1,754 research outputs found
Low-frequency gravitational-wave science with eLISA/NGO
We review the expected science performance of the New Gravitational-Wave
Observatory (NGO, a.k.a. eLISA), a mission under study by the European Space
Agency for launch in the early 2020s. eLISA will survey the low-frequency
gravitational-wave sky (from 0.1 mHz to 1 Hz), detecting and characterizing a
broad variety of systems and events throughout the Universe, including the
coalescences of massive black holes brought together by galaxy mergers; the
inspirals of stellar-mass black holes and compact stars into central galactic
black holes; several millions of ultracompact binaries, both detached and mass
transferring, in the Galaxy; and possibly unforeseen sources such as the relic
gravitational-wave radiation from the early Universe. eLISA's high
signal-to-noise measurements will provide new insight into the structure and
history of the Universe, and they will test general relativity in its
strong-field dynamical regime.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, proceedings of the 9th Amaldi Conference on
Gravitational Waves. Final journal version. For a longer exposition of the
eLISA science case, see http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.362
Dynamics of Confident Voting
We introduce the confident voter model, in which each voter can be in one of
two opinions and can additionally have two levels of commitment to an opinion
--- confident and unsure. Upon interacting with an agent of a different
opinion, a confident voter becomes less committed, or unsure, but does not
change opinion. However, an unsure agent changes opinion by interacting with an
agent of a different opinion. In the mean-field limit, a population of size N
is quickly driven to a mixed state and remains close to this state before
consensus is eventually achieved in a time of the order of ln N. In two
dimensions, the distribution of consensus times is characterized by two
distinct times --- one that scales linearly with N and another that appears to
scale as N^{3/2}. The longer time arises from configurations that fall into
long-lived states that consist of two (or more) single-opinion stripes before
consensus is reached. These stripe states arise from an effective surface
tension between domains of different opinions.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, iop format. Version 2 has minor revisions in
response to referee comments. For publication in JSTA
The management of corporate social responsibility through projects : a more economically developed country perspective
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is an increasingly influential concept, claimed to be implemented more in the West than in the Gulf Cooperation Community (GCC) and Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region where CSR is often portrayed as less developed and mainly philanthropic. The research reported in this paper investigates capacity building for CSR in organizations and examines the research question as to whether the project management of CSR can contribute to increasing levels of awareness, engagement, and implementation. The empirical study therefore examines the management of CSR through projects and consists of data analysed from 29 interviews conducted during 2011â2016 with CSR representatives for organizations operating in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which is a member of the GCC, located in the MENA region, and categorized as a more economically developed country. The findings reveal evidence supporting the argument that organizations with capabilities in the project management of CSR are in the position to develop capacities for strategic CSR. This empirical analysis of CSR capacity development across varying degrees of sophistication in the project management of CSR activities implies a more developed stage of CSR engagement, at least in the sample of organizations studied, than is expressed in the extant literature on CSR in the UAE, and elsewhere in the MENA region. The use of project management to organize, implement, align, and monitor CSR activity supports capacity development in CSR and can contribute to its sustainability. We recommend that future research examines the political, business, and institutional factors that could further develop CSR in organizations when managed through projects
Fermi-LAT Search for Pulsar Wind Nebulae around gamma-ray Pulsars
The high sensitivity of the Fermi-LAT (Large Area Telescope) offers the first
opportunity to study faint and extended GeV sources such as pulsar wind nebulae
(PWNe). After one year of observation the LAT detected and identified three
pulsar wind nebulae: the Crab Nebula, Vela-X and the PWN inside MSH 15-52. In
the meantime, the list of LAT detected pulsars increased steadily. These
pulsars are characterized by high energy loss rates from ~3 \times 10^{33} erg
s to 5 \times 10 erg s and are therefore likely to power a
PWN. This paper summarizes the search for PWNe in the off-pulse windows of 54
LAT-detected pulsars using 16 months of survey observations. Ten sources show
significant emission, seven of these likely being of magnetospheric origin. The
detection of significant emission in the off-pulse interval offers new
constraints on the gamma-ray emitting regions in pulsar magnetospheres. The
three other sources with significant emission are the Crab Nebula, Vela-X and a
new pulsar wind nebula candidate associated with the LAT pulsar PSR J1023-5746,
coincident with the TeV source HESS J1023-575. We further explore the
association between the H.E.S.S. and the Fermi source by modeling its spectral
energy distribution. Flux upper limits derived for the 44 remaining sources are
used to provide new constraints on famous PWNe that have been detected at keV
and/or TeV energies.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal, 42 pages, 17
figure
PSR J1907+0602: A Radio-Faint Gamma-Ray Pulsar Powering a Bright TeV Pulsar Wind Nebula
We present multiwavelength studies of the 106.6 ms gamma-ray pulsar PSR
J1907+06 near the TeV source MGRO J1908+06. Timing observations with Fermi
result in a precise position determination for the pulsar of R.A. =
19h07m547(2), decl. = +06:02:16(2) placing the pulsar firmly within the TeV
source extent, suggesting the TeV source is the pulsar wind nebula of PSR
J1907+0602. Pulsed gamma-ray emission is clearly visible at energies from 100
MeV to above 10 GeV. The phase-averaged power-law index in the energy range E >
0.1 GeV is = 1.76 \pm 0.05 with an exponential cutoff energy E_{c} = 3.6 \pm
0.5 GeV. We present the energy-dependent gamma-ray pulsed light curve as well
as limits on off-pulse emission associated with the TeV source. We also report
the detection of very faint (flux density of ~3.4 microJy) radio pulsations
with the Arecibo telescope at 1.5 GHz having a dispersion measure DM = 82.1 \pm
1.1 cm^{-3}pc. This indicates a distance of 3.2 \pm 0.6 kpc and a
pseudo-luminosity of L_{1400} ~ 0.035 mJy kpc^2. A Chandra ACIS observation
revealed an absorbed, possibly extended, compact <(4 arcsec) X-ray source with
significant non-thermal emission at R.A. = 19h07m54.76, decl. = +06:02:14.6
with a flux of 2.3^{+0.6}_{-1.4} X 10^{-14} erg cm^{-2} s^{-1}. From archival
ASCA observations, we place upper limits on any arcminute scale 2--10 keV X-ray
emission of ~ 1 X 10^{-13} erg cm^{-2} s^{-1}. The implied distance to the
pulsar is compatible with that of the supernova remnant G40.5-0.5, located on
the far side of the TeV nebula from PSR J1907+0602, and the S74 molecular cloud
on the nearer side which we discuss as potential birth sites
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