1,995 research outputs found
The All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) Light Curve Server v1.0
The All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) is working towards
imaging the entire visible sky every night to a depth of V~17 mag. The present
data covers the sky and spans ~2-5~years with ~100-400 epochs of observation.
The data should contain some ~1 million variable sources, and the ultimate goal
is to have a database of these observations publicly accessible. We describe
here a first step, a simple but unprecedented web interface
https://asas-sn.osu.edu/ that provides an up to date aperture photometry light
curve for any user-selected sky coordinate. Because the light curves are
produced in real time, this web tool is relatively slow and can only be used
for small samples of objects. However, it also imposes no selection bias on the
part of the ASAS-SN team, allowing the user to obtain a light curve for any
point on the celestial sphere. We present the tool, describe its capabilities,
limitations, and known issues, and provide a few illustrative examples.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PAS
A dynamical model of surrogate reactions
A new dynamical model is developed to describe the whole process of surrogate
reactions; transfer of several nucleons at an initial stage, thermal
equilibration of residues leading to washing out of shell effects and decay of
populated compound nuclei are treated in a unified framework. Multi-dimensional
Langevin equations are employed to describe time-evolution of collective
coordinates with a time-dependent potential energy surface corresponding to
different stages of surrogate reactions. The new model is capable of
calculating spin distributions of the compound nuclei, one of the most
important quantity in the surrogate technique. Furthermore, various observables
of surrogate reactions can be calculated, e.g., energy and angular distribution
of ejectile, and mass distributions of fission fragments. These features are
important to assess validity of the proposed model itself, to understand
mechanisms of the surrogate reactions and to determine unknown parameters of
the model. It is found that spin distributions of compound nuclei produced in
O+U O+U and O+U
O+U reactions are equivalent and much less than
10, therefore satisfy conditions proposed by Chiba and Iwamoto (PRC 81,
044604(2010)) if they are used as a pair in the surrogate ratio method.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Passive sorting of asteroid material using solar radiation pressure
Understanding dust dynamics in asteroid environments is key for future science missions to asteroids and, in the long-term, also for asteroid exploitation. This paper proposes a novel way of manipulating asteroid material by means of solar radiation pressure (SRP). We envisage a method for passively sorting material as a function of its grain size where SRP is used as a passive in-situ ‘mass spec-trometer’. The analysis shows that this novel method allows an effective sorting of regolith material. This has immediate applications for sample return, and in-situ resource utilisation to separate different regolith particle sizes
Emergency contraception in Australia: The desired source of information versus the actual source of information
Objective: To determine long-term trends in emergency contraception (EC) management by general practitioners in Australia. Design, setting and participants: Data from April 2000 to March 2012 were drawn from the BEACH (Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health) program, a continuous cross-sectional survey of GP activity. We analysed consultations involving EC management, unwanted pregnancy management and emergency contraceptive pill (ECP) prescribing per 1000 GP encounters with women aged 14-54 years. Summary statistics were calculated with 95% confidence intervals. Results: In 2000-2001, GPs managed EC problems at a rate of 5.50 per 1000 encounters (95% CI, 4.37-6.63). From 2004, after the ECP became available over the counter (OTC) in pharmacies, EC management, which includes ECP prescription, progressively declined. By 2011-2012, only 1.43 EC problems were managed per 1000 encounters (95% CI, 0.84-2.02) and only 0.48 ECP prescriptions were provided per 1000 encounters (95% CI, 0.14-0.82). Yet the management rate of unwanted pregnancy problems stayed relatively constant (rate in 2000-2001, 0.95 per 1000 encounters; 95% CI, 0.40-1.50; rate in 2011-2012, 0.88 per 1000 encounters; 95% CI, 0.41-1.36). Conclusion: Low rates of EC management by GPs since ECP became available OTC suggest that women may be obtaining information on EC elsewhere. Further investigation is needed to uncover the sources of this information and its acceptability and application by Australian women
Current contraceptive management in Australian general practice: An analysis of BEACH data
Objective: To determine current contraceptive management by general practitioners in Australia. Design, setting and participants: Analysis of data from a random sample of 3910 Australian GPs who participated in the Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health (BEACH) survey, a continuous cross-sectional survey of GP activity, between April 2007 and March 2011. Consultations with female patients aged 12-54 years that involved all forms of contraception were analysed. Main outcome measures: GP and patient characteristics associated with the management of contraception; types of contraception used; rates of encounters involving emergency contraception. Results: Increased age, ethnicity, Indigenous status and holding a Commonwealth Health Care Card were significantly associated with low rates of encounters involving management of contraception. The combined oral contraceptive pill was the most frequently prescribed method of contraception, with moderate prescription of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC), especially among women aged 34-54 years. Rates of consultations concerned with emergency contraception were low, but involved high rates of counselling, advice or education (48%) compared with encounters for general contraception (> 20%). Conclusion: A shift towards prescribing LARC, as recommended in clinical guidelines, has yet to occur in Australian general practice. Better understanding of patient and GP perspectives on contraceptive choices could lead to more effective contraceptive use
The Multifragmentation Freeze--Out Volume in Heavy Ion Collisions
The reduced velocity correlation function for fragments from the reaction Fe
+ Au at 100 A~MeV bombarding energy is investigated using the
dynamical--statistical approach QMD+SMM and compared to experimental data to
extract the Freeze--Out volume assuming simultaneous multifragmentation.Comment: 8 pages; 3 uuencoded figures available with figures command, LateX,
UCRL-J-1157
Expressive and Instrumental Offending: Reconciling the Paradox of Specialisation and Versatility
Although previous research into specialisation has been dominated by the debate over the existence of specialisation versus versatility, it is suggested that research needs to move beyond the restrictions of this dispute. The current study explores the criminal careers of 200 offenders based on their criminal records, obtained from a police database in the North West of England, aiming to understand the patterns and nature of specialisation by determining the presence of differentiation within their general offending behaviours and examining whether the framework of Expressive and Instrumental offending styles can account for any specialised tendencies that emerge. Fifty-eight offences were subjected to Smallest Space Analysis. Results revealed that a model of criminal differentiation could be identified and that any specialisation is represented in terms of Expressive and Instrumental offending styles
Proteolytic processing of human cytomegalovirus glycoprotein B (gpUL55) is mediatedby the human endoprotease furin
AbstractInhibition of endoproteolytic cleavage of glycoprotein B (gB; gpUL55) of human cytomegalovirus was achieved by treatmentof infected fibroblasts with decanoyl peptidyl chloromethyl ketone (decRVKR-CMK), which inhibits the action of cellular subtilisin-like endoproteases with the amino acid recognition motif R × K/R R. Uncleaved gB precusor molecules of 160 kDa that were accumulated were endoglycosidase H resistant, suggesting that correct cellular transport occurred in the presence of the drug. The inhibitor also prevented endoproteolytic gB processing in CV-1 cells infected with a recombinant vaccinia virus-gB construct (VVgB). Evidence for direct involvement of the ubiquitous subtilisin-like endoprotease furin in gB cleavage was obtained from the observation that coinfection of CV-1 cells with WgB and a recombinant vaccinia-human furin construct reestablished endoproteolytic activity which was normally absent late after infection with WgB alone
Discovery of a high state AM CVn binary in the Galactic Bulge Survey
We report on the discovery of a hydrogen-deficient compact binary (CXOGBS
J175107.6-294037) belonging to the AM CVn class in the Galactic Bulge Survey.
Deep archival X-ray observations constrain the X-ray positional uncertainty of
the source to 0.57 arcsec, and allow us to uniquely identify the optical and UV
counterpart. Optical spectroscopic observations reveal the presence of broad,
shallow He i absorption lines while no sign of hydrogen is present, consistent
with a high state system. We present the optical lightcurve from Optical
Gravitational Lensing Experiment monitoring, spanning 15 years. It shows no
evidence for outbursts; variability is present at the 0.2 mag level on
timescales ranging from hours to weeks. A modulation on a timescale of years is
also observed. A Lomb-Scargle analysis of the optical lightcurves shows two
significant periodicities at 22.90 and 23.22 min. Although the physical
interpretation is uncertain, such timescales are in line with expectations for
the orbital and superhump periods. We estimate the distance to the source to be
between 0.5 - 1.1 kpc. Spectroscopic follow-up observations are required to
establish the orbital period, and to determine whether this source can serve as
a verification binary for the eLISA gravitational wave mission.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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