88 research outputs found
Intrinsic myocardial recovery from the negative inotropic effects of acute hypercapnia
The inotropic effects of hypercapnia have been examined in the isometric papillary muscle preparation from the cat. The initial stage of depression which resulted from the acute induction of hypercapnia was followed by a significant degree of spontaneous recovery during the next hour. When the carbon dioxide concentration was returned to normal a temporary rebound in performance to well above control levels was observed. These findings are interpreted as being due to slow changes arising within heart muscle itself which partially compensate for the direct inotropic depressant effect of hypercapni
SARCS strong lensing galaxy groups: I - optical, weak lensing, and scaling laws
We present the weak lensing and optical analysis of the SL2S-ARCS (SARCS)
sample of strong lens candidates. The sample is based on the Strong Lensing
Legacy Survey (SL2S), a systematic search of strong lensing systems in the
photometric Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). The SARCS
sample focuses on arc-like features and is designed to contain mostly galaxy
groups. We briefly present the weak lensing methodology that we use to estimate
the mass of the SARCS objects. Among 126 candidates, we obtain a weak lensing
detection for 89 objects with velocity dispersions of the Singular Isothermal
Sphere mass model ranging from 350 to 1000 km/s with an average value of
600km/s, corresponding to a rich galaxy group (or poor cluster). From the
galaxies belonging to the bright end of the group's red sequence (M_i<-21), we
derive the optical properties of the SARCS candidates. We obtain typical
richnesses of N=5-15 galaxies and optical luminosities of L=0.5-1.5e+12 Lsol
(within a radius of 0.5 Mpc). We use these galaxies to compute luminosity
density maps, from which a morphological classification reveals that a large
fraction of the sample are groups with a complex light distribution, either
elliptical or multimodal, suggesting that these objects are dynamically young
structures. We finally combine the lensing and optical analyses to draw a
sample of 80 most secure group candidates, i.e. weak lensing detection and
over-density at the lens position in the luminosity map, to remove false
detections and galaxy-scale systems from the initial sample. We use this
reduced sample to probe the optical scaling relations in combination with a
sample of massive galaxy clusters. We detect the expected correlations over the
probed range in mass with a typical scatter of 25% in the SIS velocity
dispersion at a given richness or luminosity, making these scaling laws
interesting mass proxie
Characterizing SL2S galaxy groups using the Einstein radius
We analyzed the Einstein radius, , in our sample of SL2S galaxy
groups, and compared it with (the distance from the arcs to the center of
the lens), using three different approaches: 1.- the velocity dispersion
obtained from weak lensing assuming a Singular Isothermal Sphere profile
(), 2.- a strong lensing analytical method ()
combined with a velocity dispersion-concentration relation derived from
numerical simulations designed to mimic our group sample, 3.- strong lensing
modeling () of eleven groups (with four new models presented in
this work) using HST and CFHT images. Finally, was analyzed as a function
of redshift to investigate possible correlations with L, N, and the
richness-to-luminosity ratio (N/L). We found a correlation between
and , but with large scatter. We estimate = (2.2 0.9)
+ (0.7 0.2), = (0.4 1.5) + (1.1
0.4), and = (0.4 1.5) + (0.9 0.3) for
each method respectively. We found a weak evidence of anti-correlation between
and , with Log = (0.580.06) - (0.040.1), suggesting
a possible evolution of the Einstein radius with , as reported previously by
other authors. Our results also show that is correlated with L and N
(more luminous and richer groups have greater ), and a possible
correlation between and the N/L ratio. Our analysis indicates that
is correlated with in our sample, making useful to
characterize properties like L and N (and possible N/L) in galaxy groups.
Additionally, we present evidence suggesting that the Einstein radius evolves
with .Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. Typos correcte
Dark matter-baryons separation at the lowest mass scale: the Bullet Group
We report on the X-ray observation of a strong lensing selected group, SL2S
J08544-0121, with a total mass of
which revealed a separation of kpc between the X-ray emitting
collisional gas and the collisionless galaxies and dark matter (DM), traced by
strong lensing. This source allows to put an order of magnitude estimate to the
upper limit to the interaction cross section of DM of 10 cm g. It is
the lowest mass object found to date showing a DM-baryons separation and it
reveals that the detection of bullet-like objects is not rare and confined to
mergers of massive objects opening the possibility of a statistical detection
of DM-baryons separation with future surveys.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. Typos
correcte
Cross-sectional study of prevalence and determinants of uncontrolled hypertension among South African adult residents of Mkhondo municipality
Achieving the blood pressure treatment target in individuals with hypertension is a serious global health challenge. Furthermore, the actual burden of uncontrolled hypertension is poorly understood, especially in the developing countries. Therefore, this study comprehensively examined the prevalence and factors associated with uncontrolled hypertension in individuals receiving care at the primary healthcare facilities in the rural areas of Mkhondo Municipality in the Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 329 individuals attending care for hypertension were recruited from January 2019 to June 2019 at three primary healthcare centres, namely, Piet Retief hospital, Mkhondo town clinic and Thandukukhanya community health centre
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