3,860 research outputs found
Clinical stakeholders' opinions on the use of selective decontamination of the digestive tract in critically ill patients in intensive care units : an international Delphi study
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Observations of Gamma-ray Bursts with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
The role of the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) in the study of Gamma-ray
Bursts (GRBs) is reviewed. Through April 2001, the All-Sky Monitor (ASM) and
the Proportional Counter Array (PCA) instruments have detected 30 GRBs. In 16
cases, an early celestial position was released to the community, sometimes in
conjunction with IPN results. The subsequent optical and radio searches led to
the detection of 5 x-ray afterglows, to at least 6 optical or radio afterglows,
to 3 of the 17 secure redshifts known at this writing, and to 2 other likely
redshifts. The decay curves of early x-ray afterglows have been measured. The
rapid determination of the location of GRB 970828 and the absence of optical
afterglow at that position gave one of the first indications that GRBs occur in
star-forming regions (Groot et al. 1998, ApJ 493, L27). The location of GRB
000301C led to the determination of a break in the optical decay rate (Rhoads
and Fruchter 2001, ApJ 546, 117) which is evidence for a jet, and to
variability in the optical light curve that could represent gravitational
lensing (Garnavich, Loeb, and Stanek 2000, ApJ 544, L11). X-ray light curves of
GRB from the ASM in conjunction with gamma-ray light curves exhibit striking
differences in different bands and may reveal the commencement of the x-ray
afterglow (Smith et al. 2001, ApJ submitted, astroph 0103357).Comment: Accepted for Proceeding Proceedings Of The Joint CNR/ESO Meeting,
"Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Afterglow Era: 2nd Workshop", Rome, Italy, October
17-20, 2000, eds. F. Frontera, E. Costa, J. Hjorth, in "ESO Astrophysics
Symposia" series, Springer Verlag., 8 pages, 4 figure
The HEASARC Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Archive: The Pipeline and the Catalog
Since its launch in late 2004, the Swift satellite triggered or observed an average of one gamma-ray burst (GRB) every 3 days, for a total of 771 GRBs by 2012 January. Here, we report the development of a pipeline that semi automatically performs the data-reduction and data-analysis processes for the three instruments on board Swift (BAT, XRT, UVOT). The pipeline is written in Perl, and it uses only HEAsoft tools and can be used to perform the analysis of a majority of the point-like objects (e.g., GRBs, active galactic nuclei, pulsars) observed by Swift. We run the pipeline on the GRBs, and we present a database containing the screened data, the output products, and the results of our ongoing analysis. Furthermore, we created a catalog summarizing some GRB information, collected either by running the pipeline or from the literature. The Perl script, the database, and the catalog are available for downloading and querying at the HEASARC Web site
Bostonia. Volume 4
Founded in 1900, Bostonia magazine is Boston University's main alumni publication, which covers alumni and student life, as well as university activities, events, and programs
A Modified Real-Time Fault-Tolerant Task Allocation Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks
In WSNs, the sensor nodes are at risk of failure and malicious attacks (selective forwarding). This may have a profound negative effect when you consider real-time WSNs, making them challenging to deploy. When there is a delay in tasks allocation execution processes in real-time WSNs because of sensor nodes failures, this will cause disastrous consequences if the systems are safety-critical, e.g. aircraft, nuclear power plant, forest fire detection, battlefield monitoring, thus the need to developed a real-time system that is fault-tolerable. This paper developed a modified real-time fault-tolerant task allocation scheme (mRFTAS) for WSNs (wireless sensor networks), using active replication techniques. mRFTAS and RFTAS performance were compared using time of execution of the task, network lifetime and reliability cost. The mRFTAS performance showed an improvement over that of RFTAS when it comes to reducing the time it takes for task execution by 45.56% and reliability cost of 7.99% while prolonging the network lifetime by 36.35%
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A Tropospheric Assessment of the ERA-40, NCEP, and JRA-25 Global Reanalyses in the Polar Regions
The reliability of the global reanalyses in the polar regions is investigated. The overview stems from an April 2006 Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) workshop on the performance of global reanalyses in high latitudes held at the British Antarctic Survey. Overall, the skill is much higher in the Arctic than the Antarctic, where the reanalyses are only reliable in the summer months prior to the modern satellite era. In the Antarctic, large circulation differences between the reanalyses are found primarily before 1979, when vast quantities of satellite sounding data started to be assimilated. Specifically for ERA-40, this data discontinuity creates a marked jump in Antarctic snow accumulation, especially at high elevations. In the Arctic, the largest differences are related to the reanalyses depiction of clouds and their associated radiation impacts; ERA-40 captures the cloud variability much better than NCEP1 and JRA-25, but the ERA-40 and JRA-25 clouds are too optically thin for shortwave radiation. To further contrast the reanalyses skill, cyclone tracking results are presented. In the Southern Hemisphere, cyclonic activity is markedly different between the reanalyses, where there are few matched cyclones prior to 1979. In comparison, only some of the weaker cyclones are not matched in the Northern Hemisphere from 1958-2001, again indicating the superior skill in this hemisphere. Although this manuscript focuses on deficiencies in the reanalyses, it is important to note that they are a powerful tool for climate studies in both polar regions when used with a recognition of their limitations
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Mechanisms of change in the evolution of jargon aphasia
Background: The evolution of jargon aphasia may reflect recovery in the speech production processes. Alternatively or additionally there may be improved self-monitoring, enabling the person to suppress jargon errors. Previous case reports offer evidence for both mechanisms of change, and suggest that they can co-occur.
Aims: This longitudinal study aimed to uncover mechanisms of change in an individual with jargon aphasia. Four predictions of production processing recovery were examined against test data. The study also looked for evidence of improved error awareness, in both test and connected speech data, and explored the relationship between this improvement and the production gains.
Methods & Procedures: The participant (TK) undertook tests of single word naming, reading and repetition eight times over a 21-month period, with matched sets of nouns and verbs. Analyses of correct responses and errors were conducted, in order to test predictions of processing recovery. Changes in self-monitoring behaviours were also investigated, to uncover evidence of increased error awareness. Finally, longitudinal changes in samples of connected speech were explored.
Outcomes & Results: Two predictions of production processing recovery were upheld: there was a significant increase in the number of correct responses over time, and a significant decrease in the proportion of nonword errors. The error analysis also revealed a trend towards increased target-relatedness and decreased perseveration, but neither was significant. There was an increase in self-monitoring behaviours during testing, in that there were more null responses and attempted self-corrections. This increase correlated very strongly with the production gains. Connected speech showed little evidence of improved production, since the range of vocabulary employed by TK reduced as time progressed. However, self-monitoring behaviours were increasingly evident in this context.
Conclusions: The origin of the production and monitoring gains experienced by TK are discussed. Implications are drawn out for further research
The Passing of Print
This paper argues that ephemera is a key instrument of cultural memory, marking the things intended to be forgotten. This important role means that when ephemera survives, whether accidentally or deliberately, it does so despite itself. These survivals, because they evoke all those other objects that have necessarily been forgotten, can be described as uncanny. The paper is divided into three main sections. The first situates ephemera within an uncanny economy of memory and forgetting. The second focuses on ephemera at a particular historical moment, the industrialization of print in the nineteenth century. This section considers the liminal place of newspapers and periodicals in this period, positioned as both provisional media for information as well as objects of record. The third section introduces a new configuration of technologies – scanners, computers, hard disks, monitors, the various connections between them – and considers the conditions under which born-digital ephemera can linger and return. Through this analysis, the paper concludes by considering digital technologies as an apparatus of memory, setting out what is required if we are not to be doubly haunted by the printed ephemera within the digital archive
Measurement Of the Galactic X-ray/Gamma-ray Background Radiation: Contribution of Discrete Sources
The Galactic background radiation near the Scutum Arm was observed
simultaneously with RXTE and OSSE in order to determine the spectral shape and
the origin of the emission in the hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray band. The spectrum
in the 3 keV to 1 MeV band is well modeled by 4 components: a high energy
continuum dominating above 500 keV that can be characterized by a power law of
photon index ~ 1.6 (an extrapolation from measurements above ~ 1 MeV); a
positron annihilation line at 511 keV and positronium continuum; a variable
hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray component that dominates between 10-200 keV (with a
minimum detected flux of ~ 7.7 x 10^-7 photons cm^-2 s^-1 keV^-1 deg^-2 at 100
keV averaged over the field of view of OSSE) and that is well modeled by an
exponentially cut off power law of photon index ~ 0.6 and energy cut off at ~
41 keV; and finally a thermal plasma model of solar abundances and temperature
of 2.6 keV that dominates below 10 keV. We estimate that the contribution of
bright discrete sources to the minimum flux detected by OSSE was ~ 46% at 60
keV and ~ 20% at 100 keV. The remaining unresolved emission may be interpreted
either as truly diffuse emission with a hard spectrum (such as that from
inverse Compton scattering) or the superposition of discrete sources that have
very hard spectra.Comment: Accepted for Publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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