6,336 research outputs found
Random graphs from a block-stable class
A class of graphs is called block-stable when a graph is in the class if and
only if each of its blocks is. We show that, as for trees, for most -vertex
graphs in such a class, each vertex is in at most blocks, and each path passes through at most blocks.
These results extend to `weakly block-stable' classes of graphs
Using SCUBA to place upper limits on arcsecond scale CMB anisotropies at 850 microns
The SCUBA instrument on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope has already had an
impact on cosmology by detecting relatively large numbers of dusty galaxies at
high redshift. Apart from identifying well-detected sources, such data can also
be mined for information about fainter sources and their correlations, as
revealed through low level fluctuations in SCUBA maps. As a first step in this
direction we analyse a small SCUBA data-set as if it were obtained from a
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) differencing experiment. This enables us to
place limits on CMB anisotropy at 850 microns. Expressed as Q_{flat}, the
quadrupole expectation value for a flat power spectrum, the limit is 152
microKelvin at 95 per cent confidence, corresponding to C_0^{1/2} < 355
microKelvin for a Gaussian autocorrelation function, with a coherence angle of
about 20--25 arcsec; These results could easily be reinterpretted in terms of
any other fluctuating sky signal. This is currently the best limit for these
scales at high frequency, and comparable to limits at similar angular scales in
the radio. Even with such a modest data-set, it is possible to put a constraint
on the slope of the SCUBA counts at the faint end, since even randomly
distributed sources would lead to fluctuations. Future analysis of sky
correlations in more extensive data-sets ought to yield detections, and hence
additional information on source counts and clustering.Comment: 12 pages, 9 postscript figures, uses mn.st
Ordering Things: The Irish State Administration Database
New theoretical approaches to the state have posed challenges for the comparative analysis of the organizational features of states. The analysis of state bodies and state agencies has largely been confined to the sub-discipline of public administration, and has been resistant to the systematic classification that has made progress possible in other areas of comparative politics. This article argues that there is much to be gained by reconceptualizing state bodies in a comparative context. This paper profiles the classification system underlying the construction of the Irish State Administration Database (ISAD) (Hardiman et al., 2011). This paper sets out a new approach to conceptualizing the organizational and functional features of states. ISAD not only provides a valuable research resource for work on the Irish state, but can also provide a framework for building a comparative research agenda.
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