9,186 research outputs found
The Production Rate and Employment of Ph.D. Astronomers
In an effort to encourage self-regulation of the astronomy job market, I
examine the supply of, and demand for, astronomers over time. On the supply
side, I document the production rate of Ph.D. astronomers from 1970 to 2006
using the UMI Dissertation Abstracts database, along with data from other
independent sources. I compare the long-term trends in Ph.D. production with
federal astronomy research funding over the same time period, and I demonstrate
that additional funding is correlated with higher subsequent Ph.D. production.
On the demand side, I monitor the changing patterns of employment using
statistics about the number and types of jobs advertised in the AAS Job
Register from 1984 to 2006. Finally, I assess the sustainability of the job
market by normalizing this demand by the annual Ph.D. production. The most
recent data suggest that there are now annual advertisements for about one
postdoctoral job, half a faculty job, and half a research/support position for
every new domestic Ph.D. recipient in astronomy and astrophysics. The average
new astronomer might expect to hold up to 3 jobs before finding a steady
position.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, PASP accepte
Measuring ^{12}C(&alpha,&gamma)^{16}O from White Dwarf Asteroseismology
During helium burning in the core of a red giant, the relative rates of the
3&alpha and ^{12}C(&alpha,&gamma)^{16}O reactions largely determine the final
ratio of carbon to oxygen in the resulting white dwarf star. The uncertainty in
the 3&alpha reaction at stellar energies due to the extrapolation from
high-energy laboratory measurements is relatively small, but this is not the
case for the ^{12}C(&alpha,&gamma)^{16}O reaction. Recent advances in the
analysis of asteroseismological data on pulsating white dwarf stars now make it
possible to obtain precise measurements of the central ratio of carbon to
oxygen, providing a more direct way to measure the ^{12}C(&alpha,&gamma)^{16}O
reaction rate at stellar energies. We assess the systematic uncertainties of
this approach and quantify small shifts in the measured central oxygen
abundance originating from the observations and from model settings that are
kept fixed during the optimization. Using new calculations of white dwarf
internal chemical profiles, we find a rate for the ^{12}C(&alpha,&gamma)^{16}O
reaction that is significantly higher than most published values. The accuracy
of this method may improve as we modify some of the details of our description
of white dwarf interiors that were not accessible through previous
model-fitting methods.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, uses emulateapj5.sty, Accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journa
White Dwarf Asteroseismology and the ^12C(alpha,gamma)^16O Rate
Due to a new global analysis method, it is now possible to measure the
internal composition of pulsating white dwarf stars, even with relatively
simple theoretical models. The precise internal mixture of carbon and oxygen is
the largest single source of uncertainty in ages derived from white dwarf
cosmochronometry, and contains information about the rate of the
astrophysically important, but experimentally uncertain, ^12C(alpha,gamma)^16O
nuclear reaction. Recent determinations of the internal composition and
structure of two helium-atmosphere variable (DBV) white dwarf stars, GD 358 and
CBS 114, initially led to conflicting implied rates for the
^12C(alpha,gamma)^16O reaction. If both stars were formed through single-star
evolution, then the initial analyses of their pulsation frequencies must have
differed in some systematic way. I present improved fits to the two sets of
pulsation data, resolving the tension between the initial results and leading
to a value for the ^12C(alpha,gamma)^16O reaction rate that is consistent with
recent laboratory measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, uses emulateapj5.sty; Accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
The core/envelope symmetry in pulsating stars
We demonstrate that there is an inherent symmetry in the way high-overtone
stellar pulsations sample the core and the envelope, which can potentially lead
to an ambiguity in the asteroseismologically derived locations of internal
structures. We provide an intuitive example of the source of this symmetry by
analogy with a vibrating string. For the stellar case, we focus on the white
dwarf stars, establishing the practical consequences for high-order white dwarf
pulsations both analytically and numerically. In addition, we verify the effect
empirically by cross-fitting two different structural models, and we discuss
the consequences that this approximate symmetry may have for past and present
asteroseismological fits of the pulsating DBV, GD 358. Finally, we show how the
signatures of composition transition zones that are brought about by physically
distinct processes may be used to help alleviate this potential ambiguity in
our asteroseismological interpretation of the pulsation frequencies observed in
white dwarf stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 8 pages, 8 figure
The Strauss conjecture on asymptotically flat space-times
By assuming a certain localized energy estimate, we prove the existence
portion of the Strauss conjecture on asymptotically flat manifolds, possibly
exterior to a compact domain, when the spatial dimension is 3 or 4. In
particular, this result applies to the 3 and 4-dimensional Schwarzschild and
Kerr (with small angular momentum) black hole backgrounds, long range
asymptotically Euclidean spaces, and small time-dependent asymptotically flat
perturbations of Minkowski space-time. We also permit lower order perturbations
of the wave operator. The key estimates are a class of weighted Strichartz
estimates, which are used near infinity where the metrics can be viewed as
small perturbations of the Minkowski metric, and the assumed localized energy
estimate, which is used in the remaining compact set.Comment: Final version, to appear in SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis. 17
page
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