5,376 research outputs found
Dispersion-strengthened chromium alloy
Finely divided powder mixture produced by vapor deposition of CR on small ThO2 particles was hot pressed or pressure bonded. Resulting alloy has lower ductile-to-brittle transition temperature than pure chromium, and high strength and oxidation resistance at elevated temperatures, both in as-rolled condition and after annealing
Spitzer/MIPS Imaging of NGC 650: Probing the History of Mass Loss on the Asymptotic Giant Branch
We present the far-infrared (IR) maps of a bipolar planetary nebula (PN), NGC
650, at 24, 70, and 160 micron taken with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for
Spitzer (MIPS) on-board the Spitzer Space Telescope. While the two-peak
emission structure seen in all MIPS bands suggests the presence of a near
edge-on dusty torus, the distinct emission structure between the 24 micron map
and the 70/160 micron maps indicates the presence of two distinct emission
components in the central torus. Based on the spatial correlation of these two
far-IR emission components with respect to various optical line emission, we
conclude that the 24 micron emission is largely due to the [O IV] line at 25.9
micron arising from highly ionized regions behind the ionization front, whereas
the 70 and 160 micron emission is due to dust continuum arising from
low-temperature dust in the remnant asymptotic giant branch (AGB) wind shell.
The far-IR nebula structure also suggests that the enhancement of mass loss at
the end of the AGB phase has occurred isotropically, but has ensued only in the
equatorial directions while ceasing in the polar directions. The present data
also show evidence for the prolate spheroidal distribution of matter in this
bipolar PN. The AGB mass loss history reconstructed in this PN is thus
consistent with what has been previously proposed based on the past optical and
mid-IR imaging surveys of the post-AGB shells.Comment: 9 pages in the emulated ApJ format with 6 figures, to appear in Ap
Pet Imaging Of Early Therapeutic Response In Solid Tumors
An important pillar of precision medicine for oncology is the ability to identify patients who respond to treatment early into their therapy. Positron emission tomography (PET) allows physicians and researchers to measure changes in tumor behavior prior to noticeable differences in morphology.
Objective: Determine the utility of multiple tracers for PET in assessing early changes in tumor activity that result from treatment.
Methods: Two tracers for PET were studied. 64Cu-labeled liposomes were used to assess changes in liposome delivery two solid colon tumors early into treatment with bevacizumab (Bev). 18F-FMAU thymidine analog (1-(2\u27-deoxy-2\u27-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl)thymine), was utilized to detect early response to cisplatin treatment in non-small cell lung tumor models. Scans were analyzed before and after short-term therapy to determine changes in tracer retention which suggest therapeutic response.
Results: In each study PET was able to detect changes in tumor behavior which occurred early into treatment. After two injections of Bev over one week, liposome delivery was significantly reduced as measured by PET. In lung tumors, 24 hours of cisplatin treatment induced significant drops in 18F-FMAU retention in cisplatin sensitive tumors compared to resistant tumors.
Conclusion: PET imaging with a variety of tracers can provide information about tumor response to a broad spectrum of treatments. Thus, PET is a powerful tool for personalized therapy of cancer
The Circumstellar Extinction of Planetary Nebulae
We analyze the dependence of circumstellar extinction on core mass for the
brightest planetary nebulae (PNe) in the Magellanic Clouds and M31. We show
that in all three galaxies, a statistically significant correlation exists
between the two quantities, such that high core mass objects have greater
extinction. We model this behavior, and show that the relation is a simple
consequence of the greater mass loss and faster evolution times of high mass
stars. The relation is important because it provides a natural explanation for
the invariance of the [O III] 5007 planetary nebula luminosity function (PNLF)
with population age: bright Population I PNe are extinguished below the cutoff
of the PNLF. It also explains the counter-intuitive observation that
intrinsically luminous Population I PNe often appear fainter than PNe from
older, low-mass progenitors.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, accepted for ApJ, April 10, 199
MxiA, MxiC and IpaD Regulate Substrate Selection and Secretion Mode in the T3SS of <i>Shigella flexneri</i>
Type III secretion systems (T3SSs) are central virulence devices for many Gram-negative bacterial pathogens of humans, animals & plants. Upon physical contact with eukaryotic host cells, they translocate virulence-mediating proteins, known as effectors, into them during infection. T3SSs are gated from the outside by host-cell contact and from the inside via two cytoplasmic negative regulators, MxiC and IpaD in Shigella flexneri, which together control the effector secretion hierarchy. Their absence leads to premature and increased secretion of effectors. Here, we investigated where and how these regulators act. We demonstrate that the T3SS inner membrane export apparatus protein MxiA plays a role in substrate selection. Indeed, using a genetic screen, we identified two amino acids located on the surface of MxiA's cytoplasmic region (MxiAC) which, when mutated, upregulate late effector expression and, in the case of MxiAI674V, also secretion. The cytoplasmic region of MxiA, but not MxiAN373D and MxiAI674V, interacts directly with the C-terminus of MxiC in a two-hybrid assay. Efficient T3S requires a cytoplasmic ATPase and the proton motive force (PMF), which is composed of the ΔΨ and the ΔpH. MxiA family proteins and their regulators are implicated in utilization of the PMF for protein export. However, our MxiA point mutants show similar PMF utilisation to wild-type, requiring primarily the ΔΨ. On the other hand, lack of MxiC or IpaD, renders the faster T3S seen increasingly dependent on the ΔpH. Therefore, MxiA, MxiC and IpaD act together to regulate substrate selection and secretion mode in the T3SS of Shigella flexneri
Optical Identification of Close White Dwarf Binaries in the LISA Era
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is expected to detect close
white dwarf binaries (CWDBs) through their gravitational radiation. Around 3000
binaries will be spectrally resolved at frequencies > 3 mHz, and their
positions on the sky will be determined to an accuracy ranging from a few tens
of arcminutes to a degree or more. Due to the small binary separation, the
optical light curves of >~ 30% of these CWDBs are expected to show eclipses,
giving a unique signature for identification in follow-up studies of the LISA
error boxes. While the precise optical location improves binary parameter
determination with LISA data, the optical light curve captures additional
physics of the binary, including the individual sizes of the stars in terms of
the orbital separation. To optically identify a substantial fraction of CWDBs
and thus localize them very accurately, a rapid monitoring campaign is
required, capable of imaging a square degree or more in a reasonable time, at
intervals of 10--100 seconds, to magnitudes between 20 and 25. While the
detectable fraction can be up to many tens of percent of the total resolved
LISA CWDBs, the exact fraction is uncertain due to unknowns related to the
white dwarf spatial distribution, and potentially interesting physics, such as
induced tidal heating of the WDs due to their small orbital separation.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
The Environments around Long-Duration Gamma-Ray Burst Progenitors
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow observations have allowed us to significantly
constrain the engines producing these energetic explosions. Te redshift and
position information provided by these afterglows have already allowed us to
limit the progenitors of GRBs to only a few models. The afterglows may also
provide another observation that can place further constraints on the GRB
progenitor: measurements telling us about the environments surrounding GRBs.
Current analyses of GRB afterglows suggest that roughly half of long-duration
gamma-ray bursts occur in surroundings with density profiles that are uniform.
We study the constraints placed by this observation on both the classic
``collapsar'' massive star progenitor and its relative, the ``helium-merger''
progenitor. We study several aspects of wind mass-loss and find that our
modifications to the standard Wolf-Rayet mass-loss paradigm are not sufficient
to produce constant density profiles. Although this does not rule out the
standard ``collapsar'' progenitor, it does suggest a deficiency with this
model. We then focus on the He-merger models and find that such progenitors can
fit this particular constraint well. We show how detailed observations can not
only determine the correct progenitor for GRBs, but also allow us to study
binary evolution physics.Comment: 44 pages including 11 figure
Modeling lithium rich carbon stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud: an independent distance indicator ?
We present the first quantitative results explaining the presence in the
Large Magellanic Cloud of some asymptotic giant branch stars that share the
properties of lithium rich carbon stars. A self-consistent description of
time-dependent mixing, overshooting, and nuclear burning was required. We
identify a narrow range of masses and luminosities for this peculiar stars.
Comparison of these models with the luminosities of the few Li-rich C stars in
the Large Magellanic Cloud provides an independent distance indicator for the
LMCComment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Observational Tests and Predictive Stellar Evolution II: Non-standard Models
We examine contributions of second order physical processes to results of
stellar evolution calculations amenable to direct observational testing. In the
first paper in the series (Young et al. 2001) we established baseline results
using only physics which are common to modern stellar evolution codes. In the
current paper we establish how much of the discrepancy between observations and
baseline models is due to particular elements of new physics. We then consider
the impact of the observational uncertainties on the maximum predictive
accuracy achievable by a stellar evolution code. The sun is an optimal case
because of the precise and abundant observations and the relative simplicity of
the underlying stellar physics. The Standard Model is capable of matching the
structure of the sun as determined by helioseismology and gross surface
observables to better than a percent. Given an initial mass and surface
composition within the observational errors, and no additional constraints for
which the models can be optimized, it is not possible to predict the sun's
current state to better than ~7%. Convectively induced mixing in radiative
regions, seen in multidimensional hydrodynamic simulations, dramatically
improves the predictions for radii, luminosity, and apsidal motions of
eclipsing binaries while simultaneously maintaining consistency with observed
light element depletion and turnoff ages in young clusters (Young et al. 2003).
Systematic errors in core size for models of massive binaries disappear with
more complete mixing physics, and acceptable fits are achieved for all of the
binaries without calibration of free parameters. The lack of accurate abundance
determinations for binaries is now the main obstacle to improving stellar
models using this type of test.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Dynamic Subspace Estimation with Grassmannian Geodesics
Dynamic subspace estimation, or subspace tracking, is a fundamental problem
in statistical signal processing and machine learning. This paper considers a
geodesic model for time-varying subspaces. The natural objective function for
this model is non-convex. We propose a novel algorithm for minimizing this
objective and estimating the parameters of the model from data with
Grassmannian-constrained optimization. We show that with this algorithm, the
objective is monotonically non-increasing. We demonstrate the performance of
this model and our algorithm on synthetic data, video data, and dynamic fMRI
data
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