9,904 research outputs found
Association of 3He-Rich Solar Energetic Particles with Large-Scale Coronal Waves
Small 3He-rich solar energetic particle (SEP) events have been commonly
associated with extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) jets and narrow coronal mass
ejections (CMEs) which are believed to be the signatures of magnetic
reconnection involving field lines open to interplanetary space. The elemental
and isotopic fractionation in these events are thought to be caused by
processes confined to the flare sites. In this study we identify 32 3He-rich
SEP events observed by the Advanced Composition Explorer near the Earth during
the solar minimum period 2007-2010 and examine their solar sources with the
high resolution Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) EUV images.
Leading the Earth, STEREO-A provided for the first time a direct view on
3He-rich flares, which are generally located on the Sun's western hemisphere.
Surprisingly, we find that about half of the 3He-rich SEP events in this survey
are associated with large-scale EUV coronal waves. An examination of the wave
front propagation, the source-flare distribution and the coronal magnetic field
connections suggests that the EUV waves may affect the injection of 3He-rich
SEPs into interplanetary space.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Latent Process Heterogeneity in Discounting Behavior
We show that observed choices in discounting experiments are consistent with roughly one-half of the subjects using exponential discounting and one-half using quasi-hyperbolic discounting. We characterize the latent data generating process using a mixture model which allows different subjects to behave consistently with each model. Our results have substantive implications for the assumptions made about discounting behavior, and also have significant methodological implications for the manner in which we evaluate alternative models when there may be complementary data generating processes.
Analytical description of spin-Rabi oscillation controlled electronic transitions rates between weakly coupled pairs of paramagnetic states with S=1/2
We report on an analytical description of spin-dependent electronic
transition rates which are controlled by a radiation induced spin-Rabi
oscillation of weakly spin-exchange and spin-dipolar coupled paramagnetic
states (S=1/2). The oscillation components (the Fourier content) of the net
transition rates within spin-pair ensembles are derived for randomly
distributed spin resonances with account of a possible correlation between the
two distributions that correspond to the two individual pair partners. The
results presented here show that when electrically or optically detected Rabi
spectroscopy is conducted under an increasing driving field B_ 1, the Rabi
spectrum evolves from a single resonance peak at s=\Omega_R, where
\Omega_R=\gamma B_1 is the Rabi frequency (\gamma is the gyromagnetic ratio),
to three peaks at s= \Omega_R, s=2\Omega_R, and at low s<< \Omega_R. The
crossover between the two regimes takes place when \Omega_R exceeds the
expectation value \delta_0 of the difference of the Zeeman energies within the
pairs, which corresponds to the broadening of the magnetic resonance lines in
the presence of disorder caused by hyperfine field or distributions of Lande
g-factors. We capture this crossover by analytically calculating the shapes of
all three peaks at arbitrary relation between \Omega_R and \delta_0. When the
peaks are well-developed their widths are \Delta s ~ \delta_0^2/\Omega_R.Comment: 10 page, 5 figure
Case studies of multi-day 3He-rich solar energetic particle periods
Context. Impulsive solar energetic particle events in the inner heliosphere
show the long-lasting enrichment of 3He. Aims. We study the source regions of
long-lasting 3He-rich solar energetic particle (SEP) events Methods. We located
the responsible open magnetic field regions, we combined potential field source
surface extrapolations (PFSS) with the Parker spiral, and compared the magnetic
field of the identified source regions with in situ magnetic fields. The
candidate open field regions are active region plages. The activity was
examined by using extreme ultraviolet (EUV) images from the Solar Dynamics
Observatory (SDO) and STEREO together with radio observations from STEREO and
WIND. Results. Multi-day periods of 3He-rich SEP events are associated with ion
production in single active region. Small flares or coronal jets are their
responsible solar sources. We also find that the 3He enrichment may depend on
the occurrence rate of coronal jets.Comment: 7page, 4 figure
Theory, Experimental Design and Econometrics Are Complementary (And So Are Lab and Field Experiments)
Experiments are conducted with various purposes in mind including theory testing, mechanism design and measurement of individual characteristics. In each case a careful researcher is constrained in the experimental design by prior considerations imposed either by theory, common sense or past results. We argue that the integration of the design with these elements needs to be taken even further. We view all these elements that make up the body of research methodology in experimental economics as mutually dependant and therefore take a systematic approach to the design of our experimental research program. Rather than drawing inferences from individual experiments or theories as if they were independent constructs, and then using the findings from one to attack the other, we recognize the need to constrain the inferences from one by the inferences from the other. Any data generated by an experiment needs to be interpreted jointly with considerations from theory, common sense, complementary data, econometric methods and expected applications. We illustrate this systematic approach by reference to a research program centered on large artefactual field experiments we have conducted in Denmark. An important contribution that grew out of our work is the complementarity between lab and field experiments.
Estimating Subjective Probabilities
Subjective probabilities play a role in many economic decisions. There is a large theoretical literature on the elicitation of subjective probabilities, and an equally large empirical literature. However, there is a gulf between the two. The theoretical literature proposes a range of procedures that can be used to recover subjective probabilities, but stresses the need to make strong auxiliary assumptions or "calibrating adjustments" to elicited reports in order to recover the latent probability. With some notable exceptions, the empirical literature seems intent on either making those strong assumptions or ignoring the need for calibration. We illustrate how the joint estimation of risk attitudes and subjective probabilities using structural maximum likelihood methods can provide the calibration adjustments that theory calls for. This allows the observer to make inferences about the latent subjective probability, calibrating for virtually any well-specified model of choice under uncertainty. We demonstrate our procedures with experiments in which we elicit subjective probabilities. We calibrate the estimates of subjective beliefs assuming that choices are made consistently with expected utility theory or rank-dependent utility theory. Inferred subjective probabilities are significantly different when calibrated according to either theory, thus showing the importance of undertaking such exercises. Our findings also have implications for the interpretation of probabilities inferred from prediction markets.
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