8,269 research outputs found
Galactic Open Clusters
The study of open clusters has a classic feel to it since the subject
predates anyone alive today. Despite the age of this topic, I show via an ADS
search that its relevance and importance in astronomy has grown faster in the
last few decades than astronomy in general. This is surely due to both
technical reasons and the interconnection of the field of stellar evolution to
many branches of astronomy. In this review, I outline what we know today about
open clusters and what they have taught us about a range of topics from stellar
evolution to Galactic structure to stellar disk dissipation timescales. I argue
that the most important astrophysics we have learned from open clusters is
stellar evolution and that its most important product has been reasonably
precise stellar ages. I discuss where open cluster research is likely to go in
the next few years, as well as in the era of 20m telescopes, SIM, and GAIA. Age
will continue to be of wide relevance in astronomy, from cosmology to planet
formation timescales, and with distance errors soon no longer a problem,
improved ages will be critically important to many of the most fascinating
astrophysical questions.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in Resolved Stellar Populations, ASP Conference
in Cancu
Estimates of heterogeneity (I2) can be biased in small meta-analyses
In meta-analysis, the fraction of variance that is due to heterogeneity is
known as I2. We show that the usual estimator of I2 is biased. The bias is
largest when a meta-analysis has few studies and little heterogeneity. For
example, with 7 studies and the true value of I2 at 0, the average estimate of
I2 is .124. Estimates of I2 should be interpreted cautiously when the
meta-analysis is small and the null hypothesis of homogeneity (I2=0) has not
been rejected. In small meta-analyses, confidence intervals may be preferable
to point estimates for I2.Comment: 7 pages + 3 figure
To Apply or Not to Apply: A Survey Analysis of Grant Writing Costs and Benefits
We surveyed 113 astronomers and 82 psychologists active in applying for
federally funded research on their grant-writing history between January, 2009
and November, 2012. We collected demographic data, effort levels, success
rates, and perceived non-financial benefits from writing grant proposals. We
find that the average proposal takes 116 PI hours and 55 CI hours to write;
although time spent writing was not related to whether the grant was funded.
Effort did translate into success, however, as academics who wrote more grants
received more funding. Participants indicated modest non-monetary benefits from
grant writing, with psychologists reporting a somewhat greater benefit overall
than astronomers. These perceptions of non-financial benefits were unrelated to
how many grants investigators applied for, the number of grants they received,
or the amount of time they devoted to writing their proposals. We also explored
the number of years an investigator can afford to apply unsuccessfully for
research grants and our analyses suggest that funding rates below approximately
20%, commensurate with current NIH and NSF funding, are likely to drive at
least half of the active researchers away from federally funded research. We
conclude with recommendations and suggestions for individual investigators and
for department heads.Comment: Full paper plus three tables not included here and supplemental
material available at
journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0118494, PLOS ONE,
March 4, 201
Bootstrapping an NMHV amplitude through three loops
We extend the hexagon function bootstrap to the
next-to-maximally-helicity-violating (NMHV) configuration for six-point
scattering in planar super-Yang-Mills theory at three loops.
Constraints from the differential equation, from the operator product
expansion (OPE) for Wilson loops with operator insertions, and from multi-Regge
factorization, lead to a unique answer for the three-loop ratio function. The
three-loop result also predicts additional terms in the OPE expansion, as well
as the behavior of NMHV amplitudes in the multi-Regge limit at one higher
logarithmic accuracy (NNLL) than was used as input. Both predictions are in
agreement with recent results from the flux-tube approach. We also study the
multi-particle factorization of multi-loop amplitudes for the first time. We
find that the function controlling this factorization is purely logarithmic
through three loops. We show that a function , which is closely related to
the parity-even part of the ratio function , is remarkably simple; only five
of the nine possible final entries in its symbol are non-vanishing. We study
the analytic and numerical behavior of both the parity-even and parity-odd
parts of the ratio function on simple lines traversing the space of cross
ratios , as well as on a few two-dimensional planes. Finally, we
present an empirical formula for in terms of elements of the coproduct of
the six-gluon MHV remainder function at one higher loop, which works
through three loops for (four loops for ).Comment: 69 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, 3 ancillary files; v2, minor typo's
correcte
Moving Objects in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
We identify proper motion objects in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF) using
the optical data from the original UDF program in 2004 and the near-infrared
data from the 128-orbit UDF 2012 campaign. There are 12 sources brighter than
I=27 mag that display >3sigma significant proper motions. We do not find any
proper motion objects fainter than this magnitude limit. Combining optical and
near-infrared photometry, we model the spectral energy distribution of each
point-source using stellar templates and state-of-the-art white dwarf models.
For I<27 mag, we identify 23 stars with K0-M6 spectral types and two faint blue
objects that are clearly old, thick disk white dwarfs. We measure a thick disk
white dwarf space density of 0.1-1.7 E-3 per cubic parsec from these two
objects. There are no halo white dwarfs in the UDF down to I=27 mag. Combining
the Hubble Deep Field North, South, and the UDF data, we do not see any
evidence for dark matter in the form of faint halo white dwarfs, and the
observed population of white dwarfs can be explained with the standard Galactic
models.Comment: ApJ, in pres
User Innovation in SMEs: Incidence and Transfer to Producers
The contribution of this paper is threefold. Firstly, we measure the incidence of user innovation in a broad sample of firms. Previous work has collected repeated evidence on the frequency of user innovation in a variety of industries and products, but so far its incidence has not been demonstrated in samples of larger business populations. Secondly, we assess if current innovation surveys adequately capture user innovation. Surveys such as the CIS (Community Innovation Survey) take a producer perspective and seem to overlook that in practice many innovation efforts are done by users to satisfy their process needs. Thirdly, we explore to what extent user innovations are transferred to producer firms. In doing so we assess if user innovation is marked by voluntary spillovers which is a strong argument to justify policies for user innovation. Drawing on survey data of 2 416 SMEs in the Netherlands, we find that 21% of all SMEs engage in user innovation, i.e. they develop and/or significantly modify existing techniques, equipment or software to satisfy their own process-related needs. We also find that user innovation is remains largely invisible in the current innovation surveys. Next, in a survey of technology-based small firms in the Netherlands we identified 364 specific user innovations. We found that users tend not to patent or protect their innovations, and that one out of four is transferred to producers. The data suggest a significant feedstock of voluntary knowledge spillovers from users to producer firms. We conclude that future innovation surveys should explicitly capture user innovation, and develop some recommendations to guide this effort. We also plea for more research on policies for user innovation.
The scalar pion form factor in two-flavor lattice QCD
We calculate the scalar form factor of the pion using two dynamical flavors
of non-perturbatively -improved Wilson fermions, including both
the connected and the disconnected contribution to the relevant correlation
functions. We employ the calculation of all-to-all propagators using stochastic
sources and a generalized hopping parameter expansion. From the form factor
data at vanishing momentum transfer, , and two non-vanishing we
obtain an estimate for the scalar radius \left^\pi_{_{\rm S}} of
the pion at one value of the lattice spacing and for five different pion
masses. Using Chiral Perturbation Theory at next-to-leading order, we find
\left^\pi_{_{\rm S}}=0.635\pm0.016 fm at the physical pion
mass (statistical error only). This is in good agreement with the
phenomenological estimate from -scattering. The inclusion of the
disconnected contribution is essential for achieving this level of agreement.Comment: 15 pages, 10 pdf figures, uses revtex4-1; version to appear in PR
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