749 research outputs found
The Global Chilling Effects of Antidumping Proliferation
Advocates of antidumping (AD) laws downplay their effects by arguing that the trade flows that are subject to AD are small and their distortions negligible.This paper is the first to counter that notion by quantifying the worldwide effect of AD laws on aggregate trade flows.The recent proliferation of AD laws across countries provides us with a natural experiment to estimate the trade effects of adopting versus using AD laws; differences in the intensity of use among countries with older AD laws allow us to investigate reputation effects.For this purpose, we estimate worldwide trade flows using a gravity equation spanning 21 years (1980-2000) of annual observations.Our estimates confirm that AD effects are not small.Among other findings, new tough users have their aggregate imports depressed by 15.7 billion US on top of the cumulative negative effect of reputation.For some countries, the dampening effects of AD laws on trade flows are found to nearly offset the gains from trade liberalization.antidumping;gravity equation;trade liberalization;trade flows
Occurrence of pharmaceuticals in environmental samples: a multi-analyte approach
Pharmaceuticals and their residues in the environment have been recently recognized as one of the emerging research areas in the environmental chemistry and toxicology and caused them to be viewed as a new class of priority substances. It has been reportedthat they are introduced continuously in the environment via household use, effluents from Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) and animal excreta. Up to date, the potential human, animal and ecological risk associated with the occurrence of these compounds in the environment is not well documented. There is an increased attention due to the fact that they are designed to have specific effects at low doses and to be resistant to Moreover, the science of mixture toxicity is complex and to date quite unknown (Bound et al., 2006; Hernando et al., 2006).Despite the increased research and regulatory interest in the occurrence of pharmaceuticals and their degradation products in STPs effluents and freshwater ecosystems (Hernando et al., 2006), the occurrence, the distribution between the different environmental compartments (i.e. water, sediments, suspended solids and aqueous organisms), the trophic transfer and their potential toxicity is to date far less documented (Emblidge and DeLorenze, 2006).In this sense, this study will present a detection method for the determination of a large group of pharmaceuticals (i.e. antibiotics, beta-agonists, painkillers, tranquilizers, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) used both in human and veterinary practice in environmental samples using Liquid Chromatography coupled to multiple Mass Spectrometry
Characterization of the optical properties of the buried contact of the JWST MIRI Si:As infrared blocked impurity band detectors
The Mid-Infrared Instrument MIRI on-board the James Webb Space Telescope uses
three Si:As impurity band conduction detector arrays. MIRI medium resolution
spectroscopic measurements (R3500-1500) in the 5~ to 28~
wavelength range show a 10-30\% modulation of the spectral baseline; coherent
reflections of infrared light within the Si:As detector arrays result in
fringing. We quantify the shape and impact of fringes on spectra of optical
sources observed with MIRI during ground testing and develop an optical model
to simulate the observed modulation. We use our optical model in conjunction
with the MIRI spectroscopic data to show that the properties of the buried
contact inside the MIRI Si:As detector have a significant effect on the
fringing behavior.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation
2020, submitted to SPI
Desorption of CO and O2 interstellar ice analogs
Solid O2 has been proposed as a possible reservoir for oxygen in dense clouds
through freeze-out processes. The aim of this work is to characterize
quantitatively the physical processes that are involved in the desorption
kinetics of CO-O2 ices by interpreting laboratory temperature programmed
desorption (TPD) data. This information is used to simulate the behavior of
CO-O2 ices under astrophysical conditions. The TPD spectra have been recorded
under ultra high vacuum conditions for pure, layered and mixed morphologies for
different thicknesses, temperatures and mixing ratios. An empirical kinetic
model is used to interpret the results and to provide input parameters for
astrophysical models. Binding energies are determined for different ice
morphologies. Independent of the ice morphology, the desorption of O2 is found
to follow 0th-order kinetics. Binding energies and temperature-dependent
sticking probabilities for CO-CO, O2-O2 and CO-O2 are determined. O2 is
slightly less volatile than CO, with binding energies of 912+-15 versus 858+-15
K for pure ices. In mixed and layered ices, CO does not co-desorb with O2 but
its binding energies are slightly increased compared with pure ice whereas
those for O2 are slightly decreased. Lower limits to the sticking probabilities
of CO and O2 are 0.9 and 0.85, respectively, at temperatures below 20K. The
balance between accretion and desorption is studied for O2 and CO in
astrophysically relevant scenarios. Only minor differences are found between
the two species, i.e., both desorb between 16 and 18K in typical environments
around young stars. Thus, clouds with significant abundances of gaseous CO are
unlikely to have large amounts of solid O2.Comment: 8 pages + 2 pages online material, 8 figures (1 online), accepted by
A&
Formation of hydrogen peroxide and water from the reaction of cold hydrogen atoms with solid oxygen at 10K
The reactions of cold H atoms with solid O2 molecules were investigated at 10
K. The formation of H2O2 and H2O has been confirmed by in-situ infrared
spectroscopy. We found that the reaction proceeds very efficiently and obtained
the effective reaction rates. This is the first clear experimental evidence of
the formation of water molecules under conditions mimicking those found in cold
interstellar molecular clouds. Based on the experimental results, we discuss
the reaction mechanism and astrophysical implications.Comment: 12 pages, 3 Postscript figures, use package amsmath, amssymb,
graphic
Molecular ions in L1544. II. The ionization degree
The maps presented in Paper I are here used to infer the variation of the
column densities of HCO+, DCO+, N2H+, and N2D+ as a function of distance from
the dust peak. These results are interpreted with the aid of a crude chemical
model which predicts the abundances of these species as a function of radius in
a spherically symmetric model with radial density distribution inferred from
the observations of dust emission at millimeter wavelengths and dust absorption
in the infrared. Our main observational finding is that the N(N2D+)/N(N2H+)
column density ratio is of order 0.2 towards the L1544 dust peak as compared to
N(DCO+)/N(HCO+) = 0.04. We conclude that this result as well as the general
finding that N2H+ and N2D+ correlate well with the dust is caused by CO being
depleted to a much higher degree than molecular nitrogen in the high density
core of L1544. Depletion also favors deuterium enhancement and thus N2D+, which
traces the dense and highly CO-depleted core nucleus, is much more enhanced
than DCO+. Our models do not uniquely define the chemistry in the high density
depleted nucleus of L1544 but they do suggest that the ionization degree is a
few times 10^{-9} and that the ambipolar diffusion time scale is locally
similar to the free fall time. It seems likely that the lower limit which one
obtains to ionization degree by summing all observable molecular ions is not a
great underestimate of the true ionization degree. We predict that atomic
oxygen is abundant in the dense core and, if so, H3O+ may be the main ion in
the central highly depleted region of the core.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Ap
Cryptochromes are the key photoreceptors mediating Arabidopsis inflorescence stem movements under natural sunlight
Inflorescence stem movements in response to natural sunlight are widely spread across angiosperm species and are suggested to increase reproductive success. However, the underlying mechanisms that mediate this phototropic response to natural irradiation are unclear. We studied phototropic responses of Arabidopsis inflorescences in both laboratory and field conditions and report an action spectrum at wavelengths below 500 nm, mediated by several photoreceptor families. In controlled conditions, UVR8 is the key photoreceptor for narrowband UV-B radiation while phototropins and cryptochromes are crucial for phototropic responses to narrowband blue light. At low blue irradiances, phototropins are dominant while cryptochromes are essential during high blue irradiances but subjected to the negative control of phototropins. Importantly, cryptochromes are the principal photoreceptors mediating inflorescence stem bending under full sunlight
Constraints on the gas content of the Fomalhaut debris belt. Can gas-dust interactions explain the belt's morphology?
Context: The 440 Myr old main-sequence A-star Fomalhaut is surrounded by an
eccentric debris belt with sharp edges. This sort of a morphology is usually
attributed to planetary perturbations, but the orbit of the only planetary
candidate detected so far, Fomalhaut b, is too eccentric to efficiently shape
the belt. Alternative models that could account for the morphology without
invoking a planet are stellar encounters and gas-dust interactions.
Aims: We aim to test the possibility of gas-dust interactions as the origin
of the observed morphology by putting upper limits on the total gas content of
the Fomalhaut belt.
Methods: We derive upper limits on the CII 158 m and OI 63 m
emission by using non-detections from the Photodetector Array Camera and
Spectrometer (PACS) onboard the Herschel Space Observatory. Line fluxes are
converted into total gas mass using the non-local thermodynamic equilibrium
(non-LTE) code RADEX. We consider two different cases for the elemental
abundances of the gas: solar abundances and abundances similar to those
observed for the gas in the Pictoris debris disc.
Results: The gas mass is shown to be below the millimetre dust mass by a
factor of at least 3 (for solar abundances) respectively 300 (for
Pic-like abundances).
Conclusions: The lack of gas co-spatial with the dust implies that gas-dust
interactions cannot efficiently shape the Fomalhaut debris belt. The morphology
is therefore more likely due to a yet unseen planet (Fomalhaut c) or stellar
encounters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published in A&A; versions 2 and 3: language
editin
The enigmatic nature of the circumstellar envelope and bow shock surrounding Betelgeuse as revealed by Herschel. I. Evidence of clumps, multiple arcs, and a linear bar-like structure
Context. The interaction between stellar winds and the interstellar medium
(ISM) can create complex bow shocks. The photometers on board the Herschel
Space Observatory are ideally suited to studying the morphologies of these bow
shocks. Aims. We aim to study the circumstellar environment and wind-ISM
interaction of the nearest red supergiant, Betelgeuse. Methods. Herschel PACS
images at 70, 100, and 160 micron and SPIRE images at 250, 350, and 500 micron
were obtained by scanning the region around Betelgeuse. These data were
complemented with ultraviolet GALEX data, near-infrared WISE data, and radio 21
cm GALFA-HI data. The observational properties of the bow shock structure were
deduced from the data and compared with hydrodynamical simulations. Results.
The infrared Herschel images of the environment around Betelgeuse are
spectacular, showing the occurrence of multiple arcs at 6-7 arcmin from the
central target and the presence of a linear bar at 9 arcmin. Remarkably, no
large-scale instabilities are seen in the outer arcs and linear bar. The dust
temperature in the outer arcs varies between 40 and 140 K, with the linear bar
having the same colour temperature as the arcs. The inner envelope shows clear
evidence of a non-homogeneous clumpy structure (beyond 15 arcsec), probably
related to the giant convection cells of the outer atmosphere. The
non-homogeneous distribution of the material even persists until the collision
with the ISM. A strong variation in brightness of the inner clumps at a radius
of 2 arcmin suggests a drastic change in mean gas and dust density some 32 000
yr ago. Using hydrodynamical simulations, we try to explain the observed
morphology of the bow shock around Betelgeuse. Conclusions: [abbreviated]Comment: 26 page
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