581 research outputs found
The Complete Local Volume Groups Sample - I. Sample Selection and X-ray Properties of the High-Richness Subsample
We present the Complete Local-Volume Groups Sample (CLoGS), a statistically
complete optically-selected sample of 53 groups within 80 Mpc. Our goal is to
combine X-ray, radio and optical data to investigate the relationship between
member galaxies, their active nuclei, and the hot intra-group medium (IGM). We
describe sample selection, define a 26-group high-richness subsample of groups
containing at least 4 optically bright (log L_B>=10.2 LBsol) galaxies, and
report the results of XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of these systems. We
find that 14 of the 26 groups are X-ray bright, possessing a group-scale IGM
extending at least 65kpc and with luminosity >10^41 erg/s, while a further 3
groups host smaller galaxy-scale gas halos. The X-ray bright groups have masses
in the range M_500=0.5-5x10^13 Msol, based on system temperatures of 0.4-1.4
keV, and X-ray luminosities in the range 2-200x10^41 erg/s. We find that
~53-65% of the X-ray bright groups have cool cores, a somewhat lower fraction
than found by previous archival surveys. Approximately 30% of the X-ray bright
groups show evidence of recent dynamical interactions (mergers or sloshing),
and ~35% of their dominant early-type galaxies host AGN with radio jets. We
find no groups with unusually high central entropies, as predicted by some
simulations, and confirm that CLoGS is in principle capable of detecting such
systems. We identify three previously unrecognized groups, and find that they
are either faint (L_X,R500<10^42 erg/s) with no concentrated cool core, or
highly disturbed. This leads us to suggest that ~20% of X-ray bright groups in
the local universe may still be unidentified.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS, 25 Manuscript pages with 6 tables
and 10 figures, plus 30 pages of appendices. v2 corrects minor typographical
errors identified at proof stag
A Natural Plasmid Uniquely Encodes Two Biosynthetic Pathways Creating a Potent Anti-MRSA Antibiotic
Background
Understanding how complex antibiotics are synthesised by their producer bacteria is essential for creation of new families of bioactive compounds. Thiomarinols, produced by marine bacteria belonging to the genus Pseudoalteromonas, are hybrids of two independently active species: the pseudomonic acid mixture, mupirocin, which is used clinically against MRSA, and the pyrrothine core of holomycin.
Methodology/Principal Findings
High throughput DNA sequencing of the complete genome of the producer bacterium revealed a novel 97 kb plasmid, pTML1, consisting almost entirely of two distinct gene clusters. Targeted gene knockouts confirmed the role of these clusters in biosynthesis of the two separate components, pseudomonic acid and the pyrrothine, and identified a putative amide synthetase that joins them together. Feeding mupirocin to a mutant unable to make the endogenous pseudomonic acid created a novel hybrid with the pyrrothine via âmutasynthesisâ that allows inhibition of mupirocin-resistant isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase, the mupirocin target. A mutant defective in pyrrothine biosynthesis was also able to incorporate alternative amine substrates.
Conclusions/Significance
Plasmid pTML1 provides a paradigm for combining independent antibiotic biosynthetic pathways or using mutasynthesis to develop a new family of hybrid derivatives that may extend the effective use of mupirocin against MRSA
Stackfile Database
This software provides storage retrieval and analysis functionality for managing satellite altimetry data. It improves the efficiency and analysis capabilities of existing database software with improved flexibility and documentation. It offers flexibility in the type of data that can be stored. There is efficient retrieval either across the spatial domain or the time domain. Built-in analysis tools are provided for frequently performed altimetry tasks. This software package is used for storing and manipulating satellite measurement data. It was developed with a focus on handling the requirements of repeat-track altimetry missions such as Topex and Jason. It was, however, designed to work with a wide variety of satellite measurement data [e.g., Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment -- GRACE). The software consists of several command-line tools for importing, retrieving, and analyzing satellite measurement data
Evaluation of the effect of patient education on rates of falls in older hospital patients: Description of a randomised controlled trial
Background. Accidental falls by older patients in hospital are one of the most commonly reported adverse events. Falls after discharge are also common. These falls have enormous physical, psychological and social consequences for older patients, including serious physical injury and reduced quality of life, and are also a source of substantial cost to health systems worldwide. There have been a limited number of randomised controlled trials, mainly using multifactorial interventions, aiming to prevent older people falling whilst inpatients. Trials to date have produced conflicting results and recent meta-analyses highlight that there is still insufficient evidence to clearly identify which interventions may reduce the rate of falls, and falls related injuries, in this population. Methods and design. A prospective randomised controlled trial (n = 1206) is being conducted at two hospitals in Australia. Patients are eligible to be included in the trial if they are over 60 years of age and they, or their family or guardian, give written consent. Participants are randomised into three groups. The control group continues to receive usual care. Both intervention groups receive a specifically designed patient education intervention on minimising falls in addition to usual care. The education is delivered by Digital Video Disc (DVD) and written workbook and aims to promote falls prevention activities by participants. One of the intervention groups also receives follow up education training visits by a health professional. Blinded assessors conduct baseline and discharge assessments and follow up participants for 6 months after discharge. The primary outcome measure is falls by participants in hospital. Secondary outcome measures include falls at home after discharge, knowledge of falls prevention strategies and motivation to engage in falls prevention activities after discharge. All analyses will be based on intention to treat principle. Discussion. This trial will examine the effect of a single intervention (specifically designed patient education) on rates of falls in older patients in hospital and after discharge. The results will provide robust recommendations for clinicians and researchers about the role of patient education in this population. The study has the potential to identify a new intervention that may reduce rates of falls in older hospital patients and could be readily duplicated and applied in a wide range of clinical settings. Trial Registration. ACTRN12608000015347
Observation and Spectral Measurements of the Crab Nebula with Milagro
The Crab Nebula was detected with the Milagro experiment at a statistical
significance of 17 standard deviations over the lifetime of the experiment. The
experiment was sensitive to approximately 100 GeV - 100 TeV gamma ray air
showers by observing the particle footprint reaching the ground. The fraction
of detectors recording signals from photons at the ground is a suitable proxy
for the energy of the primary particle and has been used to measure the photon
energy spectrum of the Crab Nebula between ~1 and ~100 TeV. The TeV emission is
believed to be caused by inverse-Compton up-scattering scattering of ambient
photons by an energetic electron population. The location of a TeV steepening
or cutoff in the energy spectrum reveals important details about the underlying
electron population. We describe the experiment and the technique for
distinguishing gamma-ray events from the much more-abundant hadronic events. We
describe the calculation of the significance of the excess from the Crab and
how the energy spectrum is fit. The fit is consistent with values measured by
IACTs between 1 and 20 TeV. Fixing the spectral index to values that have been
measured below 1 TeV by IACT experiments (2.4 to 2.6), the fit to the Milagro
data suggests that Crab exhibits a spectral steepening or cutoff between about
20 to 40 TeV.Comment: Submitted to Astrophysical Journa
The XMM Cluster Survey: Active Galactic Nuclei and Starburst Galaxies in XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z=1.46
We use Chandra X-ray and Spitzer infrared observations to explore the AGN and
starburst populations of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 at z=1.46, one of the most distant
spectroscopically confirmed galaxy clusters known. The high resolution X-ray
imaging reveals that the cluster emission is contaminated by point sources that
were not resolved in XMM observations of the system, and have the effect of
hardening the spectrum, leading to the previously reported temperature for this
system being overestimated. From a joint spectroscopic analysis of the Chandra
and XMM data, the cluster is found to have temperature T=4.1_-0.9^+0.6 keV and
luminosity L_X=(2.92_-0.35^+0.24)x10^44 erg/s extrapolated to a radius of 2
Mpc. As a result of this revised analysis, the cluster is found to lie on the
sigma_v-T relation, but the cluster remains less luminous than would be
expected from self-similar evolution of the local L_X-T relation. Two of the
newly discovered X-ray AGN are cluster members, while a third object, which is
also a prominent 24 micron source, is found to have properties consistent with
it being a high redshift, highly obscured object in the background. We find a
total of eight >5 sigma 24 micron sources associated with cluster members (four
spectroscopically confirmed, and four selected using photometric redshifts),
and one additional 24 micron source with two possible optical/near-IR
counterparts that may be associated with the cluster. Examining the IRAC colors
of these sources, we find one object is likely to be an AGN. Assuming that the
other 24 micron sources are powered by star formation, their infrared
luminosities imply star formation rates ~100 M_sun/yr. We find that three of
these sources are located at projected distances of <250 kpc from the cluster
center, suggesting that a large amount of star formation may be taking place in
the cluster core, in contrast to clusters at low redshift.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 16 pages, 10 figure
Galaxy Zoo: the dependence of morphology and colour on environment
We analyse the relationships between galaxy morphology, colour, environment
and stellar mass using data for over 100,000 objects from Galaxy Zoo, the
largest sample of visually classified morphologies yet compiled. We
conclusively show that colour and morphology fractions are very different
functions of environment. Both are sensitive to stellar mass; however, at fixed
stellar mass, while colour is also highly sensitive to environment, morphology
displays much weaker environmental trends. Only a small part of both relations
can be attributed to variation in the stellar mass function with environment.
Galaxies with high stellar masses are mostly red, in all environments and
irrespective of their morphology. Low stellar-mass galaxies are mostly blue in
low-density environments, but mostly red in high-density environments, again
irrespective of their morphology. The colour-density relation is primarily
driven by variations in colour fractions at fixed morphology, in particular the
fraction of spiral galaxies that have red colours, and especially at low
stellar masses. We demonstrate that our red spirals primarily include galaxies
with true spiral morphology. We clearly show there is an environmental
dependence for colour beyond that for morphology. Before using the Galaxy Zoo
morphologies to produce the above results, we first quantify a luminosity-,
size- and redshift-dependent classification bias that affects this dataset, and
probably most other studies of galaxy population morphology. A correction for
this bias is derived and applied to produce a sample of galaxies with reliable
morphological type likelihoods, on which we base our analysis.Comment: 25 pages, 20 figures (+ 6 pages, 11 figures in appendices);
moderately revised following referee's comments; accepted by MNRA
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