9,991 research outputs found
A flux-ratio anomaly in the CO spectral line emission from gravitationally-lensed quasar MG J0414+0534
We present an analysis of archival observations with the Atacama Large
(sub-)Millimetre Array (ALMA) of the gravitationally lensed quasar MG
J0414+0534, which show four compact images of the quasar and an Einstein ring
from the dust associated with the quasar host galaxy. We confirm that the
flux-ratio anomalies observed in the mid-infrared and radio persists into the
sub-mm for the continuum images of the quasar. We report the detection of CO
(11-10) spectral line emission, which traces a region of compact gas around the
quasar nucleus. This line emission also shows evidence of a flux-ratio anomaly
between the merging lensed images that is consistent with those observed at
other wavelengths, suggesting high-excitation CO can also provide a useful
probe of substructures that is unaffected by microlensing or dust extinction.
However, we do not detect the candidate dusty dwarf galaxy that was previously
reported with this dataset, which we conclude is due to a noise artefact. Thus,
the cause of the flux-ratio anomaly between the merging lensed images is still
unknown. The composite compact and diffuse emission in this system suggest
lensed quasar-starbursts will make excellent targets for detecting dark
sub-haloes and testing models for dark matter.Comment: Accepted as MNRAS Lette
Phillips curves, monetary policy, and a labor market transmission mechanism
This paper develops a general equilibrium monetary model with performance incentives to study the inflation-unemployment relationship. A long-run downward-sloping Phillips curve can exist with perfectly anticipated inflation because workers’ incentive to exert effort depend on financial market returns. Consequently, higher inflation rates can reduce wages and stimulate employment. An upward-sloping or vertical Phillips Curve can arise instead, depending on agents’ risk aversion and the possibility of capital formation. Welfare might be higher away from the Friedman rule and with a central bank putting some weight on employment.Phillips curve ; Labor market ; Monetary policy ; Wages
DID VIETNAM VETERANS GET SICKER IN THE 1990s? THE COMPLICATED EFFECTS OF MILITARY SERVICE ON SELF-REPORTED HEALTH
The veterans disability compensation (VDC) program, which provides a monthly stipend to disabled veterans, is the third largest American disability insurance program. Since the late 1990s, VDC growth has been driven primarily by an increase in claims from Vietnam veterans, raising concerns about costs as well as health. We use the draft lottery to study the long-term effects of Vietnam-era military service on health and work in the 2000 Census. These estimates show no significant overall effects on employment or work-related disability status, with a small effect on non-work-related disability for whites. On the other hand, estimates for white men with low earnings potential show a large negative impact on employment and a marked increase in non-work-related disability rates. The differential impact of Vietnam-era service on low-skill men cannot be explained by more combat or war-theatre exposure for the least educated, leaving the relative attractiveness of VDC for less skilled men and the work disincentives embedded in the VDC system as a likely explanation.
Embedding oriented graphs in books
A book consists of a line L in [special characters omitted]3, called the spine, and a collection of half planes, called pages, whose common boundary is L. A k-book is book with k pages. A k-page book embedding is a continuous one-to-one mapping of a graph G into a book such that the vertices are mapped into L and the edges are each mapped to either the spine or a particular page, such that no two edges cross in any page. Each page contains a planar subgraph of G. The book thickness, denoted bt(G), is the minimum number of pages for a graph to have a k-page book embedding. We focus on oriented graphs, and propose a new way to embed oriented graphs into books, called an oriented book embedding, and define oriented book thickness .
We investigate oriented graphs having oriented book thickness k using k-page critical oriented graphs, oriented graphs with oriented book thickness equal to k, but, for each arc, the deletion of that arc yields an oriented graph with oriented book thickness equal to k –1. We discuss several classes of two-page critical oriented graphs, and use them to characterize oriented graphs with oriented book thickness equal to one that are strictly uni-dicyclic graphs, oriented graphs having exactly one cycle, which is a directed cycle. We give a similar result for strictly bi-dicyclic graphs, oriented graphs having exactly two cycles, which are directed cycles
Did Vietnam Veterans Get Sicker in the 1990s? The Complicated Effects of Military Service on Self-Reported Health
The veterans disability compensation (VDC) program, which provides a monthly stipend to disabled veterans, is the third largest American disability insurance program. Since the late 1990s, VDC growth has been driven primarily by an increase in claims from Vietnam veterans, raising concerns about costs as well as health. We use the draft lottery to study the long-term effects of Vietnam-era military service on health and work in the 2000 Census. These estimates show no significant overall effects on employment or work-related disability status, with a small effect on non-work-related disability for whites. On the other hand, estimates for white men with low earnings potential show a large negative impact on employment and a marked increase in non-work-related disability rates. The differential impact of Vietnam-era service on low-skill men cannot be explained by more combat or wartheatre exposure for the least educated, leaving the relative attractiveness of VDC for less skilled men and the work disincentives embedded in the VDC system as a likely explanation.Public economics, social security and public pensions, health, education, welfare,labour, demographic economics
Anne of Green Gables
When aging brother and sister Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert send to the orphanage in Nova Scotia for a boy to help them on the farm, they get more than they bargained for, 11-year-old Anne Shirley. This swift yet theatrical adaptation of the classic novel is an all-ages crowd-pleaser.https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/theatre_productions/1050/thumbnail.jp
The intrinsic value of HFO features as a biomarker of epileptic activity
High frequency oscillations (HFOs) are a promising biomarker of epileptic
brain tissue and activity. HFOs additionally serve as a prototypical example of
challenges in the analysis of discrete events in high-temporal resolution,
intracranial EEG data. Two primary challenges are 1) dimensionality reduction,
and 2) assessing feasibility of classification. Dimensionality reduction
assumes that the data lie on a manifold with dimension less than that of the
feature space. However, previous HFO analyses have assumed a linear manifold,
global across time, space (i.e. recording electrode/channel), and individual
patients. Instead, we assess both a) whether linear methods are appropriate and
b) the consistency of the manifold across time, space, and patients. We also
estimate bounds on the Bayes classification error to quantify the distinction
between two classes of HFOs (those occurring during seizures and those
occurring due to other processes). This analysis provides the foundation for
future clinical use of HFO features and buides the analysis for other discrete
events, such as individual action potentials or multi-unit activity.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
- …