24,367 research outputs found
A Note on the Importance of Weak Convergence Rates for SPDE Approximations in Multilevel Monte Carlo Schemes
It is a well-known rule of thumb that approximations of stochastic partial
differential equations have essentially twice the order of weak convergence
compared to the corresponding order of strong convergence. This is already
known for many approximations of stochastic (ordinary) differential equations
while it is recent research for stochastic partial differential equations. In
this note it is shown how the availability of weak convergence results
influences the number of samples in multilevel Monte Carlo schemes and
therefore reduces the computational complexity of these schemes for a given
accuracy of the approximations.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, updated to version published in the Proceedings
of MCQMC1
Reference models for thermospheric NO
Nitric oxide has been measured with an ultraviolet spectrometer on the polar-orbiting satellite Solar Mesosphere Explorer (SME) for the period January 1982 to August 1986. The nitric oxide database contains densities at all latitudes sorted into 5 degree bins and at altitudes between 100 and 140 km sorted into 3.3 km-bins. The largest densities occur at latitudes in the auroral zones where the density varies as a function of geomagnetic activity. Variations of a factor of 10 occur between times of intense activity and quiet times. At low latitudes, the nitric oxide density at 110 km varies from a mean value of 3 times 10(exp 7) molecules per cubic cm in January 1982 to a mean value of 4 times 10(exp 6) molecules per cubic cm during solar minimum conditions in 1986. In addition, the low-latitude nitric oxide density varies plus or minus 50 percent with a period of 27 days during times of high solar activity
Education in the Post-Lake View Era: What Is Arkansas Doing to Close the Achievement Gap?
Assesses whether the state's reforms can close the achievement gap among racial and socioeconomic groups. Proposes additional steps such as school health programs, extended learning programs, targeted small classes, and more parental engagement
No Evidence for [O III] Variability in Mrk 142
Using archival data from the 2008 Lick AGN Monitoring Project, Zhang & Feng
(2016) claimed to find evidence for flux variations in the narrow [O III]
emission of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 142 over a two-month time span. If
correct, this would imply a surprisingly compact size for the narrow-line
region. We show that the claimed [O III] variations are merely the result of
random errors in the overall flux calibration of the spectra. The data do not
provide any support for the hypothesis that the [O III] flux was variable
during the 2008 monitoring period.Comment: Response to Zhang & Feng 2016, MNRAS Letters, 457, L64
(arXiv:1512.07673). Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 5 pages, 2
figure
Investigation of a lineament expressed in an oblique Apollo 9 photograph
The author has identified the following significant results. A linear topographic feature, referred to as the New York Mountains lineament, was recognized in an oblique Apollo 9 photograph to extend from the Providence Mountains of California to near Lake Mead, Arizona. In subsequent vertical ERTS-1 imagery this feature was found to have vague and indistinct expression. A study was conducted to determine the possible geologic origin(s) of the lineament and to explain its anomalous expression in the Apollo 9 photograph. The results suggest that the apparent expression of the lineament is due to a combination of the oblique view of the Apollo photograph, low sun angle illumination of southeast facing slopes, shadowing of northwest facing slopes, and linear snow line along the southeastern flank of the New York Mountains. No geologic or structural causes for the lineament have been found
A Search for Optical Variability of Type 2 Quasars in SDSS Stripe 82
Hundreds of Type 2 quasars have been identified in Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS) data, and there is substantial evidence that they are generally galaxies
with highly obscured central engines, in accord with unified models for active
galactic nuclei (AGNs). A straightforward expectation of unified models is that
highly obscured Type 2 AGNs should show little or no optical variability on
timescales of days to years. As a test of this prediction, we have carried out
a search for variability in Type 2 quasars in SDSS Stripe 82 using
difference-imaging photometry. Starting with the Type 2 AGN catalogs of
Zakamska et al. (2003) and Reyes et al. (2008), we find evidence of significant
g-band variability in 17 out of 173 objects for which light curves could be
measured from the Stripe 82 data. To determine the nature of this variability,
we obtained new Keck spectropolarimetry observations for seven of these
variable AGNs. The Keck data show that these objects have low continuum
polarizations (p<~1% in most cases) and all seven have broad H-alpha and/or
MgII emission lines in their total (unpolarized) spectra, indicating that they
should actually be classified as Type 1 AGNs. We conclude that the primary
reason variability is found in the SDSS-selected Type 2 AGN samples is that
these samples contain a small fraction of Type 1 AGNs as contaminants, and it
is not necessary to invoke more exotic possible explanations such as a
population of "naked" or unobscured Type 2 quasars. Aside from misclassified
Type 1 objects, the Type 2 quasars do not generally show detectable optical
variability over the duration of the Stripe 82 survey.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A
Intermediate-mass Black Holes in Galactic Nuclei
We present the first homogeneous sample of intermediate-mass black hole
candidates in active galactic nuclei. Starting with broad-line active nuclei
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, we use the linewidth-luminosity-mass scaling
relation to select a sample of 19 galaxies in the mass range M_BH ~ 8 x 10^4 -
10^6 solar masses. In contrast to the local active galaxy population, the host
galaxies are ~1 mag fainter than M* and thus are probably late-type systems.
The active nuclei are also faint, with M_g ~ -15 to -18 mag, while the
bolometric luminosities are close to the Eddington limit. The spectral
properties of the sample are compared to the related class of objects known as
narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies. We discuss the importance of our sample as
observational analogues of primordial black holes, contributors to the
integrated signal for future gravitational wave experiments, and as a valuable
tool in the calibration of the M-sigma relation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. To appear in "The Interplay among Black Holes,
Stars and ISM in Galactic Nuclei," Proc. IAU 222 (Gramado, Brazil), eds Th.
Storchi Bergmann, L.C. Ho, H.R. Schmit
The Cost Channel of Monetary Transmission
This paper presents evidence that the cost channel' may be an important part of the monetary transmission mechanism. We argue that if working capital is an essential component of production and distribution, monetary contractions can affect output through a supply channel as well as the traditional demand-type channels. We specify an industry equilibrium model and use it to interpret the results of a VAR analysis. We find that following a monetary contraction, many industries exhibit periods of falling output and rising price-wage ratios, consistent with a supply shock in our model. We also show that the effects are noticeably more pronounced during the period before 1979.
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