77 research outputs found
Detection of Molecular Hydrogen Orbiting a "Naked" T Tauri Star
Astronomers have established that for a few million years newborn stars
possess disks of orbiting gas and dust. Such disks, which are likely sites of
planet formation, appear to disappear once these stars reach ages of 5-10 times
10^6 yr; yet, >= 10^7 yr is thought necessary for giant planet formation. If
disks dissipate in less time than is needed for giant planet formation, such
planets may be rare and those known around nearby stars would be anomalies.
Herein, we report the discovery of H_2 gas orbiting a weak-lined T Tauri star
heretofore presumed nearly devoid of circumstellar material. We estimate that a
significant amount of H_2 persists in the gas phase, but only a tiny fraction
of this mass emits in the near-infrared. We propose that this star possesses an
evolved disk that has escaped detection thus far because much of the dust has
coagulated into planetesimals. This discovery suggests that the theory that
disks are largely absent around such stars should be reconsidered. The
widespread presence of such disks would indicate that planetesimals can form
quickly and giant planet formation can proceed to completion before the gas in
circumstellar disks disperses.Comment: latex 12 pages, including 1 figur
In vivo investigation of the tissue response to commercial Teflon insulin infusion sets in large swine for 14 days: the effect of angle of insertion on tissue histology and insulin spread within the subcutaneous tissue.
Objective: This study investigated the effects of the inflammatory tissue response (ITR) to an insulin infusion set (IIS) on insulin bolus spread over wear time, as well as the effect of cannula insertion angle on the ITR, bolus shape, and pump tubing pressure.
Research design and methods: Angled or straight IISs were inserted every other day for 14 days into the subcutaneous tissue of 11 swine and insulin was delivered continuously. Prior to euthanasia, a 70 µL bolus of insulin/X-ray contrast agent was infused while recording a pressure profile (peak tubing pressure, pmax; area under the pressure curve, AUC), followed by the excision of the tissue-catheter specimen. Bolus surface area (SA) and volume (V) were assessed via micro-CT. Tissue was stained to analyze total area of inflammation (TAI) and inflammatory layer thickness (ILT) surrounding the cannula.
Results: A bolus delivered through an angled IIS had a larger mean SA than a bolus delivered through a straight cannula (314.0±84.2 mm2 vs 229.0±99.7 mm2, p\u3c0.001) and a larger volume (198.7±66.9 mm3 vs 145.0±65.9 mm3, p=0.001). Both decreased significantly over wear time, independent of angle. There was a significant difference in TAI (angled, 9.1±4.0 mm2 vs straight, 14.3±8.6 mm2, p\u3c0.001) and ILT (angled, 0.7±0.4 vs straight, 1.2±0.7 mm, p\u3c0.001). pmax (p=0.005) and AUC (p=0.014) were lower using angled IIS. As ILT increased, pmax increased, while SA and V decreased.
Conclusions: The progression of the ITR directly affected bolus shape and tubing pressure. Although straight insertion is clinically preferred, our data suggest that an angled IIS elicits lower grades of ITR and delivers a bolus with lower tubing pressure and greater SA and V. The subcutaneous environment plays a crucial role in IIS longevity, and the insertion angle needs to be considered in future IIS designs and clinical trials
Quiescent H2 Emission From Pre-Main Sequence Stars in Chamaeleon I
We report the discovery of quiescent emission from molecular hydrogen gas
located in the circumstellar disks of six pre-main sequence stars, including
two weak-line T Tauri stars (TTS), and one Herbig AeBe star, in the Chamaeleon
I star forming region. For two of these stars, we also place upper limits on
the 2->1 S(1)/1->0 S(1) line ratios of 0.4 and 0.5. Of the 11 pre-main sequence
sources now known to be sources of quiescent near-infrared hydrogen emission,
four possess transitional disks, which suggests that detectable levels of H
emission and the presence of inner disk holes are correlated. These H
detections demonstrate that these inner holes are not completely devoid of gas,
in agreement with the presence of observable accretion signatures for all four
of these stars and the recent detections of [Ne II] emission from three of
them. The overlap in [Ne II] and H detections hints at a possible
correlation between these two features and suggests a shared excitation
mechanism of high energy photons. Our models, combined with the kinematic
information from the H lines, locate the bulk of the emitting gas at a few
tens of AU from the stars. We also find a correlation between H detections
and those targets which possess the largest H equivalent widths,
suggesting a link between accretion activity and quiescent H emission. We
conclude that quiescent H emission from relatively hot gas within the disks
of TTS is most likely related to on-going accretion activity, the production of
UV photons and/or X-rays, and the evolutionary status of the dust grain
populations in the inner disks.Comment: 12 pages, emulateapj, Accepted by Ap
Disk Imaging Survey of Chemistry with SMA: II. Southern Sky Protoplanetary Disk Data and Full Sample Statistics
This is the second in a series of papers based on data from DISCS, a
Submillimeter Array observing program aimed at spatially and spectrally
resolving the chemical composition of 12 protoplanetary disks. We present data
on six Southern sky sources - IM Lup, SAO 206462 (HD 135344b), HD 142527, AS
209, AS 205 and V4046 Sgr - which complement the six sources in the Taurus star
forming region reported previously. CO 2-1 and HCO+ 3-2 emission are detected
and resolved in all disks and show velocity patterns consistent with Keplerian
rotation. Where detected, the emission from DCO+ 3-2, N2H+ 3-2, H2CO 3-2 and
4-3,HCN 3-2 and CN 2-1 are also generally spatially resolved. The detection
rates are highest toward the M and K stars, while the F star SAO 206462 has
only weak CN and HCN emission, and H2CO alone is detected toward HD 142527.
These findings together with the statistics from the previous Taurus disks,
support the hypothesis that high detection rates of many small molecules depend
on the presence of a cold and protected disk midplane, which is less common
around F and A stars compared to M and K stars. Disk-averaged variations in the
proposed radiation tracer CN/HCN are found to be small, despite two orders of
magnitude range of spectral types and accretion rates. In contrast, the
resolved images suggest that the CN/HCN emission ratio varies with disk radius
in at least two of the systems. There are no clear observational differences in
the disk chemistry between the classical/full T Tauri disks and transitional
disks. Furthermore, the observed line emission does not depend on measured
accretion luminosities or the number of infrared lines detected, which suggests
that the chemistry outside of 100 AU is not coupled to the physical processes
that drive the chemistry in the innermost few AU.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, 41 pages including 7 figure
The Far-Ultraviolet "Continuum" in Protoplanetary Disk Systems I: Electron-Impact H2 and Accretion Shocks
We present deep spectroscopic observations of the classical T Tauri stars DF
Tau and V4046 Sgr in order to better characterize two important sources of
far-ultraviolet continuum emission in protoplanetary disks. These new Hubble
Space Telescope-Cosmic Origins Spectrograph observations reveal a combination
of line and continuum emission from collisionally excited H2 and emission from
accretion shocks. H2 is the dominant emission in the 1400-1650 A band spectrum
of V4046 Sgr, while an accretion continuum contributes strongly across the
far-ultraviolet spectrum of DF Tau. We compare the spectrum of V4046 Sgr to
models of electron-impact induced H2 emission to constrain the physical
properties of the emitting region, after making corrections for attenuation
within the disk. We find reasonable agreement with the broad spectral
characteristics of the H2 model, implying N(H2) ~ 10^{18} cm^{-2}, T(H2) =
3000^{+1000}_{-500} K, and a characteristic electron energy in the range of ~
50 - 100 eV. We propose that self-absorption and hydrocarbons provide the
dominant attenuation for H2 line photons originating within the disk. For both
DF Tau and V4046 Sgr, we find that a linear fit to the far-UV data can
reproduce near-UV/optical accretion spectra. We discuss outstanding issues
concerning how these processes operate in protostellar/protoplanetary disks,
including the effective temperature and absolute strength of the radiation
field in low-mass protoplanetary environments. We find that the 912-2000A
continuum in low-mass systems has an effective temperature of ~10^{4} K with
fluxes 10^{5-7} times the interstellar level at 1 AU.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables. ApJ, accepte
Event-Related Potentials Dissociate Effects of Salience and Space in Biased Competition for Visual Representation
BACKGROUND: Selective visual attention is the process by which the visual system enhances behaviorally relevant stimuli and filters out others. Visual attention is thought to operate through a cortical mechanism known as biased competition. Representations of stimuli within cortical visual areas compete such that they mutually suppress each others' neural response. Competition increases with stimulus proximity and can be biased in favor of one stimulus (over another) as a function of stimulus significance, salience, or expectancy. Though there is considerable evidence of biased competition within the human visual system, the dynamics of the process remain unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we used scalp-recorded electroencephalography (EEG) to examine neural correlates of biased competition in the human visual system. In two experiments, subjects performed a task requiring them to either simultaneously identify two targets (Experiment 1) or discriminate one target while ignoring a decoy (Experiment 2). Competition was manipulated by altering the spatial separation between target(s) and/or decoy. Both experimental tasks should induce competition between stimuli. However, only the task of Experiment 2 should invoke a strong bias in favor of the target (over the decoy). The amplitude of two lateralized components of the event-related potential, the N2pc and Ptc, mirrored these predictions. N2pc amplitude increased with increasing stimulus separation in Experiments 1 and 2. However, Ptc amplitude varied only in Experiment 2, becoming more positive with decreased spatial separation. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest that N2pc and Ptc components may index distinct processes of biased competition--N2pc reflecting visual competitive interactions and Ptc reflecting a bias in processing necessary to individuate task-relevant stimuli
Progressive Acceleration of Insulin Exposure Over 7 Days of Infusion Set Wear
Insulin exposure varies over 3 days of insulin infusion set (IIS) wear making day-to-day insulin dosing challenging for people with diabetes (PWD). Here we report insulin pharmacodynamic (PD) and pharmacokinetic (PK) data extending these observations to 7 days of IIS wear. PWD (A1C ≤8.5%, C-peptide tmax (P \u3c 0.001), Cmax (P \u3c 0.05), and mean residence time (P \u3c 0.0001). Area under the insulin concentration curve (AUC0–300) declined by ∼24% from days 0 to 7 (P \u3c 0.05). These results confirm/extend previous observations showing progressive acceleration of insulin exposure over IIS wear time. This may have implications for PWD and designers of closed-loop algorithms, although larger studies are necessary to confirm this. The study was registered in clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04398030)
Fractional quantum Hall effect in a quantum point contact at filling fraction 5/2
Recent theories suggest that the excitations of certain quantum Hall states
may have exotic braiding statistics which could be used to build topological
quantum gates. This has prompted an experimental push to study such states
using confined geometries where the statistics can be tested. We study the
transport properties of quantum point contacts (QPCs) fabricated on a
GaAs/AlGaAs two dimensional electron gas that exhibits well-developed
fractional quantum Hall effect, including at bulk filling fraction 5/2. We find
that a plateau at effective QPC filling factor 5/2 is identifiable in point
contacts with lithographic widths of 1.2 microns and 0.8 microns, but not 0.5
microns. We study the temperature and dc-current-bias dependence of the 5/2
plateau in the QPC, as well as neighboring fractional and integer plateaus in
the QPC while keeping the bulk at filling factor 3. Transport near QPC filling
factor 5/2 is consistent with a picture of chiral Luttinger liquid edge-states
with inter-edge tunneling, suggesting that an incompressible state at 5/2 forms
in this confined geometry
PTF10nvg: An Outbursting Class I Protostar in the Pelican/North American Nebula
During a synoptic survey of the North American Nebula region, the Palomar
Transient Factory (PTF) detected an optical outburst (dubbed PTF10nvg)
associated with the previously unstudied flat or rising spectrum infrared
source IRAS 20496+4354. The PTF R-band light curve reveals that PTF10nvg
brightened by more than 5 mag during the current outburst, rising to a peak
magnitude of R~13.5 in 2010 Sep. Follow-up observations indicate PTF10nvg has
undergone a similar ~5 mag brightening in the K band, and possesses a rich
emission-line spectrum, including numerous lines commonly assumed to trace mass
accretion and outflows. Many of these lines are blueshifted by ~175 km/s from
the North American Nebula's rest velocity, suggesting that PTF10nvg is driving
an outflow. Optical spectra of PTF10nvg show several TiO/VO bandheads fully in
emission, indicating the presence of an unusual amount of dense (> 10^10
cm^-3), warm (1500-4000 K) circumstellar material. Near-infrared spectra of
PTF10nvg appear quite similar to a spectrum of McNeil's Nebula/V1647 Ori, a
young star which has undergone several brightenings in recent decades, and
06297+1021W, a Class I protostar with a similarly rich near--infrared emission
line spectrum. While further monitoring is required to fully understand this
event, we conclude that the brightening of PTF10nvg is indicative of enhanced
accretion and outflow in this Class-I-type protostellar object, similar to the
behavior of V1647 Ori in 2004-2005.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 21 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables
in emulateapj format; v2 fixes typo in abstract; v3 updates status to
accepted, adjusts affiliations, adds acknowledgmen
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