91 research outputs found
X-Ray Emission and Optical Polarization of V1432 Aquilae: An Asynchronous Polar
A detailed analysis of X-ray data from ROSAT, ASCA, XMM and RXTE for the
asynchronous polar V1432 Aql along with Stokes polarimetry data from SAAO, is
presented. Power spectra from long-baseline ROSAT data show a spin period of
12150s along with several system related frequency components. However, the
second harmonic of the spin period dominates power spectrum in the XMM data.
For the optical circular polarization, the dominant period corresponds to half
the spin period. The ROSAT data can be explained as due to accretion onto two
hot spots that are not anti-podal. The variations seen in the optical
polarization and the ASCA and XMM data suggest the presence of at least three
accretion foot prints on the white dwarf surface. Two spectral models, a
multi-temperature plasma and a photo-ionized plasma model, are used for
spectral study. The RXTE PCA data are used to constrain the white dwarf mass to
1.20.1 M_odot using the multi-temperature plasma model. A strong soft
X-ray excess (<0.8 keV) in the XMM MOS data is well modeled by a blackbody
component having a temperature of 80-90 eV. The plasma emission lines seen at
6.7 and 7.0 keV are well fitted using the multi-temperature plasma model,
however an additional Gaussian is needed for the 6.4 keV line. The
multi-temperature plasma model requires a homogeneous absorber fully covering
the source and a partial absorber covering 65% of the source. The photo-ionized
plasma model, with a range of Fe column densities, gives a slightly better
overall fit and fits all emission lines. The presence of a strong blackbody
component, a spin period of 12150s, modulation of the 6.4 keV line flux with
spin period, and a very hard X-ray component suggest that V1432 Aql is a polar
with X-ray spectral properties similar to that of a soft intermediate polar.Comment: 46 pages, including 13 figures and 4 tables, To appear in The
Astrophysical Journal, 20 May 2005 issue, vol. 625, Added Report-no and
Journal-ref, no change in the text of the pape
A review of RCTs in four medical journals to assess the use of imputation to overcome missing data in quality of life outcomes
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are perceived as the gold-standard method for evaluating healthcare interventions, and increasingly include quality of life (QoL) measures. The observed results are susceptible to bias if a substantial proportion of outcome data are missing. The review aimed to determine whether imputation was used to deal with missing QoL outcomes. Methods: A random selection of 285 RCTs published during 2005/6 in the British Medical Journal, Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine and Journal of American Medical Association were identified. Results: QoL outcomes were reported in 61 (21%) trials. Six (10%) reported having no missing data, 20 (33%) reported ≤ 10% missing, eleven (18%) 11%–20% missing, and eleven (18%) reported >20% missing. Missingness was unclear in 13 (21%). Missing data were imputed in 19 (31%) of the 61 trials. Imputation was part of the primary analysis in 13 trials, but a sensitivity analysis in six. Last value carried forward was used in 12 trials and multiple imputation in two. Following imputation, the most common analysis method was analysis of covariance (10 trials). Conclusion: The majority of studies did not impute missing data and carried out a complete-case analysis. For those studies that did impute missing data, researchers tended to prefer simpler methods of imputation, despite more sophisticated methods being available.The Health Services Research Unit is funded by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health Directorate. Shona Fielding is also currently funded by the Chief Scientist Office on a Research Training Fellowship (CZF/1/31)
A review of RCTs in four medical journals to assess the use of imputation to overcome missing data in quality of life outcomes
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A Turke turn'd Quaker: conversion from Islam to radical dissent in early modern England
The study of the relationship between the anglophone and Islamic
worlds in the seventeenth century has been the subject of increas-
ing interest in recent years, and much attention has been given to
the cultural anxiety surrounding “Turning Turke”, conversion from
Christianity to Islam, especially by English captives on the Barbary
coast. Conversion in the other direction has attracted far less
scrutiny, not least because it appears to have been far less com-
mon. Conversion from Islam to any form of radical dissent has
attracted no scholarship whatsoever, probably because it has been
assumed to be non-existent. However, the case of Bartholomew
Cole provides evidence that such conversions did take place, and
examining the life of this “Turke turn’d Quaker” provides an insight
into the dynamics of cross-cultural conversion of an exceptional
kind
Recommended from our members
1960
Recent Developments Affecting Golf Course Design (page 1) From the Editor (3) Five Year Results (3) Turf Management Club News (4) Quotes from 1960 Seniors (5) Poa annua - - Friend or Foe (6) The Horticulture Show (7) Cartoons (8) Message from the Winter School President of 1960 (10) The Most Outstanding Turf Senior for 1959 (10) The Value of the Proper Use of Lime (11) Summer Placement (12) A Greenhouse on the Golf Course (13) More Opportunities in the Future for the Aggressive Superintendent at Country Clubs (14) Soil, Sawdust and Turfgrass (15) Picture - Senior Stockbridge Turf majors (16) Picture - Freshman Stockbridge Turf majors (17) Susceptibility of Merion Bluegrass to Stripe Smut (18) Bents in the South (19) Picture - Honorary Members of Turf Management Club (20) Picture - Graduates of Winter School for Turf mangers- 1960 (21) Weather - We are Going to Have Weather, Whether or Not - What Should we Expect by O. Tennebaum & R. E. Lautzenheiser (A-1) The Nature of Winter Injury to Plants by Dr. Johnson Parker (A-1) Turf Problems: You Name it and We\u27ve Had It in \u2759 by Alexander Radko ad T.T. Taylor (A-3) Topdressing Experiences with Greens at Century by James Fulwider (A-5) Poa annua - Fairway Rennovation at winged Foot by Sherwood A. Moore (A-6) Winter Problems at Ekwanaok by Paul O\u27Leary (A-8) Progress Through Drainage by Kayem Ovian (A-10) Winter Injury on Home Lawns by Orlando Capizzi (A-12) The Status of Pre-emergence Chemicals for the Control of Crabgrass by Dr. E. Engel (A-12) Turf Nurseries - Establishment, Maintenance & Utilization by Robert Grant (A-14) Soil Compaction by Dr. R. B. Alderfer (A-16) Water Management Practices on Turf Areas by Dr. J.R. Watson (A-18) Getting to Know Your Members by Owen Griffith (A-23) New Trends in Clubhouse Landscaping by Alfred Boicourt (A-26) General Lawn Management (Alternate Session) Conserving Soil for a good Lawn by Dr. William G. Colby (A-27) Fertilizting and Liming by Dr. Joseph Steckel (A-28) Grasses and Grass Mixtures for New England Lawns by Dr. Robert Schery (A-29) The Care and Maintenance of Establishment Lawns by Dr. John R. Davi
Polarimetry of binary systems: polars, magnetic CVs, XRBs
Polarimetry provides key physical information on the properties of
interacting binary systems, sometimes difficult to obtain by any other type of
observation. Indeed, radiation processes such as scattering by free electrons
in the hot plasma above accretion discs, cyclotron emission by mildly
relativistic electrons in the accretion shocks on the surface of highly
magnetic white dwarfs and the optically thin synchrotron emission from jets can
be observed. In this review, I will illustrate how optical/near-infrared
polarimetry allows one to estimate magnetic field strengths and map the
accretion zones in magnetic Cataclysmic Variables as well as determine the
location and nature of jets and ejection events in X-ray binaries.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures; to be published in Astrophysics and Space
Science Library 460, Astronomical Polarisation from the Infrared to Gamma
Rays, Editors: Mignani, R., Shearer, A., S{\l}owikowska, A., Zane,
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