9,833 research outputs found
Preliminary checklist of the bees of St. Eustatius, Lesser Antilles (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila)
We present a preliminary checklist of bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) compiled for St. Eustatius, an island located in the Lesser Antilles of the eastern Caribbean. The list has nine species, including six that have not been previously documented on St. Eustatius. One species is exotic to the Caribbean, one species is found only on St. Eustatius and St. Kitts, and five species occur elsewhere in the Lesser and Greater Antilles. Two of the collected specimens could not be assigned to a species; their geographical distributions are unknown
Multi-thermal dynamics and energetics of a coronal mass ejection in the low solar atmosphere
The aim of this work is to determine the multi-thermal characteristics and
plasma energetics of an eruptive plasmoid and occulted flare observed by Solar
Dynamics Observatory/Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA). We study an event
from 03-Nov-2010 (peaking at 12:20UT in GOES soft X-rays) of a coronal mass
ejection and occulted flare which demonstrates the morphology of a classic
erupting flux rope. The high spatial, and time resolution, and six coronal
channels, of the SDO/AIA images allows the dynamics of the multi-thermal
emission during the initial phases of eruption to be studied in detail. The
Differential Emission Measure (DEM) is calculated, using an optimised version
of a regularized inversion method (Hannah & Kontar 2012), for each pixel across
the six channels at different times, resulting in emission measure maps and
movies in a variety of temperature ranges. We find that the core of the
erupting plasmoid is hot (8-11, 11-14MK) with a similarly hot filamentary
"stem" structure connecting it to the lower atmosphere, which could be
interpreted as the current sheet in the flux rope model, though is wider than
these models suggest. The velocity of the leading edge of the eruption is
597-664 km s in the temperature range 3-4MK and between 1029-1246
km s for 2-3MK. We estimate the density (in 11-14 MK) of the
erupting core and stem during the impulsive phase to be about
cm, cm, cm in the plasmoid
core, stem and surrounding envelope of material. This gives thermal energy
estimates of erg, erg and
erg. The kinetic energy for the core and envelope is slightly smaller. The
thermal energy of the core and current sheet grows during the eruption,
suggesting continuous influx of energy presumably via reconnection.Comment: Submitted to A&A: in revisio
Optimization of Nonambulant Mass Casualty Decontamination Protocols as Part of an Initial or Specialist Operational Response to Chemical Incidents
© 2018 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis.© 2018 Robert P. Chilcott, Hannah Mitchell, Hazem Matar. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way.Objective: The UK's Initial Operational Response (IOR) is a new process for improving the survival of multiple casualties following a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear incident. Whilst the introduction of IOR represents a patient-focused response for ambulant casualties, there is currently no provision for disrobe and dry decontamination of nonambulant casualties. Moreover, the current specialist operational response (SOR) protocol for nonambulant casualty decontamination (also referred to as “clinical decontamination”) has not been subject to rigorous evaluation or development. Therefore, the aim of this study was to confirm the effectiveness of putatively optimized dry (IOR) and wet (SOR) protocols for nonambulant decontamination in human volunteers. Methods: Dry and wet decontamination protocols were objectively evaluated using human volunteers. Decontamination effectiveness was quantified by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry analysis of the recovery of a chemical warfare agent simulant (methylsalicylate) from skin and hair of volunteers, with whole-body fluorescence imaging to quantify the skin distribution of residual simulant. Results: Both the dry and wet decontamination processes were rapid (3 and 4 min, respectively) and were effective in removing simulant from the hair and skin of volunteers, with no observable adverse effects related to skin surface spreading of contaminant. Conclusions: Further studies are required to assess the combined effectiveness of dry and wet decontamination under more realistic conditions and to develop appropriate operational procedures that ensure the safety of first responders.Peer reviewe
Entanglement and Sources of Magnetic Anisotropy in Radical Pair-Based Avian Magnetoreceptors
One of the principal models of magnetic sensing in migratory birds rests on
the quantum spin-dynamics of transient radical pairs created photochemically in
ocular cryptochrome proteins. We consider here the role of electron spin
entanglement and coherence in determining the sensitivity of a radical
pair-based geomagnetic compass and the origins of the directional response. It
emerges that the anisotropy of radical pairs formed from spin-polarized
molecular triplets could form the basis of a more sensitive compass sensor than
one founded on the conventional hyperfine-anisotropy model. This property
offers new and more flexible opportunities for the design of biologically
inspired magnetic compass sensors
Eccentricity fluctuations in an integrated hybrid approach: Influence on elliptic flow
The effects of initial state fluctuations on elliptic flow are investigated
within a (3+1)d Boltzmann + hydrodynamics transport approach. The spatial
eccentricity ( and ) is calculated for
initial conditions generated by a hadronic transport approach (UrQMD). Elliptic
flow results as a function of impact parameter, beam energy and transverse
momentum for two different equations of state and for averaged initial
conditions or a full event-by-event setup are presented. These investigations
allow the conclusion that in mid-central ( fm) heavy ion collisions the
final elliptic flow is independent of the initial state fluctuations and the
equation of state. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that most of the is
build up during the hydrodynamic stage of the evolution. Therefore, the use of
averaged initial profiles does not contribute to the uncertainties of the
extraction of transport properties of hot and dense QCD matter based on viscous
hydrodynamic calculations.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, minor revision of figures and conclusion, as
published in PR
Characteristics of internet sexual offenders: a review
The review presented in this paper provides some descriptive findings regarding Internet Sex Offenders (ISOs) in comparison to contact sex offenders. In general, Internet Sex Offenders are found to be Caucasian, male, relatively young, highly educated, intelligent, and well-employed. ISOs also appear to be highly sexualised, in both their current lifestyle as well as childhood experiences as victims. ISOs can also be classified into several subgroups, such as child pornography offenders, who again are a heterogeneous group themselves. Professionals dealing with ISOs should be aware that they seem to share similar deficits with contact sex offenders but might differ in some important areas. This information should be kept in mind when reading their files, establishing treatment needs, and interpreting psychometric test results. To date no personality and risk measure is validated on this 'new' or emerging offender category, hence any results should be interpreted with caution
Assessing parental risk in parenting plan (child custody) evaluation cases involving internet sexual behavior
One type of claim in parenting assessment (child custody)1 cases is that one parent, typically the father, is alleged to be engaging in improper or compulsive sexual behavior via the Internet. The sexual behavior at issue can range from frequent sexually explicit chats with other adults to compulsive viewing of adult pornography. In more extreme cases, the problematic behavior may involve viewing child pornography, and in some cases the parent faces actual criminal charges in this regard. The present article reviews the current scientific knowledge base for evaluation of risk in such parenting evaluation cases and provides some guidelines and recommendations for an evaluator in the assessment process
Network-based stratification of tumor mutations.
Many forms of cancer have multiple subtypes with different causes and clinical outcomes. Somatic tumor genome sequences provide a rich new source of data for uncovering these subtypes but have proven difficult to compare, as two tumors rarely share the same mutations. Here we introduce network-based stratification (NBS), a method to integrate somatic tumor genomes with gene networks. This approach allows for stratification of cancer into informative subtypes by clustering together patients with mutations in similar network regions. We demonstrate NBS in ovarian, uterine and lung cancer cohorts from The Cancer Genome Atlas. For each tissue, NBS identifies subtypes that are predictive of clinical outcomes such as patient survival, response to therapy or tumor histology. We identify network regions characteristic of each subtype and show how mutation-derived subtypes can be used to train an mRNA expression signature, which provides similar information in the absence of DNA sequence
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