46 research outputs found
Reconstructed Overhanging Battlements. Executive Techniques and their Vulnerability in the Stronghold of Arquata del Tronto (Italy)
The stronghold of Arquata del Tronto was heavily damaged by earthquakes in 2016 and it drew the attention of the experts in reinforcing historic buildings. They regarded it as a case study, a predicting model of the failure in employing specific construction elements in fortified architecture, whose geometric and material data were only approximately considered. The overhanging battlement is the most seriously damaged part of the building and has raised particular attention and interest. As often happens in other castles and fortresses, it dates back to the late 19th and even more to the 20th century. A first close examination of the building’s repairs shows how the new additions, whose maintenance is difficult, ended in failure. The additions were inspired by ancient details, but nonetheless they are unreasonable from the point of view of structure and durability: they – and even more the irrational repairs of the last decades – are the principal cause of failure. Material decay – closely linked to circumstances and places – has also played a decisive role. An extensive and rigorous historical research is necessary to find the sources and to evaluate their nature and limits, as well as to relate all information to the building, thus operating in close correlation with the building archaeology, by now a so widespread and consolidated research field. Jointly, the written documents and the building itself in its historical stratification allow a better analysis of the structural behaviour , an essential step to achieve an effective restoration planning
The Structure and Dynamics of the Upper Chromosphere and Lower Transition Region as Revealed by the Subarcsecond VAULT Observations
The Very high Angular resolution ULtraviolet Telescope (VAULT) is a sounding
rocket payload built to study the crucial interface between the solar
chromosphere and the corona by observing the strongest line in the solar
spectrum, the Ly-a line at 1216 {\AA}. In two flights, VAULT succeeded in
obtaining the first ever sub-arcsecond (0.5") images of this region with high
sensitivity and cadence. Detailed analyses of those observations have
contributed significantly to new ideas about the nature of the transition
region. Here, we present a broad overview of the Ly-a atmosphere as revealed by
the VAULT observations, and bring together past results and new analyses from
the second VAULT flight to create a synthesis of our current knowledge of the
high-resolution Ly-a Sun. We hope that this work will serve as a good reference
for the design of upcoming Ly-a telescopes and observing plans.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure
The free energy of NOAA active region AR 11029
The NOAA active region AR 11029 was a small but highly active sunspot region
which produced 73 GOES soft X-ray flares. The flares appear to show a departure
from the well known power-law frequency-size distribution. Specifically, too
few GOES C-class and no M-class flares were observed by comparison with a
power-law distribution (Wheatland in Astrophys. J. 710, 1324, 2010). This was
conjectured to be due to the region having insufficient magnetic energy to
power large events. We construct nonlinear force-free extrapolations of the
coronal magnetic field of active region AR 11029 using data taken on 24 October
by the SOLIS Vector-SpectroMagnetograph (SOLIS/VSM), and data taken on 27
October by the Hinode Solar Optical Telescope SpectroPolarimeter (Hinode/SP).
Force-free modeling with photospheric magnetogram data encounters problems
because the magnetogram data are inconsistent with a force-free model, and we
employ a recently developed `self-consistency' procedure which addresses this
and accommodates uncertainties in the boundary data (Wheatland and Regnier in
Astrophys. J. 700, L88, 2009). We calculate the total energy and free energy of
the self-consistent solution and find that the free energy was 4x10^29 erg on
24 October, and 7x10^31 erg on 27 October. An order of magnitude scaling
between RHESSI non-thermal energy and GOES peak X-ray flux is established from
a sample of flares from the literature and is used to estimate flare energies
from observed GOES peak X-ray flux. Based on the scaling, we conclude that the
estimated free energy of AR 11029 on 27 October when the flaring rate peaked is
sufficient to power M-class or X-class flares, and hence the modeling does not
appear to support the hypothesis that the absence of large flares is due to the
region having limited energy.Comment: Accepted for publication in Solar Physic
Associated Links Among Smoking, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, and Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Pooled Analysis in the International Lung Cancer Consortium.
Background
The high relapse and mortality rate of small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) fuels the need for epidemiologic study to aid in its prevention.
Methods
We included 24 studies from the ILCCO collaboration. Random-effects panel logistic regression and cubic spline regression were used to estimate the effects of smoking behaviors on SCLC risk and explore their non-linearity. Further, we explored whether the risk of smoking on SCLC was mediated through COPD.
Findings
Significant dose–response relationships of SCLC risk were observed for all quantitative smoking variables. Smoking pack-years were associated with a sharper increase of SCLC risk for pack-years ranged 0 to approximately 50. The former smokers with longer cessation showed a 43%quit_for_5–9 years to 89%quit_for_≥ 20 years declined SCLC risk vs. subjects who had quit smoking < 5 years. Compared with non-COPD subjects, smoking behaviors showed a significantly higher effect on SCLC risk among COPD subjects, and further, COPD patients showed a 1.86-fold higher risk of SCLC. Furthermore, smoking behaviors on SCLC risk were significantly mediated through COPD which accounted for 0.70% to 7.55% of total effects.
Interpretation
This is the largest pooling study that provides improved understanding of smoking on SCLC, and further demonstrates a causal pathway through COPD that warrants further experimental study.
Abbreviations
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CPG, cigarettes per day; ILCCO, International Lung Cancer Consortium; MeSH, medical subject headings; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; OR, odds ratio; SCLC, small cell lung cancer
Microflares and the Statistics of X-ray Flares
This review surveys the statistics of solar X-ray flares, emphasising the new
views that RHESSI has given us of the weaker events (the microflares). The new
data reveal that these microflares strongly resemble more energetic events in
most respects; they occur solely within active regions and exhibit
high-temperature/nonthermal emissions in approximately the same proportion as
major events. We discuss the distributions of flare parameters (e.g., peak
flux) and how these parameters correlate, for instance via the Neupert effect.
We also highlight the systematic biases involved in intercomparing data
representing many decades of event magnitude. The intermittency of the
flare/microflare occurrence, both in space and in time, argues that these
discrete events do not explain general coronal heating, either in active
regions or in the quiet Sun.Comment: To be published in Space Science Reviews (2011
Genome-wide association study of lung adenocarcinoma in East Asia and comparison with a European population
Lung adenocarcinoma is the most common type of lung cancer. Known risk variants explain only a small fraction of lung adenocarcinoma heritability. Here, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study of lung adenocarcinoma of East Asian ancestry (21,658 cases and 150,676 controls; 54.5% never-smokers) and identified 12 novel susceptibility variants, bringing the total number to 28 at 25 independent loci. Transcriptome-wide association analyses together with colocalization studies using a Taiwanese lung expression quantitative trait loci dataset (n = 115) identified novel candidate genes, including FADS1 at 11q12 and ELF5 at 11p13. In a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of East Asian and European studies, four loci were identified at 2p11, 4q32, 16q23, and 18q12. At the same time, most of our findings in East Asian populations showed no evidence of association in European populations. In our studies drawn from East Asian populations, a polygenic risk score based on the 25 loci had a stronger association in never-smokers vs. individuals with a history of smoking (Pinteraction = 0.0058). These findings provide new insights into the etiology of lung adenocarcinoma in individuals from East Asian populations, which could be important in developing translational applications
Female chromosome X mosaicism is age-related and preferentially affects the inactivated X chromosome
To investigate large structural clonal mosaicism of chromosome X, we analysed the SNP
microarray intensity data of 38,303 women from cancer genome-wide association studies
(20,878 cases and 17,425 controls) and detected 124 mosaic X events42Mb in 97 (0.25%)
women. Here we show rates for X-chromosome mosaicism are four times higher than mean
autosomal rates; X mosaic events more often include the entire chromosome and participants
with X events more likely harbour autosomal mosaic events. X mosaicism frequency
increases with age (0.11% in 50-year olds; 0.45% in 75-year olds), as reported for Y and
autosomes. Methylation array analyses of 33 women with X mosaicism indicate events
preferentially involve the inactive X chromosome. Our results provide further evidence that
the sex chromosomes undergo mosaic events more frequently than autosomes, which could
have implications for understanding the underlying mechanisms of mosaic events and their
possible contribution to risk for chronic diseases
Detectable clonal mosaicism and its relationship to aging and cancer
In an analysis of 31,717 cancer cases and 26,136 cancer-free controls from 13 genome-wide association studies, we observed large chromosomal abnormalities in a subset of clones in DNA obtained from blood or buccal samples. We observed mosaic abnormalities, either aneuploidy or copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity, of >2 Mb in size in autosomes of 517 individuals (0.89%), with abnormal cell proportions of between 7% and 95%. In cancer-free individuals, frequency increased with age, from 0.23% under 50 years to 1.91% between 75 and 79 years (P = 4.8 × 10(-8)). Mosaic abnormalities were more frequent in individuals with solid tumors (0.97% versus 0.74% in cancer-free individuals; odds ratio (OR) = 1.25; P = 0.016), with stronger association with cases who had DNA collected before diagnosis or treatment (OR = 1.45; P = 0.0005). Detectable mosaicism was also more common in individuals for whom DNA was collected at least 1 year before diagnosis with leukemia compared to cancer-free individuals (OR = 35.4; P = 3.8 × 10(-11)). These findings underscore the time-dependent nature of somatic events in the etiology of cancer and potentially other late-onset diseases