which almost
certainly reflects the Galactic abundance gradient and a range in the
birthplaces of the runaways in the Galactic disk. Since the observed Galactic
abundance gradients of C, N, Mg and Si are of a similar magnitude, the
abundance ratios (e.g., N/Mg) are, as obtained, essentially uniform across the
sample
The HI gas content of galaxies around Abell 370, a galaxy cluster at z = 0.37
We used observations from the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope to measure the
atomic hydrogen gas content of 324 galaxies around the galaxy cluster Abell 370
at a redshift of z = 0.37 (a look-back time of ~4 billion years). The HI 21-cm
emission from these galaxies was measured by coadding their signals using
precise optical redshifts obtained with the Anglo-Australian Telescope. The
average HI mass measured for all 324 galaxies is (6.6 +- 3.5)x10^9 solar
masses, while the average HI mass measured for the 105 optically blue galaxies
is (19.0 +- 6.5)x10^9 solar masses. The significant quantities of gas found
around Abell 370, suggest that there has been substantial evolution in the gas
content of galaxy clusters since redshift z = 0.37. The total amount of HI gas
found around Abell 370 is up to ~8 times more than that seen around the Coma
cluster, a nearby galaxy cluster of similar size. Despite this higher gas
content, Abell 370 shows the same trend as nearby clusters, that galaxies close
to the cluster core have lower HI gas content than galaxies further away. The
Abell 370 galaxies have HI mass to optical light ratios similar to local galaxy
samples and have the same correlation between their star formation rate and HI
mass as found in nearby galaxies. The average star formation rate derived from
[OII] emission and from de-redshifted 1.4 GHz radio continuum for the Abell 370
galaxies also follows the correlation found in the local universe. The large
amounts of HI gas found around the cluster can easily be consumed by the
observed star formation rate in the galaxies over the ~4 billion years (from z
= 0.37) to the present day.Comment: accepted by MNRA
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