2,676 research outputs found
Stellar Differential Rotation and Coronal Timescales
We investigate the timescales of evolution of stellar coronae in response to
surface differential rotation and diffusion. To quantify this we study both the
formation time and lifetime of a magnetic flux rope in a decaying bipolar
active region. We apply a magnetic flux transport model to prescribe the
evolution of the stellar photospheric field, and use this to drive the
evolution of the coronal magnetic field via a magnetofrictional technique.
Increasing the differential rotation (i.e. decreasing the equator-pole lap
time) decreases the flux rope formation time. We find that the formation time
is dependent upon the geometric mean of the lap time and the surface diffusion
timescale. In contrast, the lifetime of flux ropes are proportional to the lap
time. With this, flux ropes on stars with a differential rotation of more than
eight times the solar value have a lifetime of less than two days. As a
consequence, we propose that features such as solar-like quiescent prominences
may not be easily observable on such stars, as the lifetimes of the flux ropes
which host the cool plasma are very short. We conclude that such high
differential rotation stars may have very dynamical coronae
Learning Cast up from the Mire: Archaeological Investigations of Schoolhouses in the Northeastern United States
Common schools, often comprising a single room with one or two teachers, taught millions of children from the 1850s through the 1930s. They have provided source material for objective historical writings on education and inspired subjective literature on the school experiences of teachers and students. But as prominent as one-room schools have been in the North American experience, and in the perceptions of rural 19th- and early 20th-century life, these ubiquitous structures have not found a place in the archaeological literature. This paper examines the archaeological potential of schoolhouse sites for providing useful information not otherwise available to historians, poets, and playwrights
Programming Protocol-Independent Packet Processors
P4 is a high-level language for programming protocol-independent packet
processors. P4 works in conjunction with SDN control protocols like OpenFlow.
In its current form, OpenFlow explicitly specifies protocol headers on which it
operates. This set has grown from 12 to 41 fields in a few years, increasing
the complexity of the specification while still not providing the flexibility
to add new headers. In this paper we propose P4 as a strawman proposal for how
OpenFlow should evolve in the future. We have three goals: (1)
Reconfigurability in the field: Programmers should be able to change the way
switches process packets once they are deployed. (2) Protocol independence:
Switches should not be tied to any specific network protocols. (3) Target
independence: Programmers should be able to describe packet-processing
functionality independently of the specifics of the underlying hardware. As an
example, we describe how to use P4 to configure a switch to add a new
hierarchical label
A multistage mathematical approach to automated clustering of high-dimensional noisy data
A critical problem faced in many scientific fields is the adequate separation of data derived from individual sources. Often, such datasets require analysis of multiple features in a highly multidimensional space, with overlap of features and sources. The datasets generated by simultaneous recording from hundreds of neurons emitting phasic action potentials have produced the challenge of separating the recorded signals into independent data subsets (clusters) corresponding to individual signal-generating neurons. Mathematical methods have been developed over the past three decades to achieve such spike clustering, but a complete solution with fully automated cluster identification has not been achieved. We propose here a fully automated mathematical approach that identifies clusters in multidimensional space through recursion, which combats the multidimensionality of the data. Recursion is paired with an approach to dimensional evaluation, in which each dimension of a dataset is examined for its informational importance for clustering. The dimensions offering greater informational importance are given added weight during recursive clustering. To combat strong background activity, our algorithm takes an iterative approach of data filtering according to a signal-to-noise ratio metric. The algorithm finds cluster cores, which are thereafter expanded to include complete clusters. This mathematical approach can be extended from its prototype context of spike sorting to other datasets that suffer from high dimensionality and background activity.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01 MH060379)United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects AgencyUnited States. Army Research Office (Grant W911NF-10-1-0059)Cure Huntington’s Disease Initiative, Inc. (Grant A-5552
Temporal and Spatial Aspects of Gas Release During the 2010 Apparition of Comet 103P/Hartley-2
We report measurements of eight primary volatiles (H2O, HCN, CH4, C2H6,
CH3OH, C2H2, H2CO, and NH3) and two product species (OH and NH2) in comet
103P/Hartley-2 using high dispersion infrared spectroscopy. We quantified the
long- and short-term behavior of volatile release over a three-month interval
that encompassed the comet's close approach to Earth, its perihelion passage,
and flyby of the comet by the Deep Impact spacecraft during the EPOXI mission.
We present production rates for individual species, their mixing ratios
relative to water, and their spatial distributions in the coma on multiple
dates. The production rates for water, ethane, HCN, and methanol vary in a
manner consistent with independent measures of nucleus rotation, but mixing
ratios for HCN, C2H6, & CH3OH are independent of rotational phase. Our results
demonstrate that the ensemble average composition of gas released from the
nucleus is well defined, and relatively constant over the three-month interval
(September 18 through December 17). If individual vents vary in composition,
enough diverse vents must be active simultaneously to approximate (in sum) the
bulk composition of the nucleus. The released primary volatiles exhibit diverse
spatial properties which favor the presence of separate polar and apolar ice
phases in the nucleus, establish dust and gas release from icy clumps (and
also, directly from the nucleus), and provide insights into the driver for the
cyanogen (CN) polar jet. The spatial distributions of C2H6 & HCN along the
near-polar jet (UT 19.5 October) and nearly orthogonal to it (UT 22.5 October)
are discussed relative to the origin of CN. The ortho-para ratio (OPR) of water
was 2.85 \pm 0.20; the lower bound (2.65) defines Tspin > 32 K. These values
are consistent with results returned from ISO in 1997.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, to be published in: Astrophysical Journal
Letter
Anaemia and blood transfusion in African children presenting to hospital with severe febrile illness
BACKGROUND: Severe anaemia in children is a leading cause of hospital admission and a major cause of mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, yet there are limited published data on blood transfusion in this vulnerable group. METHODS: We present data from a large controlled trial of fluid resuscitation (Fluid Expansion As Supportive Therapy (FEAST) trial) on the prevalence, clinical features, and transfusion management of anaemia in children presenting to hospitals in three East African countries with serious febrile illness (predominantly malaria and/or sepsis) and impaired peripheral perfusion. RESULTS: Of 3,170 children in the FEAST trial, 3,082 (97%) had baseline haemoglobin (Hb) measurement, 2,346/3,082 (76%) were anaemic (Hb <10 g/dL), and 33% severely anaemic (Hb <5 g/dL). Prevalence of severe anaemia varied from 12% in Kenya to 41% in eastern Uganda. 1,387/3,082 (45%) children were transfused (81% within 8 hours). Adherence to WHO transfusion guidelines was poor. Among severely anaemic children who were not transfused, 52% (54/103) died within 8 hours, and 90% of these deaths occurred within 2.5 hours of randomisation. By 24 hours, 128/1,002 (13%) severely anaemic children had died, compared to 36/501 (7%) and 71/843 (8%) of those with moderate and mild anaemia, respectively. Among children without severe hypotension who were randomised to receive fluid boluses of 0.9% saline or albumin, mortality was increased (10.6% and 10.5%, respectively) compared to controls (7.2%), regardless of admission Hb level. Repeat transfusion varied from ≤2% in Kenya/Tanzania to 6 to 13% at the four Ugandan centres. Adverse reactions to blood were rare (0.4%). CONCLUSIONS: Severe anaemia complicates one third of childhood admissions with serious febrile illness to hospitals in East Africa, and is associated with increased mortality. A high proportion of deaths occurred within 2.5 hours of admission, emphasizing the need for rapid recognition and prompt blood transfusion. Adherence to current WHO transfusion guidelines was poor. The high rates of re-transfusion suggest that 20 mL/kg whole blood or 10 mL/kg packed cells may undertreat a significant proportion of anaemic children. Future evaluation of the impact of a larger volume of transfused blood and optimum transfusion management of children with Hb of <6 g/dL is warranted. Please see related article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12916-014-0248-5. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12916-014-0246-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
A Growth Reference for Mid Upper Arm Circumference for Age among School Age Children and Adolescents, with Validation for Mortality in Two Cohorts
OBJECTIVES: To construct growth curves for mid-upper-arm circumference (MUAC)-for-age z score for 5-19 year olds that accord with the World Health Organization growth standards, and to evaluate their discriminatory performance for subsequent mortality.
DESIGN: Growth curve construction and longitudinal cohort study.
SETTING: United States and international growth data, and cohorts in Kenya, Uganda, and Zimbabwe.
PARTICIPANTS The Health Examination Survey (HES)/National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) US population datasets (age 5-25 years), which were used to construct the 2007 WHO growth reference for body mass index in this age group, were merged with an imputed dataset matching the distribution of the WHO 2006 growth standards age 2-6 years. Validation data were from 685 HIV infected children aged 5-17 years participating in the Antiretroviral Research for Watoto (ARROW) trial in Uganda and Zimbabwe; and 1741 children aged 5-13 years discharged from a rural Kenyan hospital (3.8% HIV infected). Both cohorts were followed-up for survival during one year.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Concordance with WHO 2006 growth standards at age 60 months and survival during one year according to MUAC-for-age and body mass index-for-age z scores.
RESULTS: The new growth curves transitioned smoothly with WHO growth standards at age 5 years. MUAC-for-age z scores of −2 to −3 and less than−3, compared with −2 or more, was associated with hazard ratios for death within one year of 3.63 (95% confidence interval 0.90 to 14.7; P=0.07) and 11.1 (3.40 to 36.0; P<0.001), respectively, among ARROW trial participants; and 2.22 (1.01 to 4.9; P=0.04) and 5.15 (2.49 to 10.7; P<0.001), respectively, among Kenyan children after discharge from hospital. The AUCs for MUAC-for-age and body mass index-for-age z scores for discriminating subsequent mortality were 0.81 (95% confidence interval 0.70 to 0.92) and 0.75 (0.63 to 0.86) in the ARROW trial (absolute difference 0.06, 95% confidence interval −0.032 to 0.16; P=0.2) and 0.73 (0.65 to 0.80) and 0.58 (0.49 to 0.67), respectively, in Kenya (absolute difference in AUC 0.15, 0.07 to 0.23; P=0.0002).
CONCLUSIONS: The MUAC-for-age z score is at least as effective as the body mass index-for-age z score for assessing mortality risks associated with undernutrition among African school aged children and adolescents. MUAC can provide simplified screening and diagnosis within nutrition and HIV programmes, and in research
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