2,191 research outputs found

    S5 0716+714 : GeV variability study

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    The GeV observations by Fermi-LAT give us the opportunity to characterize the high-energy emission (100 MeV - 300 GeV) variability properties of the BL Lac object S5 0716+714. In this study, we performed flux and spectral analysis of more than 3 year long (August 2008 to April 2012) Fermi-LAT data of the source. During this period, the source exhibits two different modes of flux variability with characteristic timescales of ~75 and ~140 days, respectively. We also notice that the flux variations are characterized by a weak spectral hardening. The GeV spectrum of the source shows a clear deviation from a simple power law, and is better explained by a broken power law. Similar to other bright Fermi blazars, the break energy does not vary with the source flux during the different activity states. We discuss several possible scenarios to explain the observed spectral break.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in Advances in Space Research journa

    Inhibition of NK cell-mediated Cytotoxicity by Tubular Epithelial Cell Expression of Clr Proteins

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    Cytotoxic effector cells can target and kill parenchymal cells of the kidney which results in injury and loss of function. Endogenous regulatory systems may exist to attenuate Natural Killer (NK) and other effector cell activation and cytotoxicity in diverse conditions, including ischemia-reperfusion injury associated with kidney transplantation. Understanding these mechanisms will direct new therapeutic strategies. Kidney tubular epithelial cells (TEC), the predominant cell type in kidneys, may negatively regulate NK cell activation by surface expression of C-type lectin-related proteins (Clr). Clr-b and -f were found to be expressed by wild type (WT) TEC. Clr-b was upregulated by TNFα+IFNγ in vitro. Elimination of both Clr-b and Clr-f expression with siRNA resulted in increased NK killing of TEC compared to individual silencing of Clr-b or Clr-f TEC (p\u3c0.01), or WT control TEC (p\u3c0.001). NK cells treated in vitro with soluble Clr-b and Clr-f reduced their capacity to kill Clr-b/-f -/- TEC as compared to untreated NK cells (p\u3c0.05). NK cells therefore are regulated by proteins expressed by TEC and thus may represent an important endogenous regulatory system in the kidney to limit organ injury. As no current drugs exist to specifically target NK cells, Clr-b and Clr-f soluble proteins that bind to NK cells may represent a novel and clinically feasible strategy to protect organs from NK cell-mediated inflammation during ischemia-reperfusion and other kidney injury models

    Nanoscale tunnel field effect transistor based on a complex oxide lateral heterostructure

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    We demonstrate a tunnel field effect transistor based on a lateral heterostructure patterned from an LaAlO3/SrTiO3\mathrm{LaAlO_3/SrTiO_3} electron gas. Charge is injected by tunneling from the LaAlO3\mathrm{LaAlO_3}/SrTiO3\mathrm{SrTiO_3} contacts and the current through a narrow channel of insulating SrTiO3\mathrm{SrTiO_3} is controlled via an electrostatic side gate. Drain-source I/V-curves have been measured at low and elevated temperatures. The transistor shows strong electric-field and temperature-dependent behaviour with a steep sub-threshold slope %of up to as small as 10mV/decade10\:\mathrm{mV/decade} and a transconductance as high as gm22μA/Vg_m\approx 22 \: \mathrm{\mu A/V}. A fully consistent transport model for the drain-source tunneling reproduces the measured steep sub-threshold slope.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, Supplementary material: 4 pages, 2 figure

    A Consistency Test of Spectroscopic Gravities for Late-Type Stars

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    Chemical analyses of late-type stars are usually carried out following the classical recipe: LTE line formation and homogeneous, plane-parallel, flux-constant, and LTE model atmospheres. We review different results in the literature that have suggested significant inconsistencies in the spectroscopic analyses, pointing out the difficulties in deriving independent estimates of the stellar fundamental parameters and hence,detecting systematic errors. The trigonometric parallaxes measured by the HIPPARCOS mission provide accurate appraisals of the stellar surface gravity for nearby stars, which are used here to check the gravities obtained from the photospheric iron ionization balance. We find an approximate agreement for stars in the metallicity range -1 <= [Fe/H] <= 0, but the comparison shows that the differences between the spectroscopic and trigonometric gravities decrease towards lower metallicities for more metal-deficient dwarfs (-2.5 <= [Fe/H] <= -1.0), which casts a shadow upon the abundance analyses for extreme metal-poor stars that make use of the ionization equilibrium to constrain the gravity. The comparison with the strong-line gravities derived by Edvardsson (1988) and Fuhrmann (1998a) confirms that this method provides systematically larger gravities than the ionization balance. The strong-line gravities get closer to the physical ones for the stars analyzed by Fuhrmann, but they are even further away than the iron ionization gravities for the stars of lower gravities in Edvardsson's sample. The confrontation of the deviations of the iron ionization gravities in metal-poor stars reported here with departures from the excitation balance found in the literature, show that they are likely to be induced by the same physical mechanism(s).Comment: AAS LaTeX v4.0, 35 pages, 10 PostScript files; to appear in The Astrophysical Journa

    Detailed Analysis of Nearby Bulgelike Dwarf Stars III. Alpha and Heavy-element abundances

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    The present sample of nearby bulgelike dwarf stars has kinematics and metallicities characteristic of a probable inner disk or bulge origin. Ages derived by using isochrones give 10-11 Gyr for these stars and metallicities are in the range -0.80< [Fe/H]< +0.40. We calculate stellar parameters from spectroscopic data, and chemical abundances of Mg, Si, Ca, Ti, La, Ba, Y, Zr and Eu are derived by using spectrum synthesis. We found that [alpha-elements/Fe] show different patterns depending on the element. Si, Ca and Ti-to-iron ratios decline smoothly for increasing metallicities, and follow essentially the disk pattern. O and Mg, products of massive supernovae, and also the r-process element Eu, are overabundant relative to disk stars, showing a steeper decline for metallicities [Fe/H] > -0.3 dex. [s-elements/Fe] roughly track the solar values with no apparent trend with metallicity for [Fe/H] < 0, showing subsolar values for the metal rich stars. Both kinematical and chemical properties of the bulgelike stars indicate a distinct identity of this population when compared to disk stars.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Ap

    Detailed analysis of Balmer lines in cool dwarf stars

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    An analysis of H alpha and H beta spectra in a sample of 30 cool dwarf and subgiant stars is presented using MARCS model atmospheres based on the most recent calculations of the line opacities. A detailed quantitative comparison of the solar flux spectra with model spectra shows that Balmer line profile shapes, and therefore the temperature structure in the line formation region, are best represented under the mixing length theory by any combination of a low mixing-length parameter alpha and a low convective structure parameter y. A slightly lower effective temperature is obtained for the sun than the accepted value, which we attribute to errors in models and line opacities. The programme stars span temperatures from 4800 to 7100 K and include a small number of population II stars. Effective temperatures have been derived using a quantitative fitting method with a detailed error analysis. Our temperatures find good agreement with those from the Infrared Flux Method (IRFM) near solar metallicity but show differences at low metallicity where the two available IRFM determinations themselves are in disagreement. Comparison with recent temperature determinations using Balmer lines by Fuhrmann (1998, 2000), who employed a different description of the wing absorption due to self-broadening, does not show the large differences predicted by Barklem et al. (2000). In fact, perhaps fortuitously, reasonable agreement is found near solar metallicity, while we find significantly cooler temperatures for low metallicity stars of around solar temperature.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, to appear in A&
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