1,631 research outputs found
The First Direct Distance and Luminosity Determination for a Self-Luminous Giant Exoplanet: The Trigonometric Parallax to 2MASS1207334-393254Ab
We present the first trigonometric parallax and distance for a young
planetary mass object. A likely TW Hya cluster member, 2MASSW J1207334-393254Ab
(hereafter 2M1207Ab) is an M8 brown dwarf with a mid to late L type planetary
mass companion. Recent observations of spectral variability have uncovered
clear signs of disk accretion and outflow, constraining the age of the system
to <10 Myr. Because of its late spectral type and the clearly youthful nature
of the system, 2M1207b is very likely a planetary mass object. We have measured
the first accurate distance and luminosity for a self-luminous planetary mass
object. Our parallax measurements are accurate to <2 mas (1sigma) for 2M1207Ab.
With 11 total epochs of data taken from January 2006 through April 2 007 (475
images for 2M1207Ab), we determine a distance of 58.8+-7.0 pc (17.0{+2.3}{-1.8}
mas, 1.28sigma) to 2M1207Ab and a calculated luminosity of 0.68-2.2x10^-5 Lsun
for 2M1207b. Hence 2M1207Ab is a clear member of the TW Hya cluster in terms of
its distance, proper motions, and youthful nature. However, as previously noted
by Mohanty and co-workers, 2M1207b's luminosity appears low compared to its
temperature according to evolutionary models.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted to ApJ Letter
The reception and implementation of ethical guidelines of the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences in medical and nursing practice
Questions under study: We conducted a survey
among Swiss health care professionals on the
reception and implementation of a number of
selected ethical guidelines of the Swiss Academy
of Medical Sciences (SAMS). The following
guidelines were chosen for evaluation: “Care of
patients in the end of life”, “Palliative care”, “Borderline
questions in intensive-care medicine” and
“The determination of death in the context of organ
transplantation”.
Methods: Anonymous questionnaires were sent
to 1933 physicians (general practitioners and internists)
and nurses, randomly chosen from address
lists of the relevant professional associations.
We conducted a statistical analysis using SPSS
16.0.
Results: The response rate was 43.1%. 16.3%
of the responding physicians had never heard of
the guidelines “Care of patients in the end of life”,
30.5% had already heard of them, 34.1% knew
some of their contents and 19.1% were familiar
with the complete content of the guidelines.
60.5% of those physicians and 56.0% of those
nurses who had at least heard of these guidelines
utilised them in clinical practice. The guidelines
“Palliative care” and “Borderline questions in intensive-
care medicine” yielded similar results. By
contrast, only 0.5% of responding physicians reported
never having heard of the guidelines “The
determination of death in the context of organ
transplantation”, 2.9% had already heard of them,
24.4% knew some of their contents and the vast
majority of respondents (72.2%) considered themselves
to be completely familiar with the guidelines.
Conclusion: Knowledge of the evaluated guidelines
is fairly widespread among Swiss GPs,
internists and nurses. The guidelines are utilised
in clinical practice by the majority of those care
providers who are aware of their existence. The
guidelines “The determination of death in the
context of organ transplantation”, as a legally
binding document, are even better known and
routinely implemented in medical practice
A Survey for Massive Giant Planets in Debris Disks with Evacuated Inner Cavities
The commonality of collisionally replenished debris around main sequence
stars suggests that minor bodies are frequent around Sun-like stars. Whether or
not debris disks in general are accompanied by planets is yet unknown, but
debris disks with large inner cavities - perhaps dynamically cleared - are
considered to be prime candidates for hosting large-separation massive giant
planets. We present here a high-contrast VLT/NACO angular differential imaging
survey for eight such cold debris disks. We investigated the presence of
massive giant planets in the range of orbital radii where the inner edge of the
dust debris is expected. Our observations are sensitive to planets and brown
dwarfs with masses >3 to 7 Jupiter mass, depending on the age and distance of
the target star. Our observations did not identify any planet candidates. We
compare the derived planet mass upper limits to the minimum planet mass
required to dynamically clear the inner disks. While we cannot exclude that
single giant planets are responsible for clearing out the inner debris disks,
our observations constrain the parameter space available for such planets. The
non-detection of massive planets in these evacuated debris disks further
reinforces the notion that the giant planet population is confined to the inner
disk (<15 AU).Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Hot Gas Structure in the Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4472
We present X-ray spectroscopic and morphological analyses using Chandra ACIS
and ROSAT observations of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 4472 in the Virgo
cluster. We discuss previously unobserved X-ray structures within the extended
galactic corona. In the inner 2' of the galaxy, we find X-ray holes or cavities
with radii of ~2 kpc, corresponding to the position of radio lobes. These holes
were produced during a period of nuclear activity that began 1.2 x 10^7 years
ago and may be ongoing. We also find an asymmetrical edge in the galaxy X-ray
emission 3' (14 kpc) northeast of the core and an ~8' tail (36 kpc) extending
southwest of the galaxy. These two features probably result from the
interaction of NGC 4472 gas with the Virgo gas, which produces compression in
the direction of NGC 4472's infall and an extended tail from ram pressure
stripping. Assuming the tail is in pressure equilibrium with the surrounding
gas, we compute its angle to our line of sight and estimate that its true
extent exceeds 100 kpc. Finally, in addition to emission from the nucleus
(first detected by Soldatenkov, Vikhlinin & Pavlinsky), we detect two small
extended sources within 10'' of the nucleus of the galaxy, both of which have
luminosities of ~7 x 10^38 erg/s.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap
Observers and Measurements in Noncommutative Spacetimes
We propose a "Copenhagen interpretation" for spacetime noncommutativity. The
goal is to be able to predict results of simple experiments involving signal
propagation directly from commutation relations. A model predicting an energy
dependence of the speed of photons of the order E/E_Planck is discussed in
detail. Such effects can be detectable by the GLAST telescope, to be launched
in 2006.Comment: 10 pp; v2: equivalence of observers explicitely stated; v3: minor
changes, references and remarks added, burst spreading with energy emphasized
as a signature rather than nois
Characterization of the Benchmark Binary NLTT 33370
We report the confirmation of the binary nature of the nearby, very low-mass
system NLTT 33370 with adaptive optics imaging and present resolved
near-infrared photometry and integrated light optical and near-infrared
spectroscopy to characterize the system. VLT-NaCo and LBTI-LMIRCam images show
significant orbital motion between 2013 February and 2013 April. Optical
spectra reveal weak, gravity sensitive alkali lines and strong lithium 6708
Angstrom absorption that indicate the system is younger than field age.
VLT-SINFONI near-IR spectra also show weak, gravity sensitive features and
spectral morphology that is consistent with other young, very low-mass dwarfs.
We combine the constraints from all age diagnostics to estimate a system age of
~30-200 Myr. The 1.2-4.7 micron spectral energy distribution of the components
point toward T_eff=3200 +/- 500 K and T_eff=3100 +/- 500 K for NLTT 33370 A and
B, respectively. The observed spectra, derived temperatures, and estimated age
combine to constrain the component spectral types to the range M6-M8.
Evolutionary models predict masses of 113 +/- 8 M_Jup and 106 +/- 7 M_Jup from
the estimated luminosities of the components. KPNO-Phoenix spectra allow us to
estimate the systemic radial velocity of the binary. The Galactic kinematics of
NLTT 33370AB are broadly consistent with other young stars in the Solar
neighborhood. However, definitive membership in a young, kinematic group cannot
be assigned at this time and further follow-up observations are necessary to
fully constrain the system's kinematics. The proximity, age, and late-spectral
type of this binary make it very novel and an ideal target for rapid, complete
orbit determination. The system is one of only a few model calibration
benchmarks at young ages and very low-masses.Comment: 25 pages, 3 tables, 13 figures, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
Effects of force load, muscle fatigue and extremely low frequency magnetic stimulation on EEG signals during side arm lateral raise task
Objective: This study was to quantitatively investigate the effects of force load, muscle fatigue and extremely low frequency (ELF) magnetic stimulation on electroencephalography (EEG) signal features during side arm lateral raise task.
Approach: EEG signals were recorded by a BIOSEMI Active Two system with Pin-Type active-electrodes from 18 healthy subjects when they performed the right arm side lateral raise task (90° away from the body) with three different loads (0 kg, 1 kg and 3 kg; their order was randomized among the subjects) on the forearm. The arm maintained the loads until the subject felt exhausted. The first 10 s recording for each load was regarded as non-fatigue status and the last 10 s before the subject was exhausted as fatigue status. The subject was then given a 5 min resting between different loads. Two days later, the same experiment was performed on each subject except that ELF magnetic stimulation was applied to the subject's deltoid muscle during the 5 min resting period. EEG features from C3 and C4 electrodes including the power of alpha, beta and gamma and sample entropy were analyzed and compared between different loads, non-fatigue/fatigue status, and with/without ELF magnetic stimulation.
Main results: The key results were associated with the change of the power of alpha band. From both C3-EEG and C4-EEG, with 1 kg and 3 kg force loads, the power of alpha band was significantly smaller than that from 0 kg for both non-fatigue and fatigue periods (all p 0.05 for all the force loads except C4-EEG with ELF simulation). The power of alpha band at fatigue status was significantly increased for both C3-EEG and C4-EEG when compared with the non-fatigue status (p 0.05, except between non-fatigue and fatigue with magnetic stimulation in gamma band of C3-EEG at 1 kg, and in the SampEn at 1 kg and 3 kg force loads from C4-EEG).
Significance: Our study comprehensively quantified the effects of force, fatigue and the ELF magnetic stimulation on EEG features with difference forces, fatigue status and ELF magnetic stimulation
Possible Synergistic Effects of Thymol and Nicotine Against Crithidia Bombi Parasitism in Bumble Bees
Floral nectar contains secondary compounds with antimicrobial properties that can affect not only plant-pollinator interactions, but also interactions between pollinators and their parasites. Although recent work has shown that consumption of plant secondary compounds can reduce pollinator parasite loads, little is known about the effects of dosage or compound combinations. We used the generalist pollinator Bombus impatiens and its obligate gut parasite Crithidia bombi to study the effects of nectar chemistry on host-parasite interactions. In two experiments we tested (1) whether the secondary compounds thymol and nicotine act synergistically to reduce parasitism, and (2) whether dietary thymol concentration affects parasite resistance. In both experiments, uninfected Bombus impatiens were inoculated with Crithidia and then fed particular diet treatments for 7 days, after which infection levels were assessed. In the synergism experiment, thymol and nicotine alone and in combination did not significantly affect parasite load or host mortality. However, the thymol-nicotine combination treatment reduced log-transformed parasite counts by 30% relative to the control group (P = 0.08). For the experiment in which we manipulated thymol concentration, we found no significant effect of any thymol concentration on Crithidia load, but moderate (2 ppm) thymol concentrations incurred a near-significant increase in mortality (P = 0.054). Our results tentatively suggest the value of a mixed diet for host immunity, yet contrast with research on the antimicrobial activity of dietary thymol and nicotine in vertebrate and other invertebrate systems. We suggest that future research evaluate genetic variation in Crithidia virulence, multi-strain competition, and Crithidia interactions with the gut microbe community that may mediate antimicrobial activities of secondary compounds
The SISO CSPI PDG standard for commercial off-the-shelf simulation package interoperability reference models
For many years discrete-event simulation has been used to analyze production and logistics problems in manufactur-ing and defense. Commercial-off-the-shelf Simulation Packages (CSPs), visual interactive modelling environ-ments such as Arena, Anylogic, Flexsim, Simul8, Witness, etc., support the development, experimentation and visua-lization of simulation models. There have been various attempts to create distributed simulations with these CSPs and their tools, some with the High Level Architecture (HLA). These are complex and it is quite difficult to assess how a set of models/CSP are actually interoperating. As the first in a series of standards aimed at standardizing how the HLA is used to support CSP distributed simula-tions, the Simulation Interoperability Standards Organiza-tion’s (SISO) CSP Interoperability Product Development Group (CSPI PDG) has developed and standardized a set of Interoperability Reference Models (IRM) that are in-tended to clearly identify the interoperability capabilities of CSP distributed simulations
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