32 research outputs found

    Modulation of the Blazhko Cycle in LS Her

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    We present analysis of the RR Lyrae star, LS Her and confirm the previously reported modulation to its Blazhko cycles. We performed Fourier analysis on two sectors (Sector 24 & 25) of data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) spanning 53 days. We find LS Her to have a primary pulsation period of 0.2308 d and a Blazhko period of 12.7 d in keeping with previously reported results. We also identified side-band frequencies around the Blazhko multiplets suggesting the Blazhko cycle is modulated on a time scale of 112 days. Analysis of the Blazhko effect using the TESS data clearly shows a changing amplitude and phase throughout the four Blazhko cycles. We compared our modeled results, which were based on our TESS frequency analysis, to TESS data (Sector 51) taken ~700 days later and found our modulation model was not a good representation of the data. We then coupled our TESS analysis with the modulation frequency results from Wils et al. (MNRAS 387 (2008) 783-787) and found excellent agreement with the Sector 51 data. To further test this result we obtained ground-based, V-magnitude observations of LS Her in the summer of 2022. This data also showed excellent agreement with our coupled modulation model. We have verified that LS Her is a Blazhko star with a modulated Blazhko period of 109 days, stability over the 862 days of observations, and possible stability lasting over 15 years. We discuss the ramifications of the modulation for other Blazhko stars that show Blazhko effect changes over time.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure

    The effect of Fucus vesiculosus, an edible brown seaweed, upon menstrual cycle length and hormonal status in three pre-menopausal women: a case report

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    BACKGROUND: Rates of estrogen-dependent cancers are among the highest in Western countries and lower in the East. These variations may be attributable to differences in dietary exposures such as higher seaweed consumption among Asian populations. The edible brown kelp, Fucus vesiculosus (bladderwrack), as well as other brown kelp species, lower plasma cholesterol levels. Since cholesterol is a precursor to sex hormone biosynthesis, kelp consumption may alter circulating sex hormone levels and menstrual cycling patterns. In particular, dietary kelp may be beneficial to women with or at high risk for estrogen-dependent diseases. To test this, bladderwrack was administered to three pre-menopausal women with abnormal menstrual cycling patterns and/or menstrual-related disease histories. CASE PRESENTATION: Intake of bladderwrack was associated with significant increases in menstrual cycle lengths, ranging from an increase of 5.5 to 14 days. In addition, hormone measurements ascertained for one woman revealed significant anti-estrogenic and progestagenic effects following kelp administration. Mean baseline 17β-estradiol levels were reduced from 626 ± 91 to 164 ± 30 pg/ml (P = 0.04) following 700 mg/d, which decreased further to 92.5.0 ± 3.5pg/ml (P = 0.03) with the1.4 g/d dose. Mean baseline progesterone levels rose from 0.58 ± 0.14 to 8.4 ± 2.6 ng/ml with the 700 mg/d dose (P = 0.1), which increased further to 16.8 ± 0.7 ng/ml with the 1.4 g/d dose (P = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: These pilot data suggest that dietary bladderwrack may prolong the length of the menstrual cycle and exert anti-estrogenic effects in pre-menopausal women. Further, these studies also suggest that seaweed may be another important dietary component apart from soy that is responsible for the reduced risk of estrogen-related cancers observed in Japanese populations. However, these studies will need to be performed in well-controlled clinical trials to confirm these preliminary findings

    Finger joint synovitis detection in ultrasound images

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    Ultrasonography has proved its usefulness in the evaluation of joint inflammations caused by rheumatoid arthritis. The illness severity is scored by human examiners based on their experience, but some discrepancies in the final diagnosis and treatment frequently occur. Therefore, the main aim of this work is the elaboration of an automatic method of the localization of finger joint inflammation level in ultrasound images. In this paper we propose a novel, fully automated framework for synovitis region segmentation. In our approach we compare several bones and joint localization methods based on the seeded region growing technique, which is combined with different speckle noise filtering algorithms. This technique extracts a region from the image using some predefined criteria of similarity between initially selected point and the pixels in its neighborhood. The seed point is localized automatically as the darkest patch within a small region between two detected finger bones close to the joint. The region affected by synovitis is found using the adopted criterion of homogeneity based on a patch to patch similarity measure. The obtained results exhibit a satisfying accuracy in comparison with the annotations prepared by an expert and the results delivered by semi-automatic methods that require manual bones delineation

    A quantum extension to inspection game

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    Quantum game theory is a new interdisciplinary field between game theory and system engineering research. In this paper, we extend the classical inspection game into a quantum game version by quantizing the strategy space and importing entanglement between players. Our results show that the quantum inspection game has various Nash equilibria depending on the initial quantum state of the game. It is also shown that quantization can respectively help each player to increase his own payoff, yet fails to bring Pareto improvement for the collective payoff in the quantum inspection game
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