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Chandra Observations of A 1.9 Kpc Separation Double X-Ray Source in A Candidate Dual Active Galactic Nucleus Galaxy At Z=0.16
We report Chandra observations of a double X-ray source in the z = 0.1569 galaxy SDSS J171544.05+600835.7. The galaxy was initially identified as a dual active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidate based on the double-peaked [O III] lambda 5007 emission lines, with a line-of-sight velocity separation of 350 km s(-1), in its Sloan Digital Sky Survey spectrum. We used the Kast Spectrograph at Lick Observatory to obtain two long-slit spectra of the galaxy at two different position angles, which reveal that the two Type 2 AGN emission components have not only a velocity offset, but also a projected spatial offset of 1.9 h(70)(-1) kpc on the sky. Chandra/ACIS observations of two X-ray sources with the same spatial offset and orientation as the optical emission suggest that the galaxy most likely contains Compton-thick dual AGNs, although the observations could also be explained by AGN jets. Deeper X-ray observations that reveal Fe K lines, if present, would distinguish between the two scenarios. The observations of a double X-ray source in SDSS J171544.05+600835.7 are a proof of concept for a new, systematic detection method that selects promising dual AGN candidates from ground-based spectroscopy that exhibits both velocity and spatial offsets in the AGN emission features.W.J. McDonald Postdoctoral FellowshipCollege of Natural SciencesDepartment of Astronomy at the University of Texas at AustinMcDonald ObservatoryU.S. Department of Energy DE-AC02-76SF00515Astronom
Medicaid Policy Changes in Kentucky Under the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005: Implementation Issues and Remaining Challenges
Describes the implementation and impact of 2006 reforms, including targeted benefit packages, increased cost sharing, soft service limits, rewarding healthy behaviors, premium assistance, and disease management. Outlines contributing factors and barriers
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The septin cytoskeleton facilitates membrane retraction during motility and blebbing.
Increasing evidence supports a critical role for the septin cytoskeleton at the plasma membrane during physiological processes including motility, formation of dendritic spines or cilia, and phagocytosis. We sought to determine how septins regulate the plasma membrane, focusing on this cytoskeletal element's role during effective amoeboid motility. Surprisingly, septins play a reactive rather than proactive role, as demonstrated during the response to increasing hydrostatic pressure and subsequent regulatory volume decrease. In these settings, septins were required for rapid cortical contraction, and SEPT6-GFP was recruited into filaments and circular patches during global cortical contraction and also specifically during actin filament depletion. Recruitment of septins was also evident during excessive blebbing initiated by blocking membrane trafficking with a dynamin inhibitor, providing further evidence that septins are recruited to facilitate retraction of membranes during dynamic shape change. This function of septins in assembling on an unstable cortex and retracting aberrantly protruding membranes explains the excessive blebbing and protrusion observed in septin-deficient T cells
Duality in linearized gravity
We show that duality transformations of linearized gravity in four
dimensions, i.e., rotations of the linearized Riemann tensor and its dual into
each other, can be extended to the dynamical fields of the theory so as to be
symmetries of the action and not just symmetries of the equations of motion.
Our approach relies on the introduction of two "superpotentials", one for the
spatial components of the spin-2 field and the other for their canonically
conjugate momenta. These superpotentials are two-index, symmetric tensors. They
can be taken to be the basic dynamical fields and appear locally in the action.
They are simply rotated into each other under duality. In terms of the
superpotentials, the canonical generator of duality rotations is found to have
a Chern-Simons like structure, as in the Maxwell case.Comment: 10 pages; introduction rewritten and references adde
On the classical central charge
In the canonical formulation of a classical field theory, symmetry properties
are encoded in the Poisson bracket algebra, which may have a central term.
Starting from this well understood canonical structure, we derive the related
Lagrangian form of the central term.Comment: 23 pages, RevTeX, no figures; introduction improved, a few references
adde
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