16,000 research outputs found
A Measure of Segregation Based on Social Interactions
We develop an index of segregation based on two premises: (1) a measure of segregation should disaggregate to the level of individuals, and (2) an individual is more segregated the more segregated are the agents with whom she interacts. We present an index that satisfies (1) and (2) and that is based on agents' social interactions: the extent to which blacks interact with blacks, whites with whites, etc. We use the index to measure school and residential segregation. Using detailed data on friendship networks, we calculate levels of within-school racial segregation in a sample of U. S. schools. We also calculate residential segregation across major U. S. cities, using block-level data from the 2000 U. S. Census
Untenable nonstationarity: An assessment of the fitness for purpose of trend tests in hydrology
The detection and attribution of long-term patterns in hydrological time series have been important research topics for decades. A significant portion of the literature regards such patterns as âdeterministic componentsâ or âtrendsâ even though the complexity of hydrological systems does not allow easy deterministic explanations and attributions. Consequently, trend estimation techniques have been developed to make and justify statements about tendencies in the historical data, which are often used to predict future events. Testing trend hypothesis on observed time series is widespread in the hydro-meteorological literature mainly due to the interest in detecting consequences of human activities on the hydrological cycle. This analysis usually relies on the application of some null hypothesis significance tests (NHSTs) for slowly-varying and/or abrupt changes, such as Mann-Kendall, Pettitt, or similar, to summary statistics of hydrological time series (e.g., annual averages, maxima, minima, etc.). However, the reliability of this application has seldom been explored in detail. This paper discusses misuse, misinterpretation, and logical flaws of NHST for trends in the analysis of hydrological data from three different points of view: historic-logical, semantic-epistemological, and practical. Based on a review of NHST rationale, and basic statistical definitions of stationarity, nonstationarity, and ergodicity, we show that even if the empirical estimation of trends in hydrological time series is always feasible from a numerical point of view, it is uninformative and does not allow the inference of nonstationarity without assuming a priori additional information on the underlying stochastic process, according to deductive reasoning. This prevents the use of trend NHST outcomes to support nonstationary frequency analysis and modeling. We also show that the correlation structures characterizing hydrological time series might easily be underestimated, further compromising the attempt to draw conclusions about trends spanning the period of records. Moreover, even though adjusting procedures accounting for correlation have been developed, some of them are insufficient or are applied only to some tests, while some others are theoretically flawed but still widely applied. In particular, using 250 unimpacted stream flow time series across the conterminous United States (CONUS), we show that the test results can dramatically change if the sequences of annual values are reproduced starting from daily stream flow records, whose larger sizes enable a more reliable assessment of the correlation structures
Photon localization versus population trapping in a coupled-cavity array
We consider a coupled-cavity array (CCA), where one cavity interacts with a
two-level atom under the rotating-wave approximation. We investigate the
excitation transport dynamics across the array, which arises in the atom's
emission process into the CCA vacuum. Due to the known formation of atom-photon
bound states, partial field localization and atomic population trapping in
general take place. We study the functional dependance on the coupling strength
of these two phenomena and show that the threshold values beyond which they
become significant are different. As the coupling strength grows from zero,
field localization is exhibited first.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Replaced one plot in Fig.
Non-Supersymmetric F-Theory Compactifications on Spin(7) Manifolds
We propose a novel approach to obtain non-supersymmetric four-dimensional
effective actions by considering F-theory on manifolds with special holonomy
Spin(7). To perform such studies we suggest that a duality relating M-theory on
a certain class of Spin(7) manifolds with F-theory on the same manifolds times
an interval exists. The Spin(7) geometries under consideration are constructed
as quotients of elliptically fibered Calabi-Yau fourfolds by an
anti-holomorphic and isometric involution. The three-dimensional minimally
supersymmetric effective action of M-theory on a general Spin(7) manifold with
fluxes is determined and specialized to the aforementioned geometries. This
effective theory is compared with an interval Kaluza-Klein reduction of a
non-supersymmetric four-dimensional theory with definite boundary conditions
for all fields. Using this strategy a minimal set of couplings of the
four-dimensional low-energy effective actions is obtained in terms of the
Spin(7) geometric data. We also discuss briefly the string interpretation in
the Type IIB weak coupling limit.Comment: 39 pages, 4 figures, v2: improvements and clarifications on the 4d
interpretation and weak coupling limit; typos correcte
On the Measurement of Segregation
This paper develops a measure of segregation based on two premises: (1) a measure of segregation should disaggregate to the level of individuals, and (2) an individual is more segregated the more segregated are the agents with whom she interacts. Developing three desirable axioms that any segregation measure should satisfy, we prove that one and only one segregation index satisfies our three axioms, and the two aims mentioned above; which we coin the Spectral Segregation Index. We apply the index to two well-studied social phenomena: residential and school segregation. We calculate the extent of residential segregation across major US cities using data from the 2000 US Census. The correlation between the Spectral index and the commonly- used dissimilarity index is .42. Using detailed data on friendship networks, available in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we calculate the prevalence of within-school racial segregation. The results suggests that the percent of minority students within a school, commonly used as a substitute for a measure of in-school segregation, is a poor proxy for social interactions.segregation, networks, social interactions, school segregation, residential segregation
Cosmological black holes and the direction of time
Macroscopic irreversible processes emerge from fundamental physical laws of
reversible character. The source of the local irreversibility seems to be not
in the laws themselves but in the initial and boundary conditions of the
equations that represent the laws. In this work we propose that the screening
of currents by black hole event horizons determines, locally, a preferred
direction for the flux of electromagnetic energy. We study the growth of black
hole event horizons due to the cosmological expansion and accretion of cosmic
microwave background radiation, for different cosmological models. We propose
generalized McVittie co-moving metrics and integrate the rate of accretion of
cosmic microwave background radiation onto a supermassive black hole over
cosmic time. We find that for flat, open, and closed Friedmann cosmological
models, the ratio of the total area of the black hole event horizons with
respect to the area of a radial co-moving space-like hypersurface always
increases. Since accretion of cosmic radiation sets an absolute lower limit to
the total matter accreted by black holes, this implies that the causal past and
future are not mirror symmetric for any spacetime event. The asymmetry causes a
net Poynting flux in the global future direction; the latter is in turn related
to the ever increasing thermodynamic entropy. Thus, we expose a connection
between four different "time arrows": cosmological, electromagnetic,
gravitational, and thermodynamic.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures in Foundations of Science (2017
New limits on extragalactic magnetic fields from rotation measures
We take advantage of the wealth of rotation measures data contained in the
NRAO VLA Sky Survey catalogue to derive new, statistically robust, upper limits
on the strength of extragalactic magnetic fields. We simulate the extragalactic
magnetic field contribution to the rotation measures for a given field strength
and correlation length, by assuming that the electron density follows the
distribution of Lyman- clouds. Based on the observation that rotation
measures from distant radio sources do not exhibit any trend with redshift,
while the extragalactic contribution instead grows with distance, we constrain
fields with Jeans' length coherence length to be below 1.7~nG at the
level, and fields coherent across the entire observable Universe below 0.65~nG.
These limits do not depend on the particular origin of these cosmological
fields.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures -- v2 to match PRL versio
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