3,352 research outputs found
Early infant feeding and adiposity risk: from infancy to adulthood
Introduction: Systematic reviews suggest that a longer duration of breast-feeding is associated with a reduction in the risk of later overweight and obesity. Most studies examining breast-feeding in relation to adiposity have not used longitudinal analysis. In our study, we aimed to examine early infant feeding and adiposity risk in a longitudinal cohort from birth to young adulthood using new as well as published data.
Methods: Data from the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study in Perth, W.A., Australia, were used to examine associations between breast-feeding and measures of adiposity at 1, 2, 3, 6, 8, 10, 14, 17, and 20 years.
Results: Breast-feeding was measured in a number of ways. Longer breast-feeding (in months) was associated with reductions in weight z-scores between birth and 1 year (β = -0.027; p \u3c 0.001) in the adjusted analysis. At 3 years, breast-feeding for \u3c4 months increased the odds of infants experiencing early rapid growth (OR 2.05; 95% CI 1.43-2.94; p \u3c 0.001). From 1 to 8 years, children breast-fed for ≤4 months compared to ≥12 months had a significantly greater probability of exceeding the 95th percentile of weight. The age at which breast-feeding was stopped and a milk other than breast milk was introduced (introduction of formula milk) played a significant role in the trajectory of the BMI from birth to 14 years; the 4-month cutoff point was consistently associated with a higher BMI trajectory. Introduction of a milk other than breast milk before 6 months compared to at 6 months or later was a risk factor for being overweight or obese at 20 years of age (OR 1.47; 95% CI 1.12-1.93; p = 0.005).
Discussion: Breast-feeding until 6 months of age and beyond should be encouraged and is recommended for protection against increased adiposity in childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood. Adverse long-term effects of early growth acceleration are fundamental in later overweight and obesity. Formula feeding stimulates a higher postnatal growth velocity, whereas breast-feeding promotes slower growth and a reduced likelihood of overweight and obesity. Biological mechanisms underlying the protective effect of breast-feeding against obesity are based on the unique composition and metabolic and physiological responses to human milk
On Pulsar Distance Measurements and their Uncertainties
Accurate distances to pulsars can be used for a variety of studies of the
Galaxy and its electron content. However, most distance measures to pulsars
have been derived from the absorption (or lack thereof) of pulsar emission by
Galactic HI gas, which typically implies that only upper or lower limits on the
pulsar distance are available. We present a critical analysis of all measured
HI distance limits to pulsars and other neutron stars, and translate these
limits into actual distance estimates through a likelihood analysis that
simultaneously corrects for statistical biases. We also apply this analysis to
parallax measurements of pulsars in order to obtain accurate distance estimates
and find that the parallax and HI distance measurements are biased in different
ways, because of differences in the sampled populations. Parallax measurements
typically underestimate a pulsar's distance because of the limited distance to
which this technique works and the consequential strong effect of the Galactic
pulsar distribution (i.e. the original Lutz-Kelker bias), in HI distance
limits, however, the luminosity bias dominates the Lutz-Kelker effect, leading
to overestimated distances because the bright pulsars on which this technique
is applicable are more likely to be nearby given their brightness.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables; Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The Nearby Neutron Star RX J0720.4-3125 from Radio to X-rays
We present radio, optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray observations of the
isolated, thermally-emitting neutron star RX J0720.4-3125 using the Parkes
radio telescope, the Very Large Array, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the
Chandra X-ray Observatory. From these data we show that the optical/UV spectrum
of RX J0720.4-3125 is not well fit by a Rayleigh-Jeans tail as previously
thought, but is instead best fit by either a single non-thermal power-law or a
combination of a Rayleigh-Jeans tail and a non-thermal power-law. Taken
together with the X-ray spectrum, we find the best model for RX J0720.4-3125 to
be two blackbodies plus a power-law, with the cool blackbody implying a radius
of 11-13 km at an assumed distance of 300 pc. This is similar to many middle
aged (10^{5-6} yr) radio pulsars such as PSR B0656+14, evidence supporting the
hypothesis that RX J0720.4-3125 is likely to be an off-beam radio pulsar. The
radio data limit the flux at 1.4 GHz to be <0.24 mJy, or a luminosity limit of
4*pi*d^2*F < 3e25*d_300^2 ergs/s, and we see no sign of extended nebulosity,
consistent with expectations for a pulsar like RX J0720.4-3125.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Uses emulateapj5.sty and onecolfloat5.sty.
Accepted for publication in Ap
SPITZER SAGE Observations of Large Magellanic Cloud Planetary Nebulae
We present IRAC and MIPS images and photometry of a sample of previously
known planetary nebulae (PNe) from the SAGE survey of the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) performed with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Of the 233 known PNe in
the survey field, 185 objects were detected in at least two of the IRAC bands,
and 161 detected in the MIPS 24 micron images. Color-color and color-magnitude
diagrams are presented using several combinations of IRAC, MIPS, and 2MASS
magnitudes. The location of an individual PN in the color-color diagrams is
seen to depend on the relative contributions of the spectral components which
include molecular hydrogen, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), infrared
forbidden line emission from the ionized gas, warm dust continuum, and emission
directly from the central star. The sample of LMC PNe is compared to a number
of Galactic PNe and found to not significantly differ in their position in
color-color space. We also explore the potential value of IR PNe luminosity
functions (LFs) in the LMC. IRAC LFs appear to follow the same functional form
as the well-established [O III] LFs although there are several PNe with
observed IR magnitudes brighter than the cut-offs in these LFs.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, to be published in the Astronomical
Journal. Additional online data available at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/irac/publications
GBT Discovery of Two Binary Millisecond Pulsars in the Globular Cluster M30
We report the discovery of two binary millisecond pulsars in the
core-collapsed globular cluster M30 using the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) at 20
cm. PSR J2140-2310A (M30A) is an eclipsing 11-ms pulsar in a 4-hr circular
orbit and PSR J2140-23B (M30B) is a 13-ms pulsar in an as yet undetermined but
most likely highly eccentric (e>0.5) and relativistic orbit. Timing
observations of M30A with a 20-month baseline have provided precise
determinations of the pulsar's position (within 4" of the optical centroid of
the cluster), and spin and orbital parameters, which constrain the mass of the
companion star to be m_2 >~ 0.1Msun. The position of M30A is coincident with a
possible thermal X-ray point source found in archival Chandra data which is
most likely due to emission from hot polar caps on the neutron star. In
addition, there is a faint (V_555 ~ 23.8) star visible in archival HST F555W
data that may be the companion to the pulsar. Eclipses of the pulsed radio
emission from M30A by the ionized wind from the compact companion star show a
frequency dependent duration (\propto\nu^{-\alpha} with \alpha ~ 0.4-0.5) and
delay the pulse arrival times near eclipse ingress and egress by up to 2-3 ms.
Future observations of M30 may allow both the measurement of post-Keplerian
orbital parameters from M30B and the detection of new pulsars due to the
effects of strong diffractive scintillation.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to ApJ. This version includes many
recommended modifications, an improved structure, a new author, and a
completely redone optical analysi
The source ambiguity problem: Distinguishing the effects of grammar and processing on acceptability judgments
Judgments of linguistic unacceptability may theoretically arise from either grammatical deviance or significant processing difficulty. Acceptability data are thus naturally ambiguous in theories that explicitly distinguish formal and functional constraints. Here, we consider this source ambiguity problem in the context of Superiority effects: the dispreference for ordering a wh-phrase in front of a syntactically “superior” wh-phrase in multiple wh-questions, e.g., What did who buy? More specifically, we consider the acceptability contrast between such examples and so-called D-linked examples, e.g., Which toys did which parents buy? Evidence from acceptability and self-paced reading experiments demonstrates that (i) judgments and processing times for Superiority violations vary in parallel, as determined by the kind of wh-phrases they contain, (ii) judgments increase with exposure, while processing times decrease, (iii) reading times are highly predictive of acceptability judgments for the same items, and (iv) the effects of the complexity of the wh-phrases combine in both acceptability judgments and reading times. This evidence supports the conclusion that D-linking effects are likely reducible to independently motivated cognitive mechanisms whose effects emerge in a wide range of sentence contexts. This in turn suggests that Superiority effects, in general, may owe their character to differential processing difficulty
Timing stability of millisecond pulsars and prospects for gravitational-wave detection
Analysis of high-precision timing observations of an array of approx. 20
millisecond pulsars (a so-called "timing array") may ultimately result in the
detection of a stochastic gravitational-wave background. The feasibility of
such a detection and the required duration of this type of experiment are
determined by the achievable rms of the timing residuals and the timing
stability of the pulsars involved. We present results of the first long-term,
high-precision timing campaign on a large sample of millisecond pulsars used in
gravitational-wave detection projects. We show that the timing residuals of
most pulsars in our sample do not contain significant low-frequency noise that
could limit the use of these pulsars for decade-long gravitational-wave
detection efforts. For our most precisely timed pulsars, intrinsic
instabilities of the pulsars or the observing system are shown to contribute to
timing irregularities on a five-year timescale below the 100 ns level. Based on
those results, realistic sensitivity curves for planned and ongoing timing
array efforts are determined. We conclude that prospects for detection of a
gravitational-wave background through pulsar timing array efforts within five
years to a decade are good.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
Planetary Nebulae as standard candles XI. Application to Spiral Galaxies
We report the results of an [O III] lambda 5007 survey for planetary nebulae
(PN) in three spiral galaxies: M101 (NGC 5457), M51 (NGC 5194/5195) and M96
(NGC 3368). By comparing on-band/off-band [O III] lambda 5007 images with
images taken in H-alpha and broadband R, we identify 65, 64 and 74 PN
candidates in each galaxy, respectively. From these data, an adopted M31
distance of 770 kpc, and the empirical planetary nebula luminosity function
(PNLF), we derive distances to M101, M51, and M96 of 7.7 +/- 0.5, 8.4 +/- 0.6,
and 9.6 +/- 0.6 Mpc. These observations demonstrate that the PNLF technique can
be successfully applied to late-type galaxies, and provide an important overlap
between the Population I and Population II distance scales. We also discuss
some special problems associated with using the PNLF in spiral galaxies,
including the effects of dust and the possible presence of [O III] bright
supernova remnants.Comment: 38 pages, TeX, with tables included but not figures. Uses epsf.tex
and kpnobasic.tex. To be published in the Astophysical Journal. Full paper is
available at http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/johnf/Text/research.htm
Confirmation of SBS 1150+599A As An Extremely Metal-Poor Planetary Nebula
SBS 1150+599A is a blue stellar object at high galactic latitude discovered
in the Second Byurakan Survey. New high-resolution images of SBS 1150+599A are
presented, demonstrating that it is very likely to be an old planetary nebula
in the galactic halo, as suggested by Tovmassian et al (2001). An H-alpha image
taken with the WIYN 3.5-m telescope and its "tip/tilt" module reveals the
diameter of the nebula to be 9.2", comparable to that estimated from spectra by
Tovmassian et al. Lower limits to the central star temperature were derived
using the Zanstra hydrogen and helium methods to determine that the star's
effective temperature must be > 68,000K and that the nebula is optically thin.
New spectra from the MMT and FLWO telescopes are presented, revealing the
presence of strong [Ne V] lambda 3425, indicating that the central star
temperature must be > 100,000K. With the revised diameter, new central star
temperature, and an improved central star luminosity, we can constrain
photoionization models for the nebula significantly better than before. Because
the emission-line data set is sparse, the models are still not conclusive.
Nevertheless, we confirm that this nebula is an extremely metal-poor planetary
nebula, having a value for O/H that is less than 1/100 solar, and possibly as
low as 1/500 solar.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
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