2,824 research outputs found
The Use of Economic Incentives in Developing Countries: Lessons from International Experience with Industrial Air Pollution
To what extent should developing countries eschew conventional command and control environmental regulation that is increasingly seen as inefficient and rely instead on economic incentives? This paper addresses this question as it pertains to industrial air pollution. The paper discusses the advantages and disadvantages of various economic incentive instruments, presents in-depth case studies of their application in Sweden, the United States, China, and Poland, and proposes a number of policy guidelines. The authors argue that both design deficiencies and pervasive constraints on monitoring and enforcement impede the effectiveness of economic instruments in developing countries. The latter are difficult to rectify, at least in the medium term. As a result, tradable permits are generally not practical. Suitably modified however, emissions fee policies probably are appropriate. They can provide a foundation for a transition to an effective economic incentive system, and can raise much needed revenue for environmental projects and programs. In addition, if political opposition can be overcome, environmental taxes constitute a second-best but potentially effective pollution control instrument.
Using Alternative Regulatory Instruments to Control Fixed Point Air Pollution in Developing Countries: Lessons from International Experience
Mass and luminosity evolution of young stellar objects
A model of protostar mass and luminosity evolution in clusters gives new
estimates of cluster age, protostar birthrate, accretion rate and mean
accretion time. The model assumes constant protostar birthrate, core-clump
accretion, and equally likely accretion stopping. Its parameters are set to
reproduce the initial mass function, and to match protostar luminosity
distributions in nearby star-forming regions. It obtains cluster ages and
birthrates from the observed numbers of protostars and pre-main sequence (PMS)
stars, and from the modal value of the protostar luminosity. In 31 embedded
clusters and complexes the global cluster age is 1-3 Myr, matching available
estimates based on optical spectroscopy and evolutionary tracks. This method of
age estimation is simpler than optical spectroscopy, and is more useful for
young embedded clusters where optical spectrocopy is not possible. In the
youngest clusters, the protostar fraction decreases outward from the densest
gas, indicating that the local star-forming age increases outward from a few
0.1 Myr in small protostar-dominated zones to a few Myr in large PMS-dominated
zones.Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal, Part
Luminosity Functions of Spitzer Identified Protostars in Nine Nearby Molecular Clouds
We identify protostars in Spitzer surveys of nine star-forming molecular
clouds within 1 kpc: Serpens, Perseus, Ophiuchus, Chamaeleon, Lupus, Taurus,
Orion, Cep OB3, and Mon R2, which combined host over 700 protostar candidates.
Our diverse cloud sample allows us to compare protostar luminosity functions in
these varied environments. We combine photometry from 2MASS J, H, and Ks bands
and Spitzer IRAC and MIPS 24 micron bands to create 1 - 24 micron spectral
energy distributions (SEDs). Using protostars from the c2d survey with
well-determined bolometric luminosities (Lbol), we derive a relationship
between Lbol, L_MIR (integrated from 1 - 24 microns), and SED slope.
Estimations of Lbol for protostar candidates are combined to create luminosity
functions for each cloud. Contamination due to edge-on disks, reddened Class II
sources, and galaxies is estimated and removed from the luminosity functions.
We find that luminosity functions for high mass star forming clouds peak near 1
Lsun and show a tail extending toward luminosities above 100 Lsun. The
luminosity functions of the low mass star forming clouds do not exhibit a
common peak, however the combined luminosity function of these regions peaks
below 1 Lsun. Finally, we examine the luminosity functions as a function of the
local surface density of YSOs. In the Orion molecular cloud, we find a
significant difference between the luminosity functions of protostars in
regions of high and low stellar density, the former of which is biased toward
more luminous sources. This may be the result of primordial mass segregation,
although this interpretation is not unique. We compare our luminosity functions
to those predicted by models and find that our observed luminosity functions
are best matched by models which invoke competitive accretion, although we do
not find strong agreement of the high mass star forming clouds with any of the
models.Comment: 76 pages, 18 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
The Structure of the Star-forming Cluster RCW 38
We present a study of the structure of the high mass star-forming region
RCW~38 and the spatial distribution of its young stellar population. Spitzer
IRAC photometry 3-8um are combined with 2MASS near-IR data to identify young
stellar objects by IR-excess emission from their circumstellar material.
Chandra X-ray data are used to identify class III pre-main sequence stars
lacking circumstellar material. We identify 624 YSOs: 23 class 0/I and 90 flat
spectrum protostars, 437 Class II stars, and 74 Class III stars. We also
identify 29 (27 new) O star candidates over the IRAC field. Seventy-two stars
exhibit IR-variability, including seven class 0/I and 12 flat spectrum YSOs. A
further 177 tentative candidates are identified by their location in the IRAC
[3.6] vs. [3.6]-[5.8] cmd. We find strong evidence of subclustering in the
region. Three subclusters were identified surrounding the central cluster, with
massive and variable stars in each subcluster. The central region shows
evidence of distinct spatial distributions of the protostars and pre-main
sequence stars. A previously detected IR cluster, DB2001_Obj36, has been
established as a subcluster of RCW 38. This suggests that star formation in RCW
38 occurs over a more extended area than previously thought. The gas to dust
ratio is examined using the X-ray derived hydrogen column density, N_H and the
K-band extinction, and found to be consistent with the diffuse ISM, in contrast
with Serpens & NGC1333. We posit that the high photoionising flux of massive
stars in RCW 38 affects the agglomeration of the dust grains.Comment: 98 pages, 15 figure
The Properties of X-ray Luminous Young Stellar Objects in the NGC 1333 and Serpens Embedded Clusters
We present Chandra X-ray data of the NGC 1333 embedded cluster, combining
these data with existing Chandra data, Sptizer photometry and ground based
spectroscopy of both the NGC 1333 & Serpens North clusters to perform a
detailed study of the X-ray properties of two of the nearest embedded clusters
to the Sun. In NGC 1333, a total of 95 cluster members are detected in X-rays,
of which 54 were previously identified with Spitzer. Of the Spitzer sources, we
detect 23% of the Class I protostars, 53% of the Flat Spectrum sources, 52% of
the Class II, and 50% of the Transition Disk YSOs. Forty-one Class III members
of the cluster are identified, bringing the total identified YSO population to
178. The X-ray Luminosity Functions (XLFs) of the NGC 1333 and Serpens clusters
are compared to each other and the Orion Nebula Cluster. Based on this
comparison, we obtain a new distance for the Serpens cluster of 360+22/-13 pc.
The X-ray luminosity was found to depend on the bolometric luminosity as in
previous studies of other clusters, and that Lx depends primarily on the
stellar surface area. In the NGC 1333 cluster, the Class III sources have a
somewhat higher X-ray luminosity for a given surface area. We also find
evidence in NGC 1333 for a jump in the X-ray luminosity between spectral types
of M0 and K7, we speculate that this may result from the presence of radiative
zones in the K-stars. The gas column density vs. extinction in the NGC 1333 was
found to be N_H = 0.89 +/- 0.13 x 10^22 A_K, this is lower than expected of the
standard ISM but similar to that found previously in the Serpens Cloud Core.Comment: 58 pages, 14 figures, accepted by A
Spitzer Observations of NGC 1333: A Study of Structure and Evolution in a Nearby Embedded Cluster
We present a comprehensive analysis of structure in the young, embedded
cluster, NGC 1333 using members identified with Spitzer and 2MASS photometry
based on their IR-excess emission. In total, 137 members are identified in this
way, composed of 39 protostars and 98 more evolved pre-main sequence stars with
disks. Of the latter class, four are transition/debris disk candidates. The
fraction of exposed pre-main sequence stars with disks is 83% +/- 11%, showing
that there is a measurable diskless pre-main sequence population. The sources
in each of the Class I and Class II evolutionary states are shown to have very
different spatial distributions relative to the distribution of the dense gas
in their natal cloud. However, the distribution of nearest neighbor spacings
among these two groups of sources are found to be quite similar, with a strong
peak at spacings of 0.045 pc. Radial and azimuthal density profiles and surface
density maps computed from the identified YSOs show that NGC 1333 is elongated
and not strongly centrally concentrated, confirming previous claims in the
literature. We interpret these new results as signs of a low velocity
dispersion, extremely young cluster that is not in virial equilibrium.Comment: 59 pages, 20 figures, accepted to ApJ, verion with full resolution
figures available at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~rgutermuth/preprints/gutermuth_ngc1333.pdf .
Updated to fix astro-ph figure garblin
A Combined Spitzer and Chandra Survey of Young Stellar Objects in the Serpens Cloud Core
We present Spitzer and Chandra observations of the nearby (~260 pc) embedded
stellar cluster in the Serpens Cloud Core. We observed, using Spitzer's IRAC
and MIPS instruments, in six wavelength bands from 3 to 70 , to detect
thermal emission from circumstellar disks and protostellar envelopes, and to
classify stars using color-color diagrams and spectral energy distributions
(SEDs). These data are combined with Chandra observations to examine the
effects of circumstellar disks on stellar X-ray properties. Young diskless
stars were also identified from their increased X-ray emission. We have
identified 138 YSOs in Serpens: 22 class 0/I, 16 flat spectrum, 62 class II, 17
transition disk, and 21 class III stars; 60 of which exhibit X-ray emission.
Our primary results are the following: 1.) ten protostars detected previously
in the sub-millimeter are detected at lambda < 24 microns, seven at lambda < 8
microns, 2.) the protostars are more closely grouped than more evolved YSOs
(median separation : ~0.024 pc, and 3.) the luminosity and temperature of the
X-ray emitting plasma around these YSOs does not show any significant
dependence on evolutionary class. We combine the infrared derived values of AK
and X-ray values of NH for 8 class III objects and find that the column density
of hydrogen gas per mag of extinctions is less than half the standard
interstellar value, for AK > 1. This may be the result of grain growth through
coagulation and/or the accretion of volatiles in the Serpens cloud core.Comment: 69 pages, 16 figures, accepted to ApJ. Higher Resolution Figures at:
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~ewinston
Timescale of Mass Accretion in Pre-Main-Sequence Stars
We present initial result of a large spectroscopic survey aimed at measuring
the timescale of mass accretion in young, pre-main-sequence stars in the
spectral type range K0 - M5. Using multi-object spectroscopy with VIMOS at the
VLT we identified the fraction of accreting stars in a number of young stellar
clusters and associations of ages between 1 - 50 Myr. The fraction of accreting
stars decreases from ~60% at 1.5 - 2 Myr to ~2% at 10 Myr. No accreting stars
are found after 10 Myr at a sensitivity limit of Msun yr-1. We
compared the fraction of stars showing ongoing accretion (f_acc) to the
fraction of stars with near-to-mid infrared excess (f_IRAC). In most cases we
find f_acc < f_IRAC, i.e., mass accretion appears to cease (or drop below
detectable level) earlier than the dust is dissipated in the inner disk. At 5
Myr, 95% of the stellar population has stopped accreting material at a rate of
> 10^{-11} Msun yr-1, while ~20% of the stars show near-infrared excess
emission. Assuming an exponential decay, we measure a mass accretion timescale
(t_acc) of 2.3 Myr, compared to a near-to-mid infrared excess timescale
(t_IRAC) of 2.9 Myr. Planet formation, and/or migration, in the inner disk
might be a viable mechanism to halt further accretion onto the central star on
such a short timescale.Comment: Accepted for publicatio
- …
