590 research outputs found
Decay of Magnetic Fields in the Early Universe
We study the evolution of a stochastic helical magnetic field generated in
the early Universe after the electroweak phase transition, using standard
magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). We find how the coherence length xi, magnetic
energy E_M and magnetic helicity H evolve with time. We show that the
self-similarity of the magnetic power spectrum alone implies that xi ~ t^{1/2}.
This in turn implies that magnetic helicity decays as H ~ t^{-2s}, and that the
magnetic energy decays as E_M ~ t^{-0.5-2s}, where s is inversely proportional
to the magnetic Reynolds number Re_M. These laws improve on several previous
estimates.Comment: 5pp LaTeX + World Sci procs class, 3 eps figs. Talk given at Strong
and Electroweak Matter, Oct 2-5 2002, Heidelber
Nutritional status in elderly people admitted to community residential homes: comparisons between two cohorts
The aim was to describe nutritional status and socio-demographic and medical data in people who were newly admitted to community residential homes (cohort 2), and to compare the results with a previous study performed in the same municipality four years earlier (cohort 1). One hundred and twenty-seven people, 65 years of age, or older, newly admitted to residential homes in a municipality in the southern part of Sweden, were consecutively included. Nutritional status was assessed, using a combination of anthropometry and serum protein measurements and by Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA). The results showed that 32% of the residents in cohort 2 were assessed as protein-energy malnourished (PEM), compared with 38% in cohort 1. Body mass index, psychological stress or acute disease, and reduced fluid intake were items in MNA which had power to predict PEM. Residents in cohort 2, diagnosed as having severe medical diseases, increased as well as residents with neuropsychological problems. Simultaneously, the number living in residential homes decreased, as compared to cohort 1. These differences indicate that the admission criteria have changed between cohorts 1 and 2
Detection of Babesia divergens in southern Norway by using an immunofluorescence antibody test in cow sera
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The incidence of bovine babesiosis, caused by <it>Babesia divergens </it>(Apicomplexa: Piroplasmida) has decreased markedly since the 1930 s, but may re-emerge as a consequence of climate change and changes in legislation and pasturing practices. This is a potentially serious disease, with both economical and animal welfare consequences. Therefore, there is a need to survey the distribution of <it>B. divergens</it>.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We tested sera from 306 healthy pastured cows from 24 farms along the southern Norwegian coast by using an indirect immunofluorescence IgG antibody test (IFAT). Fractions of seropositive cows were compared by calculating 95% CI.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The results of this test showed that 27% of the sera were positive for <it>B. divergens </it>antibodies. The fraction of antibody-positive sera that we detected showed a two-humped distribution, with a high fraction of positives being found in municipalities in the western and eastern parts of the study area, while the municipalities between these areas had few or no positive serum samples.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Neither the farmers' observations nor the Norwegian Dairy Herd Recording System give an adequate picture of the distribution of bovine babesiosis. Serological testing of cows by using IFAT is a convenient way of screening for the presence of <it>B. divergens </it>in an area.</p
The Cosmic Microwave Background and Helical Magnetic Fields: the tensor mode
We study the effect of a possible helicity component of a primordial magnetic
field on the tensor part of the cosmic microwave background temperature
anisotropies and polarization. We give analytical approximations for the tensor
contributions induced by helicity, discussing their amplitude and spectral
index in dependence of the power spectrum of the primordial magnetic field. We
find that an helical magnetic field creates a parity odd component of gravity
waves inducing parity odd polarization signals. However, only if the magnetic
field is close to scale invariant and if its helical part is close to maximal,
the effect is sufficiently large to be observable. We also discuss the
implications of causality on the magnetic field spectrum.Comment: We have corrected a normalisation error which was pointed out to us
by Antony Lewis. It enhances our limits on the magnetic fields by
(2\pi)^{3/4} ~
Validating a common tick survey method: cloth-dragging and line transects
Cloth-dragging is the most widely-used method for collecting and counting ticks, but there are few studies of its reliability. By using cloth-dragging, we applied a replicated line transects survey method, in two areas in Sweden with different Ixodes ricinus tick-densities (low at Grimsö and high at Bogesund) to evaluate developmental stage specific repeatability, agreement and precision in estimates of tick abundance. 'Repeatability' was expressed as the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC), 'agreement' with the Total Deviation Index (TDI) and 'precision' by the coefficient of variation (CV) for a given dragging distance. Repeatability (ICC) and agreement (TDI) were higher for the most abundant instar (nymphs) and in the area of higher abundance. At Bogesund tick counts were higher than at Grimsö and so also repeatability, with fair to substantial ICC estimates between 0.22 and 0.75, and TDI ranged between 1 and 44.5 counts of difference (thus high to moderate agreement). At Grimsö, ICC was poor to moderate and ranged between 0 and 0.59, whereas TDI remained low with estimates lower or equal to 1 count (thus high agreement). Despite a 100-fold lower abundance at Grimsö, the same level of precision for nymphs could be achieved with a 70% increase of dragging effort. We conclude that the cloth-dragging technique is useful for surveying ticks' and primarily to estimate abundance of the nymphal stage, whereas it rarely will be recommended for larvae and adults
The stochastic gravitational wave background from turbulence and magnetic fields generated by a first-order phase transition
We analytically derive the spectrum of gravitational waves due to
magneto-hydrodynamical turbulence generated by bubble collisions in a
first-order phase transition. In contrast to previous studies, we take into
account the fact that turbulence and magnetic fields act as sources of
gravitational waves for many Hubble times after the phase transition is
completed. This modifies the gravitational wave spectrum at large scales. We
also model the initial stirring phase preceding the Kolmogorov cascade, while
earlier works assume that the Kolmogorov spectrum sets in instantaneously. The
continuity in time of the source is relevant for a correct determination of the
peak position of the gravitational wave spectrum. We discuss how the results
depend on assumptions about the unequal-time correlation of the source and
motivate a realistic choice for it. Our treatment gives a similar peak
frequency as previous analyses but the amplitude of the signal is reduced due
to the use of a more realistic power spectrum for the magneto-hydrodynamical
turbulence. For a strongly first-order electroweak phase transition, the signal
is observable with the space interferometer LISA.Comment: 46 pages, 17 figures. Replaced with revised version accepted for
publication in JCA
- âŠ