5,342 research outputs found
Higher-Order Properties of Analytic Wavelets
The influence of higher-order wavelet properties on the analytic wavelet
transform behavior is investigated, and wavelet functions offering advantageous
performance are identified. This is accomplished through detailed investigation
of the generalized Morse wavelets, a two-parameter family of exactly analytic
continuous wavelets. The degree of time/frequency localization, the existence
of a mapping between scale and frequency, and the bias involved in estimating
properties of modulated oscillatory signals, are proposed as important
considerations. Wavelet behavior is found to be strongly impacted by the degree
of asymmetry of the wavelet in both the frequency and the time domain, as
quantified by the third central moments. A particular subset of the generalized
Morse wavelets, recognized as deriving from an inhomogeneous Airy function,
emerge as having particularly desirable properties. These "Airy wavelets"
substantially outperform the only approximately analytic Morlet wavelets for
high time localization. Special cases of the generalized Morse wavelets are
examined, revealing a broad range of behaviors which can be matched to the
characteristics of a signal.Comment: 15 pages, 6 Postscript figure
On the relation between sSFR and metallicity
In this paper we present an exact general analytic expression
linking the gas metallicity Z to the specific
star formation rate (sSFR), that validates and extends the approximate relation
put forward by Lilly et al. (2013, L13), where is the yield per stellar
generation, is the instantaneous ratio between inflow and star
formation rate expressed as a function of the sSFR, and is the integral of
the past enrichment history, respectively. We then demonstrate that the
instantaneous metallicity of a self-regulating system, such that its sSFR
decreases with decreasing redshift, can be well approximated by the first term
on the right-hand side in the above formula, which provides an upper bound to
the metallicity. The metallicity is well approximated also by the L13 ideal
regulator case, which provides a lower bound to the actual metallicity. We
compare these approximate analytic formulae to numerical results and infer a
discrepancy <0.1 dex in a range of metallicities and almost three orders of
magnitude in the sSFR. We explore the consequences of the L13 model on the
mass-weighted metallicity in the stellar component of the galaxies. We find
that the stellar average metallicity lags 0.1-0.2 dex behind the gas-phase
metallicity relation, in agreement with the data. (abridged)Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepte
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