9,491 research outputs found
The Ever Changing Circumstellar Nebula Around UW Centauri
We present new images of the reflection nebula surrounding the R Coronae
Borealis Star, UW Cen. This nebula, first detected in 1990, has changed its
appearance significantly. At the estimated distance of UW Cen, this nebula is
approximately 0.6 ly in radius so the nebula cannot have physically altered in
only 8 years. Instead, the morphology of the nebula appears to change as
different parts are illuminated by light from the central star modulated by
shifting thick dust clouds near its surface. These dust clouds form and
dissipate at irregular intervals causing the well-known declines in the R
Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. In this way, the central star acts like a
lighthouse shining through holes in the dust clouds and lighting up different
portions of the nebula. The existence of this nebula provides clues to the
evolutionary history of RCB stars possibly linking them to the Planetary
Nebulae and the final helium shell flash stars.Comment: To be published in ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 3 figures (2 in color
Causal Fermion Systems: A Quantum Space-Time Emerging from an Action Principle
Causal fermion systems are introduced as a general mathematical framework for
formulating relativistic quantum theory. By specializing, we recover earlier
notions like fermion systems in discrete space-time, the fermionic projector
and causal variational principles. We review how an effect of spontaneous
structure formation gives rise to a topology and a causal structure in
space-time. Moreover, we outline how to construct a spin connection and
curvature, leading to a proposal for a "quantum geometry" in the Lorentzian
setting. We review recent numerical and analytical results on the support of
minimizers of causal variational principles which reveal a "quantization
effect" resulting in a discreteness of space-time. A brief survey is given on
the correspondence to quantum field theory and gauge theories.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, footnote added on page
The platinum nuclei: concealed configuration mixing and shape coexistence
The role of configuration mixing in the Pt region is investigated. For this
chain of isotopes, the nature of the ground state changes smoothly, being
spherical around mass and and deformed around the
mid-shell N=104 region. This has a dramatic effect on the systematics of the
energy spectra as compared to the systematics in the Pb and Hg nuclei.
Interacting Boson Model with configuration mixing calculations are presented
for gyromagnetic factors, -decay hindrance factors, and isotope shifts.
The necessity of incorporating intruder configurations to obtain an accurate
description of the latter properties becomes evident.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review
Long-term high fat feeding of rats results in increased numbers of circulating microvesicles with pro-inflammatory effects on endothelial cells
Obesity and type 2 diabetes lead to dramatically increased risks of atherosclerosis and CHD. Multiple mechanisms converge to promote atherosclerosis by increasing endothelial oxidative stress and up-regulating expression of pro-inflammatory molecules. Microvesicles (MV) are small ( < 1 μm) circulating particles that transport proteins and genetic material, through which they are able to mediate cell–cell communication and influence gene expression. Since MV are increased in plasma of obese, insulin-resistant and diabetic individuals, who often exhibit chronic vascular inflammation, and long-term feeding of a high-fat diet (HFD) to rats is a well-described model of obesity and insulin resistance, we hypothesised that this may be a useful model to study the impact of MV on endothelial inflammation. The number and cellular origin of MV from HFD-fed obese rats were characterised by flow cytometry. Total MV were significantly increased after feeding HFD compared to feeding chow (P< 0·001), with significantly elevated numbers of MV derived from leucocyte, endothelial and platelet compartments (P< 0·01 for each cell type). MV were isolated from plasma and their ability to induce reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1 expression was measured in primary rat cardiac endothelial cells in vitro. MV from HFD-fed rats induced significant ROS (P< 0·001) and VCAM-1 expression (P= 0·0275), indicative of a pro-inflammatory MV phenotype in this model of obesity. These findings confirm that this is a useful model to further study the mechanisms by which diet can influence MV release and subsequent effects on cardio-metabolic health
Basic linear algebra subprograms for FORTRAN usage
A package of 38 low level subprograms for many of the basic operations of numerical linear algebra is presented. The package is intended to be used with FORTRAN. The operations in the package are dot products, elementary vector operations, Givens transformations, vector copy and swap, vector norms, vector scaling, and the indices of components of largest magnitude. The subprograms and a test driver are available in portable FORTRAN. Versions of the subprograms are also provided in assembly language for the IBM 360/67, the CDC 6600 and CDC 7600, and the Univac 1108
Therapeutic outcomes in a museum? “You don't get them by aiming for them”. How a focus on arts participation promotes inclusion and well-being
Background: The three year “Ways of Seeing” project was hosted by an award-winning museum and included adults with long-term diagnoses associated with mental health and physical impairments. The participants were involved throughout the project, preparing and curating artwork for a major public exhibition. Methods: Qualitative data were collected to explore meanings of the project from the perspective of participants, the project manager and the public, using interviews, participant observation and comment cards. Results: The project was successful in engaging the participants who had previously often felt excluded from mainstream art spaces. Findings about the benefits of arts participation echoed other studies but participants highlighted some difficulty with the ending of the project. Public perceptions were positive, acclaiming the thought-provoking quality of the exhibition. Interviews and participant observation revealed the importance of egalitarian leadership, mutual trust and the absence of any therapeutic agenda. Conclusion: Developing similar projects would offer opportunities to foster diverse artistic communities and empower people with experiences of disability and mental health conditions
Initial Conditions for Bubble Universes
The "bubble universes" of Coleman and De Luccia play a crucial role in string
cosmology. Since our own Universe is supposed to be of this kind, bubble
cosmology should supply definite answers to the long-standing questions
regarding cosmological initial conditions. In particular, it must explain how
an initial singularity is avoided, and also how the initial conditions for
Inflation were established. We argue that the simplest non-anthropic approach
to these problems involves a requirement that the spatial sections defined by
distinguished bubble observers should not be allowed to have arbitrarily small
volumes. Casimir energy is a popular candidate for a quantum effect which can
ensure this, but [because it violates energy conditions] there is a danger that
it could lead to non-perturbative instabilities in string theory. We make a
simple proposal for the initial conditions of a bubble universe, and show that
our proposal ensures that the system is non-perturbatively stable. Thus,
low-entropy conditions can be established at the beginning of a bubble universe
without violating the Second Law of thermodynamics and without leading to
instability in string theory. These conditions are inherited from the ambient
spacetime.Comment: Further clarifications; 28 pages including three eps files. This is
the final [accepted for publication] versio
Isomorphic classical molecular dynamics model for an excess electron in a supercritical fluid
Ring polymer molecular dynamics (RPMD) is used to directly simulate the
dynamics of an excess electron in a supercritical fluid over a broad range of
densities. The accuracy of the RPMD model is tested against numerically exact
path integral statistics through the use of analytical continuation techniques.
At low fluid densities, the RPMD model substantially underestimates the
contribution of delocalized states to the dynamics of the excess electron.
However, with increasing solvent density, the RPMD model improves, nearly
satisfying analytical continuation constraints at densities approaching those
of typical liquids. In the high density regime, quantum dispersion
substantially decreases the self-diffusion of the solvated electron.
In this regime where the dynamics of the electron is strongly coupled to the
dynamics of the atoms in the fluid, trajectories that can reveal diffusive
motion of the electron are long in comparison to .Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Query processing of spatial objects: Complexity versus Redundancy
The management of complex spatial objects in applications, such as geography and cartography,
imposes stringent new requirements on spatial database systems, in particular on efficient
query processing. As shown before, the performance of spatial query processing can be improved
by decomposing complex spatial objects into simple components. Up to now, only decomposition
techniques generating a linear number of very simple components, e.g. triangles or trapezoids, have
been considered. In this paper, we will investigate the natural trade-off between the complexity of
the components and the redundancy, i.e. the number of components, with respect to its effect on
efficient query processing. In particular, we present two new decomposition methods generating
a better balance between the complexity and the number of components than previously known
techniques. We compare these new decomposition methods to the traditional undecomposed representation
as well as to the well-known decomposition into convex polygons with respect to their
performance in spatial query processing. This comparison points out that for a wide range of query
selectivity the new decomposition techniques clearly outperform both the undecomposed representation
and the convex decomposition method. More important than the absolute gain in performance
by a factor of up to an order of magnitude is the robust performance of our new decomposition
techniques over the whole range of query selectivity
Binarity as a key factor in protoplanetary disk evolution: Spitzer disk census of the eta Chamaeleontis cluster
The formation of planets is directly linked to the evolution of the
circumstellar (CS) disk from which they are born. The dissipation timescales of
CS disks are, therefore, of direct astrophysical importance in evaluating the
time available for planet formation. We employ Spitzer Space Telescope spectra
to complete the CS disk census for the late-type members of the ~8 Myr-old eta
Chamaeleontis star cluster. Of the 15 K- and M-type members, eight show excess
emission. We find that the presence of a CS disk is anti-correlated with
binarity, with all but one disk associated with single stars. With nine single
stars in total, about 80% retain a CS disk. Of the six known or suspected close
binaries the only CS disk is associated with the primary of RECX 9. No
circumbinary disks have been detected. We also find that stars with disks are
slow rotators with surface values of specific angular momentum j = 2-15 j_sun.
All high specific angular momentum systems with j = 20-30 j_sun are confined to
the primary stars of binaries. This provides novel empirical evidence for
rotational disk locking and again demonstrates the much shorter disk lifetimes
in close binary systems compared to single star systems. We estimate the
characteristic mean disk dissipation timescale to be ~5 Myr and ~9 Myr for the
binary and single star systems, respectively.Comment: Accepted by ApJ
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