13,815 research outputs found
Takayasu arteritis in childhood: retrospective experience from a tertiary referral centre in the United Kingdom.
Takayasu arteritis (TA) is an idiopathic large-vessel vasculitis affecting the aorta and its major branches. Although the disease rarely affects children, it does occur, even in infants. The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical features, disease activity, treatment and outcome of childhood TA in a tertiary UK centre
Synthesis of high-oxidation Y-Ba-Cu-O phases in superoxygenated thin films
It is known that solid-state reaction in high-pressure oxygen can stabilize
high-oxidation phases of Y-Ba-Cu-O superconductors in powder form. We extend
this superoxygenation concept of synthesis to thin films which, due to their
large surface-to-volume ratio, are more reactive thermodynamically. Epitaxial
thin films of grown by pulsed laser deposition are
annealed at up to 700 atm O and 900C, in conjunction with Cu
enrichment by solid-state diffusion. The films show clear formation of
and as well as regions
of and YBaCuO phases,
according to scanning transmission electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction and
x-ray absorption spectroscopy. Similarly annealed
powders show no phase conversion. Our results demonstrate a novel route of
synthesis towards discovering more complex phases of cuprates and other
superconducting oxides.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Material
Radio Observations of Infrared Luminous High Redshift QSOs
We present Very Large Array (VLA) observations at 1.4 GHz and 5 GHz of a
sample of 12 Quasi-stellar Objects (QSOs) at z = 3.99 to 4.46. The sources were
selected as the brightest sources at 250 GHz from the recent survey of Omont et
al. (2001). We detect seven sources at 1.4 GHz with flux densities, S_{1.4} >
50 microJy. These centimeter (cm) wavelength observations imply that the
millimeter (mm) emission is most likely thermal dust emission. The
radio-through-optical spectral energy distributions for these sources are
within the broad range defined by lower redshift, lower optical luminosity
QSOs. For two sources the radio continuum luminosities and morphologies
indicate steep spectrum, radio loud emission from a jet-driven radio source.
For the remaining 10 sources the 1.4 GHz flux densities, or limits, are
consistent with those expected for active star forming galaxies. If the radio
emission is powered by star formation in these systems, then the implied star
formation rates are of order 1e3 M_solar/year. We discuss the angular sizes and
spatial distributions of the radio emitting regions, and we consider briefly
these results in the context of co-eval black hole and stellar bulge formation
in galaxies.Comment: to appear in the A
[OII] emitters in the GOODS field at z~1.85: a homogeneous measure of evolving star formation
We present the results of a deep, near-infrared, narrow band imaging survey
at a central wavelength of 1.062 microns (FWHM=0.01 microns) in the GOODS-South
field using the ESO VLT instrument, HAWK-I. The data are used to carry out the
highest redshift search for [OII]3727 emission line galaxies to date. The
images reach an emission line flux limit (5 sigma) of 1.5 x 10^-17 erg cm^-2
s^-1, additionally making the survey the deepest of its kind at high redshift.
In this paper we identify a sample of [OII]3727 emission line objects at
redshift z~1.85 in a co-moving volume of ~4100 Mpc^3. Objects are selected
using an observed equivalent width (EW_obs) threshold of EW_obs = 50 angstroms.
The sample is used to derive the space density and constrain the luminosity
function of [OII] emitters at z=1.85. We find that the space density of objects
with observed [OII] luminosities in the range log(L_[OII]) > 41.74 erg s^-1 is
log(rho)=-2.45+/-0.14 Mpc^-3, a factor of 2 greater than the observed space
density of [OII] emitters reported at z~1.4. After accounting for completeness
and assuming an internal extinction correction of A_Halpha=1 mag (equivalent to
A_[OII]=1.87), we report a star formation rate density of rho* ~0.38+/-0.06
Msun yr^-1 Mpc^-3. We independently derive the dust extinction of the sample
using 24 micron fluxes and find a mean extinction of A_[OII]=0.98+/-0.11
magnitudes (A_Halpha=0.52). This is significantly lower than the A_Halpha=1
(A[OII]=1.86) mag value widely used in the literature. Finally we incorporate
this improved extinction correction into the star formation rate density
measurement and report rho*~0.24+/-0.06 Msun yr^-1 Mpc^-3.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
350 Micron Dust Emission from High Redshift Objects
We report observations of a sample of high redshift sources (1.8<z<4.7),
mainly radio-quiet quasars, at 350 microns using the SHARC bolometer camera at
the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. Nine sources were detected (>4-sigma)
and upper limits were obtained for 11 with 350 micron flux density limits
(3-sigma) in the range 30-125mJy. Combining published results at other
far-infrared and millimeter wavelengths with the present data, we are able to
estimate the temperature of the dust, finding relatively low values, averaging
50K. From the spectral energy distribution, we derive dust masses of a few 10^8
M_sun and luminosities of 4-33x10^{12} L_sun (uncorrected for any
magnification) implying substantial star formation activity. Thus both the
temperature and dust masses are not very different from those of local
ultraluminous infrared galaxies. For this redshift range, the 350 micron
observations trace the 60-100 micron rest frame emission and are thus directly
comparable with IRAS studies of low redshift galaxies.Comment: 5 pages, 2 PS figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Near-infrared colors of minor planets recovered from VISTA - VHS survey (MOVIS)
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
(WISE) provide information about the surface composition of about 100,000 minor
planets. The resulting visible colors and albedos enabled us to group them in
several major classes, which are a simplified view of the diversity shown by
the few existing spectra. We performed a serendipitous search in VISTA-VHS
observations using a pipeline developed to retrieve and process the data that
corresponds to solar system objects (SSo). The colors and the magnitudes of the
minor planets observed by the VISTA survey are compiled into three catalogs
that are available online: the detections catalog (MOVIS-D), the magnitudes
catalog (MOVIS-M), and the colors catalog (MOVIS-C). They were built using the
third data release of the survey (VISTA VHS-DR3). A total of 39,947 objects
were detected, including 52 NEAs, 325 Mars Crossers, 515 Hungaria asteroids,
38,428 main-belt asteroids, 146 Cybele asteroids, 147 Hilda asteroids, 270
Trojans, 13 comets, 12 Kuiper Belt objects and Neptune with its four
satellites. The colors found for asteroids with known spectral properties
reveal well-defined patterns corresponding to different mineralogies. The
distributions of MOVIS-C data in color-color plots shows clusters identified
with different taxonomic types. All the diagrams that use (Y-J) color separate
the spectral classes more effectively than the (J-H) and (H-Ks) plots used
until now: even for large color errors (<0.1), the plots (Y-J) vs (Y-Ks) and
(Y-J) vs (J-Ks) provide the separation between S-complex and C-complex. The end
members A, D, R, and V-types occupy well-defined regions.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figure
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