6,309 research outputs found
Knowledge of iodine nutrition in the South African adult population
OBJECTIVES: To determine the level of knowledge regarding iodine nutrition and its relationship with socio-economic status in the South African population. DESIGN: A cross-sectional population survey collecting questionnaire information on knowledge of iodine nutrition and sociodemographic variables in a multistage, stratified, cluster study sample, representative of the adult South African population. SETTING: Home visits and personal interviews in the language of the respondent. SUBJECTS: Data were collected from one adult in each of the selected 2164 households, and the participation rate was 98%. RESULTS: Only 15.4% of respondents correctly identified iodised salt as the primary dietary source of iodine, 16.2% knew the thyroid gland needs iodine for its functioning, and a mere 3.9% considered brain damage, and 0.8% considered cretinism, as the most important health consequence of iodine deficiency. Compared with respondents from high socio-economic households, respondents from low socio-economic households were considerably less informed about aspects of iodine nutrition covered in this study. CONCLUSIONS: The knowledge level of iodine nutrition is low among South Africans, particularly among the low socio-economic groups. These data suggest that the international emphasis on brain damage resulting from iodine deficiency has not been conveyed successfully to the consumer level in this country
Self-trapping at the liquid vapor critical point
Experiments suggest that localization via self-trapping plays a central role
in the behavior of equilibrated low mass particles in both liquids and in
supercritical fluids. In the latter case, the behavior is dominated by the
liquid-vapor critical point which is difficult to probe, both experimentally
and theoretically. Here, for the first time, we present the results of
path-integral computations of the characteristics of a self-trapped particle at
the critical point of a Lennard-Jones fluid for a positive particle-atom
scattering length. We investigate the influence of the range of the
particle-atom interaction on trapping properties, and the pick-off decay rate
for the case where the particle is ortho-positronium.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, revtex4 preprin
An HST/COS legacy survey of high-velocity ultraviolet absorption in the Milky Way's circumgalactic medium and the Local Group
To characterize the absorption properties of this circumgalactic medium (CGM)
and its relation to the LG we present the so-far largest survey of metal
absorption in Galactic high-velocity clouds (HVCs) using archival ultraviolet
(UV) spectra of extragalactic background sources. The UV data are obtained with
the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
and are supplemented by 21 cm radio observations of neutral hydrogen. Along 270
sightlines we measure metal absorption in the lines of SiII, SiIII, CII, and
CIV and associated HI 21 cm emission in HVCs in the velocity range
|v_LSR|=100-500 km s^-1. With this unprecedented large HVC sample we were able
to improve the statistics on HVC covering fractions, ionization conditions,
small-scale structure, CGM mass, and inflow rate. For the first time, we
determine robustly the angular two point correlation function of the
high-velocity absorbers, systematically analyze antipodal sightlines on the
celestial sphere, and compare the absorption characteristics with that of
Damped Lyman alpha absorbers (DLAs) and constrained cosmological simulations of
the LG. Our study demonstrates that the Milky Way CGM contains sufficient
gaseous material to maintain the Galactic star-formation rate at its current
level. We show that the CGM is composed of discrete gaseous structures that
exhibit a large-scale kinematics together with small-scale variations in
physical conditions. The Magellanic Stream clearly dominates both the cross
section and mass flow of high-velocity gas in the Milky Way's CGM. The possible
presence of high-velocity LG gas underlines the important role of the local
cosmological environment in the large-scale gas-circulation processes in and
around the Milky Way (abridged).Comment: 37 pages, 25 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in A&
A View of Point Sources in Hickson Compact Groups: High AGN fraction but a dearth of strong AGNs
We present X-ray point source catalogs for 9 Hickson Compact Groups
(HCGs, 37 galaxies) at distances Mpc. We perform detailed X-ray point
source detection and photometry, and interpret the point source population by
means of simulated hardness ratios. We thus estimate X-ray luminosities ()
for all sources, most of which are too weak for reliable spectral fitting. For
all sources, we provide catalogs with counts, count rates, power-law indices
(), hardness ratios, and , in the full ( keV), soft
( keV) and hard ( keV) bands. We use optical emission-line
ratios from the literature to re-classify 24 galaxies as star-forming,
accreting onto a supermassive black hole (AGNs), transition objects, or
low-ionization nuclear emission regions (LINERs). Two-thirds of our galaxies
have nuclear X-ray sources with /UVOT counterparts. Two nuclei have
~ erg s, are strong
multi-wavelength AGNs and follow the known correlation for strong AGNs. Otherwise, most nuclei are X-ray faint,
consistent with either a low-luminosity AGN or a nuclear X-ray binary
population, and fall in the "non-AGN locus" in space, which also hosts other, normal, galaxies. Our results suggest
that HCG X-ray nuclei in high specific star formation rate spiral galaxies are
likely dominated by star formation, while those with low specific star
formation rates in earlier types likely harbor a weak AGN. The AGN fraction in
HCG galaxies with and erg
s is , somewhat higher than the fraction
in galaxy clusters.Comment: 77 pages (emulateapj), 28 tables, 11 figures. Accepted by ApJS on
March 5, 201
Neutron reflection from the liquid helium surface.
The reflection of neutrons from a helium surface has been observed for the first time. The 4He surface is smoother in the superfluid state at 1.54 K than in the case of the normal liquid at 2.3 K. In the superfluid state we also observe a surface layer ~200 Å thick which has a subtly different neutron scattering cross-section, which may be explained by an enhanced Bose-Einstein condensate fraction close to the helium surface. The application of neutron reflectometry described in this paper creates new and exciting opportunities for the surface and interfacial study of quantum fluids
Exploratory Study of the X-Ray Properties of Quasars With Intrinsic Narrow Absorption Lines
We have used archival Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of quasars hosting
intrinsic narrow UV absorption lines (intrinsic NALs) to carry out an
exploratory survey of their X-ray properties. Our sample consists of three
intrinsic-NAL quasars and one "mini-BAL" quasar, plus four quasars without
intrinsic absorption lines for comparison. These were drawn in a systematic
manner from an optical/UV-selected sample. The X-ray properties of
intrinsic-NAL quasars are indistinguishable from those of "normal" quasars. We
do not find any excess absorption in quasars with intrinsic NALs, with upper
limits of a few times 10^22 cm^-2. We compare the X-ray and UV properties of
our sample quasars by plotting the equivalent width and blueshift velocity of
the intrinsic NALs and the X-ray spectral index against the "optical-to-X-ray"
slope, alpha-ox. When BAL quasars and other AGNs with intrinsic NALs are
included, the plots suggest that intrinsic-NAL quasars form an extension of the
BAL sequences and tend to bridge the gap between BAL and "normal" quasars.
Observations of larger samples of intrinsic-NAL quasars are needed to verify
these conclusions. We also test two competing scenarios for the location of the
NAL gas in an accretion-disk wind. Our results strongly support a location of
the NAL gas at high latitudes above the disk, closer to the disk axis than the
dense BAL wind. We detect excess X-ray absorption only in Q0014+8118, which
does not host intrinsic NALs. The absorbing medium very likely corresponds to
an intervening system at z=1.1, which also produces strong absorption lines in
the rest-frame UV spectrum of this quasar. In the appendix we discuss the
connection between UV and X-ray attenuation and its effect on alpha-ox.Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
Roaring high and low: composition and possible functions of the Iberian stag's vocal repertoire
We provide a detailed description of the rutting vocalisations of free-ranging male Iberian deer (Cervus elaphus hispanicus, Hilzheimer 1909), a geographically isolated and morphologically differentiated subspecies of red deer Cervus elaphus. We combine spectrographic examinations, spectral analyses and automated classifications to identify different call types, and
compare the composition of the vocal repertoire with that of other red deer subspecies. Iberian stags give bouts of roars (and more rarely, short series of barks) that are typically composed of two different types of calls. Long Common Roars are mostly given at the beginning or at the end of the bout, and are characterised by a high fundamental frequency (F0) resulting in poorly defined formant frequencies but a relatively high amplitude. In contrast, Short Common Roars are typically given in the middle or at the end of the bout, and are characterised by a lower F0 resulting in relatively well defined vocal tract resonances, but low amplitude. While we did not identify entirely Harsh Roars (as described in the Scottish red
deer subspecies (Cervus elaphus scoticus), a small percentage of Long Common Roars contained segments of deterministic chaos. We suggest that the evolution of two clearly distinct types of Common Roars may reflect divergent selection pressures favouring either vocal efficiency in high pitched roars or the communication of body size in low-pitched, high spectral density roars highlighting vocal tract resonances. The clear divergence of the Iberian red deer vocal repertoire from those of other documented European red deer populations reinforces the status of this geographical variant as a distinct subspecies
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