7,766 research outputs found
The Economics of Suicide: An Empirical Study
This study uses economic theory to investigate the impact of socioeconomic factors on the
suicide rate in the United States. Using a utility maximization framework based on
Hamermesh and Soss’ 1974 model, a panel data set from 2000-2010 is constructed for the 50
states and District of Columbia. This research adds to the literature in the field by focusing on
the more recent past and providing additional variables consistent with today’s challenges.
The results from the multiple regression analysis can be used to advocate policies that may
reduce the suicide rate in the future
On the Connection Between Metal Absorbers and Quasar Nebulae
We establish a simple model for the distribution of cold gas around L*
galaxies using a large set of observational constraints on the properties of
strong MgII absorber systems. Our analysis suggests that the halos of L*
galaxies are filled with cool gaseous clouds having sizes of order 1kpc and
densities of ~10^{-2} cm^{-3}. We then investigate the physical effects of
cloud irradiation by a quasar and study the resulting spectral signatures. We
show that quasar activity gives rise to (i) extended narrow-line emission on
~100kpc scales and (ii) an anisotropy in the properties of the absorbing gas
arising from the geometry of the quasar radiation field. Provided that quasars
reside in halos several times more massive than those of L* galaxies, our model
predictions appear to be in agreement with observations of narrow emission-line
nebulae around quasars and the recent detections of ~100kpc cold gaseous
envelopes around those objects, suggesting a common origin for these phenomena.
We discuss the implications of our results for understanding absorption
systems, probing quasar environments at high redshifts, and testing the quasar
unification scheme.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures (ApJ submitted
Optical properties and spatial distribution of MgII absorbers from SDSS image stacking
We present a statistical analysis of the photometric properties and spatial
distribution of more than 2,800 MgII absorbers with 0.37<z<1 and rest
equivalent width W_0(\lambda2796)>0.8\AA detected in SDSS quasar spectra. Using
an improved image stacking technique, we measure the cross-correlation between
MgII gas and light (in the g, r, i and z-bands) from 10 to 200 kpc and infer
the light-weighted impact parameter distribution of MgII absorbers. Such a
quantity is well described by a power-law with an index that strongly depends
on W_0, ranging from ~-1 for W_0~ 1.5\AA. At redshift
0.37<z<0.55, we find the average luminosity enclosed within 100 kpc around MgII
absorbers to be M_g=-20.65+-0.11 mag, which is ~0.5 L_g*. The global
luminosity-weighted colors are typical of present-day intermediate type
galaxies. However, while the light of weaker absorbers originates mostly from
red passive galaxies, stronger systems display the colors of blue star-forming
galaxies. Based on these observations, we argue that the origin of strong MgII
absorber systems might be better explained by models of metal-enriched gas
outflows from star-forming/bursting galaxies. Our analysis does not show any
redshift dependence for both impact parameter and rest-frame colors up to z=1.
However, we do observe a brightening of the absorbers related light at high
redshift (~50% from z~0.4 to 1). We argue that MgII absorbers are a phenomenon
typical of a given evolutionary phase that more massive galaxies experience
earlier than less massive ones, in a downsizing fashion. (abridged)Comment: ApJ in press, 28 pages, 16 figures, using emulateapj. Only typo
corrections wrt the original submission (v1
Damped Lyman Alpha Systems at z<1.65: The Expanded SDSS HST Sample
We present results of our HST Cycle 11 Survey for low-redshift (z<1.65) DLAs
in the UV spectra of quasars selected from the SDSS Early Data Release. These
quasars have strong intervening MgII-FeII systems which are known signatures of
high column density neutral gas. In total, UV observations of Ly-alpha
absorption in 197 MgII systems with z<1.65 and rest equivalent width (REW)
W2796 \ge 0.3A have now been obtained. The main results are: (1) 36(+/- 6)% of
systems with W2796 \ge 0.5 A and FeII W2600 \ge 0.5 A are DLAs. This increases
to 42(+/- 7)% for systems with W2796/W2600 0.1 A. (2) The
mean N(HI) of MgII systems with 0.3 A \le W2796 < 0.6 A is a factor of ~36
lower than that of systems with W2796 \ge 0.6 A. (3) The DLA incidence per unit
redshift is consistent with no evolution for z <~ 2 (Omega_L=0.7, Omega_M =
0.3), but exhibits significant evolution for z >~ 2. (4) Omega_{DLA} is
constant for 0.5<z<5.0 to within the uncertainties. This is larger than
Omega_{gas}(z=0) by a factor of ~2. (5) The slope of the N(HI) distribution
does not change significantly with redshift. However, the low redshift
distribution is marginally flatter due to the higher fraction of high N(HI)
systems in our sample. (6) Finally, using the precision of MgII survey
statistics, we find that there may be evidence of a decreasing Omega_{DLA} from
z=0.5 to z=0. We reiterate the conclusion of Hopkins, Rao, & Turnshek that very
high columns of neutral gas might be missed by DLA surveys because of their
very small cross sections, and therefore, that Omega_{DLA} might not include
the bulk of the neutral gas mass in the Universe. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 22 pages, 22 figure
Where are the missing cosmic metals ?
The majority of the heavy elements produced by stars 2 billion years after
the Big Bang (redshift z~3) are presently undetected at those epochs. We
propose a solution to this cosmic `missing metals' problem in which such
elements are stored in gaseous halos produced by supernova explosions around
star-forming galaxies. By using data from the ESO/VLT Large Program, we find
that:(i) only 5%-9% of the produced metals reside in the cold phase, the rest
being found in the hot (log T=5.8-6.4) phase; (ii) 1%-6% (3%-30%) of the
observed CIV (OVI) is in the hot phase. We conclude that at z~3 more than 90%
of the metals produced during the star forming history can be placed in a hot
phase of the IGM, without violating any observational constraint. The observed
galaxy mass-metallicity relation, and the intergalactic medium and intracluster
medium metallicity evolution are also naturally explained by this hypothesis.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, ApJ Letters, in pres
Combinatorics of Labelled Parallelogram polyominoes
We obtain explicit formulas for the enumeration of labelled parallelogram
polyominoes. These are the polyominoes that are bounded, above and below, by
north-east lattice paths going from the origin to a point (k,n). The numbers
from 1 and n (the labels) are bijectively attached to the north steps of
the above-bounding path, with the condition that they appear in increasing
values along consecutive north steps. We calculate the Frobenius characteristic
of the action of the symmetric group S_n on these labels. All these enumeration
results are refined to take into account the area of these polyominoes. We make
a connection between our enumeration results and the theory of operators for
which the intergral Macdonald polynomials are joint eigenfunctions. We also
explain how these same polyominoes can be used to explicitly construct a linear
basis of a ring of SL_2-invariants.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figure
Star formation rate and dynamical mass of 10^8 solar mass black hole host galaxies at redshift 6
We present ALMA observations of two moderate luminosity quasars at redshift
6. These quasars from the Canada-France High-z Quasar Survey (CFHQS) have black
hole masses of ~10^8 M_solar. Both quasars are detected in the [CII] line and
dust continuum. Combining these data with our previous study of two similar
CFHQS quasars we investigate the population properties. We show that z>6
quasars have a significantly lower far-infrared luminosity than
bolometric-luminosity-matched samples at lower redshift, inferring a lower star
formation rate, possibly correlated with the lower black hole masses at z=6.
The ratios of [CII] to far-infrared luminosities in the CFHQS quasars are
comparable with those of starbursts of similar star formation rate in the local
universe. We determine values of velocity dispersion and dynamical mass for the
quasar host galaxies based on the [CII] data. We find that there is no
significant offset from the relations defined by nearby galaxies with similar
black hole masses. There is however a marked increase in the scatter at z=6,
beyond the large observational uncertainties.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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