7,845 research outputs found
Exact Zeros of the Partition Function for a Continuum System with Double Gaussian Peaks
We calculate the exact zeros of the partition function for a continuum system
where the probability distribution for the order parameter is given by two
asymmetric Gaussian peaks. When the positions of the two peaks coincide, the
two separate loci of zeros which used to give first-order transition touch each
other, with density of zeros vanishing at the contact point on the positive
real axis. Instead of the second-order transition of Ehrenfast classification
as one might naively expect, one finds a critical behavior in this limit.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, revtex, minor changes in fig.2, to be published
in Physical Review
Optical Morphology Evolution of Infrared Luminous Galaxies in GOODS-N
We combine optical morphologies and photometry from HST, redshifts from Keck,
and mid-infrared luminosities from Spitzer for an optically selected sample
of~800 galaxies in GOODS-N to track morphology evolution of infrared luminous
galaxies (LIRGs) since redshift z=1. We find a 50% decline in the number of
LIRGs from z~1 to lower redshift, in agreement with previous studies. In
addition, there is evidence for a morphological evolution of the populations of
LIRGs. Above z=0.5, roughly half of all LIRGs are spiral, the
peculiar/irregular to spiral ratio is ~0.7, and both classes span a similar
range of L_{IR} and M_B. At low-z, spirals account for one-third of LIRGs, the
peculiar to spiral fraction rises to 1.3, and for a given M_B spirals tend to
have lower IR luminosity than peculiars. Only a few percent of LIRGs at any
redshift are red early-type galaxies. For blue galaxies (U-B < 0.2), M_B is
well correlated with log(L_{IR}) with an RMS scatter (about a bivariate linear
fit) of ~0.25 dex in IR luminosity. Among blue galaxies that are brighter than
M_B = -21, 75% are LIRGs, regardless of redshift. These results can be
explained by a scenario in which at high-z, most large spirals experience an
elevated star formation rate as LIRGs. Gas consumption results in a decline of
LIRGs, especially in spirals, to lower redshifts.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted ApJ
Spatially Resolved Stellar Populations of Eight GOODS-South Active Galactic Nuclei at z ~ 1
We present a pilot study of the stellar populations of eight active galactic nucleus (AGN) hosts at z ~ 1 and compare with (1) lower redshift samples and (2) a sample of nonactive galaxies of similar redshift. We utilize K' images in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey South field obtained with the laser guide star adaptive optics system at Keck Observatory. We combine these K' data with B, V, i, and z imaging from the Advanced Camera for Surveys on Hubble Space Telescope to give multicolor photometry at a matched spatial resolution better than 100 mas in all bands. The hosts harbor AGNs as inferred from their high X-ray luminosities (LX > 10^42 erg s^â1) or mid-IR colors. We find a correlation between the presence of younger stellar populations and the strength of the AGN, as measured with [O III] line luminosity or X-ray (2-10 keV) luminosity. This finding is consistent with similar studies at lower redshift. Of the three Type II galaxies, two are disk galaxies and one is of irregular type, while in the Type I sample there are only one disk-like source and four sources with smooth, elliptical/spheroidal morphologies. In addition, the mid-IR spectral energy distributions of the strong Type II AGNs indicate that they are excited to Luminous InfraRed Galaxy (LIRG) status via galactic starbursting, while the strong Type I AGNs are excited to LIRG status via hot dust surrounding the central AGN. This supports the notion that the obscured nature of Type II AGNs at z ~ 1 is connected with global starbursting and that they may be extincted by kpc-scale dusty features that are by-products of this starbursting
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY OF A U.S./CANADIAN WHEAT POOL: A GAME THEORY ANALYSIS
The problem of declining wheat prices and excess supply has been the subject of recent economic studies partly because it coincides with the Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform (FAIR) Act of 1996, and partly because efforts to decrease supply domestically have led to increased imports from Canada. This paper develops a game theory optimization model of market efficiency and derives conditions under which voluntary pooling is sustained for U.S./Canadian durum and hard red spring wheat producers. Analysis reveals that U.S. and Canadian farmers can increase farm returns with efficiency gains from pooling and by internalizing benefits from grain blending and logistics. The model is used to analyze diverse factors affecting the sustainability of such a pool.Voluntary pooling, game theory, efficiency gains, durum and HRS wheat marketing, Crop Production/Industries, Marketing,
Recommended from our members
Exploiting Plaintiffs Through Settlement: Divide and Conquer
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there are Fixed costs of litigation. When making simultaneous take-it-or-leave-it offers to the plaintiffs, the defendant adopts a divide and conquer strategy. Plaintiffs settle their claims for less than they are jointly worth. The problem is worse when N is larger, the offers are sequential, and the plaintiffs make offers instead. Although divide and conquer strategies dilute the defendant's incentives, they increase the settlement rate and reduce litigation spending. Plaintiffs can raise their joint payoff through transfer payments, voting rules, and covenants not to accept discriminatory offers
- âŠ