3,509 research outputs found
The Growth-Volatility Relationship: New Evidence Based on Stochastic Volatility in Mean Models
This paper models the relationship between growth and volatility for G7 economies in the time period 1960-2009. It delivers for the first time estimates of this relationship based on a logarithm variant of stochastic volatility in mean (SV-M) models. The relationship appears significantly positive in Germany and Italy, but insignificant in other countries. We also show that output volatility has increased in all countries since the beginning of the financial crisis, which illustrates the end of the great moderation. For comparison, the paper also delivers estimates based on a logarithm variant of GARCH in mean (log-GARCH-M) models, the class of time series models previously used in the literature to estimate the growth-volatility relationship. We show that SV-M models deliver results preferable to those of log-GARCH-M models, despite the high computational cost of their estimation. SV-M models fit generally better data than log-GARCH-M ones. As their residuals do not violate distribution assumptions, they do not deliver dubious conclusions concerning the significance of the relationship, which is the case of the log-GARCH-model for France, the UK and the US. Finally, SV-M models suggest a positive impact of unexpected volatility on output growth, which is not taken into account by log-GARCH-M models.Growth, Volatility, Sequential Monte-Carlo Methods.
Centaurus A as the Source of ultra-high energy cosmic rays?
We present numerical simulations for energy spectra and angular distributions
of nucleons above 10^{19} eV injected by the radio-galaxy Centaurus A at a
distance 3.4 Mpc and propagating in extra-galactic magnetic fields in the
sub-micro Gauss range. We show that field strengths B~0.3 micro Gauss, as
proposed by Farrar and Piran, cannot provide sufficient angular deflection to
explain the observational data. A magnetic field of intensity ~1 micro Gauss
could reproduce the observed large-scale isotropy and could marginally explain
the observed energy spectrum. However, it would not readily account for the
E=320 plusminus 93 EeV Fly's Eye event that was detected at an angle 136
degrees away from Cen-A. Such a strong magnetic field also saturates
observational upper limits from Faraday rotation observations and X-ray
bremsstrahlung emission from the ambient gas (assuming equipartition of
energy). This scenario may already be tested by improving magnetic field limits
with existing instruments. We also show that high energy cosmic ray experiments
now under construction will be able to detect the level of anisotropy predicted
by this scenario. We conclude that for magnetic fields B~0.1-0.5 micro Gauss,
considered as more reasonable for the local Supercluster environment, in all
likelihood at least a few sources within ~10 Mpc from the Earth should
contribute to the observed ultra high energy cosmic ray flux.Comment: 7 latex pages, 7 postscript figures included; for related numerical
simulations see also http://www.iap.fr/users/sigl/r2e.htm
The impact of tidal errors on the determination of the Lense-Thirring effect from satellite laser ranging
The general relativistic Lense-Thirring effect can be detected by means of a
suitable combination of orbital residuals of the laser-ranged LAGEOS and LAGEOS
II satellites. While this observable is not affected by the orbital
perturbation induced by the zonal Earth solid and ocean tides, it is sensitive
to those generated by the tesseral and sectorial tides. The assessment of their
influence on the measurement of the parameter mu, with which the
gravitomagnetic effect is accounted for, is the goal of this paper. After
simulating the combined residual curve by calculating accurately the
mismodeling of the more effective tidal perturbations, it has been found that,
while the solid tides affect the recovery of mu at a level always well below
1%, for the ocean tides and the other long-period signals Delta mu depends
strongly on the observational period and the noise level: Delta mu(tides)
amounts to almost 2% after 7 years. The aliasing effect of K1 l=3 p=1 tide and
SRP(4241) solar radiation pressure harmonic, with periods longer than 4 years,
on the perigee of LAGEOS II yield to a maximum systematic uncertainty on
\m_{LT} of less than 4% over different observational periods. The zonal
18.6-year tide does not affect the combined residuals.Comment: 24 pages, 4 tables, 6 figures, submitted to Int. Journal of Mod.
Phys. D. Changes in auctorship, references and conten
The E1B19K-deleted oncolytic adenovirus mutant Ad Delta 19K sensitizes pancreatic cancer cells to drug-induced DNA-damage by down-regulating Claspin and Mre11
This study was supported by a generous grant from
the UK charity Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund (PCRF)
and by the BCI CRUK Centre Grant [grant number
C16420/A18066]
Trans-Planckian Dark Energy?
It has recently been proposed by Mersini et al. 01, Bastero-Gil and Mersini
02 that the dark energy could be attributed to the cosmological properties of a
scalar field with a non-standard dispersion relation that decreases
exponentially at wave-numbers larger than Planck scale (k_phys > M_Planck). In
this scenario, the energy density stored in the modes of trans-Planckian
wave-numbers but sub-Hubble frequencies produced by amplification of the vacuum
quantum fluctuations would account naturally for the dark energy. The present
article examines this model in detail and shows step by step that it does not
work. In particular, we show that this model cannot make definite predictions
since there is no well-defined vacuum state in the region of wave-numbers
considered, hence the initial data cannot be specified unambiguously. We also
show that for most choices of initial data this scenario implies the production
of a large amount of energy density (of order M_Planck^4) for modes with
momenta of order M_Planck, far in excess of the background energy density. We
evaluate the amount of fine-tuning in the initial data necessary to avoid this
back-reaction problem and find it is of order H/M_Planck. We also argue that
the equation of state of the trans-Planckian modes is not vacuum-like.
Therefore this model does not provide a suitable explanation for the dark
energy.Comment: RevTeX - 15 pages, 7 figures: final version to appear in PRD, minor
changes, 1 figure adde
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