3,217 research outputs found
An Understanding of the Shoulder of Giants: Jovian Planets around Late K Dwarf Stars and the Trend with Stellar Mass
Analyses of exoplanet statistics suggest a trend of giant planet occurrence
with host star mass, a clue to how planets like Jupiter form. One missing piece
of the puzzle is the occurrence around late K dwarf stars (masses of
0.5-0.75Msun and effective temperatures of 3900-4800K). We analyzed four years
of Doppler radial velocities data of 110 late K dwarfs, one of which hosts two
previously reported giant planets. We estimate that 4.0+/-2.3% of these stars
have Saturn-mass or larger planets with orbital periods <245d, depending on the
planet mass distribution and RV variability of stars without giant planets. We
also estimate that 0.7+/-0.5% of similar stars observed by Kepler have giant
planets. This Kepler rate is significantly (99% confidence) lower than that
derived from our Doppler survey, but the difference vanishes if only the single
Doppler system (HIP 57274) with completely resolved orbits is considered. The
difference could also be explained by the exclusion of close binaries (without
giant planets) from the Doppler but not Kepler surveys, the effect of
long-period companions and stellar noise on the Doppler data, or an intrinsic
difference between the two populations. Our estimates for late K dwarfs bridge
those for solar-type stars and M dwarfs and support a positive trend with
stellar mass. Small sample size precludes statements about finer structure,
e.g. a "shoulder" in the distribution of giant planets with stellar mass.
Future surveys such as the Next Generation Transit Survey and the Transiting
Exoplanet Satellite Survey will ameliorate this deficiency.Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journa
GETTING TECHNOLOGY AND THE TECHNOLOGY ENVIRONMENT RIGHT: LESSONS FROM MAIZE DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
This paper examines two questions: (1) what were the most important factors that led to differential rates of adoption of maize technology by farmers in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Malawi from 1910 to 1995? and (2) what do these experiences suggest about strategic investments in institutions and organizations needed to create a sustainable environment for technology development and adoption in the future? The analysis suggests that productivity increases are facilitated by (a) technology innovations throughout the agricultural system, (b) integration of technological innovations with changes in policies, organizations, human capital and infrastructure related to extension, input and output markets and processing services, and (c) coordination of these innovations across different stages of the agricultural system.Crop Production/Industries, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
FINANCIAL AND RISK ANALYSIS OF MAIZE TECHNOLOGY IN ETHIOPIA, BASED ON CERES-MAIZE MODEL RESULTS
This paper presents a financial and risk analysis of improved versus traditional maize production technology in Ethiopia, based on yields simulated with the CERES-Maize crop growth model (Schulthess and Ward, 2000). The purpose is to analyze the potential performance of the SG2000/Ministry of Agriculture program technology under less favorable meteorological conditions (rainfall level and distribution), and in areas with lower agroecological potential than those covered by the SG2000/MOA program through 1998. At the time of this study, expansion of the MOA program into lower potential zones seemed likely. Results show that use of fertilizer and improved seed is highly profitable under a variety of assumptions about crop growth conditions, maize prices, and fertilizer costs. Risk is examined using simple sensitivity and breakeven analysis, and stochastic dominance analysis.Crop Production/Industries, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
The California Planet Survey IV: A Planet Orbiting the Giant Star HD 145934 and Updates to Seven Systems with Long-Period Planets
We present an update to seven stars with long-period planets or planetary
candidates using new and archival radial velocities from Keck-HIRES and
literature velocities from other telescopes. Our updated analysis better
constrains orbital parameters for these planets, four of which are known
multi-planet systems. HD 24040 b and HD 183263 c are super-Jupiters with
circular orbits and periods longer than 8 yr. We present a previously unseen
linear trend in the residuals of HD 66428 indicative on an additional planetary
companion. We confirm that GJ 849 is a multi-planet system and find a good
orbital solution for the c component: it is a planet in a 15 yr
orbit (the longest known for a planet orbiting an M dwarf). We update the HD
74156 double-planet system. We also announce the detection of HD 145934 b, a planet in a 7.5 yr orbit around a giant star. Two of our stars, HD
187123 and HD 217107, at present host the only known examples of systems
comprising a hot Jupiter and a planet with a well constrained period yr,
and with no evidence of giant planets in between. Our enlargement and
improvement of long-period planet parameters will aid future analysis of
origins, diversity, and evolution of planetary systems.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
The TRENDS High-Contrast Imaging Survey. VI. Discovery of a Mass, Age, and Metallicity Benchmark Brown Dwarf
The mass and age of substellar objects are degenerate parameters leaving the
evolutionary state of brown dwarfs ambiguous without additional information.
Theoretical models are normally used to help distinguish between old, massive
brown dwarfs and young, low mass brown dwarfs but these models have yet to be
properly calibrated. We have carried out an infrared high-contrast imaging
program with the goal of detecting substellar objects as companions to nearby
stars to help break degeneracies in inferred physical properties such as mass,
age, and composition. Rather than using imaging observations alone, our targets
are pre-selected based on the existence of dynamical accelerations informed
from years of stellar radial velocity (RV) measurements. In this paper, we
present the discovery of a rare benchmark brown dwarf orbiting the nearby
( pc), solar-type (G9V) star HD 4747 ([Fe/H]=)
with a projected separation of only AU (
0.6"). Precise Doppler measurements taken over 18 years reveal the companion's
orbit and allow us to place strong constraints on its mass using dynamics (). Relative photometry (,
, ) indicates that HD 4747 B is
most-likely a late-type L-dwarf and, if near the L/T transition, an intriguing
source for studying cloud physics, variability, and polarization. We estimate a
model-dependent mass of for an age of
Gyr based on gyrochronology. Combining astrometric measurements with RV data,
we calculate the companion dynamical mass () and orbit
() directly. As a new mass, age, and metallicity benchmark, HD
4747 B will serve as a laboratory for precision astrophysics to test
theoretical models that describe the emergent radiation of brown dwarfs.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Chromospheric Activity of HAT-P-11: an Unusually Active Planet-Hosting K Star
Kepler photometry of the hot Neptune host star HAT-P-11 suggests that its
spot latitude distribution is comparable to the Sun's near solar maximum. We
search for evidence of an activity cycle in the CaII H & K chromospheric
emission -index with archival Keck/HIRES spectra and observations from the
echelle spectrograph on the ARC 3.5 m Telescope at APO. The chromospheric
emission of HAT-P-11 is consistent with a year activity cycle,
which plateaued near maximum during the Kepler mission. In the cycle that we
observed, the star seemed to spend more time near active maximum than minimum.
We compare the normalized chromospheric emission index of
HAT-P-11 with other stars. HAT-P-11 has unusually strong chromospheric emission
compared to planet-hosting stars of similar effective temperature and rotation
period, perhaps due to tides raised by its planet.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures; accepted to the Astrophysical Journa
PROGRESS AND PROBLEMS IN PROMOTING HIGH EXTERNAL-INPUT TECHNOLOGIES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: THE SASAKAWA GLOBAL 2000 EXPERIENCE IN ETHIOPIA AND MOZAMBIQUE
Critics argue that high external input technologies are too costly for African farmers, and that pilot programs to promote them are economically unsustainable. This paper assesses Sasakawa-Global 2000 programs in Ethiopia and Mozambique; budgets, yield models and subsector analysis help explain the radically different country results and prognoses for sustainable adoption.technology adoption, sub-Saharan Africa, Sasakawa-Global 2000, maize, fertilizer, International Development, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, O002, O003,
Green Revolution Technology Takes Root in Africa The Promise and Challenge of the Ministry of Agriculture/SG2000 Experiment with Improved Cereals Technology in Ethiopia
In 1993, the Sasakawa/Global 2000 Program (SG) and the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) began a joint program to demonstrate that substantial productivity increases could be achieved when farmers were given appropriate extension messages and agricultural inputs were delivered on time at reasonable prices. The program provided credit, inputs and extension assistance to participants willing to establish half-hectare demonstration plots on their own land. In 1995, the MOA/SG demonstration program reached more than 3,500 farmers. During the same year MOA launched the New Extension Program (NEP) based on SG principles but managed independently. By 1997, NEP was managing the bulk of the demonstration plots. Although the MOA/SG program is widely considered to be a success, no formal analysis had been carried out to determine its profitability. In September 1997 MOA/SG agreed to collaborate with MSU to answer the following questions: (1) Is improved technology financially profitable for farmers? (2) Is it economically profitable from a national perspective? (3) What factors limit crop response to improved technologies? and (4) What challenges does the government face as it scales up the NEP program?food security, food policy, agricultural inputs, Ethiopia, Crop Production/Industries, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, Downloads July 2008 - June 2009: 15, O33,
Green Revolution Technology Takes Root In Africa: The Promise and Challenge of the Ministry of Agriculture/SG2000 Experiment with Improved Cereals Technology in Ethiopia; Statistical Annex and Copies of Questionnaire
food security, food policy, agricultural inputs, Ethiopia, Crop Production/Industries, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, Downloads July 2008 - July 2009: 5, O33,
- âŠ