1,169 research outputs found
The possible detection of a binary companion to a Type Ibn supernova progenitor
We present late-time observations of the site of the Type Ibn supernova (SN) 2006jc, acquired with the Hubble
Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys. A faint blue source is recovered at the SN position, with
brightness mF W 435 = 26.76 0.20, mF W 555 = 26.60 0.23 and mF W 625 = 26.32 0.19 mag, although there is
no detection in a contemporaneous narrow-band Ha image. The spectral energy distribution of the late-time source
is well-fit by a stellar-like spectrum (log 3.7 Teff > and log L L > 4), subject to only a small degree of reddening
—consistent with that estimated for SN 2006jc itself at early-times. The lack of further outbursts after the
explosion of SN 2006jc suggests that the precursor outburst originated from the progenitor. The possibility of the
source being a compact host cluster is ruled out on the basis of the source’s faintness; however, the possibility that
the late-time source may be an unresolved light echo originating in a shell or sphere of pre-SN dust (within a radius
1 pc) is also discussed. Irrespective of the nature of the late-time source, these observations rule out a luminous
blue variable as a companion to the progenitor of SN 2006jc
Towards sustainable wildlife management. An in-depth study for the promotion of community conservancies in Zambia and Zimbabwe
Zambia and Zimbabwe, with Angola, Botswana and Namibia, constitute the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KaZa-TFCA), which is the largest transfrontier conservation area in the world (520 000 km²), and whose key objective is to join fragmented wildlife habitats to form an interconnected mosaic of protected areas and transboundary wildlife corridors. In this region, wildlife populations have declined over the past three decades, mainly due to poaching and loss of habitat. In this TFCA, the Sustainable Wildlife Management (SWM) Programme aims to address these challenges by promoting the model of community conservancy (CC) to diversify income-generating activities and supply a well-balanced source of wild and domestic protein. In Zimbabwe, the SWM project in KaZa supports the emerging project of Mucheni CC encompassing three wards of Binga District, in Matabeleland North Province. In Zambia, the target implementation sites are the Simalaha and Inyasemu CC, located in Southern Zambia. The SWM Programme is an initiative of the Organization of the African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) funded by the European Union and co-financed by the French Facility for Global Environment (FFEM) and the French Development Agency (AFD). This seven-year programme (2017–2024) is being implemented in 15 OACPS member countries by a consortium of partners including the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Centre for International Cooperation in Agricultural Research for Development (CIRAD), the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)
Exploring the Partonic Structure of Hadrons through the Drell-Yan Process
The Drell-Yan process is a standard tool for probing the partonic structure
of hadrons. Since the process proceeds through a quark-antiquark annihilation,
Drell-Yan scattering possesses a unique ability to selectively probe sea
distributions. This review examines the application of Drell-Yan scattering to
elucidating the flavor asymmetry of the nucleon's sea and nuclear modifications
to the sea quark distributions in unpolarized scattering. Polarized beams and
targets add an exciting new dimension to Drell-Yan scattering. In particular,
the two initial-state hadrons give Drell-Yan sensitivity to chirally-odd
transversity distributions.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, to appear in J. Phys. G, resubmission corrects
typographical error
The XMM Cluster Survey: Forecasting cosmological and cluster scaling-relation parameter constraints
We forecast the constraints on the values of sigma_8, Omega_m, and cluster
scaling relation parameters which we expect to obtain from the XMM Cluster
Survey (XCS). We assume a flat Lambda-CDM Universe and perform a Monte Carlo
Markov Chain analysis of the evolution of the number density of galaxy clusters
that takes into account a detailed simulated selection function. Comparing our
current observed number of clusters shows good agreement with predictions. We
determine the expected degradation of the constraints as a result of
self-calibrating the luminosity-temperature relation (with scatter), including
temperature measurement errors, and relying on photometric methods for the
estimation of galaxy cluster redshifts. We examine the effects of systematic
errors in scaling relation and measurement error assumptions. Using only (T,z)
self-calibration, we expect to measure Omega_m to +-0.03 (and Omega_Lambda to
the same accuracy assuming flatness), and sigma_8 to +-0.05, also constraining
the normalization and slope of the luminosity-temperature relation to +-6 and
+-13 per cent (at 1sigma) respectively in the process. Self-calibration fails
to jointly constrain the scatter and redshift evolution of the
luminosity-temperature relation significantly. Additional archival and/or
follow-up data will improve on this. We do not expect measurement errors or
imperfect knowledge of their distribution to degrade constraints significantly.
Scaling-relation systematics can easily lead to cosmological constraints 2sigma
or more away from the fiducial model. Our treatment is the first exact
treatment to this level of detail, and introduces a new `smoothed ML' estimate
of expected constraints.Comment: 28 pages, 17 figures. Revised version, as accepted for publication in
MNRAS. High-resolution figures available at http://xcs-home.org (under
"Publications"
New Constraints (and Motivations) for Abelian Gauge Bosons in the MeV-TeV Mass Range
We survey the phenomenological constraints on abelian gauge bosons having
masses in the MeV to multi-GeV mass range (using precision electroweak
measurements, neutrino-electron and neutrino-nucleon scattering, electron and
muon anomalous magnetic moments, upsilon decay, beam dump experiments, atomic
parity violation, low-energy neutron scattering and primordial
nucleosynthesis). We compute their implications for the three parameters that
in general describe the low-energy properties of such bosons: their mass and
their two possible types of dimensionless couplings (direct couplings to
ordinary fermions and kinetic mixing with Standard Model hypercharge). We argue
that gauge bosons with very small couplings to ordinary fermions in this mass
range are natural in string compactifications and are likely to be generic in
theories for which the gravity scale is systematically smaller than the Planck
mass - such as in extra-dimensional models - because of the necessity to
suppress proton decay. Furthermore, because its couplings are weak, in the
low-energy theory relevant to experiments at and below TeV scales the charge
gauged by the new boson can appear to be broken, both by classical effects and
by anomalies. In particular, if the new gauge charge appears to be anomalous,
anomaly cancellation does not also require the introduction of new light
fermions in the low-energy theory. Furthermore, the charge can appear to be
conserved in the low-energy theory, despite the corresponding gauge boson
having a mass. Our results reduce to those of other authors in the special
cases where there is no kinetic mixing or there is no direct coupling to
ordinary fermions, such as for recently proposed dark-matter scenarios.Comment: 49 pages + appendix, 21 figures. This is the final version which
appears in JHE
Expanding NASA's Land, Atmosphere Near Real-Time Capability for EOS (LANCE)
NASA's Land, Atmosphere Near real-time Capability for EOS (LANCE) is a virtual system that provides near real-time EOS data and imagery to meet the needs of scientists and application users interested in monitoring a wide variety of natural and man-made phenomena in near real-time. Over the last year: near real-time data and imagery from MOPITT, MISR, OMPS and VIIRS (Land and Atmosphere), the Fire Information for Resource Management System (FIRMS) has been updated and LANCE has begun the process of integrating the Global NRT flood, and Black Marble products. In addition, following the AMSU-A2 instrument anomaly in September 2016, AIRS-only products have replaced the NRT level 2 AIRS+AMSU products. This presentation provides a brief overview of LANCE, describes the new products that are recently available and contains a preview of what to expect in LANCE over the coming year
Has education lost sight of children?
The reflections presented in this chapter are informed by clinical and personal experiences of school education in the UK. There are many challenges for children and young people in the modern education system and for the professionals who support them. In the UK, there are significant gaps between the highly selective education provided to those who pay privately for it and to the majority of those educated in the state-funded system. Though literacy rates have improved around the world, many children, particularly boys, do not finish their education for reasons such as boredom, behavioural difficulties or because education does not ‘pay’. Violence, bullying, and sexual harassment are issues faced by many children in schools and there are disturbing trends of excluding children who present with behavioural problems at school whose origins are not explored. Excluded children are then educated with other children who may also have multiple problems which often just make the situation worse. The experience of clinicians suggests that school-related mental health problems are increasing in severity. Are mental health services dealing with the consequences of an education system that is not meeting children’s needs? An education system that is testing- and performance-based may not be serving many children well if it is driving important decisions about them at increasingly younger ages. Labelling of children and setting them on educational career paths can occur well before they reach secondary schools, limiting potential very early on in their developmental trajectory. Furthermore, the emphasis at school on testing may come at the expense of creativity and other forms of intelligence, which are also valuable and important. Meanwhile the employment marketplace requires people with widely different skills, with an emphasis on innovation, creativity, and problem solving. Is education losing sight of the children it is educating
Asthma prescribing, ethnicity and risk of hospital admission: an analysis of 35,864 linked primary and secondary care records in East London
This work was partly supported by funding from the Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research
The role of liquid based cytology and ancillary techniques in the peritoneal washing analysis: our institutional experience
Background
The cytological analysis of peritoneal effusions serves as a diagnostic and prognostic aid for either primary or metastatic diseases. Among the different cytological preparations, liquid based cytology (LBC) represents a feasible and reliable method ensuring also the application of ancillary techniques (i.e immunocytochemistry-ICC and molecular testing).
Methods
We recorded 10348 LBC peritoneal effusions between January 2000 and December 2014. They were classified as non-diagnostic (ND), negative for malignancy-NM, atypical-suspicious for malignancy-SM and positive for malignancy-PM.
Results
The cytological diagnosis included 218 ND, 9.035 NM, 213 SM and 882 PM. A total of 8048 (7228 NM, 115SM, 705 PM) cases with histological follow-up were included. Our NM included 21 malignant and 7207 benign histological diagnoses. Our 820 SMs+PMs were diagnosed as 107 unknown malignancies (30SM and 77PM), 691 metastatic lesions (81SM and 610PM), 9 lymphomas (2SM and 7PM), 9 mesotheliomas (1SM and 8SM), 4 sarcomas (1SM and 3PM). Primary gynecological cancers contributed with 64% of the cases. We documented 97.4% sensitivity, 99.9% specificity, 98% diagnostic accuracy, 99.7% negative predictive value (NPV) and 99.7% positive predictive value (PPV). Furthermore, the morphological diagnoses were supported by either 173 conclusive ICC results or 50 molecular analyses. Specifically the molecular testing was performed for the EGFR and KRAS mutational analysis based on the previous or contemporary diagnoses of Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) and colon carcinomas. We identified 10 EGFR in NSCCL and 7 KRAS mutations on LBC stored material.
Conclusions
Peritoneal cytology is an adjunctive tool in the surgical management of tumors mostly gynecological cancers. LBC maximizes the application of ancillary techniques such as ICC and molecular analysis with feasible diagnostic and predictive yields also in controversial cases.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Episodic Memory and Appetite Regulation in Humans
Psychological and neurobiological evidence implicates hippocampal-dependent memory processes in the control of hunger and food intake. In humans, these have been revealed in the hyperphagia that is associated with amnesia. However, it remains unclear whether 'memory for recent eating' plays a significant role in neurologically intact humans. In this study we isolated the extent to which memory for a recently consumed meal influences hunger and fullness over a three-hour period. Before lunch, half of our volunteers were shown 300 ml of soup and half were shown 500 ml. Orthogonal to this, half consumed 300 ml and half consumed 500 ml. This process yielded four separate groups (25 volunteers in each). Independent manipulation of the 'actual' and 'perceived' soup portion was achieved using a computer-controlled peristaltic pump. This was designed to either refill or draw soup from a soup bowl in a covert manner. Immediately after lunch, self-reported hunger was influenced by the actual and not the perceived amount of soup consumed. However, two and three hours after meal termination this pattern was reversed - hunger was predicted by the perceived amount and not the actual amount. Participants who thought they had consumed the larger 500-ml portion reported significantly less hunger. This was also associated with an increase in the 'expected satiation' of the soup 24-hours later. For the first time, this manipulation exposes the independent and important contribution of memory processes to satiety. Opportunities exist to capitalise on this finding to reduce energy intake in humans
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