4,805 research outputs found
Deep radio observations of the radio halo of the bullet cluster 1E 0657-55.8
We present deep 1.1-3.1 GHz Australia Telescope Compact Array observations of
the radio halo of the bullet cluster, 1E 0657-55.8. In comparison to existing
images of this radio halo the detection in our images is at higher
significance. The radio halo is as extended as the X-ray emission in the
direction of cluster merger but is significantly less extended than the X-ray
emission in the perpendicular direction. At low significance we detect a faint
second peak in the radio halo close to the X-ray centroid of the smaller
sub-cluster (the bullet) suggesting that, similarly to the X-ray emission, the
radio halo may consist of two components. Finally, we find that the distinctive
shape of the western edge of the radio halo traces out the X-ray detected bow
shock. The radio halo morphology and the lack of strong point-to-point
correlations between radio, X-ray and weak-lensing properties suggests that the
radio halo is still being formed. The colocation of the X-ray shock with a
distinctive radio brightness edge illustrates that the shock is influencing the
structure of the radio halo. These observations support the theory that shocks
and turbulence influence the formation and evolution of radio halo synchrotron
emission.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures, 3 tables. Accepted by MNRA
Another shock for the Bullet cluster, and the source of seed electrons for radio relics
With Australia Telescope Compact Array observations, we detect a highly
elongated Mpc-scale diffuse radio source on the eastern periphery of the Bullet
cluster 1E0657-55.8, which we argue has the positional, spectral and
polarimetric characteristics of a radio relic. This powerful relic (2.3+/-0.1 x
10^25 W Hz^-1) consists of a bright northern bulb and a faint linear tail. The
bulb emits 94% of the observed radio flux and has the highest surface
brightness of any known relic. Exactly coincident with the linear tail we find
a sharp X-ray surface brightness edge in the deep Chandra image of the cluster
-- a signature of a shock front in the hot intracluster medium (ICM), located
on the opposite side of the cluster to the famous bow shock. This new example
of an X-ray shock coincident with a relic further supports the hypothesis that
shocks in the outer regions of clusters can form relics via diffusive shock
(re-)acceleration. Intriguingly, our new relic suggests that seed electrons for
reacceleration are coming from a local remnant of a radio galaxy, which we are
lucky to catch before its complete disruption. If this scenario, in which a
relic forms when a shock crosses a well-defined region of the ICM polluted with
aged relativistic plasma -- as opposed to the usual assumption that seeds are
uniformly mixed in the ICM -- is also the case for other relics, this may
explain a number of peculiar properties of peripheral relics.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Valuation of Child Behavioral Problems from the Perspective of US Adults
To assess preferences between child behavioral problems and estimate their value on a quality-adjusted life year (QALYs) scale
Mitochondrial‐Dna Analyses And The Origin And Relative Age Of Parthenogenetic Lizards (Genus Cnemidophorus). Iii. C. Velox And C. Exsanguis
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137554/1/evo02542.pd
Systematic review of antimicrobial drug prescribing in hospitals.
Prudent antibiotic prescribing to hospital inpatients has the potential to reduce the incidences of antimicrobial resistance and healthcare-associated infection. We reviewed the literature from January 1980 to November 2003 to identify rigorous evaluations of interventions to improve hospital antibiotic prescribing. We identified 66 studies with interpretable data of which 16 reported 20 microbiological outcomes: Gram negative resistant bacteria (GNRB), 10 studies; Clostridium difficile associated diarrhoea (CDAD), 5 studies; vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE), 3 studies and methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), 2 studies. Four studies provide good evidence that the intervention changed microbial outcomes with low risk of alternative explanations, eight studies provide less convincing evidence and four studies were negative. The strongest and most consistent evidence was for CDAD but we were able to analyse only the immediate impact of interventions because of nonstandardised durations of follow up. The ability to compare results of studies could be substantially improved by standardising methodology and reporting
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