741 research outputs found
Market Allocations under Ambiguity: A Survey
We review some of the (theoretical) economic implications of David Schmeidler's models of decision under uncertainty (Choquet expected utility and maxmin expected utility) in competitive market settings. We start with the portfolio inertia result of Dow and Werlang (1992), show how it does or does not generalize in an equilibrium setting. We further explore the equilibrium implications (indeterminacies, non revelation of information) of these decision models. A section is then devoted to the studies of Pareto optimal arrangements under these models. We conclude with a discussion of experimental evidence for these models that relate, in particular, to the implications for market behaviour discussed in the preceding sections
Massive 70 micron quiet clumps I: evidence of embedded low/intermediate-mass star formation activity
Massive clumps, prior to the formation of any visible protostars, are the
best candidates to search for the elusive massive starless cores. In this work
we investigate the dust and gas properties of massive clumps selected to be 70
micron quiet, therefore good starless candidates. Our sample of 18 clumps has
masses 300 < M < 3000 M_sun, radius 0.54 < R < 1.00 pc, surface densities Sigma
> 0.05 g cm^-2 and luminosity/mass ratio L/M < 0.3. We show that half of these
70 micron quiet clumps embed faint 24 micron sources. Comparison with GLIMPSE
counterparts shows that 5 clumps embed young stars of intermediate stellar mass
up to ~5.5 M_sun. We study the clump dynamics with observations of N2H+ (1-0),
HNC (1-0) and HCO+ (1-0) made with the IRAM 30m telescope. Seven clumps have
blue-shifted spectra compatible with infall signatures, for which we estimate a
mass accretion rate 0.04 < M_dot < 2.0 x 10^-3 M_sun yr^-1, comparable with
values found in high-mass protostellar regions, and free-fall time of the order
of t_ff = 3 x 10^5 yr. The only appreciable difference we find between objects
with and without embedded 24 micron sources is that the infall rate appears to
increase from 24 micron dark to 24 micron bright objects. We conclude that all
70 micron quiet objects have similar properties on clump scales, independently
of the presence of an embedded protostar. Based on our data we speculate that
the majority, if not all of these clumps may already embed faint, low-mass
protostellar cores. If these clumps are to form massive stars, this must occur
after the formation of these lower mass stars.Comment: 44 pages, 11 Figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
CEA Bolometer Arrays: the First Year in Space
The CEA/LETI and CEA/SAp started the development of far-infrared filled bolometer arrays for space applications
over a decade ago. The unique design of these detectors makes possible the assembling of large focal planes
comprising thousands of bolometers running at 300 mK with very low power dissipation. Ten arrays of 16x16
pixels were thoroughly tested on the ground, and integrated in the Herschel/PACS instrument before launch in
May 2009. These detectors have been successfully commissioned and are now operating in their nominal environment
at the second Lagrangian point of the Earth-Sun system. In this paper we briefly explain the functioning
of CEA bolometer arrays, and we present the properties of the detectors focusing on their noise characteristics,
the effect of cosmic rays on the signal, the repeatability of the measurements, and the stability of the system
Performances of Herschel/PACS bolometer arrays and future developments at CEA
The European Space Agency is building a space telescope to observe the Universe in the Far-IR and sub-millimeter regime of the electromagnetic spectrum. The scientific payload is composed of three instruments. One of them, PACS, is equipped with a novel type of bolometer arrays developed by CEA in the late 90's. We briefly present the PACS Photometer and the architecture of CEA filled bolometer arrays. We accessed the physics of the detectors and thoroughly measured their performances by developing a pragmatic calibration procedure. The Photometer is now calibrated and integrated on the focal plane of the observatory. The launch is scheduled for April 2009. Meanwhile, CEA is working on adapting PACS bolometers to longer wavelength for wide-field ground-based telescopes, and for the future cold-telescope space mission SPICA
HOPS 383: An Outbursting Class 0 Protostar in Orion
We report the dramatic mid-infrared brightening between 2004 and 2006 of HOPS
383, a deeply embedded protostar adjacent to NGC 1977 in Orion. By 2008, the
source became a factor of 35 brighter at 24 microns with a brightness increase
also apparent at 4.5 microns. The outburst is also detected in the
submillimeter by comparing APEX/SABOCA to SCUBA data, and a scattered-light
nebula appeared in NEWFIRM K_s imaging. The post-outburst spectral energy
distribution indicates a Class 0 source with a dense envelope and a luminosity
between 6 and 14 L_sun. Post-outburst time-series mid- and far-infrared
photometry shows no long-term fading and variability at the 18% level between
2009 and 2012. HOPS 383 is the first outbursting Class 0 object discovered,
pointing to the importance of episodic accretion at early stages in the star
formation process. Its dramatic rise and lack of fading over a six-year period
hint that it may be similar to FU Ori outbursts, although the luminosity
appears to be significantly smaller than the canonical luminosities of such
objects.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters, 6 pages, 4 figures; v2 has an updated email
address for the lead autho
Diversité agro-morphologique des accessions de fonio [Digitaria exilis (Kippist.) Stapf.] au Niger
La variablité morphologique de 67 accessions de fonio [Digitaria exilis (Kippist.) Stapf.] collectées au Niger a été évaluée au cours de deux années (2011 et 2012). Seize (16) caractères agro morphologiques (dont 14 caractères quantitatifs et 2 caractères qualitatifs) ont été évalués en station dans deux zones agroécologiques différentes (Tarna en zone sahélo-saharienne et Tara en zone soudanienne). La classification acsendante hierarchique (CAH) et l’analyse factorielle discriminante (AFD) ont mis en évidence quatre groupes (GI, GII, GIII et GIV). Les accessions du groupe GIV ont en moyenne un cycle de maturité compris entre 85 et 90 jours tandis que les autres groupes présentent un cycle de maturité superieur à 90 jours dans nos conditions expérimentales. Les résultats montrent que les variables les plus discriminantes qui permettent de décrire la variabilité entre les groupes identifiés sont la biomasse sèche (tige et feuille) par hectare, la longueur des entrenoeuds, le rendement en graine par hectare et dans une certaine mesure le cycle de la plante. L’observation des caractères qualitatifs a montré que cinq accessions (représentant 7% du total) ont des graines non decortiquées de couleur rouge et quatre accessions (6% du total), une tige de couleur rouge. Les caractères analysés peuvent ainsi constituer des critères de base pour différencier les accessions des autres régions de l’Afrique de l’Ouest et servir pour une étude de variabilité entre les restes des accessions de fonio collectées au Niger. Des possiblités d’amélioration peuvent également être envisagées une fois que le regime de réproduction de l’espèce est bien identifié.Mots clés: Digitaria exilis, variabilité morphologique, accessions, diversité, fonio, Niger
A cluster of outflows in the Vulpecula Rift
We present CO, CO and CO (J=32) observations of a new
cluster of outflows in the Vulpecula Rift with HARP-B on the JCMT. The mass
associated with the outflows, measured using the CO HARP-B observations
and assuming a distance to the region of 2.3 kpc, is 129 \msol{}, while the
mass associated with the dense gas from CO observations is 458 \msol{}
and the associated sub-millimeter core has a mass of 327 112 \msol{}
independently determined from Bolocam 1.1mm data. The outflow-to-core mass
ratio is therefore 0.4, making this region one of the most efficient
observed thus far with more than an order of magnitude more mass in the outflow
than would be expected based on previous results. The kinetic energy associated
with the flows, 94 ergs, is enough to drive the turbulence in
the local clump, and potentially unbind the local region altogether. The
detection of SiO (J=87) emission toward the outflows indicates that the flow
is still active, and not simply a fossil flow. We also model the SEDs of the
four YSOs associated with the molecular material, finding them all to be of mid
to early B spectral type. The energetic nature of the outflows and significant
reservoir of cold dust detected in the sub-mm suggest that these intermediate
mass YSOs will continue to accrete and become massive, rather than reach the
main sequence at their current mass.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures and 3 tables. Accepted to MNRAS. A
higher-resolution version of figure 1 will be included in the published
version and is available from the authors upon request. Updated with red and
blue wings swapped to match doppler shif
Fine Selmer Groups and Isogeny Invariance
We investigate fine Selmer groups for elliptic curves and for Galois
representations over a number field. More specifically, we discuss Conjecture
A, which states that the fine Selmer group of an elliptic curve over the
cyclotomic extension is a finitely generated -module. The
relationship between this conjecture and Iwasawa's classical conjecture
is clarified. We also present some partial results towards the question whether
Conjecture A is invariant under isogenies.Comment: 20 page
Direct Estimate of Cirrus Noise in Herschel Hi-GAL Images
In Herschel images of the Galactic plane and many star forming regions, a
major factor limiting our ability to extract faint compact sources is cirrus
confusion noise, operationally defined as the "statistical error to be expected
in photometric measurements due to confusion in a background of fluctuating
surface brightness". The histogram of the flux densities of extracted sources
shows a distinctive faint-end cutoff below which the catalog suffers from
incompleteness and the flux densities become unreliable. This empirical cutoff
should be closely related to the estimated cirrus noise and we show that this
is the case. We compute the cirrus noise directly, both on Herschel images from
which the bright sources have been removed and on simulated images of cirrus
with statistically similar fluctuations. We connect these direct estimates with
those from power spectrum analysis, which has been used extensively to predict
the cirrus noise and provides insight into how it depends on various
statistical properties and photometric operational parameters. We report
multi-wavelength power spectra of diffuse Galactic dust emission from Hi-GAL
observations at 70 to 500 microns within Galactic plane fields at l= 30 degrees
and l= 59 degrees. We find that the exponent of the power spectrum is about -3.
At 250 microns, the amplitude of the power spectrum increases roughly as the
square of the median brightness of the map and so the expected cirrus noise
scales linearly with the median brightness. Generally, the confusion noise will
be a worse problem at longer wavelengths, because of the combination of lower
angular resolution and the rising power spectrum of cirrus toward lower spatial
frequencies, but the photometric signal to noise will also depend on the
relative spectral energy distribution of the source compared to the cirrus.Comment: 4 pages (in journal), 3 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics, accepted
for publication 13 May 201
Follow-up of blood-pressure lowering and glucose control in type 2 diabetes.
BACKGROUND
In the Action in Diabetes and Vascular Disease: Preterax and Diamicron Modified Release Controlled Evaluation (ADVANCE) factorial trial, the combination of perindopril and indapamide reduced mortality among patients with type 2 diabetes, but intensive glucose control, targeting a glycated hemoglobin level of less than 6.5%, did not. We now report results of the 6-year post-trial follow-up.
METHODS
We invited surviving participants, who had previously been assigned to perindopril–indapamide or placebo and to intensive or standard glucose control (with the glucose-control comparison extending for an additional 6 months), to participate in a post-trial follow-up evaluation. The primary end points were death from any cause and major macrovascular events.
RESULTS
The baseline characteristics were similar among the 11,140 patients who originally underwent randomization and the 8494 patients who participated in the post-trial follow-up for a median of 5.9 years (blood-pressure–lowering comparison) or 5.4 years (glucose-control comparison). Between-group differences in blood pressure and glycated hemoglobin levels during the trial were no longer evident by the first post-trial visit. The reductions in the risk of death from any cause and of death from cardiovascular causes that had been observed in the group receiving active blood-pressure–lowering treatment during the trial were attenuated but significant at the end of the post-trial follow-up; the hazard ratios were 0.91 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.84 to 0.99; P=0.03) and 0.88 (95% CI, 0.77 to 0.99; P=0.04), respectively. No differences were observed during follow-up in the risk of death from any cause or major macrovascular events between the intensive-glucose-control group and the standard-glucose-control group; the hazard ratios were 1.00 (95% CI, 0.92 to 1.08) and 1.00 (95% CI, 0.92 to 1.08), respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
The benefits with respect to mortality that had been observed among patients originally assigned to blood-pressure–lowering therapy were attenuated but still evident at the end of follow-up. There was no evidence that intensive glucose control during the trial led to long-term benefits with respect to mortality or macrovascular events
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