317 research outputs found
Molecular outflows in the young open cluster IC348
We present a wide-field survey of the young open cluster IC348 for molecular
H2 outflows. Outflow activity is only found at its south-western limit, where a
new subcluster of embedded sources is in an early phase of its formation. If
the IC348 cluster had been built up by such subclusters forming at different
times, this could explain the large age-spread that Herbig (1998) found for the
IC348 member stars. In addition to several compact groups of H2 knots, our
survey reveals a large north-south oriented outflow, and we identify the newly
discovered far-infrared and mm-object IC348MMS as its source. New deep images
in the 1-0 S(1) line of molecular hydrogen trace the HH211 jet and counterjet
as highly-collimated chains of knots, resembling the interferometric CO and SiO
jets. This jet system appears rotated counter-clockwise by about 3 degrees with
respect to the prominent H2 bow shocks. Furthermore, we resolve HH211-mm as a
double point-like source in the mm-continuum.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Reliability of 2D ultrasound imaging associated with transient ShearWave Elastography method to analyze spastic gastrocnemius medialis muscle architecture and viscoelastic properties
PurposeThe aim of the study was to assess the reliability of pennation angle (PA) and muscle thickness (MT) 2D measurements and of shear elastic modulus measurement, using ultrasound imaging (US). Those measurements were made on spastic gastrocnemius medialis muscle at rest and at maximal passive stretching, in post-stroke hemiplegic patients. The paretic side measurements were compared to non-paretic side.Material and methodsFourteen patients took part in 2 inter-session reliability experiments, realized at a 7 days interval by the same operator. The Aixplorer® Supersonic US scanner with the transient ShearWave Elastography (SWE) software was used. The stretching experiments were made manually and controlled by a goniometer.ResultsThe reliability of the 2D measurements was good. The coefficient of variation (CV) was 6.30% for MT measurement at rest, 6.40% and 8.26% for PA at rest and at maximal passive stretching respectively. The reliability of the shear elastic modulus measurement in the sagittal plane was good only at rest with a CV of 9.86%, versus 40.58% at stretching. None of the shear elastic modulus measurements in the axial plane were good. At rest, MT and PA were weaker on the paretic side (14.25±3.12mm and 17.32±5.10°) versus non-paretic side (16.30±3.19mm and 21.08±5.05°) (P<0.0001 and P=0.006). At rest, there was a small difference in the shear elastic modulus between the paretic side and the non-paretic side (5.40±1.67kPa versus 6.20±2.18kPa, P=0.041).DiscussionThis is the first description of muscle spastic structure using SWE with Supersonic Shear Imaging. 2D US associated with SWE shows promise in terms of muscular atrophy quantification and muscle histological quality assessment. These structural properties reflect some of the functional abilities regardless of motor control. It should enable further research on therapies, which impact muscle tissue quality, such as botulinum neurotoxin injections
Experimental investigation of the stability of Fe-rich carbonates in the lower mantle
International audienceThe fate of carbonates in the Earth's mantle plays a key role in the geodynamical carbon cycle. Although iron is a major component of the Earth's lower mantle, the stability of Fe-bearing carbonates has rarely been studied. Here we present experimental results on the stability of Fe-rich carbonates at pressures ranging from 40 to 105 GPa and temperatures of 1450-3600 K, corresponding to depths within the Earth's lower mantle of about 1000-2400 km. Samples of iron oxides and iron-magnesium oxides were loaded into CO2 gas and laser heated in a diamond-anvil cell. The nature of crystalline run products was determined in situ by X-ray diffraction, and the recovered samples were studied by analytical transmission electron microscopy and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy. We show that Fe-(II) is systematically involved in redox reactions with CO2 yielding to Fe-(III)-bearing phases and diamonds. We also report a new Fe-(III)-bearing high-pressure phase resulting from the transformation of FeCO3 at pressures exceeding 40 GPa. The presence of both diamonds and an oxidized C-bearing phase suggests that oxidized and reduced forms of carbon might coexist in the deep mantle. Finally, the observed reactions potentially provide a new mechanism for diamond formation at great depth
A Study of the Luminosity and Mass Functions of the Young IC 348 Cluster using FLAMINGOS Wide-Field Near-Infrared Images
We present wide-field near-infrared (JHK) images of the young, 2 Myr IC 348
cluster taken with FLAMINGOS. We use these new data to construct an infrared
census of sources, which is sensitive enough to detect a 10 Mjup brown dwarf
seen through an extinction of Av=7mag. We examine the cluster's structure and
relationship to the molecular cloud and construct the cluster's K band
luminosity function. Using our model luminosity function algorithm, we derive
the cluster's initial mass function throughout the stellar and substellar
regimes and find that the IC 348 IMF is very similar to that found for the
Trapezium Cluster with both cluster IMFs having a mode between 0.2 - 0.08 Msun.
In particular we find that, similar to our results for the Trapezium, brown
dwarfs constitute only 1 in 4 of the sources in the IC 348 cluster. We show
that a modest secondary peak forms in the substellar IC 348 KLF, corresponding
to the same mass range responsible for a similar KLF peak found in the
Trapezium. We interpret this KLF peak as either evidence for a corresponding
secondary IMF peak at the deuterium burning limit, or as arising from a feature
in the substellar mass-luminosity relation that is not predicted by current
theoretical models. Lastly, we find that IC 348 displays radial variations of
its sub-solar (0.5 - 0.08 Msun) IMF on a parsec scale. Whatever mechanism that
is breaking the universality of the IMF on small spatial scales in IC 348 does
not appear to be acting upon the brown dwarf population, whose relative size
does not vary with distance from the cluster center.Comment: 53 pages, 20 figures, AASTeX5.0. Color version of Figure 1 made
available in jpg format. Figure(s) 2,3,5 are reduced in resolution. Accepted
14 Jan 2003 to the Astronomical Journa
International multicentre observational study to assess the efficacy and safety of a 0·5 mg kg−1 per day starting dose of oral corticosteroids to treat bullous pemphigoid
BackgroundEuropean guidelines propose a 0 center dot 5 mg kg(-1) per day dose of oral prednisone as initial treatment for bullous pemphigoid (BP). We assessed the safety and efficacy of this regimen depending on BP extent and general condition of the patients.MethodsIn a prospective international study, we consecutively included all patients diagnosed with BP. Patients received a 0 center dot 5 mg kg(-1) per day dose of prednisone, which was then gradually tapered 15 days after disease control, with the aim of stopping prednisone or maintaining minimal treatment (0 center dot 1 mg kg(-1) per day) within 6 months after the start of treatment. The two coprimary endpoints were control of disease activity at day 21 and 1-year overall survival. Disease severity was assessed according to the Bullous Pemphigoid Disease Area Index (BPDAI) score.ResultsIn total, 198 patients were included between 2015 and 2017. The final analysis comprised 190 patients with a mean age of 80 center dot 9 (SD 9 center dot 1) years. Control of disease activity was achieved at day 21 in 119 patients [62 center dot 6%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 55 center dot 3-69.5]; 18 of 24 patients (75%, 95% CI 53 center dot 3-90 center dot 2), 75 of 110 patients (68 center dot 8%, 95% CI 59 center dot 2-77 center dot 3) and 26 of 56 patients (46.4%, 95% CI 33 center dot 0-60 center dot 3) had mild, moderate and severe BP, respectively (P = 0 center dot 0218). A total of 30 patients died during the study. The overall Kaplan-Meier 1-year survival was 82 center dot 6% (95% CI 76 center dot 3-87 center dot 4) corresponding to 90 center dot 9%, 83 center dot 0% and 80 center dot 0% rates in patients with mild, moderate and severe BP, respectively (P = 0 center dot 5). Thresholds of 49 points for BPDAI score and 70 points for Karnofsky score yielded maximal Youden index values with respect to disease control at day 21 and 1-year survival, respectively.ConclusionsA 0 center dot 5 mg kg(-1) per day dose of prednisone is a valuable therapeutic option in patients with mild or moderate BP whose general condition allows them to be autonomous.</p
Tb3+/Yb3+ codoped silica-hafnia glass and glass-ceramic waveguides to improve the efficiency of photovoltaic solar cells
In this paper we present the investigation of the energy transfer efficiency between Tb3+ and Yb3+ ions in silica-hafnia waveguides. Cooperative energy transfer between these two ions allows to cut one 488 nm photon in two 980 nm photons and could have important applications in improving the performance of photovoltaic solar cells. Previous works revealed that for a given concentration of donors (Tb3+, increasing the number of acceptors (Yb3+) located near to the Tb3+ ion can increase the Tb-Yb transfer probability. However, when increasing the density of active ions, some detrimental effects due to cross-relaxation mechanisms become relevant. On the basis of this observation the sample doping was chosen keeping constant the molar ratio [Yb]/[Tb] = 4 and the total rare earths contents were [Tb + Yb]/[Si + Hf] = 5%, 7%, 9%. The choice of the matrix is another crucial point to obtain an efficient down conversion processes with rare earth ions. To this respect a 70SiO(2)-30HfO(2) waveguide composition was chosen. The comparison between the glass and the glass-ceramic structures demonstrated that the latter is more efficient since it combines the good optical properties of glasses with the optimal spectroscopic properties of crystals activated by luminescent species. A maximum transfer efficiency of 55% was found for the highest rare earth doping concentration
Copy Number Variants in Patients with Severe Oligozoospermia and Sertoli-Cell-Only Syndrome
A genetic origin is estimated in 30% of infertile men with the common phenotypes of oligo- or azoospermia, but the pathogenesis of spermatogenic failure remains frequently obscure. To determine the involvement of Copy Number Variants (CNVs) in the origin of male infertility, patients with idiopathic severe oligozoospermia (N = 89), Sertoli-cell-only syndrome (SCOS, N = 37)) and controls with normozoospermia (N = 100) were analysed by array-CGH using the 244A/400K array sets (Agilent Technologies). The mean number of CNVs and the amount of DNA gain/loss were comparable between all groups. Ten recurring CNVs were only found in patients with severe oligozoospermia, three only in SCOS and one CNV in both groups with spermatogenic failure but not in normozoospermic men. Sex-chromosomal, mostly private CNVs were significantly overrepresented in patients with SCOS. CNVs found several times in all groups were analysed in a case-control design and four additional candidate genes and two regions without known genes were associated with SCOS (P<1×10−3). In conclusion, by applying array-CGH to study male infertility for the first time, we provide a number of candidate genes possibly causing or being risk factors for the men's spermatogenic failure. The recurring, patient-specific and private, sex-chromosomal CNVs as well as those associated with SCOS are candidates for further, larger case-control and re-sequencing studies
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