3,932 research outputs found

    On the applicability of Taylor's hypothesis in streaming magnetohydrodynamic turbulence

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    We examine the range of applicability of Taylor's hypothesis used in observations of magnetic turbulence in the solar wind. We do not refer to turbulence theory. We simply ask whether in a turbulent magnetohydrodynamic flow the observed magnetic frequency spectrum can be interpreted as mapping of the wavenumber turbulence into the stationary spacecraft frame. In addition to the known restrictions on the angle of propagation with respect to the fluctuation spectrum and the question on the wavenumber dependence of the frequency in turbulence which we briefly review, we show that another restriction concerns the inclusion or exclusion of turbulent fluctuations in the velocity field. Taylor's hypothesis in application to magnetic (MHD) turbulence encounters its strongest barriers here. It is applicable to magnetic turbulence only when the turbulent velocity fluctuations can practically be completely neglected against the bulk flow speed. For low flow speeds the transformation becomes rather involved. This account makes even no use of the additional scale dependence of the turbulent frequency, viz. the existence of a "turbulent dispersion relation".Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Earth, Planets & Spac

    On the ion-inertial range density power spectra in solar wind turbulence

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    A model-independent first-principle first-order investigation of the shape of turbulent density-power spectra in the ion-inertial range of the solar wind at 1 AU is presented. De-magnetised ions in the ion-inertial range of quasi-neutral plasmas respond to Kolmogorov (K) or Iroshnikov-Kraichnan (IK) inertial-range velocity turbulence power spectra via the spectrum of the velocity-turbulence-related random-mean-square induction-electric field. Maintenance of electrical quasi-neutrality by the ions causes deformations in the power spectral density of the turbulent density fluctuations. Kolmogorov inertial range spectra in solar wind velocity turbulence and observations of density power spectra suggest that the occasionally observed scale-limited bumps in the density-power spectrum may be traced back to the electric ion response. Magnetic power spectra react passively to the density spectrum by warranting pressure balance. This approach still neglects contribution of Hall currents and is restricted to the ion-inertial range scale. While both density and magnetic turbulence spectra in the affected range of ion-inertial scales deviate from Kolmogorov or Iroshnikov-Kraichnan, the velocity turbulence preserves its inertial range shape in this process to which spectral advection turns out to be secondary but may become observable under special external conditions. One such case observed by WIND is analysed. We discuss various aspects of this effect including the affected wavenumber scale range, dependence on angle between mean flow velocity and wavenumber and, for a radially expanding solar wind flow when assuming adiabatic expansion at fast solar wind speeds and a Parker dependence of the solar wind magnetic field on radius, also the presumable limitations on the radial location of the turbulent source region.Comment: Pages 18, Figures 5, Discussion paper submitte

    Development of Prototype Pixellated PIN CdZnTe Detectors

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    We report initial results from the design and evaluation of two pixellated PIN Cadmium Zinc Telluride detectors and an ASIC-based readout system. The prototype imaging PIN detectors consist of 4X4 1.5 mm square indium anode contacts with 0.2 mm spacing and a solid cathode plane on 10X10 mm CdZnTe substrates of thickness 2 mm and 5 mm. The detector readout system, based on low noise preamplifier ASICs, allows for parallel readout of all channels upon cathode trigger. This prototype is under development for use in future astrophysical hard X-ray imagers with 10-600 keV energy response. Measurements of the detector uniformity, spatial resolution, and spectral resolution will be discussed and compared with a similar pixellated MSM detector. Finally, a prototype design for a large imaging array is outlined.Comment: 10 pages Latex, 9 figures, to appear in Proc. of SPIE Vol. 3446 "Hard X-ray and Gamma-Ray Detector Physics and Applications

    The Value of Health Insurance: A Household Job Search Approach

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    Do households value access to free health insurance when making labor supply decisions? We answer this question using the introduction of universal health insurance in Mexico, the Seguro Popular (SP), in 2002. The SP targeted individuals not covered by Social Security and broke the link between access to health care and job contract. We start by using the rollout of SP across municipalities in a differences-indifferences approach, and find an increase in informality of 4% among low-educated families with children. We then develop and estimate a household search model that incorporates the pre-reform valuation of formal sector amenities relative to the alternatives (informal sector and non-employment) and the value of SP. The estimated value of the health insurance coverage provided by SP is below the government's cost of the program, and the corresponding utility gain is, at most, 0.56 per each peso spent

    The Prograde Orbit of Exoplanet TrES-2b

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    We monitored the Doppler shift of the G0V star TrES-2 throughout a transit of its giant planet. The anomalous Doppler shift due to stellar rotation (the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect) is discernible in the data, with a signal-to-noise ratio of 2.9, even though the star is a slow rotator. By modeling this effect we find that the planet's trajectory across the face of the star is tilted by -9 +/- 12 degrees relative to the projected stellar equator. With 98% confidence, the orbit is prograde.Comment: ApJ, in press [15 pages

    A hard X-ray polarimeter designed for transient astrophysical sources

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    — This paper discusses the latest progress in the development of GRAPE (Gamma-Ray Polarimeter Experiment), a hard X-ray Compton Polarimeter. The purpose of GRAPE is to measure the polarization of hard X-rays in the 50-300 keV energy range. We are particularly interested in X-rays that are emitted from solar flares and gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Accurately measuring the polarization of the emitted radiation from these sources will lead, to a better understating of both the emission mechanisms and source geometries. The GRAPE design consists of an array of plastic scintillators surrounding a central high-Z crystal scintillator. We can monitor individual Compton scatters that occur in the plastics and determine whether the photon is photo absorbed by the high-Z crystal or not. A Compton scattered photon that is immediately photo absorbed by the high-Z crystal constitutes a valid event. These valid events provide us with the interaction locations of each incident photon and ultimately produces a modulation pattern for the Compton scattering of the polarized radiation. Comparing with Monte Carlo simulations of a 100% polarized beam, the level of polarization of the measured beam can then be determined. The complete array is mounted on a flat-panel multi-anode photomultiplier tube (MAPMT) that can measure the deposited energies resulting from the photon interactions. The design of the detector allows for a large field-ofview (\u3e π steradian), at the same time offering the ability to be close-packed with multiple modules in order to reduce deadspace. We plan to present in this paper the latest laboratory results obtained from GRAPE using partially polarized radiation sources

    M\"obius Symmetry of Discrete Time Soliton Equations

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    We have proposed, in our previous papers, a method to characterize integrable discrete soliton equations. In this paper we generalize the method further and obtain a qq-difference Toda equation, from which we can derive various qq-difference soliton equations by reductions.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure, epsfig.st

    Decomposicao da evolucao da desigualdade de renda no Brasil em efeitos idade, periodo e coorte / Explaining income inequality in Brazil: age, period and cohort effects

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    A partir dos microdados da Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílios (PNAD), este trabalho tem como objetivo contribuir para o entendimento da evolução da desigualdade de renda no Brasil, de 1981 a 2001, ao identificar, sob algumas hipóteses, os efeitos idade, período e coorte. O método de identificação utilizado, proposto por Deaton e Paxson (1994), permitiu estimar esses efeitos para indicadores de desigualdade Theil-T com base na renda familiar de todas as fontes e na renda familiar do trabalho principal para a amostra total dos chefes de família e por grupo de escolaridade. Os principais resultados encontrados mostram que: a) a desigualdade de renda aumenta para as gerações mais novas, sendo esse aumento mais acentuado para a medida de renda do trabalho principal; b) o efeito coorte não é significativo para famílias com chefes de mesma escolaridade, o que sugere que o crescimento da desigualdade de renda para as gerações mais novas possa refletir um aumento da escolaridade das gerações mais novas em relação às antigas; c) a desigualdade de rendimentos do trabalho principal cresce acentuadamente com a idade, sobretudo para os grupos de maior escolaridade, o que é compatível com implicações da teoria do capital humano; d) a desigualdade de renda de todas as fontes tende a se reduzir após uma certa idade para os grupos de menor escolaridade; e e) há um efeito período significativo de aumento da desigualdade de renda observado em 1989 e 1993, períodos de aguda aceleração inflacionária. / Using Brazilian household survey data, this paper aims to contribute for a better understanding of the income inequality evolution from 1981 to 2001. This is done by decomposing the time evolution of the income inequality among Brazilian households into age, time and cohort effects. Identification of these effects follows as an application of the method proposed by Deaton and Paxson (1994) to a series of Theil-T inequality indexes of overall family income and earnings for the whole sample of household heads, as well as for schooling groups. The main results are: a) income and, more pronouncedly, earnings, are more unevenly distributed among families belonging to the youngest generations; b) the cohort effect is not important among families whose heads have similar levels of schooling, which suggests that the rise in inequality among younger cohorts is a result of the increase in schooling levels along the last decades; c) large positive age effects are present, especially for groups with higher schooling levels; d) income inequality tends to decrease after a certain age for groups with low education; and e) peaks in income inequality were observed in 1989 and 1993, probably due to sharp increases in inflation

    Developing a Compton Polarimeter to Measure Polarization of Hard X-Rays in the 50-300 keV Energy Range

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    This paper discusses the latest progress in the development of GRAPE (Gamma-Ray Polarimeter Experiment), a hard X-ray Compton Polarimeter. The purpose of GRAPE is to measure the polarization of hard X-rays in the 50-300 keV energy range. We are particularly interested in X-rays that are emitted from solar flares and gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Accurately measuring the polarization of the emitted radiation from these sources will lead, to a better understating of both the emission mechanisms and source geometries. The GRAPE design consists of an array of plastic scintillators surrounding a central high-Z crystal scintillator. We can monitor individual Compton scatters that occur in the plastics and determine whether the photon is photo absorbed by the high-Z crystal or not. A Compton scattered photon that is immediately photo absorbed by the high-Z crystal constitutes a valid event. These valid events provide us with the interaction locations of each incident photon and ultimately produces a modulation pattern for the Compton scattering of the polarized radiation. Comparing with Monte Carlo simulations of a 100% polarized beam, the level of polarization of the measured beam can then be determined. The complete array is mounted on a flat-panel multi-anode photomultiplier tube (MAPMT) that can measure the deposited energies resulting from the photon interactions. The design of the detector allows for a large field-of-view (>pi steradian), at the same time offering the ability to be close-packed with multiple modules in order to reduce deadspace. We plan to present in this paper the latest laboratory results obtained from GRAPE using partially polarized radiation sources.Comment: 10 pages; conference paper presented at the SPIE conference "UV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Space Instrumentation for Astronomy XIV." To be published in SPIE Conference Proceedings, vol. 589
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