9,468 research outputs found
Precession of the Isolated Neutron Star PSR B1828-11
Stairs, Lyne & Shemar have found that arrival time residuals from PSR
B1828-11 vary periodically with a period of 500 days. This behavior can be
accounted for by precession of the radiopulsar, an interpretation that is
reinforced by the detection of variations in its pulse profile on the same
timescale. Here, we model the period residuals from PSR B1828-11 in terms of
precession of a triaxial rigid body. We include two contributions to the
residuals: (i) the geometric effect, which arises because the times at which
the pulsar emission beam points toward the observer varies with precession
phase; (ii) the spindown contribution, which arises from any dependence of the
spindown torque acting on the pulsar on the angle between its spin and magnetic
axes. We use the data to probe numerous properties of the pulsar, most notably
its shape, and the dependence of its spindown torque on the angle between its
spin and magnetic axes, for which we assume a sum of a spin-aligned component
(with a weight 1-a) and a dipolar component perpendicular to the magnetic beam
axis (weight a), rather than the vacuum dipole torque (a=1). We find that a
variety of shapes are consistent with the residuals, with a slight statistical
preference for a prolate star. Moreover, a range of torque possibilities fit
the data equally well, with no strong preference for the vacuum model. In the
case of a prolate star we find evidence for an angle-dependent spindown torque.
Our results show that the combination of geometrical and spin-down effects
associated with precession can account for the principal features of PSR
B1828-11's timing behavior, without fine tuning of the parameters.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, submitted to MNRAS; added references, corrected
typo
Thermally-driven Neutron Star Glitches
We examine the thermal and dynamical response of a neutron star to a sudden
perturbation of the inner crust temperature. During the star's evolution,
starquakes and other processes may deposit \gap 10^{42} ergs, causing
significant internal heating and increased frictional coupling between the
crust and the more rapidly rotating neutron superfluid the star is expected to
contain. Through numerical simulation we study the propagation of the thermal
wave created by the energy deposition, the induced motion of the interior
superfluid, and the resulting spin evolution of the crust. We find that energy
depositions of ergs produce gradual spin-ups above the timing
noise level, while larger energy depositions produce sudden spin jumps
resembling pulsar glitches. For a star with a temperature in the observed range
of the Vela pulsar, an energy deposition of ergs produces a
large spin-up taking place over minutes, similar to the Vela ``Christmas''
glitch. Comparable energy deposition in a younger and hotter ``Crab-like'' star
produces a smaller spin-up taking place over day, similar to that seen
during the partially time-resolved Crab glitch of 1989.Comment: 21 pages plus 17 figures, uuencode compressed Postscript. Accepted
for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
CRISPR/Cas9‐mediated genome editing: from basic research to translational medicine
The recent development of the CRISPR/Cas9 system as an efficient and accessible programmable genome-editing tool has revolutionized basic science research. CRISPR/Cas9 system-based technologies have armed researchers with new powerful tools to unveil the impact of genetics on disease development by enabling the creation of precise cellular and animal models of human diseases. The therapeutic potential of these technologies is tremendous, particularly in gene therapy, in which a patient-specific mutation is genetically corrected in order to treat human diseases that are untreatable with conventional therapies. However, the translation of CRISPR/Cas9 into the clinics will be challenging, since we still need to improve the efficiency, specificity and delivery of this technology. In this review, we focus on several in vitro, in vivo and ex vivo applications of the CRISPR/Cas9 system in human disease-focused research, explore the potential of this technology in translational medicine and discuss some of the major challenges for its future use in patients.Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology:
UID/BIM/04773/2013
1334
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
RTI2018-094629-B-I00
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology
SFRH/BPD/100434/2014
European Union (EU)
748585
LPCC-NRS/Terry Fox grantsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Incompatibility of long-period neutron star precession with creeping neutron vortices
Aims: To determine whether ``vortex creep'' in neutron stars, the slow motion
of neutron vortices with respect to pinning sites in the core or inner crust,
is consistent with observations of long-period precession. Methods: Using the
concept of vortex drag, I discuss the precession dynamics of a star with
imperfectly-pinned (i.e., "creeping'') vortices. Results: The precession
frequency is far too high to be consistent with observations, indicating that
the standard picture of the outer core (superfluid neutrons in co-existence
with type II, superconducting protons) should be reconsidered. There is a slow
precession mode, but it is highly over-damped and cannot complete even a single
cycle. Moreover, the vortices of the inner crust must be able to move with
little dissipation with respect to the solid.Comment: 4 pages, v3. Missing reference adde
SMMR Simulator radiative transfer calibration model. 2: Algorithm development
Passive microwave measurements performed from Earth orbit can be used to provide global data on a wide range of geophysical and meteorological phenomena. A Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) is being flown on the Nimbus-G satellite. The SMMR Simulator duplicates the frequency bands utilized in the spacecraft instruments through an amalgamate of radiometer systems. The algorithm developed utilizes data from the fall 1978 NASA CV-990 Nimbus-G underflight test series and subsequent laboratory testing
Social epidemiology
Social epidemiology is the branch of epidemiology concerned with understanding how social and economic characteristics influence states of health in populations. There has been a resurgence recently in interest among epidemiologists about the roles that social and economic factors play in determining health, leading to valuable synergies with the social sciences. The determinants of health commonly studied in social epidemiology include absolute poverty, income inequality, as well as race and discrimination. Recently, social epidemiologists have been at the forefront of conceptual developments within the discipline that view the determinants of health at different levels of social organization. © 2008 Copyright © 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
A strong correlation in radio pulsars with implications for torque variations
We present an analysis of the spin-down parameters for 131 radio pulsars for
which has been well determined. These pulsars have characteristic
ages ranging from yr and spin periods in the range 0.4--30 s;
nearly equal numbers of pulsars have as . We find a
strong correlation of with , {\em independent of the sign
of} . We suggest that this trend can be accounted for by small,
stochastic deviations in the spin-down torque that are directly proportional
(in magnitude) to the spin-down torque.Comment: MNRAS, 4 pages, 2 figures. Minor editorial changes and typos
correcte
Comment on evidence for new interference phenomena in the decay D+ -> K- pi+ mu+ nu
The experimental determination of low energy pi K scattering phase shifts
would assist in determining scattering lengths as well as low energy constants
of chiral perturbation theory for which sum rules have been constructed. The
FOCUS collaboration has presented evidence for interference pheomena from their
analysis of D_l4 decays based on decay amplitudes suitable for a cascade decay
D -> K* -> K pi. We point out that if the well-known full five body kinematics
are taken into account, pi K scattering phases may be extracted. We also point
out that other distributions considered in the context of K_l4 decays can be
applied to charm meson decays to provide constraints on violation of |Delta
I|=1/2 rule and T-violation.Comment: 9 pages, plain latex; version with minor changes compared to v1 on
lepton masses effects, sign error eliminated, clarifying remarks added, one
additional ref.; version to appear in Phys. Lett.
Starquake-Induced Glitches in Pulsars
The neutron star crust is rigid material floating on a neutron-proton liquid core. As the star's spin rate slows, the changing stellar shape stresses the crust and causes fractures. These starquakes may trigger pulsar glitches as well as the jumps in spin-down rate that are observed to persist after some glitches. Earlier studies found that starquakes in spinning-down neutron stars push matter toward the magnetic poles, causing temporary misalignment of the star's spin and angular momentum. After the star relaxes to a new equilibrium orientation, the magnetic poles are closer to the equator, and the magnetic braking torque is increased. The magnitude and sign of the predicted torque changes are in agreement with the observed persistent spin-down offsets. Here we examine the relaxation processes by which the new equilibrium orientation is reached. We find that the neutron superfluid in the inner crust slows as the star's spin realigns with the angular momentum, causing the crust to spin more rapidly. For plausible parameters the time scale and the magnitude of the crust's spin up agree with the giant glitches in the Vela and other pulsars
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