3,033 research outputs found
CMB Distortions from Superconducting Cosmic Strings
We reconsider the effect of electromagnetic radiation from superconducting
strings on cosmic microwave background (CMB) mu- and y-distortions and derive
present (COBE-FIRAS) and future (PIXIE) constraints on the string tension,
mu_s, and electric current, I. We show that absence of distortions of the CMB
in PIXIE will impose strong constraints on mu_s and I, leaving the possibility
of light strings (G mu_s < 10^{-18}) or relatively weak currents (I < 10 TeV).Comment: 10pages, 5 figures, Submitted to PRD, v2:References added, replaced
to match the PRD versio
Recommended from our members
Semantic and inferencing abilities in children with communication disorders
Background: Semantic and inferencing abilities have not been fully examined in children with communication difficulties.
Aims: To investigate the inferential and semantic abilities of children with communication difficulties using newly designed tasks.
Methods & Procedures: Children with different types of communication disorder were compared with each other and with three groups of typically developing children: those of the same chronological age and two groups of younger children. In total, 25 children aged 11 years with specific language impairment and 22 children, also 11 years of age, with primary pragmatic difficulties were recruited. Typically developing groups aged 11 (n = 35; age‐match), and those aged 9 (n = 40) and 7 (n = 37; language similar) also participated as comparisons.
Outcomes & Results: For Semantic Choices, children with specific language impairment performed significantly more poorly than 9‐ and 11‐year‐olds, whilst the pragmatic difficulties group scored significantly lower than all the typically developing groups. Borderline differences between specific language impairment and pragmatic difficulties groups were found. For inferencing, children with communication impairments performed significantly below the 11‐year‐old peers, but not poorer than 9‐ and 7‐year‐olds, suggesting that this skill is in line with language ability. Six children in the pragmatic difficulties group who met diagnosis for autism performed more poorly than the other two clinical groups on both tasks, but not statistically significantly so.
Conclusions: Both tasks were more difficult for those with communication impairments compared with peers. Semantic but not inferencing abilities showed a non‐significant trend for differences between the two clinical groups and children with pragmatic difficulties performed more poorly than all typically developing groups. The tasks may relate to each other in varying ways according to type of communication difficulty
Angular Correlations of the X-Ray Background and Clustering of Extragalactic X-Ray Sources
The information content of the autocorrelation function (ACF) of intensity
fluctuations of the X-ray background (XRB) is analyzed. The tight upper limits
set by ROSAT deep survey data on the ACF at arcmin scales imply strong
constraints on clustering properties of X-ray sources at cosmological distances
and on their contribution to the soft XRB. If quasars have a clustering radius
r_0=12-20 Mpc (H_0=50), and their two point correlation function, is constant
in comoving coordinates as indicated by optical data, they cannot make up more
40-50% of the soft XRB (the maximum contribution may reach 80% in the case of
stable clustering, epsilon=0). Active Star-forming (ASF) galaxies clustered
like normal galaxies, with r_0=10-12 Mpc can yield up to 20% or up to 40% of
the soft XRB for epsilon=-1.2 or epsilon=0, respectively. The ACF on degree
scales essentially reflects the clustering properties of local sources and is
proportional to their volume emissivity. The upper limits on scales of a few
degrees imply that hard X-ray selected AGNs have r_0<25 Mpc if epsilon=0 or
r_0<20 Mpc if epsilon=-1.2. No significant constraints are set on clustering of
ASF galaxies, due to their low local volume emissivity. The possible signal on
scales >6 deg, if real, may be due to AGNs with r_0=20 Mpc; the contribution
from clusters of galaxies with r_0~50 Mpc is a factor 2 lower.Comment: ApJ, in press (20 July 1993); 28 pages, TeX, ASTRPD-93-2-0
A Stochastic Theory of the Hierarchical Clustering III. The Non-universality and Non-stationarity of the Halo Mass Function
In the framework of the stochastic theory for hierarchical clustering, we
investigate the time-dependent solutions of the Fokker-Planck equation
describing the statistics of dark matter halos, and discuss the typical
timescales needed for these to converge toward stationary states, far away
enough from initial conditions. Although we show that the stationary solutions
can reproduce the outcomes of state-of-the-art body simulations at
to a great accuracy, one needs to go beyond to fully account for
the cosmic evolution of the simulated halo mass function toward high-redshift.
Specifically, we demonstrate that the time-dependent solutions of the
Fokker-Planck equation can describe, for reasonable initial conditions, the
non-universal evolution of the simulated halo mass functions. Compared to
standard theoretical estimates, our stochastic theory predicts a halo number
density higher by factor of several toward , an outcome which can
be helpful in elucidating early and upcoming data from JWST. Finally, we point
out the relevance of our approach in designing, interpreting and emulating
present and future body experiments.Comment: 14 pages, 5 Figures. Accepted by Ap
Estimating the economic burden of cardiovascular events in patients receiving lipid-modifying therapy in the UK.
OBJECTIVES: To characterise the costs to the UK National Health Service of cardiovascular (CV) events among individuals receiving lipid-modifying therapy. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using Clinical Practice Research Datalink records from 2006 to 2012 to identify individuals with their first and second CV-related hospitalisations (first event and second event cohorts). Within-person differences were used to estimate CV-related outcomes. SETTING: Patients in the UK who had their first CV event between January 2006 and March 2012. PARTICIPANTS: Patients ≥18 years who had a CV event and received at least 2 lipid-modifying therapy prescriptions within 180 days beforehand. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Direct medical costs (2014 £) were estimated in 3 periods: baseline (pre-event), acute (6 months afterwards) and long-term (subsequent 30 months). Primary outcomes included incremental costs, resource usage and total costs per period. RESULTS: There were 24 093 patients in the first event cohort of whom 5274 were included in the second event cohort. The mean incremental acute CV event costs for the first event and second event cohorts were: coronary artery bypass graft/percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (CABG/PTCA) £5635 and £5823, myocardial infarction £4275 and £4301, ischaemic stroke £3512 and £4572, heart failure £2444 and £3461, unstable angina £2179 and £2489 and transient ischaemic attack £1537 and £1814. The mean incremental long-term costs were: heart failure £848 and £2829, myocardial infarction £922 and £1385, ischaemic stroke £973 and £682, transient ischaemic attack £705 and £1692, unstable angina £328 and £677, and CABG/PTCA £-368 and £599. Hospitalisation accounted for 95% of acute and 61% of long-term incremental costs. Higher comorbidity was associated with higher long-term costs. CONCLUSIONS: Revascularisation and myocardial infarction were associated with the highest incremental costs following a CV event. On the basis of real-world data, the economic burden of CV events in the UK is substantial, particularly among those with greater comorbidity burden
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