8,430 research outputs found
The Clinton welfare reform plan: Will it end poverty as we know it
The central elements in President Clinton's proposal to reform the welfare system are: increasing the earned income tax credit, improving the child support system, educating and training the poor, and limiting the amount of time people can receive assistance. The authors commend the first two components of the president's plan but question the likely effectiveness of the last two: even with the education, training, and child care programs that the president has proposed, few welfare recipients will be able to command wages that would lift them out of poverty, and successful education and training programs would cost more than the government appears willing to spend. They recommend that the president consider giving tax credits to, and subsidizing the wages paid by, employers who hire low-wage workers and assist young people and poor families to save for future opportunities. In their view, poverty will not be alleviated by only getting tough on welfare recipients; instead, labor market interventions should be adopted so as to expand opportunities for low-wage, low-skilled workers.
Effects of moderate abundance changes on the atmospheric structure and colours of Mira variables (Research Note)
Aims. We study the effects of moderate deviations from solar abundances upon
the atmospheric structure and colours of typical Mira variables. Methods. We
present two model series of dynamical opacity-sampling models of Mira variables
which have (1) 1 solar metallicity 3 and (2) "mild" S-type C/O abundance ratio
([C/O]=0.9) with typical Zr enhancement (solar +1.0). These series are compared
to a previously studied solar-abundance series which has similar fundamental
parameters (mass, luminosity, period, radius) that are close to those of o Cet.
Results. Both series show noticeable effects of abundance upon stratifications
and infrared colours but cycle-to-cycle differences mask these effects at most
pulsation phases, with the exception of a narrow-water-filter colour near
minimum phase.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for A&
The Rotation of Young Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs
We review the current state of our knowledge concerning the rotation and
angular momentum evolution of young stellar objects and brown dwarfs from a
primarily observational view point. Periods are typically accurate to 1% and
available for about 1700 stars and 30 brown dwarfs in young clusters.
Discussion of angular momentum evolution also requires knowledge of stellar
radii, which are poorly known for pre-main sequence stars. It is clear that
rotation rates at a given age depend strongly on mass; higher mass stars
(0.4-1.2 M) have longer periods than lower mass stars and brown dwarfs.
On the other hand, specific angular momentum is approximately independent of
mass for low mass pre-main sequence stars and young brown dwarfs. A spread of
about a factor of 30 is seen at any given mass and age. The evolution of
rotation of solar-like stars during the first 100 Myr is discussed. A broad,
bimodal distribution exists at the earliest observable phases (1 Myr) for
stars more massive than 0.4 M. The rapid rotators (50-60% of the
sample) evolve to the ZAMS with little or no angular momentum loss. The slow
rotators continue to lose substantial amounts of angular momentum for up to 5
Myr, creating the even broader bimodal distribution characteristic of 30-120
Myr old clusters. Accretion disk signatures are more prevalent among slowly
rotating PMS stars, indicating a connection between accretion and rotation.
Disks appear to influence rotation for, at most, 5 Myr, and considerably
less than that for the majority of stars. If the dense clusters studied so far
are an accurate guide, then the typical solar-like star may have only 1
Myr for this task. It appears that both disk interactions and stellar winds are
less efficient at braking these objects.Comment: Review chapter for Protostars and Planets V. 15 page and 8 figure
Search for nearby stars among proper motion stars selected by optical-to-infrared photometry. II. Two late M dwarfs within 10 pc
We have identified two late M dwarfs within 10 parsecs of the Sun, by
cross-correlating the Luyten NLTT catalogue of stars with proper motions larger
than 0.18 arcsec/yr, with objects lacking optical identification in the 2MASS
data base. The 2MASS photometry was then combined with improved optical
photometry obtained from the SuperCOSMOS Sky Surveys. The two objects (LP775-31
and LP655-48) have extremely red optical-to-infrared colours ((R-K)~7) and very
bright infrared magnitudes (K_s<10): follow-up optical spectroscopy with the
ESO 3.6-m telescope gave spectral types of M8.0 and M7.5 dwarfs, respectively.
Comparison of their near-infrared magnitudes with the absolute magnitudes of
known M8 and M7.5 dwarfs with measured trigonometric parallaxes yields
spectroscopic distance estimates of 6.4+/-1.4 parsecs and 8.0+/-1.6 parsecs for
LP775-31 and LP655-48, respectively. In contrast, Cruz & Reid (2002) recently
determined spectral types of M6 for both objects, and commensurately larger
distances of 11.3+/-1.3 parsecs and 15.3+/-2.6 parsecs. LP655-48 is also a
bright X-ray source (1RXS J044022.8-053020). With only a few late M dwarfs
previously known within 10 parsecs, these two objects represent an important
addition to the census of the Solar neighbourhood.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics (Letters), in press; 5 pages, 1 figure, uses
aa.cls version 5.
SSSPM J1444-2019: an extremely high proper motion, ultracool subdwarf
We present the discovery of a new extreme high proper motion object (3.5
arcsec/year) which we classify as an ultracool subdwarf with [M/H] = -0.5. It
has a formal spectral type of sdM9 but also shows L-type features: while the VO
bands are completely absent, it exhibits extremely strong TiO absorption in its
optical spectrum. With a radial velocity of about -160 km/s and a rough
distance estimate of 16--24 pc, it is likely one of the nearest halo members
crossing the Solar neighbourhood with a heliocentric space velocity of
(U,V,W)=(-244,-256,-100)+/-(32,77,6) km/s.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (Fig.1a-d available as jpg files), accepted for
publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letter
Spectroscopic classification of red high proper motion objects in the Southern Sky
We present the results of spectroscopic follow-up observations for a sample
of 71 red objects with high proper motions in the range 0.08-1.14 arcsec/yr as
detected using APM and SSS measurements of multi-epoch photographic Schmidt
plates. Red objects were selected by combining the photographic BjRI magnitudes
with 2MASS near-infrared JHKs magnitudes. Some 50 of the 71 spectroscopically
classified objects turn out to be late-type (>M6) dwarfs and in more detail,
the sample includes 35 ultracool dwarfs with spectral types between M8 and L2,
some previously reported, as well as five M-type subdwarfs, including a cool
esdM6 object, SSSPM J0500-5406. Distance estimates based on the spectral types
and 2MASS J magnitudes place almost all of the late-type (>M6) dwarfs within 50
pc, with 25 objects located inside the 25 pc limit of the catalogue of nearby
stars. Most of the early-type M dwarfs are located at larger distances of
100-200 pc, suggesting halo kinematics for some of them. All objects with
Halpha equivalent widths larger than 10 Angstroms have relatively small
tangential velocities (<50 km/s). Finally, some late-type but blue objects are
candidate binaries.Comment: accepted on 06 June 2005 for publication in A&A, 22 pages, 14
figures, 7 table
A cycling state that can lead to glassy dynamics in intracellular transport
Power-law dwell times have been observed for molecular motors in living
cells, but the origins of these trapped states are not known. We introduce a
minimal model of motors moving on a two-dimensional network of filaments, and
simulations of its dynamics exhibit statistics comparable to those observed
experimentally. Analysis of the model trajectories, as well as experimental
particle tracking data, reveals a state in which motors cycle unproductively at
junctions of three or more filaments. We formulate a master equation for these
junction dynamics and show that the time required to escape from this
vortex-like state can account for the power-law dwell times. We identify trends
in the dynamics with the motor valency for further experimental validation. We
demonstrate that these trends exist in individual trajectories of myosin II on
an actin network. We discuss how cells could regulate intracellular transport
and, in turn, biological function, by controlling their cytoskeletal network
structures locally
A U-band survey of brown dwarfs in the Taurus Molecular Cloud with the XMM-Newton Optical/UV Monitor
We aim to characterize the U-band variability of young brown dwarfs in the
Taurus Molecular Cloud and discuss its origin. We used the XMM-Newton Extended
Survey of the Taurus Molecular Cloud, where a sample of 11 young bona fide
brown dwarfs (spectral type later than M6) were observed simultaneously in
X-rays with XMM-Newton and in the U-band with the XMM-Newton Optical/UV Monitor
(OM). We obtained upper limits to the U-band emission of 10 brown dwarfs
(U>19.6-20.6 mag), whereas 2MASSJ04141188+2811535 was detected in the U-band.
Remarkably, the magnitude of this brown dwarf increased regularly from U~19.5
mag at the beginning of the observation, peaked 6h later at U~18.4 mag, and
then decreased to U~18.65 mag in the next 2h. The first OM U-band measurement
is consistent with the quiescent level observed about one year later thanks to
ground follow-up observations. This brown dwarf was not detected in X-rays by
XMM-Newton during the OM observation. We discuss the possible sources of U-band
variability for this young brown dwarf, namely a magnetic flare, non-steady
accretion onto the substellar surface, and rotational modulation of a hot spot.
We conclude that this event is related to accretion from a circumsubstellar
disk, where the mass accretion rate was about a factor of 3 higher than during
the quiescent level.Comment: 6 pages and 4 Figures. Accepted by A&A, to appear in a special
section/issue dedicated to the XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the Taurus
Molecular Cloud (XEST
Simulation of the Burridge-Knopoff Model of Earthquakes with Variable Range Stress Transfer
Simple models of earthquake faults are important for understanding the
mechanisms for their observed behavior, such as Gutenberg-Richter scaling and
the relation between large and small events, which is the basis for various
forecasting methods. Although cellular automaton models have been studied
extensively in the long-range stress transfer limit, this limit has not been
studied for the Burridge-Knopoff model, which includes more realistic friction
forces and inertia. We find that the latter model with long-range stress
transfer exhibits qualitatively different behavior than both the long-range
cellular automaton models and the usual Burridge-Knopoff model with nearest
neighbor springs, depending on the nature of the velocity-weakening friction
force. This result has important implications for our understanding of
earthquakes and other driven dissipative systems.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published on Phys. Rev. Let
Multi-wavelength visibility measurements of the red giant R Doradus
We present visibility measurements of the nearby Mira-like star R Doradus
taken over a wide range of wavelengths (650--990 nm). The observations were
made using MAPPIT (Masked APerture-Plane Interference Telescope), an
interferometer operating at the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope. We used a
slit to mask the telescope aperture and prism to disperse the interference
pattern in wavelength. We observed in R Dor strong decreases in visibility
within the TiO absorption bands. The results are in general agreement with
theory but differ in detail, suggesting that further work is needed to refine
the theoretical models.Comment: 8 pages; SPIE Conf. 4006 "Interferometry in Optical Astronomy
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