200 research outputs found
Stoics against stoics in Cudworth's "A Treatise of Freewill"
In his 'A Treatise of Freewill', Ralph Cudworth argues against Stoic determinism by drawing on what he takes to be other concepts found in Stoicism, notably the claim that some things are âup to usâ and that these things are the product of our choice. These concepts are central to the late Stoic Epictetus and it appears at first glance as if Cudworth is opposing late Stoic voluntarism against early Stoic determinism. This paper argues that in fact, despite his claim to be drawing on Stoic doctrine, Cudworth uses these terms with a meaning first articulated only later, by the Peripatetic commentator Alexander of Aphrodisias
Orbits of Globular Clusters in the Outer Galaxy: NGC 7006
We present a proper motion study of the distant globular cluster NGC 7006
based on the measurement of 25 photographic plates spanning a 40-year interval.
The absolute proper motion determined with respect to extragalactic objects is
(-0.96, -1.14) +- (0.35, 0.40) mas/yr. The total space velocity of NGC 7006 in
a Galactocentric rest frame is 279 km/s, placing the cluster on one of the most
energetic orbits (Ra =102 kpc) known to date for clusters within 40-kpc from
the Galactic center. We compare the orbits of four clusters that have
apocentric radii larger than 80 kpc (NGC 5466, NGC 6934, NGC 7006 and Pal 13)
with those of Galactic satellites with well-measured proper motions. These
clusters have orbits that are highly eccentric and of various inclinations with
respect to the Galactic plane. In contrast, the orbits of the Galactic
satellites are of low to moderate eccentricity and highly inclined. Based on
orbit types, chemical abundances and cluster parameters, we discuss the
properties of the hypothetical host systems of the remote globular clusters in
the Searle-Zinn paradigm. It is apparent that clusters such as NGC 5466, NGC
6934 and NGC 7006 formed in systems that more likely resemble the Fornax dSph,
rather than the Sagittarius dSph. We also discuss plausible causes for the
difference found so far between the orbit type of outer halo clusters and that
of Galactic satellites and for the tentative, yet suggestive phase-space
scatter found among outer halo clusters.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, to be published in the Astronomical Journa
Palomar 13's Last Stand
We present a proper motion and CCD photometric study of stars in the distant
halo globular cluster Palomar 13. The absolute proper motion of Pal 13 with
respect to the background galaxies, derived from moderate scale photographic
plates separated by a 40-year baseline, is milliarc-seconds per year. The
resultant total space velocity (315 km s) implies that Pal 13 is in the
inner part of its orbit near perigalacticon. Orbital integration reveals the
cluster to possess an inclined, very eccentric, retrograde orbit. These data
confirm that Pal 13 is a paradigm "young halo" globular cluster.
The derived proper motions for cluster stars are used to produce membership
probabilities and a cleaned CCD UBV catalogue for Pal 13. With this data set we
have made small revisions to Pal 13's distance, metallicity, position and light
profile. The membership of four previously reported RR Lyrae variables and a
proportionally large group of blue straggler stars are confirmed. As expected,
the blue stragglers are centrally concentrated.
The small size of this cluster, combined with the shape of its light profile,
which shows a clear departure from a classical King function beyond the tidal
radius, suggests that Pal 13 is in the final throes of destruction. This could
explain the large blue straggler specific frequency, as destructive processes
would preferentially strip less massive stars.Comment: 54 pages, 9 figures, 7 tables, accapted for publication in February
2001 A
ROSAT observations of X-ray emission from planetary nebulae
We have searched the entire ROSAT archive for useful observations to study
X-ray emission from Galactic planetary nebulae (PNs). The search yields a
sample of 63 PNs, which we call the ROSAT PN sample. About 20-25% of this
sample show X-ray emission; these include 13 definite detections and three
possible detections (at a 2-sigma level). All X-ray sources in these PNs are
concentrated near the central stars. Only A 30, BD+30 3639, and NGC 6543 are
marginally resolved by the ROSAT instruments. Three types of X-ray spectra are
seen in PNs. Type 1 consists of only soft X-ray emission (<0.5 keV), peaks at
0.1-0.2 keV, and can be fitted by blackbody models at temperatures 1-2 10^5 K.
Type 2 consists of harder X-ray emission, peaks at >0.5 keV, and can be fitted
by thin plasma emission models at temperatures of a few 10^6 K. Type 3 is a
composite of a bright Type 1 component and a fainter Type 2 component.
Unresolved soft sources with Type 1 spectra or the soft component of Type 3
spectra are most likely photospheric emission from the hot central stars.
Absorption cross sections are large for these soft-energy photons; therefore,
only large, tenuous, evolved PNs with hot central stars and small absorption
column densities have been detected. The origin of hard X-ray emission from PNs
is uncertain. PNs with Type 2 spectra are small, dense, young nebulae with
relatively cool (<<10^5 K) central stars, while PNs with Type 3 X-ray spectra
are large, tenuous, evolved nebulae with hot central stars. The hard X-ray
luminosities are also different between these two types of PNs, indicating
perhaps different origins of their hard X-ray emission. Future Chandra and XMM
observations with high spatial and spectral resolution will help to understand
the origin of hard X-ray emission from PNs.Comment: To be published in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 21
pages, 7 figures, 5 table
The Age Of Globular Clusters In Light Of Hipparcos: Resolving the Age Problem?
We review five independent techniques which are used to set the distance
scale to globular clusters, including subdwarf main sequence fitting utilizing
the recent Hipparcos parallax catalogue. These data together all indicate that
globular clusters are farther away than previously believed, implying a
reduction in age estimates. This new distance scale estimate is combined with a
detailed numerical Monte Carlo study designed to assess the uncertainty
associated with the theoretical age-turnoff luminosity relationship in order to
estimate both the absolute age and uncertainty in age of the oldest globular
clusters. Our best estimate for the mean age of the oldest globular clusters is
now Gyr, with a one-sided, 95% confidence level lower limit of
9.5 Gyr. This represents a systematic shift of over 2 compared to our
earlier estimate, due completely to the new distance scale---which we emphasize
is not just due to the Hipparcos data. This now provides a lower limit on the
age of the universe which is consistent with either an open universe, or a
flat, matter dominated universe (the latter requiring H_0 \le 67 \kmsmpc).
Our new study also explicitly quantifies how remaining uncertainties in the
distance scale and stellar evolution models translate into uncertainties in the
derived globular cluster ages. Simple formulae are provided which can be used
to update our age estimate as improved determinations for various quantities
become available.Comment: 41 pages, including 10 eps figs, uses aaspp4.sty and flushrt.sty,
submitted to Ap.J., revised to incorporate FULL Hipparcos catalogue dat
Star Clusters
This review concentrates almost entirely on globular star clusters. It
emphasises the increasing realisation that few of the traditional problems of
star cluster astronomy can be studied in isolation: the influence of the Galaxy
affects dynamical evolution deep in the core, and the spectrum of stellar
masses; in turn the evolution of the core determines the highest stellar
densities, and the rate of encounters. In this way external tidal effects
indirectly influence the formation and evolution of blue stragglers, binary
pulsars, X-ray sources, etc. More controversially, the stellar density appears
to influence the relative distribution of normal stars. In the opposite sense,
the evolution of individual stars governs much of the early dynamics of a
globular cluster, and the existence of large numbers of primordial binary stars
has changed important details of our picture of the dynamical evolution. New
computational tools which will become available in the next few years will help
dynamical theorists to address these questions.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, Te
Analysing Change: Complex Rather than Dialectical?
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.This article offers a discussion of dialectics from a complexity perspective. Dialectics is a term much utilized but infrequently defined. This article suggests that a spectrum of ideas exist concerning understandings of dialectics. We are particularly critical of Hegelian dialectics, which we see as anthropocentric and teleological. While Marxist approaches to dialectics, in the form of historical materialism, marked a break from the idealist elements of Hegelian dialectics, they retained traces of this approach. The article offers a partial discussion of essential elements of dialectics, which we consider to be the analysis of change, the centrality of contradiction, and the methodology of abstraction. Points of overlap with complexity thinking are highlighted, together with those points where complexity thinking and dialectical approaches diverge. We conclude with some suggestions as to how complexity thinking might contribute to a development of dialectical approaches
3-Dimensional Kinematics in low foreground extinction windows of the Galactic Bulge: Radial Velocities for 6 bulge fields
The detailed structure of the Galactic bulge still remain uncertain. The
strong difficulties of obtaining observations of stars in the Galactic bulge
have hindered the acquisition of a kinematic representation for the inner kpc
of the Milky Way. The observation of the 3-d kinematics in several low
foreground extinction windows can solve this problem. We have developed a new
technique, which combines precise stellar HST positions and proper motions with
integral field spectroscopy, in order to obtain reliable 3-d stellar kinematics
in crowded fields of the Galactic center. In addition, we present results using
the new techniques for six fields in our project. A significant vertex
deviation has been found in some of the fields in agreement with previous
determinations. This result confirms the presence of a stellar bar in the
Galactic bulge.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Extending the DAMA annual-modulation region by inclusion of the uncertainties in the astrophysical velocities
The original annual-modulation region, singled out by the DAMA/NaI experiment
for direct detection of WIMPs, is extended by taking into account the
uncertainties in the galactic astrophysical velocities. Also the effect due to
a possible bulk rotation for the dark matter halo is considered. We find that
the range for the WIMP mass becomes 30 GeV < m_chi < 130 GeV at 1-sigma C.L.
with a further extension in the upper bound, when a possible bulk rotation of
the dark matter halo is taken into account. We show that the DAMA results, when
interpreted in the framework of the Minimal Supersymmetric extension of the
Standard Model, are consistent with a relic neutralino as a dominant component
of cold dark matter (on the average in our universe and in our galactic halo).
It is also discussed the discovery potential for the relevant supersymmetric
configurations at accelerators of present generation.Comment: ReVTeX, 12 pages, 1 table, 7 figure
Rapid desensitization through immunoadsorption during cardiopulmonary bypass. A novel method to facilitate human leukocyte antigen incompatible heart transplantation
Background: Anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-antibody production represents a major barrier to heart transplantation, limiting recipient compatibility with potential donors and increasing the risk of complications with poor waiting-list outcomes. Currently there is no consensus to when desensitization should take place, and through what mechanism, meaning that sensitized patients must wait for a compatible donor for many months, if not years. We aimed to determine if intraoperative immunoadsorption could provide a potential desensitization methodology. Methods: Anti-HLA antibody-containing whole blood was added to a Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) circuit set up to mimic a 20Â kg patient undergoing heart transplantation. Plasma was separated and diverted to a standalone, secondary immunoadsorption system, with antibody-depleted plasma returned to the CPB circuit. Samples for anti-HLA antibody definition were taken at baseline, when combined with the CPB prime (on bypass), and then every 20Â min for the duration of treatment (total 180Â min). Results: A reduction in individual allele median fluorescence intensity (MFI) to below clinically relevant levels (4000 was demonstrated. Reduction occurred in all cases within 120Â min, demonstrating efficacy in a time period usual for heart transplantation. Flowcytometric crossmatching of suitable pseudo-donor lymphocytes demonstrated a change from T cell and B cell positive channel shifts to negative, demonstrating a reduction in binding capacity. Conclusions: Intraoperative immunoadsorption in an ex vivo setting demonstrates clinically relevant reductions in anti-HLA antibodies within the normal timeframe for heart transplantation. This method represents a potential desensitization technique that could enable sensitized children to accept a donor organ earlier, even in the presence of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies
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