449 research outputs found
European deposit insurance scheme and bank board composition
This paper investigates whether bank corporate governance can play a role in the aggregate risk score assigned to individual banks by regulators. We exploit regulatory changes at the European level and a fixed-effects model to reduce endogeneity issues. We contribute to the existing literature on bank corporate governance by showing that board age significantly increases bank risk. This may indicate that boards formed by older members are more entrenched and can also be less dynamic. Board size and gender composition of the board are risk-neutral
Collisionless evaporation from cluster elliptical galaxies
We describe a particular aspect of the effects of the parent cluster tidal
field (CTF) on stellar orbits inside cluster Elliptical galaxies. In particular
we discuss, with the aid of a simple numerical model, the possibility that
collisionless stellar evaporation from elliptical galaxies is an effective
mechanism for the production of the recently discovered intracluster stellar
populations. A preliminary investigation, based on very idealized galaxy
density profiles (Ferrers density distributions), showed that over an Hubble
time, the amount of stars lost by a representative galaxy may sum up to the 10%
of the initial galaxy mass, a fraction in interesting agreement with
observational data. The effectiveness of this mechanism is due to the fact that
the galaxy oscillation periods near equilibrium configurations in the CTF are
comparable to stellar orbital times in the external galaxy regions. Here we
extend our previous study to more realistic galaxy density profiles, in
particular by adopting a triaxial Hernquist model.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. To appear on "Lecture Notes in Physics",
proceedings of the Workshop on "Galaxies and Chaos. Theory and Observations",
Athens (September 16-19, 2002), G. Contopoulos and N. Voglis, ed
Polar Ring Galaxies and the Tully Fisher relation: implications for the dark halo shape
We have investigated the Tully-Fisher relation for Polar Ring Galaxies
(PRGs), based on near infrared, optical and HI data available for a sample of
these peculiar objects. The total K-band luminosity, which mainly comes from
the central host galaxy, and the measured HI linewidth at 20% of the peak line
flux density, which traces the potential in the polar plane, place most polar
rings of the sample far from the Tully-Fisher relation defined for spiral
galaxies, with many PRGs showing larger HI linewidths than expected for the
observed K band luminosity. This result is confirmed by a larger sample of
objects, based on B-band data. This observational evidence may be related to
the dark halo shape and orientation in these systems, which we study by
numerical modeling of PRG formation and dynamics: the larger rotation
velocities observed in PRGs can be explained by a flattened polar halo, aligned
with the polar ring.Comment: 22 pages, 8 postscript figures, accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journa
Evolution of Ego-networks in Social Media with Link Recommendations
Ego-networks are fundamental structures in social graphs, yet the process of
their evolution is still widely unexplored. In an online context, a key
question is how link recommender systems may skew the growth of these networks,
possibly restraining diversity. To shed light on this matter, we analyze the
complete temporal evolution of 170M ego-networks extracted from Flickr and
Tumblr, comparing links that are created spontaneously with those that have
been algorithmically recommended. We find that the evolution of ego-networks is
bursty, community-driven, and characterized by subsequent phases of explosive
diameter increase, slight shrinking, and stabilization. Recommendations favor
popular and well-connected nodes, limiting the diameter expansion. With a
matching experiment aimed at detecting causal relationships from observational
data, we find that the bias introduced by the recommendations fosters global
diversity in the process of neighbor selection. Last, with two link prediction
experiments, we show how insights from our analysis can be used to improve the
effectiveness of social recommender systems.Comment: Proceedings of the 10th ACM International Conference on Web Search
and Data Mining (WSDM 2017), Cambridge, UK. 10 pages, 16 figures, 1 tabl
The stellar halos of ETGs in the IllustrisTNG simulations: II. Accretion, merger history, and dark halo connection
Stellar halos in early-type galaxies (ETGs) are shaped by their accretion and
merger histories. We use a sample of 1114 ETGs in the TNG100 simulation with
stellar masses , selected at z=0
within the range of g-r colour and lambda-ellipticity diagram populated by
observed ETGs. We study how the rotational support and intrinsic shapes of the
stellar halos depend on the fraction of stars accreted, overall and separately
by major, minor, and mini mergers. Accretion histories in TNG100 ETGs as well
as the radial distributions of ex-situ stars strongly correlate
with stellar mass. Low-mass ETGs have characteristic peaked rotation profiles
and near-oblate shapes with rounder halos that are completely driven by the
in-situ stars. At high major mergers decrease the in-situ peak in
rotation velocity, flatten the profiles, and increase the
triaxiality of the stellar halos. Kinematic transition radii do not trace the
transition between in-situ and ex-situ dominated regions, but for systems with
the local rotational support and triaxiality of the
stellar halos is anti-correlated with the local ex-situ fraction at
fixed . These correlations are followed by fast and slow rotators alike
with a continuous and overlapping sequence of properties. Merger events
dynamically couple stars and dark matter: in high mass ETGs and at large radii
where , both components tend to have similar intrinsic shapes
and rotational support, and nearly aligned principal axes and spin directions.
Based on these results we suggest that extended photometry and kinematics of
massive ETGs () can be used to estimate the local
fraction of ex-situ stars and to approximate the intrinsic shapes and
rotational support of the co-spatial dark matter component. [abridged]Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures, submitted to A&
The stellar halos of ETGs in the IllustrisTNG simulations: the photometric and kinematic diversity of galaxies at large radii
We characterize the photometric and kinematic properties of simulated
early-type galaxy (ETG) stellar halos, and compare them to observations. We
select a sample of ~1200 ETGs in the TNG100 and TNG50 simulations, spanning a
stellar mass range of and within the range of
(g-r) colour and lambda-ellipticity diagram populated by observed ETGs. We
determine photometric parameters, intrinsic shapes, and kinematic observables
in their extended stellar halos. We study the variation in kinematics from
center to halo and connect it to a change in the intrinsic shape of the
galaxies. We find that the simulated galaxy sample reproduces the diversity of
kinematic properties observed in ETG halos. Simulated fast rotators (FRs)
divide almost evenly in one third having flat lambda profiles and high halo
rotational support, a third with gently decreasing profiles, and another third
with low halo rotation. Slow rotators (SRs) tend to have increased rotation in
the outskirts, with half of them exceeding lambda=0.2. For
halo rotation is unimportant. A similar variety of
properties is found for the stellar halo intrinsic shapes. Rotational support
and shape are deeply related: the kinematic transition to lower rotational
support is accompanied by a change towards rounder intrinsic shape. Triaxiality
in the halos of FRs increases outwards and with stellar mass. Simulated SRs
have relatively constant triaxiality profiles. Simulated stellar halos show a
large variety of structural properties, with quantitative but no clear
qualitative differences between FRs and SRs. At the same stellar mass, stellar
halo properties show a gradual transition and significant overlap between the
two families, despite the clear bimodality in the central regions. This is in
agreement with observations of extended photometry and kinematics. [abridged]Comment: accepted for publication in A&A, 25 pages, 22 figure
Wandering Stars: an Origin of Escaped Populations
We demonstrate that stars beyond the virial radii of galaxies may be
generated by the gravitational impulse received by a satellite as it passes
through the pericenter of its orbit around its parent. These stars may become
energetically unbound (escaped stars), or may travel to further than a few
virial radii for longer than a few Gyr, but still remain energetically bound to
the system (wandering stars). Larger satellites (10-100% the mass of the
parent), and satellites on more radial orbits are responsible for the majority
of this ejected population. Wandering stars could be observable on Mpc scales
via classical novae, and on 100 Mpc scales via SNIa. The existence of such
stars would imply a corresponding population of barely-bound, old, high
velocity stars orbiting the Milky Way, generated by the same physical mechanism
during the Galaxy's formation epoch. Sizes and properties of these combined
populations should place some constraints on the orbits and masses of the
progenitor objects from which they came, providing insight into the merging
histories of galaxies in general and the Milky Way in particular.Comment: 13 pages, 3 encapsulated postscript figure
Measurements of muon flux in the Pyh\"asalmi underground laboratory
The cosmic-ray induced muon flux was measured at several depths in the
Pyh\"asalmi mine (Finland) using a plastic scintillator telescope mounted on a
trailer. The flux was determined at four different depths underground at 400 m
(980 m.w.e), at 660 m (1900 m.w.e), at 990 m (2810 m.w.e) and at 1390 m (3960
m.w.e) with the trailer, and also at the ground surface. In addition,
previously measured fluxes from depths of 90 m (210 m.w.e) and 210 m (420
m.w.e) are shown. A relation was obtained for the underground muon flux as a
function of the depth. The measured flux follows well the general behaviour and
is consistent with results determined in other underground laboratories.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to Nuclear Instrum. Methods
The VIRMOS deep imaging survey: III. ESO/WFI deep U-band imaging of the 0226-04 deep field
In this paper we describe the U-band imaging of the F02 deep field, one of
the fields in the VIRMOS Deep Imaging Survey. The observations were done at the
ESO/MPG 2.2m telescope at La Silla (Chile) using the 8k x 8k Wide-Field Imager
(WFI). The field is centered at alpha(J2000)=02h 26m 00s and
delta(J2000)=-04deg 30' 00", the total covered area is 0.9 deg**2 and the
limiting magnitude (50% completeness) is U(AB) ~ 25.4 mag. Reduction steps,
including astrometry, photometry and catalogue extraction, are first discussed.
The achieved astrometric accuracy (RMS) is ~ 0.2" with reference to the I-band
catalog and ~ 0.07" internally (estimated from overlapping sources in different
exposures). The photometric accuracy including uncertainties from photometric
calibration, is < 0.1 mag. Various tests are then performed as a quality
assessment of the data. They include: (i) the color distribution of stars and
galaxies in the field, done together with the BVRI data available from the
VIMOS survey; (ii) the comparison with previous published results of U-band
magnitude-number counts of galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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