379 research outputs found
Far Field Plume Distribution and Divergence for NEXT: DART Mission
In support of the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission, laboratory measurements were made on the NEXT ion engine, which will be used for the spacecraft's in-space propulsion [1]. This study revisits a small range of mission-specific 2.7A throttle levels to understand the effect of in-flight flow rate variability, investigate intermediate throttle conditions, and improve measurement methodology. This paper specifically examines the far-field plume divergence and backflow ion flux distribution of the NEXT, while a companion paper examines the charge state distributions
Beyond genus statistics: a unifying approach to the morphology of cosmic structure
The genus statistics of isodensity contours has become a well-established
tool in cosmology. In this Letter we place the genus in the wider framework of
a complete family of morphological descriptors. These are known as the
Minkowski functionals, and we here apply them for the first time to isodensity
contours of a continuous random field. By taking two equivalent approaches, one
through differential geometry, the other through integral geometry, we derive
two complementary formulae suitable for numerically calculating the Minkowski
functionals. As an example we apply them to simulated Gaussian random fields
and compare the outcome to the analytically known results, demonstrating that
both are indeed well suited for numerical evaluation. The code used for
calculating all Minkowski functionals is available from the authors.Comment: 8 pages plus 1 figure; uses aaspp4.sty and flushrt.sty. Matches
version accepted for publication in Ap. J. Let
Tuberculosis in children in India-II: Chemotherapy for tuberculosis
Tubercle bacilli readily become resistant to the common
drugs, and resistant bacilli are more likely to proliferate if
they are present in the patient at the start of treatment. So
always use more than one drug. The only possible exception
is prophylaxis for an asymptomatic case with a normal
X-ray.
CAUTION! (1) Never give intermittent (twice or thrice
weekly) treatment unless every dose can be supervised by
a health worker. Daily treatment is usually mandatory.
(2) When you give more than one drug, give them both at the
same time, so that high blood levels coincide; do not give
one drug daily and the other drug less often.
THE DOSES of the commonly used drugs for daily and intermittent
treatment in children and adults are:
lsoniazid (H) 5 mg/kg/24 hours if he is moderately ill and
10 mg/kg/24 hours if he is severely ill. The dose for a twice
weekly course is 15 mg/kg.
CAUTION! Opinions on the dose of isoniazid vary. Some
consider 10 mg/kg/24 hours too much for an Indian child
and always give 5 mg.
Rifampicin (R) 10 mg/kg/24 hours, or 10 mg/kg twice
weekly.
Pyrazinamide (Z) 35 mg/kg/24 hours, 75 mg/kg twice
weekly or 50 mg/kg thrice weekly, is an important drug for
short course treatment, so try to include it whenever it is
mentioned in the regimes below.
Streptomycin (S) 10-20 mg/kg/24 hours, or 40 mg/kg
twice weekly, to a total of not more than 0.75 g. Streptomycin
is painful, so avoid it if you can. If you give it, inject in different
places each day, because repeated injections into the
same site are painful.
Ethambutol (E) 25 mg/kg/24 hours for 2 months, then
15 mg/kg/24 hours. Avoid ethambutol in younger children
(under 12); they are unable to complain of the early
symptoms of retrobulbar neuritis (blindness). Thiacetazone (T) 4 mg/kg/24 hours to a maximum Of
150 mg; unsuitable for intermittent treatment
Tuberculosis in children in India-I
Tuberculosis is different in children. It involves many
organs, instead of being the predominantly respiratory
disease that it usually is in adults. Fortunately, it readily
responds to treatment–if you diagnose it early enough
and treat it for long enough! This is the problem. Unfortunately,
tuberculosis causes such non-specific
symptoms and signs, and you are so seldom able to isolate
bacilli, that you may never be sure of the diagnosis. Even
experts sometimes disagree. In India particularly, it is a
disease of the poorest of the poor, but even in them it
causes only a small proportion of their burden of morbidity.
The great problem is to reach those infected.
Of every thousand Indians, seven children and about
twenty adults have active tuberculosis, and five of these
adults are sputum positive. Only about half the 9 million
in the community at any one time are ever diagnosed, and
of these only about 13% complete their treatment, so
there is a huge pool of infectious cases, half a million of
whom die each year. Fortunately, the incidence of tuberculosis
among children reporting to hospital is slowly
decreasing, probably largely due to improved coverage
with BCG
High prevalence of bronchiectasis is linked to HTLV-1-associated inflammatory disease.
BACKGROUND: Human T-lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1), a retrovirus, is the causative agent of HTLV-1-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) and adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATLL). The reported association with pulmonary disease such as bronchiectasis is less certain. METHODS: A retrospective case review of a HTLV-1 seropositive cohort attending a national referral centre. The cohort was categorised into HTLV-1 symptomatic patients (SPs) (ATLL, HAM/TSP, Strongyloidiasis and HTLV associated inflammatory disease (HAID)) and HTLV-1 asymptomatic carriers (ACs). The cohort was reviewed for diagnosis of bronchiectasis. RESULT: 34/246 ACs and 30/167 SPs had been investigated for respiratory symptoms by computer tomography (CT) with productive cough +/- recurrent chest infections the predominant indications. Bronchiectasis was diagnosed in one AC (1/246) and 13 SPs (2 HAID, 1 ATLL, 10 HAM/TSP) (13/167, RR 19.2 95 % CI 2.5-14.5, p = 0.004) with high resolution CT. In the multivariate analysis ethnicity (p = 0.02) and disease state (p < 0.001) were independent predictors for bronchiectasis. The relative risk of bronchiectasis in SPs was 19.2 (95 % CI 2.5-14.5, p = 0.004) and in HAM/TSP patients compared with all other categories 8.4 (95 % CI 2.7-26.1, p = 0.0002). Subjects not of African/Afro-Caribbean ethnicity had an increased prevalence of bronchiectasis (RR 3.45 95 % 1.2-9.7, p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Bronchiectasis was common in the cohort (3.4 %). Risk factors were a prior diagnosis of HAM/TSP and ethnicity but not HTLV-1 viral load, age and gender. The spectrum of HTLV-associated disease should now include bronchiectasis and HTLV serology should be considered in patients with unexplained bronchiectasis
Thyroid-Hormone–Disrupting Chemicals: Evidence for Dose-Dependent Additivity or Synergism
Endocrine disruption from environmental contaminants has been linked to a broad spectrum of adverse outcomes. One concern about endocrine-disrupting xenobiotics is the potential for additive or synergistic (i.e., greater-than-additive) effects of mixtures. A short-term dosing model to examine the effects of environmental mixtures on thyroid homeostasis has been developed. Prototypic thyroid-disrupting chemicals (TDCs) such as dioxins, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and poly-brominated diphenyl ethers have been shown to alter thyroid hormone homeostasis in this model primarily by up-regulating hepatic catabolism of thyroid hormones via at least two mechanisms. Our present effort tested the hypothesis that a mixture of TDCs will affect serum total thyroxine (T(4)) concentrations in a dose-additive manner. Young female Long-Evans rats were dosed via gavage with 18 different polyyhalogenated aromatic hydrocarbons [2 dioxins, 4 dibenzofurans, and 12 PCBs, including dioxin-like and non-dioxin-like PCBs] for 4 consecutive days. Serum total T(4) was measured via radioimmunoassay in samples collected 24 hr after the last dose. Extensive dose–response functions (based on seven to nine doses per chemical) were determined for individual chemicals. A mixture was custom synthesized with the ratio of chemicals based on environmental concentrations. Serial dilutions of this mixture ranged from approximately background levels to 100-fold greater than background human daily intakes. Six serial dilutions of the mixture were tested in the same 4-day assay. Doses of individual chemicals that were associated with a 30% TH decrease from control (ED(30)), as well as predicted mixture outcomes were calculated using a flexible single-chemical-required method applicable to chemicals with differing dose thresholds and maximum-effect asymptotes. The single-chemical data were modeled without and with the mixture data to determine, respectively, the expected mixture response (the additivity model) and the experimentally observed mixture response (the empirical model). A likelihood-ratio test revealed statistically significant departure from dose additivity. There was no deviation from additivity at the lowest doses of the mixture, but there was a greater-than-additive effect at the three highest mixtures doses. At high doses the additivity model underpredicted the empirical effects by 2- to 3-fold. These are the first results to suggest dose-dependent additivity and synergism in TDCs that may act via different mechanisms in a complex mixture. The results imply that cumulative risk approaches be considered when assessing the risk of exposure to chemical mixtures that contain TDCs
Random Convex Hulls and Extreme Value Statistics
In this paper we study the statistical properties of convex hulls of
random points in a plane chosen according to a given distribution. The points
may be chosen independently or they may be correlated. After a non-exhaustive
survey of the somewhat sporadic literature and diverse methods used in the
random convex hull problem, we present a unifying approach, based on the notion
of support function of a closed curve and the associated Cauchy's formulae,
that allows us to compute exactly the mean perimeter and the mean area enclosed
by the convex polygon both in case of independent as well as correlated points.
Our method demonstrates a beautiful link between the random convex hull problem
and the subject of extreme value statistics. As an example of correlated
points, we study here in detail the case when the points represent the vertices
of independent random walks. In the continuum time limit this reduces to
independent planar Brownian trajectories for which we compute exactly, for
all , the mean perimeter and the mean area of their global convex hull. Our
results have relevant applications in ecology in estimating the home range of a
herd of animals. Some of these results were announced recently in a short
communication [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 103}, 140602 (2009)].Comment: 61 pages (pedagogical review); invited contribution to the special
issue of J. Stat. Phys. celebrating the 50 years of Yeshiba/Rutgers meeting
Measurement of 30-Centimeter Ion Thruster Discharge Cathode Erosion
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/76209/1/AIAA-22982-649.pd
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