2,243 research outputs found
Optical afterglow luminosities in the Swift epoch: confirming clustering and bimodality
We show that Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) of known redshift and rest frame optical
extinction detected by the Swift satellite fully confirm earlier results
concerning the distribution of the optical afterglow luminosity at 12 hours
after trigger (rest frame time). This distribution is bimodal and relatively
narrow, especially for the high luminosity branch. This is intriguing, given
that Swift GRBs have, on average, a redshift larger than pre-Swift ones, and is
unexpected in the common scenario explaining the GRB afterglow. We investigate
if the observed distribution can be the result of selection effects affecting a
unimodal parent luminosity distribution, and find that either the distribution
is intrinsically bimodal, or most (60 per cent) of the bursts are absorbed by a
substantial amount of grey dust. In both cases we suggest that most dark bursts
should belong to the underluminous optical family.Comment: 5 pages 3 figures, minor revision, added reference, accepted for
publication in MNRAS Letter
Analysis of Spitzer-IRS spectra of hyperluminous infrared galaxies
Hyperluminous infrared galaxies (HLIRG) are the most luminous persistent
objects in the Universe. They exhibit extremely high star formation rates, and
most of them seem to harbour an AGN. They are unique laboratories to
investigate the most extreme star formation, and its connection to
super-massive black hole growth. The AGN and SB relative contributions to the
total output in these objects is still debated. Our aim is to disentangle the
AGN and SB emission of a sample of thirteen HLIRG. We have studied the MIR low
resolution spectra of a sample of thirteen HLIRG obtained with the IRS on board
Spitzer. The 5-8 {\mu}m range is an optimal window to detect AGN activity even
in a heavily obscured environment. We performed a SB/AGN decomposition of the
continuum using templates, successfully applied for ULIRG in previous works.
The MIR spectra of all sources is largely dominated by AGN emission. Converting
the 6 {\mu}m luminosity into IR luminosity, we found that ~80% of the sample
shows an IR output dominated by the AGN emission. However, the SB activity is
significant in all sources (mean SB contribution ~30%), showing star formation
rates ~300-3000 solar masses per year. Using X-ray and MIR data we estimated
the dust covering factor (CF) of these HLIRG, finding that a significant
fraction presents a CF consistent with unity. Along with the high X-ray
absorption shown by these sources, this suggests that large amounts of dust and
gas enshroud the nucleus of these HLIRG, as also observed in ULIRG. Our results
are in agreement with previous studies of the IR SED of HLIRG using radiative
transfer models, and we find strong evidence that all HLIRG harbour an AGN.
This work provides further support to the idea that AGN and SB are both crucial
to understand the properties of HLIRG. Our study of the CF supports the
hypothesis that HLIRG can be divided in two different populations.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
A scalable data-plane architecture for one-to-one device-to-device communications in LTE-Advanced
One-to-one device-to-device (D2D) communications are expected to play a major role in future releases of LTE-A, as well as in future 5G networks. Despite the abundance of works on resource allocation for D2D communications, few works, if any, discuss how D2D should be realized within the LTE-A protocol stack. While it is generally understood that D2D endpoints should be able to communicate both on the direct path or sidelink (SL) and on the relayed path (RP) through the eNB, little has been said on how this can be achieved in practice. In this paper we present a comprehensive proposal for a data-plane architecture for D2D communication: we define how communications should occur on the SL and the RP, and propose a solution for the challenges associated with mode switching between the SL and the RP. In particular, we argue that two different communication modes on the RP are required to allow D2D connections to be kept alive across cell borders in a multicell environment. Our proposal is scalable, since it does not require any signaling, and is guaranteed to not introduce losses. We evaluate our proposal through detailed system-level simulations, also focusing on its interplay with transport-layer protocols
Short term X-ray spectral variability of the quasar PDS 456 observed in a low flux state
We present an analysis of the 2013 Suzaku campaign on the nearby luminous
quasar PDS 456, covering a total duration of ~1 Ms and a net exposure of 455
ks. During these observations, the X-ray flux was suppressed by a factor of >10
in the soft X-ray band when compared to other epochs. We investigated the
broadband continuum by constructing a spectral energy distribution, making use
of the optical/UV photometry and hard X-ray spectra from the later
XMM-Newton/NuSTAR campaign in 2014. The high energy part of this low flux state
cannot be accounted for by self-consistent accretion disc and corona models
without attenuation by absorbing gas, which partially covers a substantial
fraction of the line of sight towards the X-ray source. Two absorption layers
are required, of column density and ,
with average covering factors of ~80% (with typical 5% variations) and 60%
(10-15%), respectively. In these observations PDS 456 displays significant
short term X-ray spectral variability, on timescales of ~100 ks, which can be
accounted for by variable covering of the absorbing gas. The partial covering
absorber prefers an outflow velocity of at
the >99.9% confidence level over the case where . This is
consistent with the velocity of the highly ionised outflow responsible for the
blueshifted iron K absorption profile. We therefore suggest that the partial
covering clouds could be the denser, or clumpy part of an inhomogeneous
accretion disc wind. Finally we estimate the size-scale of the X-ray source
from its variability. The radial extent of the X-ray emitter is found to be of
the order ~15-20 , although the hard X-ray (>2 keV) emission may
originate from a more compact or patchy corona of hot electrons, which is ~6-8
in size.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Clinical significance of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in laryngeal carcinoma: Its role in the different subsites
Background: During epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, cancer cells lose adhesion capacity gaining migratory properties. The role of the process on prognosis has been evaluated in 50 cases of laryngeal carcinoma. Methods: E-cadherin, N-cadherin, β-catenin, α-catenin, γ-catenin, caveolin-1, and vimentin immunohistochemical expression were evaluated using a double score based on staining intensity and cellular localization. Results: Cytoplasmic E-cadherin and α/γ catenin staining were associated with a decrease in survival, cytoplasmic β-catenin was associated with advanced stage, and N-cadherin and vimentin expression were associated with poor differentiation and tumor relapse. On the basis of cancer cells, epithelial or mesenchymal morphological and immunophenotypic similarity we identified 4 main subgroups correlated with a transition to a more undifferentiated phenotype, which have a different pattern of relapse and survival. Conclusion: The negative prognostic role of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition has been confirmed and a predictive role in glottic tumors has been suggested, leading us to propose epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition as an additional adverse feature in laryngeal carcinoma
How Tradeoffs Shrink Attribute Hierarchy
Why do people sometimes struggle with decisions that once seemed relatively simple? This research suggests that comparing options leads people to lose sight of which decision attributes are important. Although the difference between important and unimportant attributes is often clear in the abstract, the act of making tradeoffs highlights what people must forgo on one attribute in exchange for a gain on another, which increases the perceived importance of trivial attributes in particular. This causes the variance in perceived importance across attributes to shrink, blurring the distinction between important and unimportant attributes. Four experiments demonstrate this phenomenon, explore the underlying mechanism, and show how it leads to increased choice difficulty and dissatisfaction with the choice experience
Structural determinants for NF-Y/DNA interaction at the CCAAT box
The recently determined crystal structures of the sequence-specific transcription factor NF-Y have illuminated the structural mechanism underlying transcription at the CCAAT box. NF-Y is a trimeric protein complex composed by the NF-YA, NF-YB, and NF-YC subunits. NF-YB and NF-YC contain a histone-like domain and assemble on a head-to-tail fashion to form a dimer, which provides the structural scaffold for the DNA sugar-phosphate backbone binding (mimicking the nucleosome H2A/H2B\ue2\u80\u93DNA assembly) and for the interaction with NF-YA. The NF-YA subunit hosts two structurally extended \uce\ub1-helices; one is involved in NF-YB/NF-YC binding and the other inserts deeply into the DNA minor groove, providing exquisite sequence-specificity for recognition and binding of the CCAAT box. The analysis of these structural data is expected to serve as a powerful guide for future experiments aimed at understanding the role of post-translational modification at NF-Y regulation sites and to unravel the three-dimensional architecture of higher order complexes formed between NF-Y and other transcription factors that act synergistically for transcription activation. Moreover, these structures represent an excellent starting point to challenge the formation of a stable hybrid nucleosome between NF-Y and core histone proteins, and to rationalize the fine molecular details associated with the wide combinatorial association of plant NF-Y subunits
The environment of the SN-less GRB 111005A at z = 0.0133
The collapsar model has proved highly successful in explaining the properties
of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), with the most direct confirmation being the
detection of a supernova (SN) coincident with the majority of nearby long GRBs.
Within this model, a long GRB is produced by the core-collapse of a metal-poor,
rapidly rotating, massive star. The detection of some long GRBs in metal-rich
environments, and more fundamentally the three examples of long GRBs (GRB
060505, GRB 060614 and GRB 111005A) with no coincident SN detection down to
very deep limits is in strong contention with theoretical expectations. In this
paper we present MUSE observations of the host galaxy of GRB 111005A, which is
the most recent and compelling example yet of a SN-less, long GRB. At
z=0.01326, GRB 111005A is the third closest GRB ever detected, and second
closest long duration GRB, enabling the nearby environment to be studied at a
resolution of 270 pc. From the analysis of the MUSE data cube, we find GRB
111005A to have occurred within a metal-rich environment with little signs of
ongoing star formation. Spectral analysis at the position of the GRB indicates
the presence of an old stellar population (tau > 10 Myr), which limits the mass
of the GRB progenitor to M_ZAMS<15 Msolar, in direct conflict with the
collapsar model. Our deep limits on the presence of any SN emission combined
with the environmental conditions at the position of GRB 111005A necessitate
the exploration of a novel long GRB formation mechanism that is unrelated to
massive stars.Comment: Now accepted by A&A. Manuscript replaced to match accepted version.
Some additional discussion added, and velocity map of the host galaxy now
include
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