362 research outputs found
Mass Flows in Cometary UCHII Regions
High spectral and spatial resolution, mid-infrared fine structure line
observations toward two ultracompact HII (UCHII) regions (G29.96 -0.02 and Mon
R2) allow us to study the structure and kinematics of cometary UCHII regions.
In our earlier study of Mon R2, we showed that highly organized mass motions
accounted for most of the velocity structure in that UCHII region. In this
work, we show that the kinematics in both Mon R2 and G29.96 are consistent with
motion along an approximately paraboloidal shell. We model the velocity
structure seen in our mapping data and test the stellar wind bow shock model
for such paraboloidal like flows. The observations and the simulation indicate
that the ram pressures of the stellar wind and ambient interstellar medium
cause the accumulated mass in the bow shock to flow along the surface of the
shock. A relaxation code reproduces the mass flow's velocity structure as
derived by the analytical solution. It further predicts that the pressure
gradient along the flow can accelerate ionized gas to a speed higher than that
of the moving star. In the original bow shock model, the star speed relative to
the ambient medium was considered to be the exit speed of ionized gas in the
shell.Comment: 34 pages, including 14 figures and 1 table, to be published in ApJ,
September 200
Short Course in the Microbiome
Over the past decade, it has become evident that the microbiome is an important environmental factor that affects many physiological processes, such as cell proliferation and differentiation, behaviour, immune function and metabolism. More importantly, it may contribute to a wide variety of diseases, including cancer, inflammatory diseases, metabolic diseases and responses to pathogens. We expect that international, integrative and interdisciplinary translational research teams, along with the emergence of FDA-approved platforms, will set the framework for microbiome-based therapeutics and diagnostics. We recognize that the microbiome ecosystem offers new promise for personalized/precision medicine and targeted treatment for a variety of diseases.
The short course was held as a four-session webinar series in April 2015, taught by pioneers and experts in the microbiome ecosystem, covering a broad range of topics from the healthy microbiome to the effects of an altered microbiome from neonates to adults and the long term effects as it is related to disease, from asthma to cancer. We have learned to appreciate how beneficial our microbes are in breaking down our food, fighting off infections and nurturing our immune system, and this information provides us with ideas as to how we can manipulate our microbiome to prevent certain diseases. However, given the variety of applications, there are scientific challenges, though there are very promising areas in reference to the clinical benefits of understanding more about our microbiome, whether in our gut or on our skin: the outlook is bright. A summary of the short course is presented as a meeting dispatch
W51 IRS 2: A Massive Jet Emerging from a Molecular Cloud into an H II Region
We have mapped [Ne II] (12.8um) and [S IV] (10.5um) emission from W51 IRS 2
with TEXES on Gemini North, and we compare these data to VLA free-free
observations and VLT near-infrared images. With 0.5" spatial and 4 km/s
spectral resolution we are able to separate the ionized gas into several
components: an extended H II region on the front surface of the molecular
cloud, several embedded compact H II regions, and a streamer of high velocity
gas. We interpret the high velocity streamer as a precessing or fan-like jet,
which has emerged from the molecular cloud into an OB star cluster where it is
being ionized.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, 2 movie
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Language support for immigrant children: a study of state schools in the UK and US
In recent decades, immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers have sought a new way of life in large numbers, often leaving their countries of origin behind in search of places that offer a better way of life. The purpose of this study was to investigate how elementary and middle school students in state schools in Reading, England (primarily speakers of Asian languages), and Richmond, Virginia (primarily speakers of Spanish), were supported academically, when most children’s first language was not English. The authors were interested in exploring whether or not there were cultural or structural differences in the way each country helped or hindered these students as they progressed through the school systems. Three UK schools in a district of approximately 100,000 and three US schools in a district of approximately 250,000 were the focus of this exploration from 2000 to 2003. Findings indicated that there were cultural and legislative differences and similarities. Teachers and administrators in both countries attempted to provide services with limited and sometimes diminishing resources. Community support varied based on resources, attitudes toward various ethnic groups, and the coping strategies adopted by these groups in their new environments. Marked differences appeared with regard to the manner in which assessments took place and how the results were made available to the public
High-Fat Diet with Acyl-Ghrelin Treatment Leads to Weight Gain with Low Inflammation, High Oxidative Capacity and Normal Triglycerides in Rat Muscle
Obesity is associated with muscle lipid accumulation. Experimental models suggest that inflammatory cytokines, low mitochondrial oxidative capacity and paradoxically high insulin signaling activation favor this alteration. The gastric orexigenic hormone acylated ghrelin (A-Ghr) has antiinflammatory effects in vitro and it lowers muscle triglycerides while modulating mitochondrial oxidative capacity in lean rodents. We tested the hypothesis that A-Ghr treatment in high-fat feeding results in a model of weight gain characterized by low muscle inflammation and triglycerides with high muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity. A-Ghr at a non-orexigenic dose (HFG: twice-daily 200-µg s.c.) or saline (HF) were administered for 4 days to rats fed a high-fat diet for one month. Compared to lean control (C) HF had higher body weight and plasma free fatty acids (FFA), and HFG partially prevented FFA elevation (P<0.05). HFG also had the lowest muscle inflammation (nuclear NFkB, tissue TNF-alpha) with mitochondrial enzyme activities higher than C (P<0.05 vs C, P = NS vs HF). Under these conditions HFG prevented the HF-associated muscle triglyceride accumulation (P<0.05). The above effects were independent of changes in redox state (total-oxidized glutathione, glutathione peroxidase activity) and were not associated with changes in phosphorylation of AKT and selected AKT targets. Ghrelin administration following high-fat feeding results in a novel model of weight gain with low inflammation, high mitochondrial enzyme activities and normalized triglycerides in skeletal muscle. These effects are independent of changes in tissue redox state and insulin signaling, and they suggest a potential positive metabolic impact of ghrelin in fat-induced obesity
The TEXES Survey For H2 Emission From Protoplanetary Disks
We report the results of a search for pure rotational molecular hydrogen
emission from the circumstellar environments of young stellar objects with
disks using the Texas Echelon Cross Echelle Spectrograph (TEXES) on the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility and the Gemini North Observatory. We searched for
mid-infrared H2 emission in the S(1), S(2), and S(4) transitions. Keck/NIRSPEC
observations of the H2 S(9) transition were included for some sources as an
additional constraint on the gas temperature. We detected H2 emission from 6 of
29 sources observed: AB Aur, DoAr 21, Elias 29, GSS 30 IRS 1, GV Tau N, and HL
Tau. Four of the six targets with detected emission are class I sources that
show evidence for surrounding material in an envelope in addition to a
circumstellar disk. In these cases, we show that accretion shock heating is a
plausible excitation mechanism. The detected emission lines are narrow (~10
km/s), centered at the stellar velocity, and spatially unresolved at scales of
0.4 arcsec, which is consistent with origin from a disk at radii 10-50 AU from
the star. In cases where we detect multiple emission lines, we derive
temperatures > 500 K from ~1 M_earth of gas. Our upper limits for the
non-detections place upper limits on the amount of H2 gas with T > 500 K of
less than a few Earth masses. Such warm gas temperatures are significantly
higher than the equilibrium dust temperatures at these radii, suggesting that
the gas is decoupled from the dust in the regions we are studying and that
processes such as UV, X-ray, and accretion heating may be important.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, 5 tables, ApJ accepte
The Io, Europa and Ganymede auroral footprints at Jupiter in the ultraviolet: positions and equatorial lead angles
Jupiter's satellite auroral footprints are a consequence of the interaction
between the Jovian magnetic field with co-rotating iogenic plasma and the
Galilean moons. The disturbances created near the moons propagate as Alfv\'en
waves along the magnetic field lines. The position of the moons is therefore
"Alfv\'enically" connected to their respective auroral footprint. The angular
separation from the instantaneous magnetic footprint can be estimated by the
so-called lead angle. That lead angle varies periodically as a function of
orbital longitude, since the time for the Alfv\'en waves to reach the Jovian
ionosphere varies accordingly. Using spectral images of the Main Alfv\'en Wing
auroral spots collected by Juno-UVS during the first forty-three orbits, this
work provides the first empirical model of the Io, Europa and Ganymede
equatorial lead angles for the northern and southern hemispheres. Alfv\'en
travel times between the three innermost Galilean moons to Jupiter's northern
and southern hemispheres are estimated from the lead angle measurements. We
also demonstrate the accuracy of the mapping from the Juno magnetic field
reference model (JRM33) at the completion of the prime mission for M-shells
extending to at least 15RJ . Finally, we shows how the added knowledge of the
lead angle can improve the interpretation of the moon-induced decametric
emissions.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Journal of
Geophysical Research: Space Physics on 20 April 202
Water Vapor on Betelgeuse as Revealed by TEXES High-Resolution 12 Micron Spectra
The outer atmosphere of the M supergiant Betelgeuse is puzzling. Published
observations of different kinds have shed light on different aspects of the
atmosphere, but no unified picture has emerged. They have shown, for example,
evidence of a water envelope (MOLsphere) that in some studies is found to be
optically thick in the mid-infrared. In this paper, we present high-resolution,
mid-infrared spectra of Betelgeuse recorded with the TEXES spectrograph. The
spectra clearly show absorption features of water vapor and OH. We show that a
spectrum based on a spherical, hydrostatic model photosphere with T_eff = 3600
K, an effective temperature often assumed for Betelgeuse, fails to model the
observed lines. Furthermore, we show that published MOLspheres scenarios are
unable to explain our data. However, we are able to model the observed spectrum
reasonably well by adopting a cooler outer photospheric structure corresponding
to T_mod = 3250 K. The success of this model may indicate the observed
mid-infrared lines are formed in cool photospheric surface regions. Given the
uncertainties of the temperature structure and the likely presence of
inhomogeneities, we cannot rule out the possibility that our spectrum could be
mostly photospheric, albeit non-classical. Our data put new, strong constraints
on atmospheric models of Betelgeuse and we conclude that continued
investigation requires consideration of non-classical model photospheres as
well as possible effects of a MOLsphere. We show that the mid-infrared
water-vapor features have great diagnostic value for the environments of K and
M (super-) giant star atmospheres.Comment: Accepted by Ap
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