179 research outputs found
Ja zu einer zeitgemässen Fortpflanzungsmedizin
Am 14. Juni 2015 wird über die Änderung des Artikels 119 der Bundesverfassung (BV) abgestimmt. Die Annahme dieser Änderung ist nicht nur für die Zulassung der Präimplantationsdiagnostik (PID) unabdingbar, sondern schafft ganz grundsätzlich den gesetzlichen Rahmen für die Durchführung einer zeitgemässen Reproduktionsmedizin. Letztere wird nicht nur eine effizientere Behandlung ermöglichen, sondern auch Komplikationen für Mutter und Kind vermeiden helfen
R-189. An integrated psychosocial service in an infertility clinic: functions, objectives and skills
HERschel Observations of Edge-on Spirals (HEROES). II: Tilted-ring modelling of the atomic gas disks
Context. Edge-on galaxies can offer important insights in galaxy evolution as
they are the only systems where the distribution of the different components
can be studied both radially and vertically. The HEROES project was designed to
investigate the interplay between the gas, dust, stars and dark matter (DM) in
a sample of 7 massive edge-on spiral galaxies.
Aims. In this second HEROES paper we present an analysis of the atomic gas
content of 6 out of 7 galaxies in our sample. The remaining galaxy was recently
analysed according to the same strategy. The primary aim of this work is to
constrain the surface density distribution, the rotation curve and the geometry
of the gas disks in a homogeneous way. In addition we identify peculiar
features and signs of recent interactions.
Methods. We construct detailed tilted-ring models of the atomic gas disks
based on new GMRT 21-cm observations of NGC 973 and UGC 4277 and re-reduced
archival HI data of NGC 5907, NGC 5529, IC 2531 and NGC 4217. Potential
degeneracies between different models are resolved by requiring a good
agreement with the data in various representations of the data cubes.
Results. From our modelling we find that all but one galaxy are warped along
the major axis. In addition, we identify warps along the line of sight in three
galaxies. A flaring gas layer is required to reproduce the data only for one
galaxy, but (moderate) flares cannot be ruled for the other galaxies either. A
coplanar ring-like structure is detected outside the main disk of NGC 4217,
which we suggest could be the remnant of a recent minor merger event. We also
find evidence for a radial inflow of 15 +- 5 km/s in the disk of NGC 5529,
which might be related to the ongoing interaction with two nearby companions.
(Abridged)Comment: 39 pages, 38 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Quantum Rod Emission Coupled to Plasmonic Lattice Resonances: A Collective Directional Source of Polarized Light
We demonstrate that an array of optical antennas may render a thin layer of
randomly oriented semiconductor nanocrystals into an enhanced and highly
directional source of polarized light. The array sustains collective plasmonic
lattice resonances which are in spectral overlap with the emission of the
nanocrystals over narrow angular regions. Consequently, different photon
energies of visible light are enhanced and beamed into definite directions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
HERschel Observations of Edge-on Spirals (HEROES). I: Far-infrared morphology and dust mass determination
Context. Edge-on spiral galaxies with prominent dust lanes provide us with an
excellent opportunity to study the distribution and properties of the dust
within them. The HEROES project was set up to observe a sample of seven large
edge-on galaxies across various wavelengths for this investigation.
Aims. Within this first paper, we present the Herschel observations and
perform a qualitative and quantitative analysis on them, and we derive some
global properties of the far infrared and submillimetre emission.
Methods. We determine horizontal and vertical profiles from the Herschel
observations of the galaxies in the sample and describe the morphology.
Modified black-body fits to the global fluxes, measured using aperture
photometry, result in dust temperatures and dust masses. The latter values are
compared to those that are derived from radiative transfer models taken from
the literature.
Results. On the whole, our Herschel flux measurements agree well with
archival values. We find that the exponential horizontal dust distribution
model often used in the literature generally provides a good description of the
observed horizontal profiles. Three out of the seven galaxies show signatures
of extended vertical emission at 100 and 160 {\mu}m at the 5{\sigma} level, but
in two of these it is probably due to deviations from an exactly edge-on
orientation. Only for NGC 4013, a galaxy in which vertically extended dust has
already been detected in optical images, we can detect vertically extended
dust, and the derived scaleheight agrees with the value estimated through
radiative transfer modelling. Our analysis hints at a correlation between the
dust scaleheight and its degree of clumpiness, which we infer from the
difference between the dust masses as calculated from modelling of optical data
and from fitting the spectral energy distribution of Herschel datapoints.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Recommendations for raloxifene use in daily clinical practice in the Swiss setting
Background/aim: Raloxifene is the first selective estrogen receptor modulator that has been approved for the treatment and prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women in Europe and in the US. Although raloxifene reduces the risk of invasive breast cancer in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and in postmenopausal women at high risk for invasive breast cancer, it is approved in that indication in the US but not in the EU. The aim was to characterize the clinical profiles of postmenopausal women expected to benefit most from therapy with raloxifene based on published scientific evidence to date. Methods: Key individual patient characteristics relevant to the prescription of raloxifene in daily practice were defined by a board of Swiss experts in the fields of menopause and metabolic bone diseases and linked to published scientific evidence. Consensus was reached about translating these insights into daily practice. Results: Through estrogen agonistic effects on bone, raloxifene reduces biochemical markers of bone turnover to premenopausal levels, increases bone mineral density (BMD) at the lumbar spine, proximal femur, and total body, and reduces vertebral fracture risk in women with osteopenia or osteoporosis with and without prevalent vertebral fracture. Through estrogen antagonistic effects on breast tissue, raloxifene reduces the risk of invasive estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and in postmenopausal women at high risk for invasive breast cancer. Finally, raloxifene increases the incidence of hot flushes, the risk of venous thromboembolic events, and the risk of fatal stroke in postmenopausal women at increased risk for coronary heart disease. Postmenopausal women in whom the use of raloxifene is considered can be categorized in a 2×2 matrix reflecting their bone status (osteopenic or osteoporotic based on their BMD T-score by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry) and their breast cancer risk (low or high based on the modified Gail model). Women at high risk of breast cancer should be considered for treatment with raloxifene. Conclusion: Postmenopausal women between 50 and 70years of age without climacteric symptoms with either osteopenia or osteoporosis should be evaluated with regard to their breast cancer risk and considered for treatment with raloxifene within the framework of its contraindications and precaution
The dust energy balance in the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 4565
We combine new dust continuum observations of the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC
4565 in all Herschel/SPIRE (250, 350, 500 micron) wavebands, obtained as part
of the Herschel Reference Survey, and a large set of ancillary data (Spitzer,
SDSS, GALEX) to analyze its dust energy balance. We fit a radiative transfer
model for the stars and dust to the optical maps with the fitting algorithm
FitSKIRT. To account for the observed UV and mid-infrared emission, this
initial model was supplemented with both obscured and unobscured star-forming
regions. Even though these star-forming complexes provide an additional heating
source for the dust, the far-infrared/submillimeter emission long wards of 100
micron is underestimated by a factor of 3-4. This inconsistency in the dust
energy budget of NGC 4565 suggests that a sizable fraction (two-thirds) of the
total dust reservoir (Mdust ~ 2.9e+8 Msun) consists of a clumpy distribution
with no associated young stellar sources. The distribution of those dense dust
clouds would be in such a way that they remain unresolved in current
far-infrared/submillimeter observations and hardly comtribute to the
attenuation at optical wavelengths. More than two-thirds of the dust heating in
NGC 4565 is powered by the old stellar population, with localized embedded
sources supplying the remaining dust heating in NGC 4565. The results from this
detailed dust energy balance study in NGC 4565 is consistent with that of
similar analyses of other edge-on spirals.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Nano-engineered electron–hole exchange interaction controls exciton dynamics in core–shell semiconductor nanocrystals
A strong electron–hole exchange interaction (EI) in semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) gives rise to a large (up to tens of meV) splitting between optically active ('bright') and optically passive ('dark') excitons. This dark–bright splitting has a significant effect on the optical properties of band-edge excitons and leads to a pronounced temperature and magnetic field dependence of radiative decay. Here we demonstrate a nanoengineering-based approach that provides control over EI while maintaining nearly constant emission energy. We show that the dark–bright splitting can be widely tuned by controlling the electron–hole spatial overlap in core–shell CdSe/CdS NCs with a variable shell width. In thick-shell samples, the EI energy reduces to <250 μeV, which yields a material that emits with a nearly constant rate over temperatures from 1.5 to 300 K and magnetic fields up to 7 T. The EI-manipulation strategies demonstrated here are general and can be applied to other nanostructures with variable electron–hole overlap
Insights into the content and spatial distribution of dust from the integrated spectral properties of galaxies
[Abridged] We present a new approach to investigate the content and spatial
distribution of dust in structurally unresolved star-forming galaxies from the
observed dependence of integrated spectral properties on galaxy inclination. We
develop an innovative combination of generic models of radiative transfer (RT)
in dusty media with a prescription for the spectral evolution of galaxies, via
the association of different geometric components of galaxies with stars in
different age ranges. We show that a wide range of RT models all predict a
quasi-universal relation between slope of the attenuation curve at any
wavelength and V-band attenuation optical depth in the diffuse interstellar
medium (ISM), at all galaxy inclinations. This relation predicts steeper
(shallower) dust attenuation curves than both the Calzetti and MW curves at
small (large) attenuation optical depths, which implies that geometry and
orientation effects have a stronger influence on the shape of the attenuation
curve than changes in the optical properties of dust grains. We use our
combined RT and spectral evolution model to interpret the observed dependence
of the H\alpha/H\beta\ ratio and ugrizYJH attenuation curve on inclination in a
sample of ~23 000 nearby star-forming galaxies. From a Bayesian MCMC fit, we
measure the central face-on B-band optical depth of this sample to be
tau_B\perp~1.8\pm0.2. We also quantify the enhanced optical depth towards newly
formed stars in their birth clouds, finding this to be significantly larger in
galaxies with bulges than in disc-dominated galaxies, while tau_B\perp is
roughly similar in both cases. Finally, we show that neglecting the effect of
geometry and orientation on attenuation can severely bias the interpretation of
galaxy spectral energy distributions, as the impact on broadband colours can
reach up to 0.3-0.4 mag at optical wavelengths and 0.1 mag at near-infrared
ones.Comment: 32 pages, 3 tables, 41 figures, MNRAS in-pres
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