1,005 research outputs found
Characterizing Bars at z~0 in the optical and NIR: Implications for the Evolution of Barred Disks with Redshift
Critical insights on galaxy evolution stem from the study of bars. With the
advent of HST surveys that trace bars in the rest-frame optical out to z~1, it
is critical to provide a reference baseline for bars at z~0 in the optical
band. We present results on bars at z~0 in the optical and NIR bands based on
180 spirals from OSUBSGS. (1) The deprojected bar fraction at z~0 is ~60% +/-6%
in the NIR H-band and ~44% +/-6% in the optical B-band. (2) The results before
and after deprojection are similar, which is encouraging for high-redshift
studies that forego deprojection. (3) Studies of bars at z~0.2-1.0 (lookback
time of 3-8 Gyr) have reported an optical bar fraction of ~30% +/-6%, after
applying cutoffs in absolute magnitude (M_V = 1.5
kpc), and bar ellipticity (e_bar >= 0.4). Applying these exact cutoffs to the
OSUBSGS data yields a comparable optical B-band bar fraction at z~0 of ~
34%+/-6%. This rules out scenarios where the optical bar fraction in bright
disks declines strongly with redshift. (4) Most (~70%) bars have moderate to
high strentgh or ellipticity (0.50 <= e_bar <= 0.75). There is no bimodality in
the distribution of e_bar. The H-band bar fraction and e_bar show no
substantial variation across RC3 Hubble types Sa to Scd. (5) RC3 bar types
should be used with caution. Many galaxies with RC3 types "AB" turn out to be
unbarred and RC3 bar classes "B" and "AB" have a significant overlap in e_bar.
(6) Most bars have sizes below 5 kpc. Bar and disk sizes correlate, and most
bars have a_bar/R_25~0.1-0.5. This suggests that the growths of bars and disks
are intimately tied.Comment: 11 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables, ApJ accepted, abridged abstract
below. Minor changes and shortened paper for ApJ limits. For high resolution
figures see http://www.as.utexas.edu/~marinova/paper1-highres.pd
Effect of Acute Heat Stress on Some Hematological Parameters, Trace Elements and Meat Quality in Rabbits
The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of acute heat stress on some hematological parameters, trace elements and meat quality traits in rabbits. Twelve male rabbits at the age of 4 months were allocated into 2 groups: control and experimental. The experimental rabbits were exposed to intermittent solar radiation for 4 hours at 36 °C. The following parameters were determined: white blood cells (WBC) count, red blood cells (RBC) count, hematocrit, neutrophil and lymphocyte percentages, liver and meat content of chromium (Cr) and selenium (Se), pH of meat at 60 min and 24 h post mortem, meat color, myoglobin and water holding capacity (WHC). Exposure to heat increased neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (P<0.01) and liver content of Cr (P<0.01), while WBC count, RBC count, hematocrit, liver Se, muscle Cr and Se, pH of meat at 24 h, meat color, myoglobin and WHC were not affected by the applied heat load. The experimental rabbits had significantly lower meat pH at 60 min after slaughter relative to the control rabbits (P<0.05).
It was suggested that experimental rabbits had sufficient muscle glycogen at the time of slaughter needed to produce the lactic acid that reduced the ultimate pH of post-mortem muscle within the range observed in the control rabbits
MTBVAC vaccine is safe, immunogenic and confers protective efficacy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in newborn mice
Development of novel more efficient preventive vaccines against tuberculosis (TB) is crucial to achieve TB eradication by 2050, one of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) for the current century. MTBVAC is the first and only live attenuated vaccine based on a human isolate of Mycobacterium tuberculosis developed as BCG-replacement strategy in newborns that has entered first-in-human adult clinical trials. In this work, we characterize the safety, immunogenicity and protective efficacy of MTBVAC in a model of newborn C57/BL6 mice. Our data clearly indicate that MTBVAC is safe for newborn mice, and does not affect animal growth or organ development. In addition, MTBVAC-vaccinated mice at birth showed enhanced immunogenicity and better protection against M. tuberculosis challenge in comparison with BCG
Microbiological and epizootological characterization of materials from wastewater treatment plant
Studies were carried out for the presence of microorganisms of major groups, containing pathogenic agents with epizootological importance, in order characteristic of their dynamics at different levels in the treatment plant and assessing the environmental safety of the final materials. For this purpose were traced the changes in the quantities of microorganisms contained in the materials
from successive levels of processing. It was found that the purified water inlet and outlet does not contain Salmonella enterica. Presence of Escherichia coli and Clostridium perfringens beyond the requirements of the regulation (Decree N339, 2004) was not established, as well as Enterococcus spp. The tested sludge contained microorganisms from these groups and could not be deposited in the soil without prior aerobic or anaerobic processing. The draining in the nature of treated water at the outlet of plant does not hide environmental risk. In addition to
monitoring of the sanitary indicative bacteria, the following of the main groups of Gram-negative and Gram-positive microorganisms in the water and sewage sludge
allows more reliable assessment of their decontamination. Furthermore, the new approach for reporting the results in a unit of dry matter of the studied materials, proposed here, allows their more exact comparison
Qualitative protocol for understanding the contribution of Australian policy in the urban planning, justice, energy and environment sectors to promoting health and health equity
Introduction: A well-established body of literature demonstrates that health and equity are strongly influenced by the consequences of governments’ policy and resultant actions (or inactions) outside the health sector. Consequently, the United Nations, and its agency the WHO, have called for national leadership and whole-of-government action to understand and address the health impacts of policies in all sectors. This research responds to that call by investigating how policymaking in four sectors—urban planning, justice, energy and environment—may influence the social determinants of health and health equity (SDH/HE). Methods and analysis: The research design is informed by a critical qualitative approach. Three successive stages are included in the design. The first involves analysing all strategic policy documents and selected legislative documents from the four sectors (n=583). The document analysis is based on a coding framework developed to identify alignment between the documents and the SDH/HE. Two policies that demonstrate good practice in regard to SDH/HE will be selected from each sector during the second stage for embedded case study analysis (total n=8). This is intended to illuminate which factors have supported recognition and action on SDH/HE in the selected policies. The third stage involves progressive theoretical integration and development to understand political and institutional facilitators and barriers to action on SDH/HE, both within and between sectors. Ethics and dissemination: The research will provide much needed evidence about how coherent whole-of-government action on SDH/HE can be advanced and contribute knowledge about how health-enhancing policy activity in the four sectors may be optimised. Learnings from the research will be shared via a project advisory group, policy briefings, academic papers, conference presentations and research symposia. Ethics approval has been secured for the embedded case studies, which involve research participants
Reduction of sanitary indicator microorganisms in anaerobic digestion of poultry litter in combination with silages
ABSTRACT: In connection with experiments aimed at
optimizing anaerobic digestion of organic fertilizers,
microbiological tests were performed to assess the
epizootiological safety of resulting finished product to
fertilize the soil by quantities of sanitary indicator
microorganisms. Mixtures of substrates were composed
and tested in technological parameters established for
other experiments: mesophilic temperature regime 33oC,
dry matter content of 7%, residence time in the digester 15
days. The substrates tested were beetroot, sugar and
salad beets, corn silage and leaves of Paulownia
elongata, and silage combinations of these feeds in ratio
60:40 with mulch litter from broiler chickens. It was found
that significant reduction of microorganisms was realized
in the final products, which were assessed as safe for soil
application.
The ensiling of poultry litter in combinations of these feeds had the effect of reducing the amount of microorganisms in almost all examined groups therein. The most significant was the reduction in the quantity of sanitary revealing bacteria in the manure after its ensilage with autumn leaves of P. elongata and beetroot, and the least - with the participation of sugar beet. Microbial reduction was to the greatest extent in
bioslime produced by anaerobic digestion of poultry litter
ensiled with corn. Of the silages from different types of beets with poultry manure, during anaerobic digestion highest decontamination was achieved in this with sugar beets. After anaerobic degradation of the studied feed without poultry litter, at least microorganisms were found in bioslimes from the three types of beet, as well from the silage from P. elongata.
РЕЗЮМЕ: Във връзка с експерименти, насочени към
оптимизиране на анаеробното разграждане на
органични торове, са извършени микробиологични
изследвания за преценка на епизоотологичната
безопасност на получените крайни продукти за
наторяване на почви според количествата на
санитарно индикаторните микроорганизми.
Съставени са смеси от субстрати при установени
при други експерименти технологични параметри:
мезофилен температурен режим 33оС, съдържание
на сухо вещество 7%, време на престой в
биореактора 15 денонощия. Изпитани са захарно,
кръмно и салатно цвекло, царевичен силаж и листа
от Paulownia elongata, както и силажи от
комбинации на тези фуражи в съотношение 60:40 с
торова постеля от пилета-бройлери.
Установено е, че се осъществява значително
редуциране на микроорганизмите в крайните
продукти, които се преценяват като безопасни за
внасяне в почвите. В най-голяма степен микробната
редукция е при биошлама, получен при анаеробното
разграждане на комбинацията от торова постеля с
царевичен силаж. От трите вида цвекло,
силажирани с птичи тор, при анаеробно разграждане
се постига най-висока деконтаминация с участие на
захарното цвекло. При анаеробно разграждане на
изследваните фуражи без птичи тор най-малко
микроорганизми се установяват в биошламовете
от трите вида цвекло, както и в силажа от P.
elongata
Pulmonary but not subcutaneous vaccination confers protection to TB susceptible mice by an IL17-dependent mechanism.
Some of the most promising novel tuberculosis vaccine strategies currently under development are based on respiratory vaccination, mimicking the natural route of infection. In this work, we have compared pulmonary and subcutaneous delivery of BCG vaccine in the tuberculosis-susceptible DBA/2 mouse strain, a model in which parenterally administered BCG vaccine does not protect against tuberculosis. Our data show that intranasally but not subcutaneously administered BCG confers robust protection against pulmonary tuberculosis challenge. In addition, our results indicate that pulmonary vaccination triggers a Mycobacterium tuberculosis–specific mucosal immune response orchestrated by interleukin 17A (IL-17A). Thus, IL-17A neutralization in vivo reduces protection and abrogates M. tuberculosis–specific immunoglobulin A (IgA) secretion to respiratory airways and lung expression of polymeric immunoglobulin receptor induced following intranasal vaccination. Together, our results demonstrate that pulmonary delivery of BCG can overcome the lack of protection observed when BCG is given parenterally, suggesting that respiratory tuberculosis vaccines could have an advantage in tuberculosis-endemic countries, where intradermally administered BCG has inefficient effectiveness against pulmonary tuberculosis
A prospective audit of bed utilisation and delays in care across London
Background A prospective bed utilisation census of acute London hospitals using an established Day of Care Survey (DoCS), which quantified adult patients not meeting criteria for in-hospital care. Methods Twenty-three hospitals were surveyed over two weeks in October/November 2017 using supervised trained hospital staff. Pairs of staff visited wards, reviewed all patients and identified those not meeting inpatient care criteria, recording reasons for delay. Patient demographics, length of stay (LOS), ward specialty and delay reasons were collected. Results Overall – In total, 8,656 in-patients were studied (overall occupancy 96%, range 82-117%): 800 definite discharges were excluded, leaving 7,856 patients for analysis; seven hospitals had ≥100% occupancy; 1,919/7,856 patients (24%, range 12–43%) did not meet criteria; 56% of patients were over 70 years; five hospitals had higher number of patients 14 days; 13 hospitals had greater/equal number of patients in ≤14 days LOS. For delayed patients in ≤14 days group, most were within seven days of admission (627 ≤7days, 393 8-14 days). In total 34% (range 11-54%) of delays were related to acute hospital reasons (AHR) and 61% (range 46-83%) to wider system reasons (WSR). Eight common themes accounted for 67% of recorded reasons and were equally split between AHR and WSR. Conclusion Data showed high occupancy levels with insufficient discharges. This study suggests policies selecting age and/or LOS alone as cut offs to tackle delays in care may miss a large proportion of patients requiring more timely interventions. Adopting a proactive thematic approach to improvement using the top eight delay reasons provides an obvious opportunity to reduce delays while noting the inter site variation. All metrics analysed emphasized the need for informed local data to help support local change
Barred Galaxies in the Coma Cluster
We use ACS data from the HST Treasury survey of the Coma cluster (z~0.02) to
study the properties of barred galaxies in the Coma core, the densest
environment in the nearby Universe. This study provides a complementary data
point for studies of barred galaxies as a function of redshift and environment.
From ~470 cluster members brighter than M_I = -11 mag, we select a sample of
46 disk galaxies (S0--Im) based on visual classification. The sample is
dominated by S0s for which we find an optical bar fraction of 47+/-11% through
ellipse fitting and visual inspection. Among the bars in the core of the Coma
cluster, we do not find any very large (a_bar > 2 kpc) bars. Comparison to
other studies reveals that while the optical bar fraction for S0s shows only a
modest variation across low-to-intermediate density environments (field to
intermediate-density clusters), it can be higher by up to a factor of ~2 in the
very high-density environment of the rich Coma cluster core.Comment: Proceedings of the Bash symposium, to appear in the Astronomical
Society of the Pacific Conference Series, eds. L. Stanford, L. Hao, Y. Mao,
J. Gree
Exploring high-end climate change scenarios for flood protection of the Netherlands
This international scientific assessment has been carried out at the request of the Dutch Delta Committee. The "Deltacommissie" requested that the assessment explore the high-end climate change scenarios for flood protection of the Netherlands. It is a state-of–the art scientific assessment of the upper bound values and longer term projections (for sea level rise up to 2200) of climate induced sea level rise, changing storm surge conditions and peak discharge of river Rhine. It comprises a review of recent studies, model projections and expert opinions of more than 20 leading climate scientists from different countries around the North Sea, Australia and the US
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