2,936 research outputs found
Las deformidades vertebrales a través de las artes plásticas
Si la medicina constituye el primero y más poderoso
medio de intervención del hombre con respecto
a su vulnerable naturaleza, el arte es también el
primero y más poderoso instrumento que el hombre
ha podido encontrar para expresar su propia condición.
Con los años el hombre ha evolucionado, y con
él la medicina y el arte. El arte trabaja sobre el mismo
motivo que la medicina: el hombre. De ahí el extraordinario
valor, desde el punto de vista ontológico,
de muchas obras de arte, que jamás habrían sido
realizadas si la enfermedad y el ejercicio del arte
médico no les hubiera creado el tema; ya no tiene
sentido la separación entre ciencias del espíritu y
ciencias de la naturaleza para el mejor entendimiento
del ser humano, porque lo correcto es considerar
que los conocimientos médico-científicos y
artístico-plásticos se unen en el hombre
Echoes of multiple outbursts of Sagittarius A* revealed by Chandra
The relatively rapid spatial and temporal variability of the X-ray radiation
from some molecular clouds near the Galactic center shows that this emission
component is due to the reflection of X-rays generated by a source that was
luminous in the past, most likely the central supermassive black hole,
Sagittarius A*. Studying the evolution of the molecular cloud reflection
features is therefore a key element to reconstruct Sgr A*'s past activity. The
aim of the present work is to study this emission on small angular scales in
order to characterize the source outburst on short time scales. We use Chandra
high-resolution data collected from 1999 to 2011 to study the most rapid
variations detected so far, those of clouds between 5' and 20' from Sgr A*
towards positive longitudes. Our systematic spectral-imaging analysis of the
reflection emission, notably of the Fe Kalpha line at 6.4 keV and its
associated 4-8 keV continuum, allows us to characterize the variations down to
15" angular scale and 1-year time scale. We reveal for the first time abrupt
variations of few years only and in particular a short peaked emission, with a
factor of 10 increase followed by a comparable decrease, that propagates along
the dense filaments of the Bridge cloud. This 2-year peaked feature contrasts
with the slower 10-year linear variations we reveal in all the other molecular
structures of the region. Based on column density constraints, we argue that
these two different behaviors are unlikely to be due to the same illuminating
event. The variations are likely due to a highly variable active phase of Sgr
A* sometime within the past few hundred years, characterized by at least two
luminous outbursts of a few-year time scale and during which the Sgr A*
luminosity went up to at least 10^39 erg/s.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The Intrinsic Two-Dimensional Size of Sagittarius A*
We report the detection of the two-dimensional structure of the radio source
associated with the Galactic Center black hole, Sagittarius A*, obtained from
Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) observations at a wavelength of 7mm. The
intrinsic source is modeled as an elliptical Gaussian with major axis size 35.4
x 12.6 R_S in position angle 95 deg East of North. This morphology can be
interpreted in the context of both jet and accretion disk models for the radio
emission. There is supporting evidence in large angular-scale multi-wavelength
observations for both source models for a preferred axis near 95 deg. We also
place a maximum peak-to-peak change of 15% in the intrinsic major axis size
over five different epochs. Three observations were triggered by detection of
near infrared (NIR) flares and one was simultaneous with a large X-ray flare
detected by NuSTAR. The absence of simultaneous and quasi-simultaneous flares
indicates that not all high energy events produce variability at radio
wavelengths. This supports the conclusion that NIR and X-ray flares are
primarily due to electron excitation and not to an enhanced accretion rate onto
the black hole.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
Relación entre la orientación del cotilo y los cambios radiológicos evolutivos tras prótesis total de cadera tipo Charnley-Müller
Los autores realizan un estudio retrospectivo de 87 cotilos cementados, para
averiguar si la posición del implante determina alteraciones radiológicas alrededor de este cotilo
en la evolución de la prótesis total de cadera. Se valoraron una serie de parámetros radiológicos:
protusión acetabular del cotilo, osteoporosis regional periacetabular, presencia de
imágenes quísticas alrededor del acetábulo, presencia de esclerosis subcondral, calcificaciones
yuxtacotiloideas y migración vertical del cotilo. Estos parámetros se relacionaron con los
ángulos de inclinación y anteversión del cotilo. En los resultados obtenidos, destaca la relación
estadísticamente significativa entre la posición del cotilo con la presencia de protusión acetabular,
imágenes quísticas y osteoporosis regional y esclerosis subcondral periacetabulares. La
posición «idónea» para este cotilo cementado parece ser de 35° a 45° el ángulo de inclinación
y de 15° el ángulo de anteversiónEighty-seven cemented total hip prothesis were retrospectively reviewed in order
to ascertain whether the position of the acetabular implant induces radiographic changes around
the cup during follow-up. Several radiographic parameters were evaluated: acetabular protrusión
of the cup, periacetabular local osteoporosis, cystic images, subchondral sclerosis, presence
of calcifications around the cup and vertical displacement of the cup. These findings were correlated
with the inclination and anteversion angles of the cup. A statistically significant correlation
was found between the position of the cup the following parameters: degree of acetabular
protrusion, presence of cystic images, local osteoporosis and periacetabular subchondral sclerosis.
The ideal position of the cemented cup results to be of 35-45° inclination angle and 15° anteversion
angle
Modeling Variable Emission Lines in AGNs: Method and Application to NGC 5548
We present a new scheme for modeling the broad line region in active galactic
nuclei (AGNs). It involves photoionization calculations of a large number of
clouds, in several pre-determined geometries, and a comparison of the
calculated line intensities with observed emission line light curves. Fitting
several observed light curves simultaneously provides strong constraints on
model parameters such as the run of density and column density across the
nucleus, the shape of the ionizing continuum, and the radial distribution of
the emission line clouds. When applying the model to the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC
5548, we were able to reconstruct the light curves of four ultraviolet
emission-lines, in time and in absolute flux. This has not been achieved by any
previous work. We argue that the Balmer lines light curves, and possibly also
the MgII2798 light curve, cannot be tested in this scheme because of the
limitations of present-day photoionization codes. Our fit procedure can be used
to rule out models where the particle density scales as r^{-2}, where r is the
distance from the central source. The best models are those where the density
scales as r^{-1} or r^{-1.5}. We can place a lower limit on the column density
at a distance of 1 ld, of N_{col}(r=1) >~ 10^{23} cm^{-2} and limit the
particle density to be in the range of 10^{12.5}>N(r=1)>10^{11} cm^{-3}. We
have also tested the idea that the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the
ionizing continuum is changing with continuum luminosity. None of the
variable-shape SED tried resulted in real improvement over a constant SED case
although models with harder continuum during phases of higher luminosity seem
to fit better the observed spectrum. Reddening and/or different composition
seem to play a minor role, at least to the extent tested in this work.Comment: 12 pages, including 9 embedded EPS figures, accepted for publication
in Ap
A Rewriting Based Model for Probabilistic Distributed Object Systems
Concurrent and distributed systems have traditionally been modelled using nondeterministic transitions over configurations. The nondeterminism provides an abstraction over scheduling, network delays, failures and randomization. However a probabilistic model can capture these sources of nondeterminism more precisely and enable statistical analysis, simulations and reasoning. We have developed a general semantic framework for probabilistic systems using probabilistic rewriting. Our framework also allows nondeterminism in the system. In this paper, we briefly describe the framework and its application to concurrent object based systems such as actors. We also identify a su#ciently expressive fragment of the general framework and describe its implementation. The concepts are illustrated by a simple client-server example
Towards the specification and verification of modal properties for structured systems
System specification formalisms should come with suitable property specification languages and effective verification tools. We sketch a framework for the verification of quantified temporal properties of systems with dynamically evolving structure. We consider visual specification formalisms like graph transformation systems (GTS) where program states are modelled as graphs, and the program
behavior is specified by graph transformation rules. The state space of a GTS can be represented as a graph transition system (GTrS), i.e. a transition system with states and transitions labelled, respectively, with a graph, and with a partial morphism representing the evolution of state components. Unfortunately, GTrSs are prohibitively large or infinite even for simple systems, making verification intractable and hence calling for appropriate abstraction techniques
Spitzer/IRS Observations of Seyfert 1.8s and 1.9s: A Comparison with Seyfert 1s and Seyfert 2s
We present Spitzer Space Telescope mid-infrared spectra of 12 Seyfert 1.8 and
1.9 galaxies over the 5-38 um region. We compare the spectral characteristics
of this sample to those of 58 Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 galaxies from the Spitzer
archives. An analysis of the spectral shapes, the silicate 10 um feature and
the emission line fluxes have enabled us to characterize the mid-IR properties
of Seyfert 1.8/1.9s. We find that the equivalent widths of the 10 um silicate
feature are generally weak in all Seyfert galaxies, as previously reported by
several studies. The few Seyfert galaxies in this sample that show deep 10 um
silicate absorption features are highly inclined and/or merging galaxies. It is
likely that these absorption features originate primarily in the dusty
interstellar medium of the host galaxy rather than in a dusty torus on parsec
scales close to the central engine. We find that the equivalent width of the
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) band at 6.2 um correlates strongly with
the 20-30 um spectral index. Either of these quantities are good indicators of
the amount of starburst contribution to the mid-IR spectra. The spectra of
Seyfert 1.8 and 1.9s are dominated by these starburst features, similar to most
Seyfert 2s. They show strong PAH bands and a strong red continuum toward 30 um.
The strengths of the high-ionization forbidden narrow emission lines [O IV]
25.89 um, [Ne III] 15.56 um and [Ne V] 14.32 um relative to [Ne II] 12.81 um
are weaker in Seyfert 1.8/1.9s and Seyfert 2s as compared to Seyfert 1s. The
weakness of high-ionization lines in Seyfert 1.8-1.9s is suggestive of
intrinsically weak active galactic nuclei (AGN) continua, and/or stronger star
formation activity leading to enhanced [Ne II]. We discuss the implications of
these observational results in the context of the Unified Model of AGN.Comment: 36 pages, 4 tables, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal, December 200
Obscuration in extremely luminous quasars
The spectral energy distributions and infrared (IR) spectra of a sample of
obscured AGNs selected in the mid-IR are modeled with recent clumpy torus
models to investigate the nature of the sources, the properties of the
obscuring matter, and dependencies on luminosity. The sample contains 21
obscured AGNs at z=1.3-3 discovered in the largest Spitzer surveys (SWIRE,
NDWFS, & FLS) by means of their extremely red IR to optical colors. All sources
show the 9.7micron silicate feature in absorption and have extreme mid-IR
luminosities (L(6micron)~10^46 erg/s). The IR SEDs and spectra of 12 sources
are well reproduced with a simple torus model, while the remaining 9 sources
require foreground extinction from a cold dust component to reproduce both the
depth of the silicate feature and the near-IR emission from hot dust. The
best-fit torus models show a broad range of inclinations, with no preference
for the edge-on torus expected in obscured AGNs. Based on the unobscured QSO
mid-IR luminosity function, and on a color-selected sample of obscured and
unobscured IR sources, we estimate the surface densities of obscured and
unobscured QSOs at L(6micron)>10^12 Lsun, and z=1.3-3.0 to be about 17-22
deg^-2, and 11.7 deg^-2, respectively. Overall we find that ~35-41% of luminous
QSOs are unobscured, 37-40% are obscured by the torus, and 23-25% are obscured
by a cold absorber detached from the torus. These fractions constrain the torus
half opening angle to be ~67 deg. This value is significantly larger than found
for FIR selected samples of AGN at lower luminosity (~46 deg), supporting the
receding torus scenario. A far-IR component is observed in 8 objects. The
estimated far-IR luminosities associated with this component all exceed
3.3x10^12 Lsun, implying SFRs of 600-3000 Msun/yr. (Abridged)Comment: ApJ accepte
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