297 research outputs found
Emerging role of G protein-coupled receptors in microvascular myogenic tone
Blood flow autoregulation results from the ability of resistance arteries to reduce or increase their diameters in response to changes in intravascular pressure. The mechanism by which arteries maintain a constant blood flow to organs over a range of pressures relies on this myogenic response, which defines the intrinsic property of the smooth muscle to contract in response to stretch. The resistance to flow created by myogenic tone (MT) prevents tissue damage and allows the maintenance of a constant perfusion, despite fluctuations in arterial pressure. Interventions targeting MT may provide a more rational therapeutic approach in vascular disorders, such as hypertension, vasospasm, chronic heart failure, or diabetes. Despite its early description by Bayliss in 1902, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying MT remain poorly understood. We now appreciate that MT requires a complex mechanotransduction converting a physical stimulus (pressure) into a biological response (change in vessel diameter). Although smooth muscle cell depolarization and a rise in intracellular calcium concentration are recognized as cornerstones of the myogenic response, the role of wall strain-induced formation of vasoactive mediators is less well established. The vascular system expresses a large variety of Class 1 G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) activated by an eclectic range of chemical entities, including peptides, lipids, nucleotides, and amines. These messengers can function in blood vessels as vasoconstrictors. This review focuses on locally generated GPCR agonists and their proposed contributions to MT. Their interplay with pivotal G(q-11) and G(12-13) protein signalling is also discussed
A Population of Short-Period Variable Quasars from PTF as Supermassive Black Hole Binary Candidates
Supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) at sub-parsec separations should be
common in galactic nuclei, as a result of frequent galaxy mergers.
Hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary discs predict strong periodic
modulation of the mass accretion rate on time-scales comparable to the orbital
period of the binary. As a result, SMBHBs may be recognized by the periodic
modulation of their brightness. We conducted a statistical search for periodic
variability in a sample of 35,383 spectroscopically confirmed quasars in the
photometric database of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF). We analysed
Lomb-Scargle periodograms and assessed the significance of our findings by
modeling each individual quasar's variability as a damped random walk (DRW). We
identified 50 quasars with significant periodicity beyond the DRW model,
typically with short periods of a few hundred days. We find 33 of these to
remain significant after a re-analysis of their periodograms including
additional optical data from the intermediate-PTF and the Catalina Real-Time
Transient Survey (CRTS). Assuming that the observed periods correspond to the
redshifted orbital periods of SMBHBs, we conclude that our findings are
consistent with a population of unequal-mass SMBHBs, with a typical mass ratio
as low as q = M2/M1 ~ 0.01.Comment: MNRAS (accepted), new section 4.
Electron-impact excitation of X 1Sigma<sub>g</sub><sup>+</sup>(v[double-prime]=0) to the a[double-prime] 1Sigma<sub>g</sub><sup>+</sup>, b 1Piu, c3 1Piu, o3 1Piu, b[prime] 1Sigma<sub>u</sub><sup>+</sup>, c<sub>4</sub><sup>[prime]</sup> 1Sigma<sub>u</sub><sup>+</sup>, G 3Piu, and F 3Piu states of molecular nitrogen
Measurements of differential cross sections (DCSs) for electron-impact excitation of the a[double-prime] 1Sigmag+, b 1Piu, c3 1Piu, o3 1Piu, b[prime] 1Sigmau+, c4[prime] 1Sigmau+, G 3Piu, and F 3Piu states in N2 from the X 1Sigmag+(v[double-prime]=0) ground level are presented. The DCSs were obtained from energy-loss spectra in the region of 12 to 13.82 eV measured at incident energies of 17.5, 20, 30, 50, and 100 eV and for scattering angles ranging from 2° to 130°. The analysis of the spectra follows a different algorithm from that employed in a previous study of N2 for the valence states [Khakoo et al. Phys. Rev. A 71, 062703 (2005)], since the 1Piu and 1Sigmau+ states form strongly interacting Rydberg-valence series. The results are compared with existing data
Science Validation of the Spitzer Source List
The Spitzer Science Center will produce a source list (SL) of photometry for a large subset of imaging data in the Spitzer Heritage Archive (SHA). The list will enable a large range of science projects. The primary requirement on the SL is very high reliability — with areal coverage, completeness and limiting depth being secondary considerations. The SHA at the NASA Infrared Science Archive (IRSA) will serve the SL as an enhanced data product. The SL will include data from the four channels of
IRAC (3–8 microns) and the 24 micron channel of MIPS. The Source List will include image products (mosaics) and photometric data for Spitzer observations of about 1500
square degrees and include around 30 million sources. We describe ongoing science validation of the Spitzer Source List, and discuss the range of use cases which will be
supported
The Spitzer Source List
The Spitzer Science Center will produce a source list (SL) of photometry for a large subset of imaging data in the Spitzer Heritage Archive (SHA). The list will enable a large range of science projects. The primary requirement on the SL is very high reliability, with areal coverage, completeness and limiting depth being secondary considerations. The SHA at the NASA Infrared Science Archive (IRSA) will serve the SL as an enhanced data product. The SL will include data from the four channels of IRAC (3–8 microns) and the 24 micron channel of MIPS. The Source List will include image products (mosaics) and photometric data for Spitzer observations of about 1500 square degrees and include around 30 million sources. We describe the plans and timeline for development of the Spitzer Source List. We demonstrate the verification of the Source List pipeline using Spitzer Legacy catalogs at "truth tables". Finally, we discuss the range of use cases which will be supported
An Optical Search for New Outbursting Low Mass X-Ray Binaries
Transient Low-Mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are discovered largely by X-ray and
gamma-ray all-sky monitors. The X-ray outburst is also accompanied by an
optical brightening, which empirically can precede detection of X-rays. Newly
sensitive optical synoptic surveys may offer a complementary pathway for
discovery, and potential for insight into the initial onset and propagation of
the thermal instability that leads to the ionization of the accretion disk. We
use the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) alert stream to perform a comprehensive
search at optical wavelengths for previously undiscovered outbursting LMXBs.
Our pipeline first crossmatches the positions of the alerts to cataloged X-ray
sources, and then analyzes the 30-day lightcurve of matched alerts by
thresholding on differences with an 8-day exponentially weighted moving
average. In addition to an nineteen month-long live search, we ran our pipeline
over four years of ZTF archival data, recovering 4 known LMXBs. We also
independently detected an outburst of MAXI J1957+032 in the live search and
found the first outburst of Swift J1943.4+0228, an unclassified X-ray
transient, in 10 years. Using Monte Carlo simulations of the Galactic LMXB
population, we estimate that 29% of outbursting LMXBs are detectable by ZTF and
that 4.4% of LMXBs would be present in the crossmatched X-ray catalogs, giving
an estimated Galactic population of . We estimate that
our current pipeline can detect 1.3% of all outbursting LMXBs, including those
previously unknown, but that Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and
Time (LSST) will be able to detect 43% of outbursting LMXBs.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Interaction-powered supernovae: Rise-time vs. peak-luminosity correlation and the shock-breakout velocity
Interaction of supernova (SN) ejecta with the optically thick circumstellar
medium (CSM) of a progenitor star can result in a bright, long-lived shock
breakout event. Candidates for such SNe include Type IIn and superluminous SNe.
If some of these SNe are powered by interaction, then there should be a
relation between their peak luminosity, bolometric light-curve rise time, and
shock-breakout velocity. Given that the shock velocity during shock breakout is
not measured, we expect a correlation, with a significant spread, between the
rise time and the peak luminosity of these SNe. Here, we present a sample of 15
SNe IIn for which we have good constraints on their rise time and peak
luminosity from observations obtained using the Palomar Transient Factory. We
report on a possible correlation between the R-band rise time and peak
luminosity of these SNe, with a false-alarm probability of 3%. Assuming that
these SNe are powered by interaction, combining these observables and theory
allows us to deduce lower limits on the shock-breakout velocity. The lower
limits on the shock velocity we find are consistent with what is expected for
SNe (i.e., ~10^4 km/s). This supports the suggestion that the early-time light
curves of SNe IIn are caused by shock breakout in a dense CSM. We note that
such a correlation can arise from other physical mechanisms. Performing such a
test on other classes of SNe (e.g., superluminous SNe) can be used to rule out
the interaction model for a class of events.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 6 page
An outburst from a massive star 40 days before a supernova explosion
Various lines of evidence suggest that very massive stars experience extreme
mass-loss episodes shortly before they explode as a supernova. Interestingly,
several models predict such pre-explosion outbursts. Establishing a causal
connection between these mass-loss episodes and the final supernova explosion
will provide a novel way to study pre-supernova massive-star evolution. Here we
report on observations of a remarkable mass-loss event detected 40 days prior
to the explosion of the Type IIn supernova SN 2010mc (PTF 10tel). Our
photometric and spectroscopic data suggest that this event is a result of an
energetic outburst, radiating at least 6x10^47 erg of energy, and releasing
about 0.01 Solar mass at typical velocities of 2000 km/s. We show that the
temporal proximity of the mass-loss outburst and the supernova explosion
implies a causal connection between them. Moreover, we find that the outburst
luminosity and velocity are consistent with the predictions of the wave-driven
pulsation model and disfavor alternative suggestions.Comment: Nature 494, 65, including supplementary informatio
The Palomar Transient Factory photometric catalog 1.0
We construct a photometrically calibrated catalog of non-variable sources
from the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) observations. The first version of
this catalog presented here, the PTF photometric catalog 1.0, contains
calibrated R_PTF-filter magnitudes for about 21 million sources brighter than
magnitude 19, over an area of about 11233 deg^2. The magnitudes are provided in
the PTF photometric system, and the color of a source is required in order to
convert these magnitudes into other magnitude systems. We estimate that the
magnitudes in this catalog have typical accuracy of about 0.02 mag with respect
to magnitudes from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The median repeatability of
our catalog's magnitudes for stars between 15 and 16 mag, is about 0.01 mag,
and it is better than 0.03 mag for 95% of the sources in this magnitude range.
The main goal of this catalog is to provide reference magnitudes for
photometric calibration of visible light observations. Subsequent versions of
this catalog, which will be published incrementally online, will be extended to
a larger sky area and will also include g_PTF-filter magnitudes, as well as
variability and proper motion information.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, PASP in pres
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