868 research outputs found
Prospects for Measuring Differential Rotation in White Dwarfs Through Asteroseismology
We examine the potential of asteroseismology for exploring the internal
rotation of white dwarf stars. Data from global observing campaigns have
revealed a wealth of frequencies, some of which show the signature of
rotational splitting. Tools developed for helioseismology to use many solar
p-mode frequencies for inversion of the rotation rate with depth are adapted to
the case of more limited numbers of modes of low degree. We find that the small
number of available modes in white dwarfs, coupled with the similarity between
the rotational-splitting kernels of the modes, renders direct inversion
unstable. Accordingly, we adopt what we consider to be plausible functional
forms for the differential rotation profile; this is sufficiently restrictive
to enable us to carry out a useful calibration. We show examples of this
technique for PG 1159 stars and pulsating DB white dwarfs. Published frequency
splittings for white dwarfs are currently not accurate enough for meaningful
inversions; reanalysis of existing data can provide splittings of sufficient
accuracy when the frequencies of individual peaks are extracted via
least-squares fitting or multipeak decompositions. We find that when mode
trapping is evident in the period spacing of g modes, the measured splittings
can constrain dOmega/dr.Comment: 26 pages, 20 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
The Research on Public Participation in Local Legislation ——Take Xiamen as an Example
1997年,党的十五大提出依法治国、建设社会主义法治国家的基本方略;1999年,“依法治国”正式写入宪法,明确规定“中华人民共和国实行依法治国,建设社会主义法治国家”;2007年,党的十七大做出“全面落实依法治国基本方略,加快建设社会主义法治国家”的战略部署。民主是法治国家必备的政治基础,完善的民主是法治国家的重要标志,立法并不必然是符合所有人意志的决定,但却应该是所有人参与立法决策过程的结果。2007年9月到2009年6月,西北政法大学教授王周户就“公众参与”项目在陕西西安、宝鸡进行了问卷调查。982份调查问卷结果显示:绝大多数人(78%)认为公民应该参与人大立法和政府决策;77%的被调查者...In the year of 1997, the 15th CCP congress raised the basic strategy of manage the state according to the rule of law and develop socialism law-based government; In the year of 1999, “running the country according to law” was formally written into the constitution law, “The People’s Republic of China governs the country according to law and makes it socialist country ruled by law.” was clearly dec...学位:法律硕士院系专业:法学院法律系_法律硕士(JM)学号:X200812013
Systematic Review of CT Angiography in Guiding Management in Pediatric Oropharyngeal Trauma.
OBJECTIVES: Pediatric oropharyngeal trauma is common. Although most cases resolve uneventfully, there have been reports of internal carotid artery injury leading to devastating neurovascular sequelae. There is significant controversy regarding the utility of CT angiography (CTA) in children with seemingly minor oropharyngeal trauma. The goal of this study was to appraise changes in diagnosis and treatment based on CTA results.
METHODS: A comprehensive search of PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, the Cochrane Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders Group Trials Register, and the ClinicalTrials.gov database was performed following PRISMA guidelines.
RESULTS: The search yielded 5,078 unique abstracts, of which 8 articles were included. A total of 662 patients were included, with 293 having any CT head/neck imaging, and 255 with CTA. Eleven injuries/abnormalities of the carotid were found on CTAs, comprising edema around the carotid (n = 8), potential intimal tear (n = 1), carotid spasm (n = 1), and carotid compression (n = 1). The pooled proportion of imaging findings on CTA that could lead to changes in clinical management was 0.00 (95% CI 0.00-0.43). Angiography was obtained in 10 patients, in 6 cases due to abnormal CTA. Angiography identified 1 patient with vessel spasm and two patients with carotid intima disruption without thrombus. No patient underwent vascular repair or suffered cerebrovascular injury.
CONCLUSION: Imaging with CTA yielded radiological abnormalities in a few instances. These results do not support the routine use of CTA in screening pediatric oropharyngeal trauma when balanced against the risk of radiation, as it rarely resulted in management changes and was not shown to improve outcomes.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: N/A Laryngoscope, 133:457-466, 2023
Phase-resolved NuSTAR and Swift-XRT Observations of Magnetar 4U 0142+61
We present temporal and spectral analysis of simultaneous 0.5-79 keV
Swift-XRT and NuSTAR observations of the magnetar 4U 0142+61. The pulse profile
changes significantly with photon energy between 3 and 35 keV. The pulse
fraction increases with energy, reaching a value of ~20%, similar to that
observed in 1E 1841-045 and much lower than the ~80% pulse fraction observed in
1E 2259+586. We do not detect the 55-ks phase modulation reported in previous
Suzaku-HXD observations. The phase-averaged spectrum of 4U 0142+61 above 20 keV
is dominated by a hard power law with a photon index, ~ 0.65, and the
spectrum below 20 keV can be described by two blackbodies, a blackbody plus a
soft power law, or by a Comptonized blackbody model. We study the full
phase-resolved spectra using the electron-positron outflow model of Beloborodov
(2013). Our results are consistent with the parameters of the active j-bundle
derived from INTEGRAL data by Hascoet et al. (2014). We find that a significant
degeneracy appears in the inferred parameters if the footprint of the j-bundle
is allowed to be a thin ring instead of a polar cap. The degeneracy is reduced
when the footprint is required to be the hot spot inferred from the soft X-ray
data.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
Broadband X-ray Properties of the Gamma-ray Binary 1FGL J1018.6-5856
We report on NuSTAR, XMM-Newton and Swift observations of the gamma-ray
binary 1FGL J1018.6-5856. We measure the orbital period to be 16.544+/-0.008
days using Swift data spanning 1900 days. The orbital period is different from
the 2011 gamma-ray measurement which was used in the previous X-ray study of An
et al. (2013) using ~400 days of Swift data, but is consistent with a new
gamma-ray solution reported in 2014. The light curve folded on the new period
is qualitatively similar to that reported previously, having a spike at phase 0
and broad sinusoidal modulation. The X-ray flux enhancement at phase 0 occurs
more regularly in time than was previously suggested. A spiky structure at this
phase seems to be a persistent feature, although there is some variability.
Furthermore, we find that the source flux clearly correlates with the spectral
hardness throughout all orbital phases, and that the broadband X-ray spectra
measured with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, and Swift are well fit with an unbroken
power-law model. This spectrum suggests that the system may not be
accretion-powered.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
NuSTAR observations of X-ray bursts from the magnetar 1E 1048.1-5937
We report the detection of eight bright X-ray bursts from the 6.5-s magnetar
1E 1048.1-5937, during a 2013 July observation campaign with the Nuclear
Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). We study the morphological and spectral
properties of these bursts and their evolution with time. The bursts resulted
in count rate increases by orders of magnitude, sometimes limited by the
detector dead time, and showed blackbody spectra with kT=6-8 keV in the T90
duration of 1-4 s, similar to earlier bursts detected from the source. We find
that the spectra during the tail of the bursts can be modeled with an absorbed
blackbody with temperature decreasing with flux. The bursts flux decays
followed a power-law of index 0.8-0.9. In the burst tail spectra, we detect a
~13 keV emission feature, similar to those reported in previous bursts from
this source as well as from other magnetars observed with the Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer (RXTE). We explore possible origins of the spectral feature
such as proton cyclotron emission, which implies a magnetic field strength of
B~2X10^15 G in the emission region. However, the consistency of the energy of
the feature in different objects requires further explanation.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
High-Energy X-ray Imaging of the Pulsar Wind Nebula MSH~15-52: Constraints on Particle Acceleration and Transport
We present the first images of the pulsar wind nebula (PWN) MSH 15-52 in the
hard X-ray band (>8 keV), as measured with the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope
Array (NuSTAR). Overall, the morphology of the PWN as measured by NuSTAR in the
3-7 keV band is similar to that seen in Chandra high-resolution imaging.
However, the spatial extent decreases with energy, which we attribute to
synchrotron energy losses as the particles move away from the shock. The
hard-band maps show a relative deficit of counts in the northern region towards
the RCW 89 thermal remnant, with significant asymmetry. We find that the
integrated PWN spectra measured with NuSTAR and Chandra suggest that there is a
spectral break at 6 keV which may be explained by a break in the
synchrotron-emitting electron distribution at ~200 TeV and/or imperfect cross
calibration. We also measure spatially resolved spectra, showing that the
spectrum of the PWN softens away from the central pulsar B1509-58, and that
there exists a roughly sinusoidal variation of spectral hardness in the
azimuthal direction. We discuss the results using particle flow models. We find
non-monotonic structure in the variation with distance of spectral hardness
within 50" of the pulsar moving in the jet direction, which may imply particle
and magnetic-field compression by magnetic hoop stress as previously suggested
for this source. We also present 2-D maps of spectral parameters and find an
interesting shell-like structure in the NH map. We discuss possible origins of
the shell-like structure and their implications.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Evanescent Black Holes
A renormalizable theory of quantum gravity coupled to a dilaton and conformal
matter in two space-time dimensions is analyzed. The theory is shown to be
exactly solvable classically. Included among the exact classical solutions are
configurations describing the formation of a black hole by collapsing matter.
The problem of Hawking radiation and backreaction of the metric is analyzed to
leading order in a expansion, where is the number of matter fields.
The results suggest that the collapsing matter radiates away all of its energy
before an event horizon has a chance to form, and black holes thereby disappear
from the quantum mechanical spectrum. It is argued that the matter
asymptotically approaches a zero-energy ``bound state'' which can carry global
quantum numbers and that a unitary -matrix including such states should
exist.Comment: 14 page
NuSTAR observations of the powerful radio-galaxy Cygnus A
We present NuSTAR observations of the powerful radio galaxy Cygnus A,
focusing on the central absorbed active galactic nucleus (AGN). Cygnus A is
embedded in a cool-core galaxy cluster, and hence we also examine archival
XMM-Newton data to facilitate the decomposition of the spectrum into the AGN
and intracluster medium (ICM) components. NuSTAR gives a source-dominated
spectrum of the AGN out to >70keV. In gross terms, the NuSTAR spectrum of the
AGN has the form of a power law (Gamma~1.6-1.7) absorbed by a neutral column
density of N_H~1.6x10^23 cm^-2. However, we also detect curvature in the hard
(>10keV) spectrum resulting from reflection by Compton-thick matter out of our
line-of-sight to the X-ray source. Compton reflection, possibly from the outer
accretion disk or obscuring torus, is required even permitting a high-energy
cutoff in the continuum source; the limit on the cutoff energy is E_cut>111keV
(90% confidence). Interestingly, the absorbed power-law plus reflection model
leaves residuals suggesting the absorption/emission from a fast
(15,000-26,000km/s), high column-density (N_W>3x10^23 cm^-2), highly ionized
(xi~2,500 erg cm/s) wind. A second, even faster ionized wind component is also
suggested by these data. We show that the ionized wind likely carries a
significant mass and momentum flux, and may carry sufficient kinetic energy to
exercise feedback on the host galaxy. If confirmed, the simultaneous presence
of a strong wind and powerful jets in Cygnus A demonstrates that feedback from
radio-jets and sub-relativistic winds are not mutually exclusive phases of AGN
activity but can occur simultaneously.Comment: 13 pages; accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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