4,436 research outputs found
Primary transit of the planet HD189733b at 3.6 and 5.8 microns
The hot Jupiter HD 189733b was observed during its primary transit using the
Infrared Array Camera on the Spitzer Space Telescope. The transit depths were
measured simultaneously at 3.6 and 5.8 microns. Our analysis yields values of
2.356 +- 0.019 % and 2.436 +- 0.020$ % at 3.6 and 5.8 microns respectively, for
a uniform source. We estimated the contribution of the limb-darkening and
star-spot effects on the final results. We concluded that although the limb
darkening increases by ~0.02-0.03 % the transit depths, and the differential
effects between the two IRAC bands is even smaller, 0.01 %. Furthermore, the
host star is known to be an active spotted K star with observed photometric
modulation. If we adopt an extreme model of 20 % coverage with spots 1000K
cooler of the star surface, it will make the observed transits shallower by
0.19 and 0.18 %. The difference between the two bands will be only of 0.01 %,
in the opposite direction to the limb darkening correction. If the transit
depth is affected by limb darkening and spots, the differential effects between
the 3.6 and 5.8 microns bands are very small. The differential transit depths
at 3.6 and 5.8 microns and the recent one published by Knutson et al.(2007) at
8 microns are in agreement with the presence of water vapour in the upper
atmosphere of the planet. This is the companion paper to Tinetti et al.
(2007b), where the detailed atmosphere models are presented.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Astrophysical Journal 675. Accepted Nov 21,
20007, to appear on March 10, 200
Current Challenges in Financing Agricultural Cooperatives
Agricultural, Cooperatives, Finance, Agribusiness, L10, L23, L16, Q13,
Identification of new transitional disk candidates in Lupus with Herschel
New data from the Herschel Space Observatory are broadening our understanding
of the physics and evolution of the outer regions of protoplanetary disks in
star forming regions. In particular they prove to be useful to identify
transitional disk candidates. The goals of this work are to complement the
detections of disks and the identification of transitional disk candidates in
the Lupus clouds with data from the Herschel Gould Belt Survey. We extracted
photometry at 70, 100, 160, 250, 350 and 500 m of all spectroscopically
confirmed Class II members previously identified in the Lupus regions and
analyzed their updated spectral energy distributions. We have detected 34 young
disks in Lupus in at least one Herschel band, from an initial sample of 123
known members in the observed fields. Using the criteria defined in Ribas et
al. (2013) we have identified five transitional disk candidates in the region.
Three of them are new to the literature. Their PACS-70 m fluxes are
systematically higher than those of normal T Tauri stars in the same
associations, as already found in T Cha and in the transitional disks in the
Chamaeleon molecular cloud. Herschel efficiently complements mid-infrared
surveys for identifying transitional disk candidates and confirms that these
objects seem to have substantially different outer disks than the T Tauri stars
in the same molecular clouds.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 16 pages, 9 figures, 7 table
Performance of the Micromegas detector in the CAST experiment
The gaseous Micromegas detector designed for the CERN Axion search experiment
CAST, operated smoothly during Phase-I, which included the 2003 and 2004
running periods. It exhibited linear response in the energy range of interest
(1-10keV), good spatial sensitivity and energy resolution (15-19% FWHM at
5.9keV)as well as remarkable stability. The detector's upgrade for the 2004
run, supported by the development of advanced offline analysis tools, improved
the background rejection capability, leading to an average rate 5x10^-5
counts/sec/cm^2/keV with 94% cut efficiency. Also, the origin of the detected
background was studied with a Monte Carlo simulation, using the GEANT4 package.Comment: Prepared for PSD7: The Seventh International Conference on Position
Sensitive Detectors, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 12-16 Sep. 200
Cosmological model with non-minimally coupled fermionic field
A model for the Universe is proposed whose constituents are: (a) a dark
energy field modeled by a fermionic field non-minimally coupled with the
gravitational field, (b) a matter field which consists of pressureless baryonic
and dark matter fields and (c) a field which represents the radiation and the
neutrinos. The coupled system of Dirac's equations and Einstein field equations
is solved numerically by considering a spatially flat homogeneous and isotropic
Universe. It is shown that the proposed model can reproduce the expected
red-shift behaviors of the deceleration parameter, of the density parameters of
each constituent and of the luminosity distance. Furthermore, for small values
of the red-shift the constant which couples the fermionic and gravitational
fields has a remarkable influence on the density and deceleration parameters.Comment: Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
New cell wall-affecting antifungal antibiotics
Capítulo 9.Fungi have emerged worldwide as increasingly frequent causes of healthcare-associated infections. Invasive fungal infections can be life-threatening. However, the number of antifungal agents available and their use in therapy is very limited. Recently, a new family of specific fungal cell wall synthesis inhibitors has emerged as an alternative antifungal therapy and is gaining increasing relevance yearly. The cell wall is a multilayer dynamic structure, essential to the integrity and shape of the fungal cell, whose function is to counteract the osmotic forces that could otherwise produce fungal cell lysis. The cell wall is absent in nonfungal cells, therefore representing a useful target in discovering selective drugs for the treatment of fungal infections without causing toxicity in the host. Although fungi exhibit a considerable diversity in their cell wall structure, all present β(1,3)-, β(1,6)- and α(1,3)-glucans, chitin, and mannoproteins as their major cell wall components. Three different cell wall synthesis inhibitors of the lipopeptide family of echinocandins, named caspofungin, micafungin, and anidulafungin, are commercially available and new classes of cell wall synthesis inhibitors are emerging. This review provides an overview of what is so far known about the different classes of cell wall-affecting antifungal agents and their mechanism of action, offering new alternatives with clinical potential.Peer reviewe
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