17,234 research outputs found
ARE CROP YIELDS NORMALLY DISTRIBUTED?
This paper revisits the issue of crop yield distributions using improved model specifications, estimation and testing procedures that address the methodological concerns raised in recent literature that could have invalidated previous conclusions of yield non-normality. It shows beyond reasonable doubt that some crop yield distributions are non-normal, kurtotic and right or left skewed, depending on the circumstances. A procedure to jointly estimate non-normal farm- and aggregate-level yield distributions with similar means but different variances is illustrated, and the consequences of incorrectly assuming yield normality are explored.Yield non-normality, probability distribution function models, Corn Belt yields, West Texas dryland cotton yields, Crop Production/Industries,
The spectral properties of the Falicov-Kimball model in the weak-coupling limit
The and electron density of states of the one-dimensional
Falicov-Kimball model are studied in the weak-coupling limit by exact
diagonalization calculations. The resultant behaviors are used to examine the
-electron gap (), the -electron gap (), and the
-electron gap () as functions of the -level energy
and hybridization . It is shown that the spinless Falicov-Kimball model
behaves fully differently for zero and finite hybridization between and
states. At zero hybridization the energy gaps do not coincide (), and the activation gap vanishes
discontinuously at some critical value of the -level energy . On the
other hand, at finite hybridization all energy gaps coincide and vanish
continuously at the insulator-metal transition point . The
importance of these results for a description of real materials is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, LaTe
PAH Formation in O-rich Planetary Nebulae
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have been observed in O-rich
planetary nebulae towards the Galactic Bulge. This combination of oxygen-rich
and carbon-rich material, known as dual-dust or mixed chemistry, is not
expected to be seen around such objects. We recently proposed that PAHs could
be formed from the photodissociation of CO in dense tori. In this work, using
VISIR/VLT, we spatially resolved the emission of the PAH bands and ionised
emission from the [SIV] line, confirming the presence of dense central tori in
all the observed O-rich objects. Furthermore, we show that for most of the
objects, PAHs are located at the outer edge of these dense/compact tori, while
the ionised material is mostly present in the inner parts of these tori,
consistent with our hypothesis for the formation of PAHs in these systems. The
presence of a dense torus has been strongly associated with the action of a
central binary star and, as such, the rich chemistry seen in these regions may
also be related to the formation of exoplanets in post-common-envelope binary
systems.Comment: 14, accepted for publication in the MNRAS Journa
Disk evaporation in a planetary nebula
We study the Galactic bulge planetary nebula M 2-29 (for which a 3-year
eclipse event of the central star has been attributed to a dust disk) using HST
imaging and VLT spectroscopy, both long-slit and integral field. The central
cavity of M 2-29 is filled with a decreasing, slow wind. An inner high density
core is detected, with radius less than 250 AU, interpreted as a rotating
gas/dust disk with a bipolar disk wind. The evaporating disk is argued to be
the source of the slow wind. The central star is a source of a very fast wind
(1000 km/s). An outer, partial ring is seen in the equatorial plane, expanding
at 12 km/s. The azimuthal asymmetry is attributed to mass-loss modulation by an
eccentric binary. M 2-29 presents a crucial point in disk evolution, where
ionization causes the gas to be lost, leaving a low-mass dust disk behind.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in "Astronomy and Astrophysics
An Off-Axis Model for GRB 031203
The low luminosity radio emission of the unusually faint GRB 031203 has been
argued to support the idea of a class of intrinsically sub-energetic gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs), currently comprising two members. While low energy GRBs probably
exist, we show that the collective prompt and multiwavelength observations of
the afterglow of GRB 031203 do not necessarily require a sub-energetic nature
for that event. In fact, the data are more consistent with a typical, powerful
GRB seen at an angle of about twice the opening angle of the central jet. The
(redshift corrected) peak energy, E_p, of GRB 031203 then becomes ~ 2 MeV,
similar to many other GRBs.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; ApJL in pres
A Possible Cepheid-Like Luminosity Estimator for the Long Gamma-Ray Bursts
We present a possible Cepheid-like luminosity estimator for the long
gamma-ray bursts based on the variability of their light curves. To construct
the luminosity estimator, we use CGRO/BATSE data for 13 bursts, Wind/KONUS data
for 5 bursts, Ulysses/GRB data for 1 burst, and NEAR/XGRS data for 1 burst.
Spectroscopic redshifts, peak fluxes, and high resolution light curves are
available for 11 of these bursts; partial information is available for the
remaining 9 bursts. We find that the isotropic-equivalent luminosities L of
these bursts positively correlate with a rigorously-constructed measure V of
the variability of their light curves. We fit a model to these data that
accommodates both intrinsic scatter (statistical variance) and extrinsic
scatter (sample variance). If one excludes GRB 980425 from the fit on the
grounds that its association with SN 1998bw at a redshift of z = 0.0085 is not
secure, the luminosity estimator spans approx. 2.5 orders of magnitude in L,
and the slope of the correlation between L and V is positive with a probability
of 1 - 1.4 x 10^-4 (3.8 sigma). Although GRB 980425 is excluded from this fit,
its L and V values are consistent with the fitted model, which suggests that
GRB 980425 may well be associated with SN 1998bw, and that GRB 980425 and the
cosmological bursts may share a common physical origin. If one includes GRB
980425 in the fit, the luminosity estimator spans approx. 6.3 orders of
magnitude in L, and the slope of the correlation is positive with a probability
of 1 - 9.3 x 10^-7 (4.9 sigma). Independently of whether or not GRB 980425
should be included in the fit, its light curve is unique in that it is much
less variable than the other approx. 17 light curves in our sample for which
the signal-to-noise is reasonably good.Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal, 31 pages, 13 figures, LaTe
Geometric View of Measurement Errors
The slope of the best fit line from minimizing the sum of the squared oblique
errors is the root of a polynomial of degree four. This geometric view of
measurement errors is used to give insight into the performance of various
slope estimators for the measurement error model including an adjusted fourth
moment estimator introduced by Gillard and Iles (2005) to remove the jump
discontinuity in the estimator of Copas (1972). The polynomial of degree four
is associated with a minimun deviation estimator. A simulation study compares
these estimators showing improvement in bias and mean squared error
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