2,542 research outputs found
FINDCHIRP: an algorithm for detection of gravitational waves from inspiraling compact binaries
Matched-filter searches for gravitational waves from coalescing compact
binaries by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration use the FINDCHIRP algorithm: an
implementation of the optimal filter with innovations to account for unknown
signal parameters and to improve performance on detector data that has
nonstationary and non-Gaussian artifacts. We provide details on the FINDCHIRP
algorithm as used in the search for subsolar mass binaries, binary neutron
stars, neutron star-black hole binaries, and binary black holes.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure, journal version with Creative Commons 4.0
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14C-Cobalamin Absorption from Endogenously Labeled Chicken Eggs Assessed in Humans Using Accelerator Mass Spectrometry.
Traditionally, the bioavailability of vitamin B-12 (B12) from in vivo labeled foods was determined by labeling the vitamin with radiocobalt (57Co, 58Co or 60Co). This required use of penetrating radioactivity and sometimes used higher doses of B12 than the physiological limit of B12 absorption. The aim of this study was to determine the bioavailability and absorbed B12 from chicken eggs endogenously labeled with 14C-B12 using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). 14C-B12 was injected intramuscularly into hens to produce eggs enriched in vivo with the 14C labeled vitamin. The eggs, which provided 1.4 to 2.6 Όg of B12 (~1.1 kBq) per serving, were scrambled, cooked and fed to 10 human volunteers. Baseline and post-ingestion blood, urine and stool samples were collected over a one-week period and assessed for 14C-B12 content using AMS. Bioavailability ranged from 13.2 to 57.7% (mean 30.2 ± 16.4%). Difference among subjects was explained by dose of B12, with percent bioavailability from 2.6 Όg only half that from 1.4 Όg. The total amount of B12 absorbed was limited to 0.5-0.8 Όg (mean 0.55 ± 0.19 Όg B12) and was relatively unaffected by the amount consumed. The use of 14C-B12 offers the only currently available method for quantifying B12 absorption in humans, including food cobalamin absorption. An egg is confirmed as a good source of B12, supplying approximately 20% of the average adult daily requirement (RDA for adults = 2.4 Όg/day)
Time-Resolved Ultraviolet Observations of the Globular Cluster X-ray Source in NGC 6624: The Shortest Known Period Binary System
Using the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope,
we have obtained the first time-resolved spectra of the King et al.
ultraviolet-bright counterpart to the 11-minute binary X-ray source in the core
of the globular cluster NGC 6624. This object cannot be readily observed in the
visible, even from HST, due to a much brighter star superposed <0.1'' distant.
Our FOS data show a highly statistically significant UV flux modulation with a
period of 11.46+-0.04 min, very similar to the 685 sec period of the known
X-ray modulation, definitively confirming the association between the King et
al. UV counterpart and the intense X-ray source. The UV amplitude is very large
compared with the observed X-ray oscillations: X-ray variations are generally
reported as 2-3% peak-to-peak, whereas our data show an amplitude of about 16%
in the 126-251 nm range. A model for the system by Arons & King predicts
periodic UV fluctuations in this shortest-known period binary system, due to
the cyclically changing aspect of the X-ray heated face of the secondary star
(perhaps a very low mass helium degenerate). However, prior to our
observations, this predicted modulation has not been detected. Employing the
Arons & King formalism, which invokes a number of different physical
assumptions, we infer a system orbital inclination 35deg<i<50 deg. Amongst the
three best-studied UV/optical counterparts to the intense globular cluster
X-ray sources, two are now thought to consist of exotic double-degenerate
ultrashort period binary systems.Comment: 10 pages including 2 figures in Latex (AASTeX 4.0). Accepted for
publication in vol. 482 (1997 June 10 issue) of The Astrophysical Journal
(Letters
Improving Software Citation and Credit
The past year has seen movement on several fronts for improving software
citation, including the Center for Open Science's Transparency and Openness
Promotion (TOP) Guidelines, the Software Publishing Special Interest Group that
was started at January's AAS meeting in Seattle at the request of that
organization's Working Group on Astronomical Software, a Sloan-sponsored
meeting at GitHub in San Francisco to begin work on a cohesive research
software citation-enabling platform, the work of Force11 to "transform and
improve" research communication, and WSSSPE's ongoing efforts that include
software publication, citation, credit, and sustainability.
Brief reports on these efforts were shared at the BoF, after which
participants discussed ideas for improving software citation, generating a list
of recommendations to the community of software authors, journal publishers,
ADS, and research authors. The discussion, recommendations, and feedback will
help form recommendations for software citation to those publishers represented
in the Software Publishing Special Interest Group and the broader community.Comment: Birds of a Feather session organized by the Astrophysics Source Code
Library (ASCL, http://ascl.net/ ); to be published in Proceedings of ADASS
XXV (Sydney, Australia; October, 2015). 4 page
Detecting relic gravitational radiation from string cosmology with LIGO
A characteristic spectrum of relic gravitational radiation is produced by a
period of ``stringy inflation" in the early universe. This spectrum is unusual,
because the energy-density rises rapidly with frequency. We show that
correlation experiments with the two gravitational wave detectors being built
for the Laser Interferometric Gravitational Observatory (LIGO) could detect
this relic radiation, for certain ranges of the parameters that characterize
the underlying string cosmology model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figures, Revte
Supervision and culture: Meetings at thresholds
Counsellors are required to engage in supervision in order to reflect on, reflexively review, and extend their practice. Supervision, then, might be understood as a partnership in which the focus of practitioners and supervisors is on ethical and effective practice with all clients. In Aotearoa/New Zealand, there has recently been interest in the implications for supervision of cultural difference, particularly in terms of the Treaty of Waitangi as a practice metaphor, and when non-MÄori practitioners counsel MÄori clients. This article offers an account of a qualitative investigation by a group of counsellors/supervisors into their experiences of supervision as cultural partnership. Based on interviews and then using writing-as-research, the article explores the playing out of supervisionâs contribution to practitionersâ effective and ethical practice in the context of Aotearoa/New Zealand, showing a range of possible accounts and strategies and discussing their effects. Employing the metaphor of threshold, the article includes a series of reflections and considerations for supervision practice when attention is drawn to difference
A 16-yr Comparison of Fine Particle and Aerosol Strong Acidity at the Interface Zone (1,540 m) and Within (452 m) the Planetary Boundary Layer of the Great Gulf and Presidential-Dry River Class I Wildernesses on the Presidential Range, New Hampshire
Mount Washington, NH in the White Mountain National Forest, is flanked to the north-northeast and south by two Class I Wilderness areas, the Great Gulf and Presidential Range-Dry River Wildernesses, respectively. The Clean Air Act protects Class I area natural resource values from air pollution. Aerosol sulfate, a fine particulate component that is often transported long distances, is a known contributor to visibility degradation and acidic deposition. We examined summertime fine particulate aerosol mass and sulfate, strong acidity and ammonium concentrations from 1988 to 2004 on Mount Washington at two elevations, 452 and 1,540 meters (msl). The former site is within, and the latter at the interface of, the planetary boundary layer. Comparisons of sampling interval durations (10 and 24 hours), site vs. site, and different sampling methods are made. We also examine the extent to which aerosol sulfate is neutralized. Ten hour (daytime) compared to 24 hour samples have higher mass and aerosol sulfate concentrations, however paired samples are well correlated. Fine mass concentrations compared between the 452 m and 1,540 m sites (standard temperature and pressure corrected) show a weak positive linear relationship with the later being approximately 34% lower. We attribute the lack of a strong correlation to the facts that the 1,540 m site is commonly at the interface of and even above the regional planetary boundary layer in summer and that it can intercept different air masses relative to the 452 m site. Sulfate is approximately 19% lower at the higher elevation site, but comprises a greater percentage of total fine mass; 42% compared to 35% for the high and low elevation site, respectively. Aerosol strong acidity was found to increase with increasing sulfate concentrations at both sites. At the high elevation site, elevated mass and sulfate concentrations are associated with westerly and southwesterly regional flows
A Prediction of Brown Dwarfs in Ultracold Molecular Gas
A recent model for the stellar initial mass function (IMF), in which the
stellar masses are randomly sampled down to the thermal Jeans mass from
hierarchically structured pre-stellar clouds, predicts that regions of
ultra-cold CO gas, such as those recently found in nearby galaxies by Allen and
collaborators, should make an abundance of Brown Dwarfs with relatively few
normal stars. This result comes from the low value of the thermal Jeans mass,
considering that the hierarchical cloud model always gives the Salpeter IMF
slope above this lower mass limit. The ultracold CO clouds in the inner disk of
M31 have T~3K and pressures that are probably 10 times higher than in the solar
neighborhood. This gives a mass at the peak of the IMF equal to 0.01 Msun, well
below the Brown Dwarf limit of 0.08 Msun. Using a functional approximation to
the IMF, the ultracold clouds would have 50% of the star-like mass and 90% of
the objects below the Brown Dwarf limit. The brightest of the Brown Dwarfs in
M31 should have an apparent, extinction-corrected K-band magnitude of ~21 mag
in their pre-main sequence phase.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, to be published in Astrophysical Journal, Vol
522, September 10, 199
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