4,107 research outputs found
The Implications of Galaxy Formation Models for the TeV Observations of Current Detectors
This paper represents a step toward constraining galaxy formation models via
TeV gamm a ray observations. We use semi-analytic models of galaxy formation to
predict a spectral distribution for the intergalactic infrared photon field,
which in turn yields information about the absorption of TeV gamma rays from
extra-galactic sources. By making predictions for integral flux observations at
>200 GeV for several known EGRE T sources, we directly compare our models with
current observational upper limits obtained by Whipple. In addition, our
predictions may offer a guide to the observing programs for the current
population of TeV gamma ray observatories.Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 6th TeV
Workshop at Snowbird, U
A preliminary longitudinal study of white matter alteration in cocaine use disorder subjects
Background Previous diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies have consistently shown that subjects with cocaine use disorder (CocUD) had altered white matter microstructure in the corpus callosum. It is believed that these alterations are due to preexisting factors, chronic cocaine use, or both. However, there is no published longitudinal DTI study on human cocaine users yet which could shed light on the relationship between cocaine use and DTI findings. Methods This study used a longitudinal design and DTI to test if the white matter microstructure shows quicker alteration in CocUD subjects than controls. DTI data were acquired from eleven CocUD subjects who participated a treatment study and eleven non-drug-using controls at baseline (Scan 1) and after ten weeks (Scan 2). The baseline fractional anisotropy (FA), a general measure of white matter microstucture, and the change in FA (ΔFA, equals Scan 1 FA minus Scan 2 FA) were both compared between groups. Results The two groups did not show a difference in FA at baseline. The CocUD subjects had significantly greater ΔFA than the controls in the left splenium of the corpus callosum. In CocUD subjects, greater ΔFA in this region was associated with shorter lifetime cocaine use and greater number of positive cocaine urine samples collected during the treatment. Conclusion The finding in the left splenium is consistent with previous animal studies and provide indirect evidence about the effects of chronic cocaine use on white matter alterations. The subject sample size is small, therefore the results should be treated as preliminary
A Call for the Structured Physicist Report
Introduction:
The field of diagnostic radiology continues to struggle with the clinical adoption of the structured interpretive report, with many radiologists preferring a semistructured, free-text dictation style to a more rigid, highly structured approach that some professional leaders have promoted [1]. Although structured reporting compliance in the radiologist community has been difficult to achieve, diagnostic radiologists have been thinking about and discussing this important issue for many years; it is also a part of the ACR’s Imaging 3.0_ campaign [2]. In the breast imaging community, the well-established BI-RADS_ recommendations produce a very structured report, with a discussion of interpretive findings culminating in a numeric BI-RADS score ranging from 0 to 6 [3]. Unlike some interpretive radiology reports, which can be ambiguous in terms of the next course of action, the BI-RADS scale is not only a diagnostic scale but also prescriptive of what the necessary follow-up should be
The Chain Lakes Massif and its Contact With a Cambrian Ophiolite and a Caradocian Granite
Guidebook for field trips in southern and west-central Maine, October 13, 14 and 15, 1989: New England Intercollegiate Geological Conference 81st annual meeting: Trip B-
The Chain Lakes Massif and its Contact With a Cambrian Ophiolite and a Caradocian Granite
Guidebook for field trips in southern and west-central Maine, October 13, 14 and 15, 1989: New England Intercollegiate Geological Conference 81st annual meeting: Trip A-
ALMA reveals the feeding of the Seyfert 1 nucleus in NGC 1566
We report ALMA observations of CO(3-2) emission in the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC
1566, at a spatial resolution of 25 pc. Our aim is to investigate the
morphology and dynamics of the gas inside the central kpc, and to probe nuclear
fueling and feedback phenomena. NGC 1566 has a nuclear bar of 1.7 kpc radius
and a conspicuous grand design spiral starting from this radius. The ALMA field
of view, of diameter 0.9 kpc, lies well inside the nuclear bar and reveals a
molecular trailing spiral structure from 50 to 300~pc in size, which is
contributing to fuel the nucleus, according to its negative gravity torques.
The spiral starts with a large pitch angle from the center and then winds up
in a pseudo-ring at the inner Lindblad resonance (ILR) of the nuclear bar.
This is the first time that a trailing spiral structure is clearly seen
driving the gas inwards inside the ILR ring of the nuclear bar. This phenomenon
shows that the massive central black hole has a significant dynamical influence
on the gas, triggering its fueling.
The gaseous spiral is well correlated with the dusty spiral seen through
extinction in HST images, and also with a spiral feature emitting 0.87mm
continuum. This continuum emission must come essentially from cold dust heated
by the interstellar radiation field. The HCN(4-3) and HCO+(4-3) lines were
simultaneously mapped and detected in the nuclear spiral. The HCO+(4-3) line is
3 times stronger than the HCN(4-3), as expected when star formation excitation
dominates over active galactic nucleus (AGN) heating. The CO(3-2)/HCO+(4-3)
integrated intensity ratio is \sim 100.
The molecular gas is in remarkably regular rotation, with only slight
non-circular motions at the periphery of the nuclear spiral arms. These
perturbations are quite small, and no outflow nor AGN feedback is detected.Comment: 11 pages, 16 figures, accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic
ALMA observations of feeding and feedback in nearby Seyfert galaxies: an AGN-driven outflow in NGC 1433
We report ALMA observations of CO(3-2) emission in the Seyfert 2
double-barred galaxy NGC1433, at the unprecedented spatial resolution of
0.5"=24 pc. Our aim is to probe AGN feeding and feedback phenomena through the
morphology and dynamics of the gas inside the central kpc. The CO map, which
covers the whole nuclear region (nuclear bar and ring), reveals a nuclear
gaseous spiral structure, inside the nuclear ring encircling the nuclear
stellar bar.
This gaseous spiral is well correlated with the dusty spiral seen in Hubble
Space Telescope images. The nuclear spiral winds up in a pseudo-ring at 200 pc
radius, which might correspond to the inner ILR. Continuum emission is detected
at 0.87 mm only at the very centre, and its origin is more likely thermal dust
emission than non-thermal emission from the AGN. It might correspond to the
molecular torus expected to exist in this Seyfert 2 galaxy. The HCN(4-3) and
HCO+(4-3) lines were observed simultaneously, but only upper limits are
derived, with a ratio to the CO(3-2) line lower than 1/60 at 3sigma, indicating
a relatively low abundance of very dense gas. The kinematics of the gas over
the nuclear disk reveal rather regular rotation only slightly perturbed by
streaming motions due to the spiral; the primary and secondary bars are too
closely aligned with the galaxy major or minor axis to leave a signature in the
projected velocities. Near the nucleus, there is an intense high-velocity CO
emission feature redshifted to 200 km/s (if located in the plane), with a
blue-shifted counterpart, at 2" (100 pc) from the centre. While the CO spectra
are quite narrow in the centre, this wide component is interpreted as an
outflow involving a molecular mass of 3.6 10^6 Mo and a flow rate 7 Mo/yr. The
flow could be in part driven by the central star formation, but is mainly
boosted by the AGN through its wind or radio jets.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic
- …