2,483 research outputs found
Radiative Models of Sagittarius A* and M87 from Relativistic MHD Simulations
Ongoing millimeter VLBI observations with the Event Horizon Telescope allow
unprecedented study of the innermost portion of black hole accretion flows.
Interpreting the observations requires relativistic, time-dependent physical
modeling. We discuss the comparison of radiative transfer calculations from
general relativistic MHD simulations of Sagittarius A* and M87 with current and
future mm-VLBI observations. This comparison allows estimates of the viewing
geometry and physical conditions of the Sgr A* accretion flow. The viewing
geometry for M87 is already constrained from observations of its large-scale
jet, but, unlike Sgr A*, there is no consensus for its millimeter emission
geometry or electron population. Despite this uncertainty, as long as the
emission region is compact, robust predictions for the size of its jet
launching region can be made. For both sources, the black hole shadow may be
detected with future observations including ALMA and/or the LMT, which would
constitute the first direct evidence for a black hole event horizon.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, submitted to the proceedings of AHAR 2011: The
Central Kiloparse
Reinstatement of the name Petalidium ovatum (Acanthaceae), with an amplified description of the species
The name Petalidium ovatum is reinstated and an amplified description is provided for a species of Petalidium confined to
Namibia. Petalidium ovatum used to be treated as a synonym of the widespread P. englerianum, but morphological characters
support the reinstatement. Petalidium ovatum is a range-restricted species, only known from the Khorixas-Bergsig
area in the Kaokoveld Centre of Endemism, northwestern Namibia, where it grows on arid hillsides and along ephemeral
riverbeds and drainage lines. Diagnostic characters for P. ovatum include the pale grey, often almost white, appearance of the
plants, vegetative parts with a dense white indumentum of both stellate and dendritic trichomes, flowers borne in short fewflowered
dichasia, bracts oblanceolate with apices acute or obtuse, and bracteoles widely ovate. The flowers of P. ovatum are
distinctive in having the anterior corolla lobe partly or completely yellow, the others burgundy, and with the two upper lobes
connate towards the base for almost half their length. A comparison of some of the more prominent morphological features
to differentiate Petalidium ovatum from P. englerianum, its morphologically most similar relative, is provided. Based on
IUCN Red List categories and criteria, a conservation assessment of Least Concern (LC) is recommended for the reinstated
species.The University of Pretoria and the Swiss National Science Foundation.https://www.mapress.com/pt/am2024Plant Production and Soil ScienceSDG-15:Life on lan
A framework to study and predict functional trait syndromes using phylogenetic and environmental data
Traits do not evolve in isolation but often as part of integrated trait syndromes, yet the relative contributions of environmental effects and evolutionary history on traits and their correlations are not easily resolved.In the present study, we develop a methodological framework to elucidate eco-evolutionary patterns in functional trait syndromes. We do so by separating the amount of variance and covariance related to phylogenetic heritage and environmental variables (environmental phylogenetic conservatism), only phylogenetic heritage (non-attributed phylogenetic conservatism) and only to environmental variables (evolutionarily labile environmental effects). Variance–covariance structures of trait syndromes are displayed as networks. We then use this framework to guide a newly derived imputation method based on machine learning models that predict trait values for unsampled taxa, considering environmental and phylogenetic information as well as trait covariation. TrEvol is presented as an R package providing a unified set of methodologies to study and predict multivariate trait patterns and improve our capacity to impute trait values.To illustrate its use, we leverage both simulated data and species-level traits related to hydraulics and the leaf economics spectrum, in relation to an aridity index, demonstrating that most trait correlations can be attributed to environmental phylogenetic conservatism.This conceptual framework can be employed to examine issues ranging from the evolution of trait adaptation at different phylogenetic depths to intraspecific trait variation
Numerical Modeling of Multi-wavelength Spectra of M87 Core Emission
Spectral fits to M87 core data from radio to hard x-ray are generated via a
specially selected software suite, comprised of the HARM GRMHD accretion disk
model and a 2D Monte Carlo radiation transport code. By determining appropriate
parameter changes necessary to fit x-ray quiescent and flaring behavior of
M87's core, we assess the reasonableness of various flaring mechanisms. This
shows that an accretion disk model of M87's core out to 28 GM/c^2 can describe
the inner emissions. High spin rates show GRMHD-driven polar outflow
generation, without citing an external jet model. Our results favor accretion
rate changes as the dominant mechanism of x-ray flux and index changes, with
variations in density of approximately 20% necessary to scale between the
average x-ray spectrum and flaring or quiescent spectra. The best fit
parameters are black hole spin a/M > 0.8 and maximum accretion flow density n
<= 3x10^7 cm^-3, equivalent to horizon accretion rates between m_dot =
M_dot/M_dot_Edd ~ 2x10^-6 and 1x10^-5 (with M_dot_Edd defined assuming a
radiative efficiency eta = 0.1). These results demonstrate that the immediate
surroundings of M87's core are appropriate to explain observed x-ray
variability.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Reduction Of Spin Injection Efficiency by Interface Spin Scattering
We report the first experimental demonstration that interface microstructure
limits diffusive electrical spin injection efficiency across heteroepitaxial
interfaces. A theoretical treatment shows that the suppression of spin
injection due to interface defects follows directly from the contribution of
the defect potential to the spin-orbit interaction, resulting in enhanced
spin-flip scattering. An inverse correlation between spin-polarized electron
injection efficiency and interface defect density is demonstrated for
ZnMnSe/AlGaAs-GaAs spin-LEDs with spin injection efficiencies of 0 to 85%.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures; submitted to PR
Bypass of mutagenic O 6 -Carboxymethylguanine DNA Adducts by Human Y- and B-Family Polymerases
The generation of chemical alkylating agents from nitrosation of glycine and bile acid conjugates in the gastrointestinal tract is hypothesized to initiate carcinogenesis. O6-carboxymethylguanine (O6-CMG) is a product of DNA alkylation derived from nitrosated glycine. Although the tendency of the structurally related adduct O6-methylguanine to code for the misincoporation of TTP during DNA replication is well-established, the impact of the presence of the O6-CMG adduct in a DNA template on the efficiency and fidelity of translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) by human DNA polymerases (Pols) has hitherto not been described. Herein, we characterize the ability of the four human TLS Pols η, ι, κ, and ζ and the replicative Pol δ to bypass O6-CMG in a prevalent mutational hot-spot for colon cancer. The results indicate that Pol η replicates past O6-CMG, incorporating dCMP or dAMP, whereas Pol κ incorporates dCMP only, and Pol ι incorporates primarily dTMP. Additionally, the subsequent extension step was carried out with high efficiency by TLS Pols η, κ, and ζ, while Pol ι was unable to extend from a terminal mismatch. These results provide a first basis of O6-CMG-promoted base misincorporation by Y- and B-family polymerases potentially leading to mutational signatures associated with colon cancer
A study of ovarian cancer patients treated with dose-intensive chemotherapy supported with peripheral blood progenitor cells mobilised by filgrastim and cyclophosphamide.
We have shown that large numbers of haemopoietic progenitor cells are mobilised into the blood after filgrastim [granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)] alone and filgrastim following cyclophosphamide chemotherapy in previously untreated patients with ovarian cancer. These cells may be used to provide safe and effective haemopoietic rescue following dose-intensive chemotherapy. Using filgrastim alone (10 micrograms kg-1), the apheresis harvest contained a median CFU-GM count of 45 x 10(4) kg-1 and 2 x 10(6) kg-1 CD34+ cells. Treatment with filgrastim (5 micrograms kg-1) following cyclophosphamide (3 g m-2) resulted in a harvest containing 66 x 10(4) kg-1 CFU-GM and 2.4 x 10(6) kg-1 CD34+ cells. There was no statistically significant difference between these two mobilising regimens. We have also demonstrated that dose-intensive carboplatin and cyclophosphamide chemotherapy can be delivered safely to patients with ovarian cancer when supported by peripheral blood progenitor cells and filgrastim. Carboplatin (AUC 7.5) and cyclophosphamide (900 mg m-2) given at 3 weekly intervals with progenitor cell and growth factor support was well tolerated in terms of haematological and systemic side-effects. Double the dose intensity of chemotherapy was delivered compared with our standard dose regimen when the treatment was given at 3 weekly intervals. Median dose intensity could be further escalated to 2.33 compared with our standard regimen by decreasing the interval between treatment cycles to 2 weeks. However, at this dose intensity less than a third of patients received their planned treatment on time. All the delays were due to thrombocytopenia
Superresolution Full-polarimetric Imaging for Radio Interferometry with Sparse Modeling
We propose a new technique for radio interferometry to obtain superresolution full-polarization images in all four Stokes parameters using sparse modeling. The proposed technique reconstructs the image in each Stokes parameter from the corresponding full-complex Stokes visibilities by utilizing two regularization functions: the ℓ 1 norm and the total variation (TV) of the brightness distribution. As an application of this technique, we present simulated linear polarization observations of two physically motivated models of M87 with the Event Horizon Telescope. We confirm that ℓ 1+TV regularization can achieve an optimal resolution of ~25%–30% of the diffraction limit λ/D[subscript max], which is the nominal spatial resolution of a radio interferometer for both the total intensity (i.e., Stokes I) and linear polarizations (i.e., Stokes Q and U). This optimal resolution is better than that obtained from the widely used Cotton–Schwab CLEAN algorithm or from using ℓ 1 or TV regularizations alone. Furthermore, we find that ℓ 1+TV regularization can achieve much better image fidelity in linear polarization than other techniques over a wide range of spatial scales, not only in the superresolution regime, but also on scales larger than the diffraction limit. Our results clearly demonstrate that sparse reconstruction is a useful choice for high-fidelity full-polarimetric interferometric imaging
First direct detection of an exoplanet by optical interferometry; Astrometry and K-band spectroscopy of HR8799 e
To date, infrared interferometry at best achieved contrast ratios of a few
times on bright targets. GRAVITY, with its dual-field mode, is now
capable of high contrast observations, enabling the direct observation of
exoplanets. We demonstrate the technique on HR8799, a young planetary system
composed of four known giant exoplanets. We used the GRAVITY fringe tracker to
lock the fringes on the central star, and integrated off-axis on the HR8799e
planet situated at 390 mas from the star. Data reduction included
post-processing to remove the flux leaking from the central star and to extract
the coherent flux of the planet. The inferred K band spectrum of the planet has
a spectral resolution of 500. We also derive the astrometric position of the
planet relative to the star with a precision on the order of 100as. The
GRAVITY astrometric measurement disfavors perfectly coplanar stable orbital
solutions. A small adjustment of a few degrees to the orbital inclination of HR
8799 e can resolve the tension, implying that the orbits are close to, but not
strictly coplanar. The spectrum, with a signal-to-noise ratio of
per spectral channel, is compatible with a late-type L brown dwarf. Using
Exo-REM synthetic spectra, we derive a temperature of \,K and a
surface gravity of cm/s. This corresponds to a radius
of and a mass of , which is an independent confirmation of mass estimates from evolutionary
models. Our results demonstrate the power of interferometry for the direct
detection and spectroscopic study of exoplanets at close angular separations
from their stars.Comment: published in A&
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