32,275 research outputs found
Hot Property in New Zealand: Empirical Evidence of Housing Bubbles in the Metropolitan
Using recently developed statistical methods for testing and dating exhuberant behavior in asset prices we document evidence of episodic bubbles in the New Zealand property market over the past two decades. The results show clear evidence of a broad-based New Zealand housing bubble that began in 2003 and collapsed over mid 2007 to early 2008 with the onset of the worldwide recession and the ïŹnancial crisis. New methods of analyzing market contagion are also developed and are used to examine spillovers from the Auckland property market to the other metropolitan centres. Evidence from the latest data reveals that the greater Auckland metropolitan area is currently experiencing a new property bubble that began in 2013. But there is no evidence yet of any contagion eïŹect of this bubble on the other centres, in contrast to the earlier bubble over 2003-2008 for which there is evidence of transmission of the housing bubble from Auckland to the other centres. One of our primary conclusions is that the expensive nature of New Zealand real estate relative to potential earnings in rents is partly due to the sustained market exuberance that produced the broad based bubble in house prices during the last decade and that has continued through the most recent bubble experienced in the Auckland region since 2013
Creation of entangled states in coupled quantum dots via adiabatic rapid passage
Quantum state preparation through external control is fundamental to
established methods in quantum information processing and in studies of
dynamics. In this respect, excitons in semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are of
particular interest since their coupling to light allows them to be driven into
a specified state using the coherent interaction with a tuned optical field
such as an external laser pulse. We propose a protocol, based on adiabatic
rapid passage, for the creation of entangled states in an ensemble of pairwise
coupled two-level systems, such as an ensemble of QD molecules. We show by
quantitative analysis using realistic parameters for semiconductor QDs that
this method is feasible where other approaches are unavailable. Furthermore,
this scheme can be generically transferred to some other physical systems
including circuit QED, nuclear and electron spins in solid-state environments,
and photonic coupled cavities.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. Added reference, minor changes. Discussion,
results and conclusions unchange
Spectroscopic study of unique line broadening and inversion in low-pressure microwave generated water plasmas
It was demonstrated that low pressure (~0.2 Torr) water vapor plasmas
generated in a 10 mm inner diameter quartz tube with an Evenson microwave
cavity show at least two features which are not explained by conventional
plasma models. First, significant (> 0.25 nm) hydrogen Balmer_ line broadening,
of constant width, up to 5 cm from the microwave coupler was recorded. Only
hydrogen, and not oxygen, showed significant line broadening. This feature,
observed previously in hydrogen-containing mixed gas plasmas generated with
high voltage dc and rf discharges was explained by some researchers to result
from acceleration of hydrogen ions near the cathode. This explanation cannot
apply to the line broadening observed in the (electrodeless) microwave plasmas
generated in this work, particularly at distances as great as 5 cm from the
microwave coupler. Second, inversion of the line intensities of both the Lyman
and Balmer series, again, at distances up to 5 cm from the coupler, were
observed. The line inversion suggests the existence of a hitherto unknown
source of pumping of the optical power in plasmas. Finally, it is notable that
other aspects of the plasma including the OH* rotational temperature and low
electron concentrations are quite typical of plasmas of this type.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figure
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies up to z~1 in the HST Ultra Deep Field: I. Small galaxies, or blue centers of massive disks?
We analyze 26 Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) in the HST/ACS Ultra
Deep Field (UDF) at z ~ 0.2-1.3, to determine whether these are truly small
galaxies, or rather bright central starbursts within existing or forming large
disk galaxies. Surface brightness profiles from UDF images reach fainter than
rest-frame 26.5 B mag/arcsec^2 even for compact objects at z~1. Most LCBGs show
a smaller, brighter component that is likely star-forming, and an extended,
roughly exponential component with colors suggesting stellar ages >~ 100 Myr to
few Gyr. Scale lengths of the extended components are mostly >~ 2 kpc, >1.5-2
times smaller than those of nearby large disk galaxies like the Milky Way.
Larger, very low surface brightness disks can be excluded down to faint
rest-frame surface brightnesses (>~ 26 B mag/arcsec^2). However, 1 or 2 of the
LCBGs are large, disk-like galaxies that meet LCBG selection criteria due to a
bright central nucleus, possibly a forming bulge. These results indicate that
>~ 90% of high-z LCBGs are small galaxies that will evolve into small disk
galaxies, and low mass spheroidal or irregular galaxies in the local Universe,
assuming passive evolution and no significant disk growth. The data do not
reveal signs of disk formation around small, HII-galaxy-like LCBGs, and do not
suggest a simple inside-out growth scenario for larger LCBGs with a disk-like
morphology. Irregular blue emission in distant LCBGs is relatively extended,
suggesting that nebular emission lines from star-forming regions sample a major
fraction of an LCBG's velocity field.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, AASTeX; accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Rock magnetic and geochemical evidence for authigenic magnetite formation via iron reduction in coal-bearing sediments offshore Shimokita Peninsula, Japan (IODP Site C0020)
Sediments recovered at Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site C0020, in a foreâarc basin offshore Shimokita Peninsula, Japan, include numerous coal beds (0.3â7 m thick) that are associated with a transition from a terrestrial to marine depositional environment. Within the primary coalâbearing unit (âŒ2 km depth below seafloor) there are sharp increases in magnetic susceptibility in close proximity to the coal beds, superimposed on a background of consistently low magnetic susceptibility throughout the remainder of the recovered stratigraphic sequence. We investigate the source of the magnetic susceptibility variability and characterize the dominant magnetic assemblage throughout the entire cored record, using isothermal remanent magnetization (IRM), thermal demagnetization, anhysteretic remanent magnetization (ARM), iron speciation, and iron isotopes. Magnetic mineral assemblages in all samples are dominated by very lowâcoercivity minerals with unblocking temperatures between 350 and 580°C that are interpreted to be magnetite. Samples with lower unblocking temperatures (300â400°C), higher ARM, higherâfrequency dependence, and isotopically heavy ÎŽ56Fe across a range of lithologies in the coalâbearing unit (between 1925 and 1995 mbsf) indicate the presence of fineâgrained authigenic magnetite. We suggest that ironâreducing bacteria facilitated the production of fineâgrained magnetite within the coalâbearing unit during burial and interaction with pore waters. The coal/peat acted as a source of electron donors during burial, mediated by humic acids, to supply ironâreducing bacteria in the surrounding siliciclastic sediments. These results indicate that coalâbearing sediments may play an important role in iron cycling in subsiding peat environments and if buried deeply through time, within the subsequent deep biosphere
Processing techniques development
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Excitation and abundance of C_3 in star forming cores: Herschel/HIFI observations of the sight-lines to W31C and W49N
We present spectrally resolved observations of triatomic carbon (C_3) in several ro-vibrational transitions between the vibrational ground state and
the low-energy Îœ_2 bending mode at frequencies between 1654â1897 GHz along the sight-lines to the submillimeter continuum sources W31C
and W49N, using Herschelâs HIFI instrument. We detect C_3 in absorption arising from the warm envelope surrounding the hot core, as indicated
by the velocity peak position and shape of the line profile. The sensitivity does not allow to detect C_3 absorption due to diffuse foreground clouds.
From the column densities of the rotational levels in the vibrational ground state probed by the absorption we derive a rotation temperature (T_(rot))
of ~50â70 K, which is a good measure of the kinetic temperature of the absorbing gas, as radiative transitions within the vibrational ground state
are forbidden. It is also in good agreement with the dust temperatures for W31C and W49N. Applying the partition function correction based on
the derived T_(rot), we get column densities N(C_3) ~ 7â9 Ă 10^(14) cm^(â2) and abundance x(C_3) ~ 10^(â8) with respect to H_2. For W31C, using a radiative
transfer model including far-infrared pumping by the dust continuum and a temperature gradient within the source along the line of sight we find
that a model with x(C_3) = 10^(â8), T_(kin) = 30â50 K, N(C_3) = 1.5 Ă 10^(15) cm^(â2) fits the observations reasonably well and provides parameters in very
good agreement with the simple excitation analysis
Time Dilation from Spectral Feature Age Measurements of Type Ia Supernovae
We have developed a quantitative, empirical method for estimating the age of
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from a single spectral epoch. The technique
examines the goodness of fit of spectral features as a function of the temporal
evolution of a large database of SNe Ia spectral features. When a SN Ia
spectrum with good signal-to-noise ratio over the rest frame range 3800 to 6800
A is available, the precision of a spectral feature age (SFA) is (1-sigma) ~
1.4 days. SFA estimates are made for two spectral epochs of SN 1996bj (z=0.574)
to measure the rate of aging at high redshift. In the 10.05 days which elapsed
between spectral observations, SN 1996bj aged 3.35 3.2 days, consistent
with the 6.38 days of aging expected in an expanding Universe and inconsistent
with no time dilation at the 96.4 % confidence level. The precision to which
individual features constrain the supernova age has implications for the source
of inhomogeneities among SNe Ia.Comment: 14 pages (LaTex), 7 postscript figures to Appear in the Astronomical
Journa
The Morphology of Type Ia Supernovae Light Curves
We present a family of six BVI template light curves for SNe Ia for days -5
and +80, based on high-quality data gathered at CTIO. These templates display a
wide range of light curve morphologies, with initial decline rates of their B
light curves between m15(B)=0.87 mag and 1.93 mag. We use these templates to
study the general morphology of SNe Ia light curves. We find that several of
the main features of the BVI templates correlate tightly with m15(B). In
particular, the V light curves, which are probably a reasonably good
approximation of the bolometric light curves, display an orderly progression in
shapes between the most-luminous, slowest-declining events and the
least-luminous, fastest-declining SNe. This supports the idea that the observed
spectroscopic and photometric sequences of SNe Ia are due primarily to one
parameter. Nevertheless, SNe with very similar initial decline rates do show
significant differences in their light curve properties when examined in
detail, suggesting the influence of one or more secondary parameters.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures, to appear in the Astronomical Journa
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