6,324 research outputs found
Origins of the ALMA Project in the scientific visions of the North American, European, and Japanese astronomical communities
ALMA is a worldwide project, the synthesis of early visions of astronomers in
its three partner communities, Europe, North America, and Japan. The evolution
of these concepts and their eventual merger into ALMA are discussed, setting
the background for the papers which follow on the scientific requirements and
expected performance of ALMA for extra-galactic, galactic, and solar system
research.Comment: 4 pages, including 1 figure; to appear in ESA SP-577, Proceedings of
the conference "Dusty and Molecular Universe - A prelude to HERSCHEL AND
ALMA", October 25-27, 2004, Pari
Remarks on drift estimation for diffusion processes
In applications such as molecular dynamics it is of interest to fit Smoluchowski
and Langevin equations to data. Practitioners often achieve this by a variety of seemingly ad hoc
procedures such as fitting to the empirical measure generated by the data, and fitting to properties of
auto-correlation functions. Statisticians, on the other hand, often use estimation procedures which fit
diffusion processes to data by applying the maximum likelihood principle to the path-space density
of the desired model equations, and through knowledge of the properties of quadratic variation. In
this note we show that these procedures used by practitioners and statisticians to fit drift functions
are, in fact, closely related and can be thought of as two alternative ways to regularize the (singular)
likelihood function for the drift. We also present the results of numerical experiments which probe
the relative efficacy of the two approaches to model identification and compare them with other
methods such as the minimum distance estimator
On the Leading Error Term of Exponentially Fitted Numerov Methods
Second-order boundary value problems are solved with exponentially-fitted Numerov methods. In order to attribute a value to the free parameter in such a method, we look at the leading term of the local truncation error. By solving the problem in two phases, a value for this parameter can be found such that the tuned method behaves like a sixth order method. Furthermore, guidelines to choose between multi le possible values for this parameter are given
High Redshift HCN Emission: Dense Star-Forming Molecular Gas in IRAS F10214+4724
Hydrogen cyanide emission in the J=1-0 transition has been detected at
redshift z=2.2858 in IRAS F10214+4724 using the Green Bank Telescope . This is
the second detection of HCN emission at high redshift. The large HCN line
luminosity in F10214 is similar to that in the Cloverleaf (z=2.6) and the
ultra-luminous infrared galaxies Mrk231 and Arp220. This is also true of the
ratio of HCN to CO luminosities. The ratio of far-infrared luminosity to HCN
luminosity, an indicator of the star formation rate per solar mass of dense
gas, follows the correlation found for normal spirals and infrared luminous
starburst galaxies. F10214 clearly contains a starburst that contributes,
together with its embedded quasar, to its overall infrared luminosity. A new
technique for removing spectral baselines in the search for weak, broad
emission lines is presented.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; accepted ApJ(Letters
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