2,447 research outputs found
The sectorial impact of commodity price shocks in Australia
It is found that commodity price shocks largely affect the mining, construction and manufacturing industries in Australia. However, the financial and insurance sector is found to be relatively unaffected. Mining industry profits and nominal output substantially increase in response to commodity price shocks. Construction output is also found to increase significantly, especially in response to a bulk commodities shock, as a result of increased demand for resource related construction. Increased demand for construction has a positive spillover effect to parts of the manufacturing industry that supply the construction sector with intermediate inputs, such as the non-metallic mineral sub industry. In contrast, other manufacturing sub industries with only tenuous links to the resources sector such as textiles, clothing and other manufacturing, are relatively unresponsive to commodity price shocks
General Relativistic Radiative Transfer
We present a general method to calculate radiative transfer including
scattering in the continuum as well as in lines in spherically symmetric
systems that are influenced by the effects of general relativity (GR). We
utilize a comoving wavelength ansatz that allows to resolve spectral lines
throughout the atmosphere. The used numerical solution is an operator splitting
(OS) technique that uses a characteristic formal solution. The bending of
photon paths and the wavelength shifts due to the effects of GR are fully taken
into account, as is the treatment of image generation in a curved spacetime. We
describe the algorithm we use and demonstrate the effects of GR on the
radiative transport of a two level atom line in a neutron star like atmosphere
for various combinations of continuous and line scattering coefficients. In
addition, we present grey continuum models and discuss the effects of different
scattering albedos on the emergent spectra and the determination of effective
temperatures and radii of neutron star atmospheres
A new formal solution of the radiative transfer in arbitrary velocity fields
We present a new formal solution of the Lagrangian equation of radiative
transfer that is useful in solving the equation of radiative transfer in the
presence of arbitrary velocity fields. Normally a term due to the inclusion of
the wavelength derivative in the Lagrangian equation of radiative transfer is
associated with a generalised opacity. In non-monotonic velocity fields, this
generalised opacity may become negative. To ensure that the opacity remains
positive, this term of the derivative is included in the formal solution of the
radiative transfer problem.
The new definition of the generalised opacity allows for a new solution of
the equation of radiative transfer in the presence of velocity fields. It is
especially useful for arbitrary velocity fields, where it effectively prevents
the occurrences of negative generalised opacities and still allows the explicit
construction of the Lambda-operator of the system needed for an accelerated
Lambda-iteration. We performed test calculations, where the results of old,
established solutions were compared with the new solution. The relative
deviations never exceeded 1% and so the new solution is indeed suitable for use
in radiative-transfer modelling. Non-monotonic velocity fields along photon
paths frequently occur in three-dimensional hydrodynamical models of
astrophysical atmospheres. Therefore, the formal solution will be of use for
multidimensional radiative transfer and has immediate applications in the
modelling of pulsating stars and astrophysical shock fronts.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press 8 figure
The Rise Times of High and Low Redshift Type Ia Supernovae are Consistent
We present a self-consistent comparison of the rise times for low- and
high-redshift Type Ia supernovae. Following previous studies, the early light
curve is modeled using a t-squared law, which is then mated with a modified
Leibundgut template light curve. The best-fit t-squared law is determined for
ensemble samples of low- and high-redshift supernovae by fitting simultaneously
for all light curve parameters for all supernovae in each sample. Our method
fully accounts for the non-negligible covariance amongst the light curve
fitting parameters, which previous analyses have neglected. Contrary to Riess
et al. (1999), we find fair to good agreement between the rise times of the
low- and high-redshift Type Ia supernovae. The uncertainty in the rise time of
the high-redshift Type Ia supernovae is presently quite large (roughly +/- 1.2
days statistical), making any search for evidence of evolution based on a
comparison of rise times premature. Furthermore, systematic effects on rise
time determinations from the high-redshift observations, due to the form of the
late-time light curve and the manner in which the light curves of these
supernovae were sampled, can bias the high-redshift rise time determinations by
up to +3.6/-1.9 days under extreme situations. The peak brightnesses - used for
cosmology - do not suffer any significant bias, nor any significant increase in
uncertainty.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journal. Also available at http://www.lbl.gov/~nugent/papers.html Typos were
corrected and a few sentences were added for improved clarit
Dark Energy Accretion onto a Black Hole in an Expanding Universe
By using the solution describing a black hole embedded in the FLRW universe,
we obtain the evolving equation of the black hole mass expressed in terms of
the cosmological parameters. The evolving equation indicates that in the
phantom dark energy universe the black hole mass becomes zero before the Big
Rip is reached.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, errors is correcte
Model-based aberration corrected microscopy inside a glass tube
Microscope objectives achieve near diffraction-limited performance only when
used under the conditions they are designed for. In non-standard geometries,
such as thick cover slips or curved surfaces, severe aberrations arise,
inevitably impairing high-resolution imaging. Correcting such large aberrations
using standard adaptive optics can be challenging: existing solutions are
either not suited for strong aberrations, or require extensive feedback
measurements, consequently taking a significant portion of the photon budget.
We demonstrate that it is possible to pre-compute the corrections needed for
high-resolution imaging inside a glass tube based on a priori information only.
Our ray-tracing based method achieved over an order of magnitude increase in
image contrast without the need for a feedback signal.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Submitted to Optics Expres
On the Limits of Gate Elimination
Although a simple counting argument shows the existence of Boolean functions of exponential circuit complexity, proving superlinear circuit lower bounds for explicit functions seems to be out of reach of the current techniques. There has been a (very slow) progress in proving linear lower bounds with the latest record of 3 1/86*n-o(n). All known lower bounds are based on the so-called gate elimination technique. A typical gate elimination argument shows that it is possible to eliminate several gates from an optimal circuit by making one or several substitutions to the input variables and repeats this inductively. In this note we prove that this method cannot achieve linear bounds of cn beyond a certain constant c, where c depends only on the number of substitutions made at a single step of the induction
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