721 research outputs found
Prevalence of asthma symptoms in Golestan schoolchildren aged 6–7 and 13–14 years in Northeast Iran
Asthma is the most common chronic disease among children, and its incidences are often imminent among elementary schoolchildren. This study aimed to examine the prevalence of asthma symptoms in Golestan schoolchildren aged 6–7 and 13–14 years in Northeast Iran. The prevalence rate was compared according to age group (aged 6–7 years vs. aged 13–14 years) and gender (male vs. female). In this cross-sectional study, 1706 Iranian schoolchildren aged 6–7 and 13–14 years in Golestan Province were enrolled. Participants completed questionnaires between February and July 2014. Asthma symptoms were assessed using the questionnaire of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood protocol in Persian. The logistic regression model was used to estimate the odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of the asthma symptoms for each of the gender and age groups. The prevalence rates of “current asthma” symptoms and “asthma ever” in all the children were estimated as 9.5% and 7.5%, respectively. The prevalence of asthma (“asthma ever” and “wheezing in the past 12 months”) in junior high schoolchildren (aged 13–14 years) is higher than that in elementary schoolchildren (aged 6–7 years) (P < 0.05). The prevalence of the severity of wheezing in girls is lower than that in boys (OR = 1.7, 95%CI = 1.06–2.96, P = 0.02). Asthma is still a major public health problem. This study shows that the prevalence of the asthma symptoms in boys is lower than that in girls in both age groups, and the severity of asthma in girls is higher than that in boys aged 13–14 years. © 2016 Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelber
Biases in the Quasar Mass-Luminosity Plane
We find that the recently reported departure from the Eddington luminosity
limit for the highest quasar black hole masses at a given redshift is an
artifact due to biases in black hole mass measurements. This sub-Eddington
boundary (with non-unity slope) in the quasar mass-luminosity plane was
initially reported by Steinhardt & Elvis (2010a) using the FWHM-based black
hole mass catalogue of Shen et al. (2008). However, the significance of the
boundary is reduced when the FWHM-based mass-scaling relationship is
recalibrated following Wang et al. (2009) and using the most updated
reverberation mapping estimates of black hole masses. Furthermore, this
boundary is not seen using mass estimates based on the line dispersion of the
same quasars' MgII emission lines. Thus, the initial report of a sub-Eddington
boundary with non-unity slope was due to biases in estimating masses using the
FWHM of a fit of one or two Gaussians to quasar MgII emission lines. We provide
evidence that using the line dispersion of the MgII line produces less biased
black hole mass estimates.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Elastic Correlations in Nucleosomal DNA Structure
The structure of DNA in the nucleosome core particle is studied using an
elastic model that incorporates anisotropy in the bending energetics and
twist-bend coupling. Using the experimentally determined structure of
nucleosomal DNA [T.J. Richmond and C.A. Davey, Nature {\bf 423}, 145 (2003)],
it is shown that elastic correlations exist between twist, roll, tilt, and
stretching of DNA, as well as the distance between phosphate groups. The
twist-bend coupling term is shown to be able to capture these correlations to a
large extent, and a fit to the experimental data yields a new estimate of G=25
nm for the value of the twist-bend coupling constant
Stochastic model for nucleosome sliding in the presence of DNA ligands
Heat-induced mobility of nucleosomes along DNA is an experimentally
well-studied phenomenon. A recent experiment shows that the repositioning is
modified in the presence of minor-groove binding DNA ligands. We present here a
stochastic three-state model for the diffusion of a nucleosome along DNA in the
presence of such ligands. It allows us to describe the dynamics and the steady
state of such a motion analytically. The analytical results are in excellent
agreement with numerical simulations of this stochastic process.With this
model, we study the response of a nucleosome to an external force and how it is
affected by the presence of ligands.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Supermassive Black Hole Mass Estimates Using Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasar Spectra at 0.7 < z < 2
We present MgII-based black hole mass estimates for 27,602 quasars with
rest-frame UV spectra available in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release
Three. This estimation is possible due to the existence of an empirical
correlation between the radius of the broad line region and the continuum
luminosity at 3000 Angstroms. We regenerate this correlation by applying our
measurement method to UV spectra of low-redshift quasars in the HST/IUE
databases which have corresponding reverberation mapping estimates of the Hbeta
broad line region's radius. Our mass estimation method uses the line dispersion
rather than the full width at half maximum of the low-ionization MgII emission
line. We measure MgII line dispersions for quasars whose spectra have been
reconstructed using the most significant eigenspectra produced through
Principal Component Analysis. We have tested the reliability of using
reconstructed spectra in black hole mass estimation using a Monte Carlo
simulation and by comparing the results from original and reconstructed Data
Release Three spectra. We show that using reconstructed spectra not only makes
bias-free mass estimation possible for quasars with low spectroscopic
signal-to-noise ratio, but also reduces the intrinsic scatter of the
distribution of the black hole masses to lower than 0.15 dex.Comment: 38 Pages, 12 figures, 3 Tables, 1 hyperlink to catalogue data.
Accepted for publication in ApJ
Effect of Bending Anisotropy on the 3D Conformation of Short DNA Loops
The equilibrium three dimensional shape of relatively short loops of DNA is
studied using an elastic model that takes into account anisotropy in bending
rigidities. Using a reasonable estimate for the anisotropy, it is found that
cyclized DNA with lengths that are not integer multiples of the pitch take on
nontrivial shapes that involve bending out of planes and formation of kinks.
The effect of sequence inhomogeneity on the shape of DNA is addressed, and
shown to enhance the geometrical features. These findings could shed some light
on the role of DNA conformation in protein--DNA interactions
Rapidly Spinning Black Holes in Quasars: An Open Question
Wang et al. (2006) estimated an average radiative efficiency of 30% -- 35%
for quasars at moderate redshift. We find that their method is not independent
of quasar lifetimes and thus that quasars do not necessarily have such high
efficiencies. Nonetheless, it is possible to derive interrelated constraints on
quasar lifetimes, Eddington ratios, and radiative efficiencies of supermassive
black holes. We derive such constraints using a statistically complete sample
of quasars with black hole mass estimates from broad Mg II, made both with and
without the radiation pressure correction of Marconi et al. (2008). We conclude
that for quasars with L/LEdd > 0.02, lifetimes can range from 140 to 750 Myr
for Schwarzschild black holes. Coupled with observed black hole masses, quasar
lifetimes of < 140 Myr would imply that radiatively inefficient accretion or BH
mergers must be important in the accretion history of quasars. Given reasonable
assumptions about the quasar population, if the average quasar lifetime is < 1
Gyr, and if radiatively inefficient accretion is unimportant, then not many BHs
with Eddington ratio < 0.2 can be rapidly spinning.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ on Sep 200
The study of heavy metals Copper, Zinc, Iron and Manganese bioaccumulation in the eggs of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) during incubation period
The aims of the present study were to examine bioaccumulation of heavy metals copper, zinc, iron and manganese in rainbow trout eggs at different stages of incubation period and to compare the results with those of the EPA standards. The research was carried out at Firoozkooh Namroud Rainbow Trout Hatchery Center. For this purpose, two incubators with the same condition as experimental units were selected, one of them was the experimental incubator with approximately 60000 eggs and the other one had no eggs as the control. Sampling of eggs and water during incubation period was conducted weekly. The results showed significant differences (P<0.05) in the control incubator. This indicates that eggs have absorbed these elements from incubation water and then showed increasing trend for Zn and Fe elements concentration in dry weight egg extract during incubation stages but increasing trend in Mn and Cu elements went on until the third stage. The results indicate that threshold concentrations for Mn and Cu in egg cause egg resistance against more absorption of these elements. Also, the results showed that at all sampling stages, concentration of the studied elements was lower than EPA standards for animal textures
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