25,102 research outputs found
The Effects of the Kalamazoo Promise Scholarship on College Enrollment, Persistence, and Completion
We estimate the effects on postsecondary education outcomes of the Kalamazoo Promise, a generous place-based college scholarship. We identify Promise effects using difference-indifferences, comparing eligible to ineligible graduates before and after the Promise's initiation. According to our estimates, the Promise significantly increases college enrollment, college credits attempted, and credential attainment. Stronger effects occur for minorities and women. Predicted lifetime earnings effects of the Promise's credential gains, compared to the Promise's scholarship costs, represent an internal rate of return of 11.3 percent. Based on our results, simple and generous scholarships can significantly increase educational attainment and provide net economic benefits
Formation of Supermassive Black Holes by Direct Collapse in Pregalactic Halos
We describe a mechanism by which supermassive black holes can form directly
in the nuclei of protogalaxies, without the need for seed black holes left over
from early star formation. Self-gravitating gas in dark matter halos can lose
angular momentum rapidly via runaway, global dynamical instabilities, the
so-called "bars within bars" mechanism. This leads to the rapid buildup of a
dense, self-gravitating core supported by gas pressure - surrounded by a
radiation pressure-dominated envelope - which gradually contracts and is
compressed further by subsequent infall. These conditions lead to such high
temperatures in the central region that the gas cools catastrophically by
thermal neutrino emission, leading to the formation and rapid growth of a
central black hole.
We estimate the initial mass and growth rate of the black hole for typical
conditions in metal-free halos with T_vir ~ 10^4 K, which are the most likely
to be susceptible to runaway infall. The initial black hole should have a mass
of <~20 solar masses, but in principle could grow at a super-Eddington rate
until it reaches ~ 10^4-10^6 solar masses. Rapid growth may be limited by
feedback from the accretion process and/or disruption of the mass supply by
star formation or halo mergers. Even if super-Eddington growth stops at
\~10^3-10^4 solar masses, this process would give black holes ample time to
attain quasar-size masses by a redshift of 6, and could also provide the seeds
for all supermassive black holes seen in the present universe.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society, in press. Minor revision
A system of mobile agents to model social networks
We propose a model of mobile agents to construct social networks, based on a
system of moving particles by keeping track of the collisions during their
permanence in the system. We reproduce not only the degree distribution,
clustering coefficient and shortest path length of a large data base of
empirical friendship networks recently collected, but also some features
related with their community structure. The model is completely characterized
by the collision rate and above a critical collision rate we find the emergence
of a giant cluster in the universality class of two-dimensional percolation.
Moreover, we propose possible schemes to reproduce other networks of particular
social contacts, namely sexual contacts.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett. (in press
Collective and Single-particle Motion in Beyond Mean Field Approaches
We present a novel nuclear energy density functional method to calculate
spectroscopic properties of atomic nuclei. Intrinsic nuclear quadrupole
deformations and rotational frequencies are considered simultaneously as the
degrees of freedom within a symmetry conserving configuration mixing framework.
The present method allows the study of nuclear states with collective and
single-particle character. We calculate the fascinating structure of the
semi-magic 44S nucleus as a first application of the method, obtaining an
excellent quantitative agreement both with the available experimental data and
with state-of-the-art shell model calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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