4,639 research outputs found

    Planck pre-launch status: Expected LFI polarisation capability

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    We present a system-level description of the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) considered as a differencing polarimeter, and evaluate its expected performance. The LFI is one of the two instruments on board the ESA Planck mission to study the cosmic microwave background. It consists of a set of 22 radiometers sensitive to linear polarisation, arranged in orthogonally-oriented pairs connected to 11 feed horns operating at 30, 44 and 70 GHz. In our analysis, the generic Jones and Mueller-matrix formulations for polarimetry are adapted to the special case of the LFI. Laboratory measurements of flight components are combined with optical simulations of the telescope to investigate the values and uncertainties in the system parameters affecting polarisation response. Methods of correcting residual systematic errors are also briefly discussed. The LFI has beam-integrated polarisation efficiency >99% for all detectors, with uncertainties below 0.1%. Indirect assessment of polarisation position angles suggests that uncertainties are generally less than 0°.5, and this will be checked in flight using observations of the Crab nebula. Leakage of total intensity into the polarisation signal is generally well below the thermal noise level except for bright Galactic emission, where the dominant effect is likely to be spectral-dependent terms due to bandpass mismatch between the two detectors behind each feed, contributing typically 1–3% leakage of foreground total intensity. Comparable leakage from compact features occurs due to beam mismatch, but this averages to < 5 × 10^(-4) for large-scale emission. An inevitable feature of the LFI design is that the two components of the linear polarisation are recovered from elliptical beams which differ substantially in orientation. This distorts the recovered polarisation and its angular power spectrum, and several methods are being developed to correct the effect, both in the power spectrum and in the sky maps. The LFI will return a high-quality measurement of the CMB polarisation, limited mainly by thermal noise. To meet our aspiration of measuring polarisation at the 1% level, further analysis of flight and ground data is required. We are still researching the most effective techniques for correcting subtle artefacts in polarisation; in particular the correction of bandpass mismatch effects is a formidable challenge, as it requires multi-band analysis to estimate the spectral indices that control the leakage

    Review of the Supply of and Demand for Further Education in Scotland

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    These documents provide are an Executive Summary and Full Report of the background to, methodology for, and overall conclusions and recommendations of a review of the supply of and demand for Further Education (FE) provision in Scottish Further Education colleges in 2000. The review was commissioned by the Scottish Further Education Funding Council (SFEFC), and carried out between November 1999 and June 2000 by a team of researchers drawn from the Scottish Further Education Unit (SFEU), the Centre for Research in Lifelong Learning, Glasgow Caledonian University/University of Stirling, and the Applied Statistics Group, Napier University

    OLIGOPOLY AND TRADE

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    In this chapter we present a selective analytic survey of some of the main results of trade under oligopoly. We concentrate on three topics: oligopoly as an independent determinant of trade, as illustrated by the reciprocal-markets model of Brander (1981); oligopoly as an independent rationale for government intervention, as illustrated by strategic trade and industrial policy in the third-market model of Spencer and Brander (1983); and the challenges and potential of embedding trade under oligopoly in general equilibrium as illustrated by the GOLE model of Neary (2002).GOLE (General Oligopolistic Equilibrium); reciprocal dumping; strategic trade policy.

    Robust Rules for Industrial Policy in open Economies

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    The theory of strategic trade policy yields ambiguous recommendations for assistance to exporting firms in oligopolistic industries. However, some writers have suggested that investment subsidies are a more robust recommendation than export subsidies. We show that, though ambiguous in principle, the case for investment subsidies is reasonably robust in practice. Except when functional forms exhibit arbitrary non-linearities, it holds under both Cournot and Bertrand competition, with either cost-reducing or market-expanding investment, and with or without spillovers. Only if firms have strong asymmetries in their investment behaviour and engage in Bertrand competition is an investment tax clearly justified.cost-reducing investment; export subsidies; market-expanding investment; R&D subsidies; strategic industrial policy; strategic trade policy

    Symmetric Research Joint Ventures - Cooperative Substitutes and Complements

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    We introduce the concept of cooperative substitutes and complements, and use it to throw light on the conditions for a research joint venture to choose equal levels of R&D by all member firms. We show that the second-order conditions for a symmetric optimum take a particularly simple form, ruling out both excessive cooperative substitutability and excessive cooperative complementarity, and nesting conditions already derived in the literature. Finally we explore the implications of our results for the comparison between research joint ventures and a non-cooperative equilibrium.Bertrand and Cournot competition; cooperative substitutes and complements; R&D; research joint ventures; strategic trade and industrial policy

    Absorptive Capacity, R&D Spillovers, and Public Policy

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    Empirical evidence strongly suggests that R&D increases a firm’s "absorptive capacity" (its ability to absorb spillovers from other firms) as well as contributing directly to profitability. We explore the theoretical implications of this. We specify a general model of the absorptive capacity process and show that costly absorption both raises the effectiveness of own R&D and lowers the effective spillover coefficient. This weakens the case for encouraging research joint ventures, even if there is complete information sharing between its members. It also implies an additional strategic pay-off to policies that raise the level of extra-industry knowledge.Absorptive capacity of R&D; competition policy; industrial policy; R&D spillovers; research joint ventures

    A multiband study of Hercules A. II. Multifrequency VLA imaging

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    We have mapped the powerful radio galaxy Hercules A at six frequencies spanning 1295 to 8440 MHz using the VLA in all four configurations. Here we discuss the structure revealed in total intensity, spectral index, polarization, and projected magnetic field. Our observations clearly reveal the relation between the bright jets, radio source. The jets and rings form a coherent structure with a dramatically flatter spectrum than the surrounding lobes and bridge, strongly suggesting that they represent a recently renewed outburst from the active nucleus. The spectrum of the lobes is also steeper than in typical radio sources, and steepens further towards the centre. The compact core is optically thin and also has a remarkably steep spectrum (alpha \~ -1.2). There is some evidence that the old lobe material has been swept up and compressed ahead of the new outburst. We interpret the dramatic asymmetry in the bright structure, and more subtle differences between diffuse lobe structures, in terms of relativistic beaming combined with front-to-back light-travel delays which mean that we view the two lobes at different stages of the outburst. After correcting for Faraday rotation the projected magnetic field closely follows the edge of the lobes, the jets, and the rings; the field pattern in the two lobes is broadly similar. We confirm a strong asymmetry in depolarization and Faraday rotation, with the jet side the less depolarized and the flatter spectrum, consistent with general correlations between these asymmetries. The spectral index asymmetry is clearly present in the `old' lobe material and so, at least in this case, is not due to beaming; but it can be understood in terms of the light-travel delay.Comment: 25 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. For associated jpeg files, see http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~jpl/hera

    Global Cosmological Parameters Determined Using Classical Double Radio Galaxies

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    A sample of 20 powerful extended radio galaxies with redshifts between zero and two were used to determine constraints on global cosmological parameters. Data for six radio sources were obtained from the VLA archive, analyzed, and combined with the sample of 14 radio galaxies used previously by Guerra & Daly to determine cosmological parameters. The results are consistent with our previous results, and indicate that the current value of the mean mass density of the universe is significantly less than the critical value. A universe with Ωm\Omega_m of unity is ruled out at 99.0% confidence, and the best fitting values of Ωm\Omega_m in matter are 0.10−0.10+0.250.10^{+0.25}_{-0.10} and −0.25−0.25+0.35-0.25^{+0.35}_{-0.25} assuming zero space curvature and zero cosmological constant, respectively. Note that identical results obtain when the low redshift bin, which includes Cygnus A, is excluded; these results are independent of whether the radio source Cygnus A is included. The method does not rely on a zero-redshift normalization. The radio properties of each source are also used to determine the density of the gas in the vicinity of the source, and the beam power of the source. The six new radio sources have physical characteristics similar to those found for the original 14 sources. The density of the gas around these radio sources is typical of gas in present day clusters of galaxies. The beam powers are typically about 1045erg s−110^{45} \hbox{erg s}^{-1}.Comment: 39 pages includes 21 figures, accepted to Ap

    Population health profile of the NSW Outback Division of General Practice: supplement

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    © Commonwealth of Australia To view the data presented in the profiles in Excel spreadsheets or via Interactive Mapping, please see the PHIDU website at: www.publichealth.gov.au
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