7,710 research outputs found
Uniform bounds on the 1-norm of the inverse of lower triangular Toeplitz matrices
A uniform bound on the 1-norm is given for the inverse of a lower triangular Toeplitz matrix with non-negative monotonically decreasing entries whose limit is zero. The new bound is sharp under certain specified constraints. This result is then employed to throw light upon a long standing open problem posed by Brunner concerning the convergence of the one-point collocationmethod for the Abel equation. In addition, the recent conjecture of Gauthier et al. is proved
A family of filters to search for frequency dependent gravitational wave stochastic backgrounds
We consider a three dimensional family of filters based on broken power law
spectra to search for gravitational wave stochastic backgrounds in the data
from Earth-based laser interferometers. We show that such templates produce the
necessary fitting factor for a wide class of cosmological backgrounds and
astrophysical foregrounds and that the total number of filters required to
search for those signals in the data from first generation laser
interferometers operating at the design sensitivity is fairly smallComment: 4 pages, 4 figures, uses iopart.cls, accepted for publications on
Classical and Quantum Gravity (Special Issue, Proceedings of Amaldi 2003
Comparison of Gravitational Wave Detector Network Sky Localization Approximations
Gravitational waves emitted during compact binary coalescences are a
promising source for gravitational-wave detector networks. The accuracy with
which the location of the source on the sky can be inferred from gravitational
wave data is a limiting factor for several potential scientific goals of
gravitational-wave astronomy, including multi-messenger observations. Various
methods have been used to estimate the ability of a proposed network to
localize sources. Here we compare two techniques for predicting the uncertainty
of sky localization -- timing triangulation and the Fisher information matrix
approximations -- with Bayesian inference on the full, coherent data set. We
find that timing triangulation alone tends to over-estimate the uncertainty in
sky localization by a median factor of for a set of signals from
non-spinning compact object binaries ranging up to a total mass of , and the over-estimation increases with the mass of the system. We
find that average predictions can be brought to better agreement by the
inclusion of phase consistency information in timing-triangulation techniques.
However, even after corrections, these techniques can yield significantly
different results to the full analysis on specific mock signals. Thus, while
the approximate techniques may be useful in providing rapid, large scale
estimates of network localization capability, the fully coherent Bayesian
analysis gives more robust results for individual signals, particularly in the
presence of detector noise.Comment: 11 pages, 7 Figure
Agro-biodiversity in Subsistence Farming Systems of South Somalia – Collection and Agronomic Assessment of Somali Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) Germplasm
The article gathers important information about sorghum to promote the conservation and future improvement of local sorghum landraces, thus aiding in the stabilisation of a secure and sustainable food resource for farmers of southern Somalia.Maqaalku wuxuu ka koobanyahay warar muhim ah oo ku saabsan masaggada xagga horumarinta kaydinteeda iyo tayadeeda, arrintaasoo wax weyn u tarayso beeralayda koofur Soomaaliya.L'articolo raccoglie importanti informazioni sul sorgo per promuovere la conservazione e il miglioramento delle varietà locali di sorgo, contribuendo così alla stabilizzazione di una risorsa alimentare sostenibile per gli agricoltori del sud della Somalia
The Effect of the LISA Response Function on Observations of Monochromatic Sources
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is expected to provide the
largest observational sample of binary systems of faint sub-solar mass compact
objects, in particular white-dwarfs, whose radiation is monochromatic over most
of the LISA observational window. Current astrophysical estimates suggest that
the instrument will be able to resolve about 10000 such systems, with a large
fraction of them at frequencies above 3 mHz, where the wavelength of
gravitational waves becomes comparable to or shorter than the LISA arm-length.
This affects the structure of the so-called LISA transfer function which cannot
be treated as constant in this frequency range: it introduces characteristic
phase and amplitude modulations that depend on the source location in the sky
and the emission frequency. Here we investigate the effect of the LISA transfer
function on detection and parameter estimation for monochromatic sources. For
signal detection we show that filters constructed by approximating the transfer
function as a constant (long wavelength approximation) introduce a negligible
loss of signal-to-noise ratio -- the fitting factor always exceeds 0.97 -- for
f below 10mHz, therefore in a frequency range where one would actually expect
the approximation to fail. For parameter estimation, we conclude that in the
range 3mHz to 30mHz the errors associated with parameter measurements differ
from about 5% up to a factor of 10 (depending on the actual source parameters
and emission frequency) with respect to those computed using the long
wavelength approximation.Comment: replacement version with typos correcte
The moral horizon of democracy, “majority rule” and Rousseau’s solution: On the democratic procedures for decision-making
The expansion and continuing prestige of democracy no longer seems inevitable. Doubts frequently arise
about the viability of “democracy” as a political solution, and concerns still resurface regarding its well known imperfections. Some theorists and political philosophers believe that the solution to the current
problems of democracy is more democracy, which idea finds expression in their books about how
democracies die, against voting and in favor of the draw by lot, etc. Others, instead, fear the excesses of
democracy, and out of concern they speak of the myth of rational voters, of illiberal democracies, of
minority rights, etc. Notwithstanding the variety of outlooks, almost no one seriously questions political
democracy as the only legitimate regime. The goal of this paper is to show that these problems and
imperfections are not a new discovery, but inherent to the very first experiments in democracy in the
modern era, acknowledged namely in Rousseau’s and Condorcet’s theories, an awareness maintained in
the reflection of sociologists such as Robert Dahl or Arend Lijphart, and rational choice theorists such as
James Buchanan and Gordon Tullock. The awareness of these essential features of democracy should help
us to advance its defense—since no other known decision procedures evade them
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