78 research outputs found
Evidence for a Photospheric Component in the Prompt Emission of the Short GRB120323A and its Effects on the GRB Hardness-Luminosity Relation
The short GRB 120323A had the highest flux ever detected with the Fermi/GBM.
Here we study its remarkable spectral properties and their evolution using two
spectral models: (i) a single emission component scenario, where the spectrum
is modeled by the empirical Band function, and (ii) a two component scenario,
where thermal (Planck-like) emission is observed simultaneously with a
non-thermal component (a Band function). We find that the latter model fits the
integrated burst spectrum significantly better than the former, and that their
respective spectral parameters are dramatically different: when fit with a Band
function only, the Epeak of the event is unusually soft for a short GRB, while
adding a thermal component leads to more typical short GRB values. Our
time-resolved spectral analysis produces similar results. We argue here that
the two-component model is the preferred interpretation for GRB 120323A, based
on: (i) the values and evolution of the Band function parameters of the two
component scenario, which are more typical for a short GRB, and (ii) the
appearance in the data of a significant hardness-intensity correlation,
commonly found in GRBs, when we employee two-component model fits; the
correlation is non-existent in the Band-only fits. GRB 110721A, a long burst
with an intense photospheric emission, exhibits the exact same behavior. We
conclude that GRB 120323A has a strong photospheric emission contribution,
first time observed in a short GRB. Magnetic dissipation models are difficult
to reconcile with these results, which instead favor photospheric thermal
emission and fast cooling synchrotron radiation from internal shocks. Finally,
we derive a possibly universal hardness-luminosity relation in the source frame
using a larger set of GRBs L,i=(1.59+/-0.84).10^50 (Epeak,i)^(1.33+/-0.07)
erg/s), which could be used as a possible redshift estimator for cosmology.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, Accepted by ApJ (April, 7th 2013
Temporary exclusion of ill children from childcare centres in Switzerland: practice, problems and potential solutions.
BACKGROUND: In childcare centres, temporary exclusion of ill children, if their illness poses a risk of spread of harmful diseases to others, is a central approach to fight disease transmission. However, not all ill children need to be excluded. Previous studies suggested that childcare centre staff have difficulties in deciding whether or not to exclude an ill child, even when official ill-child guidelines are used. We aimed to describe, quantify and analyse these ambiguities and discuss potential solutions. METHODS: For this cross-sectional study, we sent postal surveys to 488 childcare centre directors in the Swiss Canton of Zurich, where no official ill-child guideline is in place. We asked for exclusion criteria for ill children and ambiguities faced when dealing with ill children. We checked whether existing guidelines provided solutions to the ambiguities identified. RESULTS: 249/488 (51%) directors responded to the survey. The most common exclusion criteria were fever (87.4%) and contagiousness (52.2%). Ambiguities were mostly caused by conjunctivitis (23.7%) and use of antipyretic drugs (22.9%). Roughly one third of the ambiguities identified could have been resolved with existing guidelines, another third if existing guidelines contained additional information. For the last third, clear written directives are difficult to formulate. CONCLUSIONS: Written recommendations may help to clarify when an ill child should temporarily be excluded. However, such a guideline should cover the topics antipyretic drugs and teething and have room for modification to local circumstances. Collaboration with a paediatrician may be of additional benefit
Avaliação da temperatura do chimarrão em uma população sob risco para cùncer de esÎfago: estudo-piloto
Determination of nutrient salts by automatic methods both in seawater and brackish water: the phosphate blank
9 pĂĄginas, 2 tablas, 2 figurasThe main inconvenience in determining nutrients in seawater by automatic methods is simply solved:
the preparation of a suitable blank which corrects the effect of the refractive index change on the recorded
signal. Two procedures are proposed, one physical (a simple equation to estimate the effect) and the other
chemical (removal of the dissolved phosphorus with ferric hydroxide).Support for this work came from CICYT (MAR88-0245 project) and
Conselleria de Pesca de la Xunta de GaliciaPeer reviewe
Prebiotic effect during the first year of life in healthy infants fed formula containing GOS as the only prebiotic: a multicentre, randomised, double-blind and placebo-controlled trial
Reduced occurrence of early atopic dermatitis because of immunoactive prebiotics among low-atopy-risk infants
BACKGROUND: Most infants developing atopic dermatitis have a low risk for atopy. Primary prevention of atopic dermatitis is difficult.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of supplementation of an infant and follow-on formula with prebiotic and immunoactive oligosaccharides on the occurrence of atopic dermatitis in the first year of life.
METHODS: Healthy term infants from 5 European countries with low atopy risk were recruited before the age of 8 weeks, either having started with formula feeding or being on full breast-feeding (breast-feeding group). Formula-fed infants were randomized to feeding with a regular formula containing a specific mixture of neutral oligosaccharides and pectin-derived acidic oligosaccharides (prebiotic formula group) or regular formula without oligosaccharides (control formula group).
RESULTS: A total of 414 infants were randomized to the prebiotic group and 416 infants to the control group. A total of 300 infants were followed in the breast-feeding group. Up to the first birthday, atopic dermatitis occurred in significantly fewer infants from the prebiotic group (5.7%) than from the control group (9.7%; P = .04). The cumulative incidence of atopic dermatitis in the prebiotic group was in the low range of the breast-feeding group (7.3%). In a Cox regression model, the rate of atopic dermatitis was significantly lower by 44% in the prebiotic group versus the control group (P = .04). The number needed to prevent 1 case of atopic dermatitis by supplementation of prebiotics was 25 infants.
CONCLUSION: Formula supplementation with a specific mixture of oligosaccharides was effective as primary prevention of atopic dermatitis in low atopy risk infants.
Copyright © 2010 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved
Water management and development: the limits of coordination
International audienceActors involved in water resource management and development policies from the large water cycle (at the river basin level) to the small water cycle (drinking water, sanitation and distribution) are numerous and diversified, in their institutional and economic positioning, as well as in the logic of the approaches they develop. In view of the expectations of a comprehensive policy in this field and of the obviously limited results obtained so far, the phasing of these approaches and the coordination of these actors is a major axis of the actions to be carried out in order to better manage the water resources. We argue the need for an explicit and assumed strengthening of the coordination of water stakeholders at all levels of governance. We question the reasons for these partial successes and failures and the way to overcome these difficulties, questions renewed on the basis of recent experiences. In particular, interdisciplinary and intersectoral collaboration using new hybrid modeling approaches (coupling multi-agent system, geographic information system, equation models, cellular automata, etc.), allows to precisely simulate the scenarios of evolution of water resource management and development, to assess ex ante their social, economic and environmental impacts and to anticipate the contribution of an increased coordination of water stakeholders in a logic of development-friendly actions
Solution structure of subunit , of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae V-ATPase and the importance of its C-terminus in structure formation
The 95 kDa subunit a of eukaryotic V-ATPases consists of a C-terminal, ion-translocating part and an N-terminal cytosolic domain. The latter's N-terminal domain (~40 kDa) is described to bind in an acidification-dependent manner with cytohesin-2 (ARNO), giving the V-ATPase the putative function as pH-sensing receptor. Recently, the solution structure of the very N-terminal segment of the cytosolic N-terminal domain has been solved. Here we produced the N-terminal truncated form SCaâââââââ of the N-terminal domain (SCaâââââ) of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae V-ATPase and determined its low resolution solution structure, derived from SAXS data. SCaâââââââ shows an extended S-like conformation with a width of about 3.88 nm and a length of 11.4 nm. The structure has been superimposed into the 3D reconstruction of the related AâAâ ATP synthase from Pyrococcus furiosus, revealing that the SCaâââââââ fits well into the density of the collar structure of the enzyme complex. To understand the importance of the C-terminus of the protein SCaâââââ, and to determine the localization of the N- and C-termini in SCaâââââââ, the C-terminal truncated form SCaâââââââ was produced and analyzed by SAXS. Comparison of the SCaâââââââ and SCaâââââââ shapes showed that the additional loop region in SCaâââââââ consists of the C-terminal residues. Whereas SCaâââââââ is monomeric in solution, SCaâââââââ forms a dimer, indicating the importance of the very C-terminus in structure formation. Finally, the solution structure of SCaâââââââ and SCaâââââââ will be discussed in terms of the topological arrangement of subunit a and cytoheisn-2 in V-ATPases
Characterisation and functional implications of the two new HLA-G alleles found in Amerindian and Caribbean populations
HLA-G polymorphism has been found to be relatively low in all world populations. In the present paper two new HLA-G molecules are described in ancient American natives. A new HLA-G molecule from a Ecuador Amerindian individual (male) showed four codon changes with respect to HLA-G*010101. Silent changes at α1 domain (residue 57, Pro, CCG â CCA) and α2 domain (residue 93, His, CAC â CAT and residue 100, Gly, GGC â GGT) and one productive change in α3 domain (residue 219 changed from Arg to Trp). This α3 change may dramatically alter HLA-G interactions with beta-2 microglobulin, CD8, ILT-2 and ILT-4 ligands present in subsets of T, B, NK, monocytes, macrophages and dentritic cells. Another HLA-G new molecule was found in a woman from Hispaniola Island, Dominican Republic (Sto Domingo) it presented a silent change at α2 domain residue 107, Gly, GGA â GGT and non-silent change at residue 178, Met â Thr (with respect to HLA-G*010101) which is close to class I molecule/clonotypic T cell receptor interaction sites. Functional implications of these findings are discussed. © 2016 American Society for Histocompatibility and Immunogenetic
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