288 research outputs found
Spectral Optical Monitoring of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy Ark 564
We present the results of a long-term (1999--2010) spectral optical
monitoring campaign of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) Ark 564, which shows a
strong Fe II line emission in the optical. This AGN is a narrow line Seyfert 1
(NLS1) galaxies, a group of AGNs with specific spectral characteristics. We
analyze the light curves of the permitted Ha, Hb, optical Fe II line fluxes,
and the continuum flux in order to search for a time lag between them.
Additionally, in order to estimate the contribution of iron lines from
different multiplets, we fit the Hb and Fe II lines with a sum of Gaussian
components. We found that during the monitoring period the spectral variation
(F_max/F_min) of Ark 564 was between 1.5 for Ha to 1.8 for the Fe II lines. The
correlation between the Fe II and Hb flux variations is of higher significance
than that of Ha and Hb (whose correlation is almost absent). The permitted-line
profiles are Lorentzian-like, and did not change shape during the monitoring
period. We investigated, in detail, the optical Fe II emission and found
different degrees of correlation between the Fe II emission arising from
different spectral multiplets and the continuum flux. The relatively weak and
different degrees of correlations between permitted lines and continuum fluxes
indicate a rather complex source of ionization of the broad line emission
region.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Broad-line Balmer Decrements in Blue Active Galactic Nuclei
We have investigated the broad-line Balmer decrements (Halpha/Hbeta) for a
large, homogeneous sample of Seyfert 1 galaxies and QSOs using spectroscopic
data obtained in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The sample, drawn from the
Fourth Data Release, comprises 446 low redshift (z < 0.35) active galactic
nuclei (AGN) that have blue optical continua as indicated by the spectral
slopes in order to minimize the effect of dust extinction. We find that (i) the
distribution of the intrinsic broad-line Halpha/Hbeta ratio can be well
described by log-Gaussian, with a peak at Halpha/Hbeta=3.06 and a standard
deviation of about 0.03 dex only; (ii) the Balmer decrement does not correlate
with AGN properties such as luminosity, accretion rate, and continuum slope,
etc.; (iii) on average, the Balmer decrements are found to be only slightly
larger in radio-loud sources (3.37) and sources having double-peaked
emission-line profiles (3.27) compared to the rest of the sample. We therefore
suggest that the broad-line Halpha/Hbeta ratio can be used as a good indicator
for dust extinction in the AGN broad-line region; this is especially true for
radio-quiet AGN with regular emission-line profiles, which constitute the vast
majority of the AGN population.Comment: To appear in MNRAS. The data and the fitted parameters for the
decomposed spectral components (continuum, FeII and other emission lines) of
the 446 blue AGNs are available at
http://staff.ustc.edu.cn/~xbdong/Data_Release/blueAGN_DR4
Expression of the SmB′ splicing protein in rodent cells capable of following an alternative RNA splicing pathway
AbstractThe expression of the SmB and SmB′ spliceosome proteins in a variety of cell types and tissues has been investigated. Although SmB is found in all cells studied, the SmB′ protein is found only in a small number of rodent cell types. The presence of this protein is correlated with the ability to utilize an alternative pathway of RNA splicing which is not available in most cell types. This is the first demonstration of tissue specific expression of a protein component of the spliceosome and suggests a role for SmB′ in the regulation of some cases of alternative RNA splicing
Unreasonable Resentments
How ought we to evaluate and respond to expressions of anger and resentment? Can philosophical analysis of resentment as the emotional expression of a moral claim help us to distinguish which resentments ought to be taken seriously? Philosophers have tended to focus on what I call ‘reasonable’ resentments, presenting a technical, narrow account that limits resentment to the expression of recognizable moral claims. In the following paper, I defend three claims about the ethics and politics of resentment. First, if we care about socially just processes of reconciliation, we have good reason to pay attention to the logic of resentments. Second, the account philosophers offer of resentment – its distinctive features, aims, rationality, and gratification – will affect the conclusions we draw about which actual resentments to take seriously, which aspects of resentful claims need addressing, and what it means to address and repair them. In contesting definitions of resentment, I argue, we do more than simply perform housekeeping in philosophical taxonomies of emotion. Restricting our understanding to essentially ‘moral’ cases may cause us to lose sight of expressly political resentments.
Instead, I argue, a plausible account of resentment must acknowledge that we resent violations and threats that are not necessarily self-pertaining, may not be expressible as individual, discrete injuries, and cannot always be construed as moral threats. Second, given the dependence of moral judgments on a broader horizon of moral possibility, philosophical standards of ‘reasonable’ or ‘appropriate’ resentment cannot avoid being politically charged. Thus, the widely accepted account of ‘reasonable’ resentment cannot make philosophical sense of the most interesting and perplexing cases. Ironically, a theoretical measure designed to revalue emotional expressions of moral protest may result in the exclusion and silencing of those with the most reasons to protest
High-throughput identification of genotype-specific cancer vulnerabilities in mixtures of barcoded tumor cell lines.
Hundreds of genetically characterized cell lines are available for the discovery of genotype-specific cancer vulnerabilities. However, screening large numbers of compounds against large numbers of cell lines is currently impractical, and such experiments are often difficult to control. Here we report a method called PRISM that allows pooled screening of mixtures of cancer cell lines by labeling each cell line with 24-nucleotide barcodes. PRISM revealed the expected patterns of cell killing seen in conventional (unpooled) assays. In a screen of 102 cell lines across 8,400 compounds, PRISM led to the identification of BRD-7880 as a potent and highly specific inhibitor of aurora kinases B and C. Cell line pools also efficiently formed tumors as xenografts, and PRISM recapitulated the expected pattern of erlotinib sensitivity in vivo
Gender-based violence against women in contemporary France: domestic violence and forced marriage policy since the Istanbul Convention
ABSTRACT:
In 2014, France ratified the Council of Europe’s Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (the Istanbul Convention) and passed the Law for Equality between Women and Men to bring French law into line with it. The Law for Equality between Women and Men situates the fight against violence against women within a broader context of the need to address inequalities between women and men. This is not new at the international level, but it is new to France. When the structural, transformative understandings of violence against women found in international texts are translated into national laws, policy documents and implementation on the ground, they might challenge widespread ideas about gender relations, or they might be diluted in order to achieve consensus. To what extent has French violence against women policy moved into line with UN and Council of Europe initiatives which present violence against women as both a cause and a consequence of gendered power relations? Have internationally accepted concepts of gender and gender-based violence been incorporated into French policy debates and, if so, how? What implications, if any, does all this have for the continued struggle in France and elsewhere to eliminate violence a gainst women?
RÉSUMÉ:
En 2014, la France a ratifié la Convention du Conseil de l’Europe sur la prévention et la lutte contre la violence à l’égard des femmes et la violence domestique (dite Convention d’Istanbul) et a adopté dans la foulée la loi pour l’égalité réelle entre les femmes et les hommes afin de mettre en conformité la législation française. Cette loi place la lutte contre la violence à l’égard des femmes dans un contexte de lutte contre les inégalités de genre. Si cela est loin d’être une nouveauté à l’échelle internationale, cela l’est en France. Lorsque les conceptions structurelles et transformatrices de la violence à l’égard des femmes présentes dans les textes internationaux sont traduites à l’échelle nationale en lois, documents d’orientation et mesures de mise en œuvre sur le terrain, elles peuvent alors remettre en question des idées largement répandues sur les rapports de genre, ou au contraire être édulcorées afin d’aboutir à un consensus. Dans quelle mesure la politique de la France relative à la violence à l’égard des femmes s’est-elle alignée sur les initiatives de l’ONU et du Conseil de l’Europe qui présentent ce type de violence comme étant à la fois une cause et une conséquence des rapports de force liés au genre? Le genre et la violence fondée sur le genre, qui sont des concepts internationalement reconnus, ont-ils été intégrés dans les débats politiques français, et si oui, de quelle manière? Quelles en sont les implications le cas échéant sur la poursuite, en France et ailleurs, de la lutte pour éliminer la violence à l’égard des femmes
A pragmatic cluster randomised trial evaluating three implementation interventions
Background
Implementation research is concerned with bridging the gap between evidence and practice through the study of methods to promote the uptake of research into routine practice. Good quality evidence has been summarised into guideline recommendations to show that peri-operative fasting times could be considerably shorter than patients currently experience. The objective of this trial was to evaluate the effectiveness of three strategies for the implementation of recommendations about peri-operative fasting.
Methods
A pragmatic cluster randomised trial underpinned by the PARIHS framework was conducted during 2006 to 2009 with a national sample of UK hospitals using time series with mixed methods process evaluation and cost analysis. Hospitals were randomised to one of three interventions: standard dissemination (SD) of a guideline package, SD plus a web-based resource championed by an opinion leader, and SD plus plan-do-study-act (PDSA). The primary outcome was duration of fluid fast prior to induction of anaesthesia. Secondary outcomes included duration of food fast, patients' experiences, and stakeholders' experiences of implementation, including influences. ANOVA was used to test differences over time and interventions.
Results
Nineteen acute NHS hospitals participated. Across timepoints, 3,505 duration of fasting observations were recorded. No significant effect of the interventions was observed for either fluid or food fasting times. The effect size was 0.33 for the web-based intervention compared to SD alone for the change in fluid fasting and was 0.12 for PDSA compared to SD alone. The process evaluation showed different types of impact, including changes to practices, policies, and attitudes. A rich picture of the implementation challenges emerged, including inter-professional tensions and a lack of clarity for decision-making authority and responsibility.
Conclusions
This was a large, complex study and one of the first national randomised controlled trials conducted within acute care in implementation research. The evidence base for fasting practice was accepted by those participating in this study and the messages from it simple; however, implementation and practical challenges influenced the interventions' impact. A set of conditions for implementation emerges from the findings of this study, which are presented as theoretically transferable propositions that have international relevance. Trial registration ISRCTN18046709 - Peri-operative Implementation Study Evaluation (POISE
A Variable-Density Absorption Event in NGC 3227 mapped with Suzaku and Swift
The morphology of the circumnuclear gas accreting onto supermassive black
holes in Seyfert galaxies remains a topic of much debate. As the innermost
regions of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are spatially unresolved, X-ray
spectroscopy, and in particular line-of-sight absorption variability, is a key
diagnostic to map out the distribution of gas. Observations of variable X-ray
absorption in multiple Seyferts and over a wide range of timescales indicate
the presence of clumps/clouds of gas within the circumnuclear material. Eclipse
events by clumps transiting the line of sight allow us to explore the
properties of the clumps over a wide range of radial distances from the
optical/UV Broad Line Region (BLR) to beyond the dust sublimation radius.
Time-resolved absorption events have been extremely rare so far, but suggest a
range of density profiles across Seyferts. We resolve a weeks-long absorption
event in the Seyfert NGC 3227. We examine six Suzaku and twelve Swift
observations from a 2008 campaign spanning 5 weeks. We use a model accounting
for the complex spectral interplay of three differently-ionized absorbers. We
perform time-resolved spectroscopy to discern the absorption variability
behavior. We also examine the IR-to-X-ray spectral energy distribution (SED) to
test for reddening by dust. The 2008 absorption event is due to
moderately-ionized () gas covering 90% of the line of
sight. We resolve the density profile to be highly irregular, in contrast to a
previous symmetric and centrally-peaked event mapped with RXTE in the same
object. The UV data do not show significant reddening, suggesting that the
cloud is dust-free. The 2008 campaign has revealed a transit by a filamentary,
moderately-ionized cloud of variable density that is likely located in the BLR,
and possibly part of a disk wind.Comment: Accepted for publication by A&
The kinematics of swimming and relocation jumps in copepod nauplii
Copepod nauplii move in a world dominated by viscosity. Their swimming-by-jumping propulsion mode, with alternating power and recovery strokes of three pairs of cephalic appendages, is fundamentally different from the way other microplankters move. Protozoans move using cilia or flagella, and copepodites are equipped with highly specialized swimming legs. In some species the nauplius may also propel itself more slowly through the water by beating and rotating the appendages in a different, more complex pattern. We use high-speed video to describe jumping and swimming in nauplii of three species of pelagic copepods: Temora longicornis, Oithona davisae and Acartia tonsa. The kinematics of jumping is similar between the three species. Jumps result in a very erratic translation with no phase of passive coasting and the nauplii move backwards during recovery strokes. This is due to poorly synchronized recovery strokes and a low beat frequency relative to the coasting time scale. For the same reason, the propulsion efficiency of the nauplii is low. Given the universality of the nauplius body plan, it is surprising that they seem to be inefficient when jumping, which is different from the very efficient larger copepodites. A slow-swimming mode is only displayed by T. longicornis. In this mode, beating of the appendages results in the creation of a strong feeding current that is about 10 times faster than the average translation speed of the nauplius. The nauplius is thus essentially hovering when feeding, which results in a higher feeding efficiency than that of a nauplius cruising through the water
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