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India: Domestic Issues, Strategic Dynamics, and U.S. Relations
[Excerpt] President Barack Obama’s Administration has sought to build upon the deepened U.S. engagement with India begun by President Bill Clinton in 2000 and expanded upon during much of the past decade under President G.W. Bush. This “U.S.-India 3.0” diplomacy was most recently on display in July 2011, when the second U.S.-India Strategic Dialogue session saw a large delegation of senior U.S. officials visit New Delhi to discuss a broad range of global and bilateral issues. Many analysts view the U.S.-India relationship as being among the world’s most important in coming decades and see potentially large benefits to be accrued through engagement on many convergent interests. Bilateral initiatives are underway in all areas, although independent analysts in both countries worry that the partnership has lost momentum in recent years. Outstanding areas of bilateral friction include obstacles to bilateral trade and investment, including in the high-technology sector; outsourcing; the status of conflict in Afghanistan; climate change; and stalled efforts to initiate civil nuclear cooperation.
India is the world’s most populous democracy and remains firmly committed to representative government and rule of law. Its left-leaning Congress Party-led ruling national coalition has been in power for more than seven years under the leadership of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an Oxford-trained economist. New Delhi’s engagement with regional and other states is extensive and reflects its rising geopolitical status. The national economy has been growing rapidly—India’s is projected to be the world’s third-largest economy in the foreseeable future—yet poor infrastructure, booming energy demand, and restrictive trade and investment practices are seen to hamper full economic potential. Despite the growth of a large urban middle-class, India’s remains a largely rural and agriculture-based society, and is home to some 500-600 million people living in poverty. This report will be updated periodically
Spectral Energy Distributions for Disk and Halo M--Dwarfs
We have obtained infrared (1 to 2.5 micron) spectroscopy for 42 halo and disk
dwarfs with spectral type M1 to M6.5. These data are compared to synthetic
spectra generated by the latest model atmospheres of Allard & Hauschildt.
Photospheric parameters metallicity, effective temperature and radius are
determined for the sample. We find good agreement between observation and
theory except for known problems due to incomplete molecular data for metal
hydrides and water. The metal-poor M subdwarfs are well matched by the models
as oxide opacity sources are less important in this case. The derived effective
temperatures for the sample range from 3600K to 2600K; at these temperatures
grain formation and extinction are not significant in the photosphere. The
derived metallicities range from solar to one-tenth solar. The radii and
effective temperatures derived agree well with recent models of low mass stars.Comment: 24 pages including 13 figures, 4 Tables; accepted by Ap
WIMP astronomy and particle physics with liquid-noble and cryogenic direct-detection experiments
Once weakly-interacting massive particles (WIMPs) are unambiguously detected
in direct-detection experiments, the challenge will be to determine what one
may infer from the data. Here, I examine the prospects for reconstructing the
local speed distribution of WIMPs in addition to WIMP particle-physics
properties (mass, cross sections) from next-generation cryogenic and
liquid-noble direct-detection experiments. I find that the common method of
fixing the form of the velocity distribution when estimating constraints on
WIMP mass and cross sections means losing out on the information on the speed
distribution contained in the data and may lead to biases in the inferred
values of the particle-physics parameters. I show that using a more general,
empirical form of the speed distribution can lead to good constraints on the
speed distribution. Moreover, one can use Bayesian model-selection criteria to
determine if a theoretically-inspired functional form for the speed
distribution (such as a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution) fits better than an
empirical model. The shape of the degeneracy between WIMP mass and cross
sections and their offset from the true values of those parameters depends on
the hypothesis for the speed distribution, which has significant implications
for consistency checks between direct-detection and collider data. In addition,
I find that the uncertainties on theoretical parameters depends sensitively on
the upper end of the energy range used for WIMP searches. Better constraints on
the WIMP particle-physics parameters and speed distribution are obtained if the
WIMP search is extended to higher energy (~ 1 MeV).Comment: 25 pages, 27 figures, matches published versio
Astrophysical limitations to the identification of dark matter: indirect neutrino signals vis-a-vis direct detection recoil rates
A convincing identification of dark matter (DM) particles can probably be
achieved only through a combined analysis of different detections strategies,
which provides an effective way of removing degeneracies in the parameter space
of DM models. In practice, however, this program is made complicated by the
fact that different strategies depend on different physical quantities, or on
the same quantities but in a different way, making the treatment of systematic
errors rather tricky. We discuss here the uncertainties on the recoil rate in
direct detection experiments and on the muon rate induced by neutrinos from
dark matter annihilations in the Sun, and we show that, contrarily to the local
DM density or overall cross section scale, irreducible astrophysical
uncertainties affect the two rates in a different fashion, therefore limiting
our ability to reconstruct the parameters of the dark matter particle. By
varying within their respective errors astrophysical parameters such as the
escape velocity and the velocity dispersion of dark matter particles, we show
that the uncertainty on the relative strength of the neutrino and
direct-detection signal is as large as a factor of two for typical values of
the parameters, but can be even larger in some circumstances.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Improved presentation and Fig.3; clarifications,
references and an appendix added; conclusions unchanged. Matches version
published in PR
Errors in kinematic distances and our image of the Milky Way Galaxy
Errors in the kinematic distances, under the assumption of circular gas
orbits, were estimated by performing synthetic observations of a model disk
galaxy. It was found that the error is < 0.5 kpc for most of the disk when the
measured rotation curve was used, but larger if the real rotation curve is
applied. In both cases, the error is significantly larger at the positions of
the spiral arms. The error structure is such that, when kinematic distances are
used to develope a picture of the large scale density distribution, the most
significant features of the numerical model are significantly distorted or
absent, while spurious structure appears. By considering the full velocity
field in the calculation of the kinematic distances, most of the original
density structures can be recovered.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
A large local rotational speed for the Galaxy found from proper-motions: Implications for the mass of the Milky-Way
Predictions from a Galactic Structure and Kinematic model are compared to the
absolute proper-motions of about 30,000 randomly selected stars with derived from the Southern Proper-Motion Program (SPM) toward
the South Galactic Pole. The absolute nature of the SPM proper-motions allow us
to measure not only the relative motion of the Sun with respect to the local
disk, but also, and most importantly, the overall state of rotation of the
local disk with respect to galaxies. The SPM data are best fit by models having
a solar peculiar motion of +5 km~s in the V-component (pointing in the
direction of Galactic rotation), a large LSR speed of 270 km~s, and a
disk velocity ellipsoid that points towards the Galactic center. We stress,
however, that these results rest crucially on the assumptions of both
axisymmetry and equilibrium dynamics.
The absolute proper-motions in the U-component indicate a solar peculiar
motion of km~s, with no need for a local expansion or
contraction term.
The implications of the large LSR speed are discussed in terms of
gravitational mass of the Galaxy inferred from the most recent and accurate
determination for the proper-motion of the LMC. We find that our derived value
for the LSR is consistent both with the mass of the Galaxy inferred from the
motion of the Clouds ( to kpc), as well
as the timing argument, based on the binary motion of M31 and the Milky Way,
and Leo I and the Milky Way ( to
kpc).Comment: 7 pages (AAS Latex macro v4.0), 2 B&W postscript figures, accepted
for publication on ApJ, Letters sectio
The Advantage of Increased Resolution in the Study of Quasar Absorption Systems
We compare a new R = 120,000 spectrum of PG1634+706 (z_QSO = 1.337,m_V =
14.9) obtained with the HDS instrument on Subaru to a R = 45, 000 spectrum
obtained previously with HIRES/Keck. In the strong MgII system at z = 0.9902
and the multiple cloud, weak MgII system at z = 1.0414, we find that at the
higher resolution, additional components are resolved in a blended profile. We
find that two single-cloud weak MgII absorbers were already resolved at R =
45,000, to have b = 2 - 4 km/s. The narrowest line that we measure in the R =
120, 000 spectrum is a component of the Galactic NaI absorption, with b =
0.90+/-0.20 km/s. We discuss expectations of similarly narrow lines in various
applications, including studies of DLAs, the MgI phases of strong MgII
absorbers, and high velocity clouds. By applying Voigt profile fitting to
synthetic lines, we compare the consistency with which line profile parameters
can be accurately recovered at R = 45,000 and R = 120,000. We estimate the
improvement gained from superhigh resolution in resolving narrowly separated
velocity components in absorption profiles. We also explore the influence of
isotope line shifts and hyperfine splitting in measurements of line profile
parameters, and the spectral resolution needed to identify these effects. Super
high resolution spectra of quasars, which will be routinely possible with
20-meter class telescopes, will lead to greater sensitivity for absorption line
surveys, and to determination of more accurate physical conditions for cold
phases of gas in various environments.Comment: To appear in AJ. Paper with better resolution images available at
http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/anand/superhigh.AJ.pd
G328.4+0.2 : A large and luminous Crab-like supernova remnant
We report on radio continuum and HI observations of the radio source
G328.4+0.2 using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. Our results confirm
G328.4+0.2 to be a filled-center nebula with no surrounding shell, showing
significant linear polarization and an almost flat spectral index. These
results lead us to conclude that G328.4+0.2 is a Crab-like, or ``plerionic'',
supernova remnant (SNR), presumably powered by an unseen central pulsar. HI
absorption towards G328.4+0.2 puts a lower limit on its distance of 17.4 +/-
0.9 kpc, making it the largest (D=25 pc) and most luminous (L_R = 3e35 erg/s)
Crab-like SNR in the Galaxy. We infer G328.4+0.2 to be significantly older than
the Crab Nebula, but powered by a pulsar which is fast spinning (P<20 ms) and
which has a comparatively low magnetic field (B<1e12 G). We propose G328.4+0.2,
G74.9+1.2 and N157B as a distinct group of large-diameter, high-luminosity
Crab-like SNRs, all powered by fast-spinning low-field pulsars.Comment: 7 pages, 3 embedded EPS figures, uses emulateapj.sty. Accepted to
ApJ. Abstract corrected so that distance is now in kpc, not pc
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