4,433 research outputs found
Total-evidence framework reveals complex morphological evolution in nightbirds (Strisores)
Strisores is a clade of neoavian birds that include diurnal aerial specialists such as swifts and hummingbirds, as well as several predominantly nocturnal lineages such as nightjars and potoos. Despite the use of genome-scale molecular datasets, the phylogenetic interrelationships among major strisorean groups remain controversial. Given the availability of next-generation sequence data for Strisores and the clade’s rich fossil record, we reassessed the phylogeny of Strisores by incorporating a large-scale sequence dataset with anatomical data from living and fossil strisoreans within a Bayesian total-evidence framework. Combined analyses of molecular and morphological data resulted in a phylogenetic topology for Strisores that is congruent with the findings of two recent molecular phylogenomic studies, supporting nightjars (Caprimulgidae) as the extant sister group of the remainder of Strisores. This total-evidence framework allowed us to identify morphological synapomorphies for strisorean clades previously recovered using molecular-only datasets. However, a combined analysis of molecular and morphological data highlighted strong signal conflict between sequence and anatomical data in Strisores. Furthermore, simultaneous analysis of molecular and morphological data recovered differing placements for some fossil taxa compared with analyses of morphological data under a molecular scaffold, highlighting the importance of analytical decisions when conducting morphological phylogenetic analyses of taxa with molecular phylogenetic data. We suggest that multiple strisorean lineages have experienced convergent evolution across the skeleton, obfuscating the phylogenetic position of certain fossils, and that many distinctive specializations of strisorean subclades were acquired early in their evolutionary history. Despite this apparent complexity in the evolutionary history of Strisores, our results provide fossil support for aerial foraging as the ancestral ecological strategy of Strisores, as implied by recent phylogenetic topologies derived from molecular data.Parts of this project were supported by Systematics Research Fund awards to A.C. and D.J.F. by the Linnean Society of London and the Systematics Association. D.J.F. also acknowledges support from the Isaac Newton Trust early career support scheme. Parts of this project were also funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program 2014–2018 under grant agreement 677774 (European Research Council [ERC] Starting Grant: TEMPO) to R.B.J.B. N.D.W. and M.J.B. received Smithsonian Institution support through the Predoctoral Fellowship Program (N.D.W.), the Frontiers in Phylogenetics Program, the Scholarly Studies Program, and the Consortium for Understanding and Sustaining a Biodiverse Planet
Photodissociation and the Morphology of HI in Galaxies
Young massive stars produce Far-UV photons which dissociate the molecular gas
on the surfaces of their parent molecular clouds. Of the many dissociation
products which result from this ``back-reaction'', atomic hydrogen \HI is one
of the easiest to observe through its radio 21-cm hyperfine line emission. In
this paper I first review the physics of this process and describe a simplified
model which has been developed to permit an approximate computation of the
column density of photodissociated \HI which appears on the surfaces of
molecular clouds. I then review several features of the \HI morphology of
galaxies on a variety of length scales and describe how photodissociation might
account for some of these observations. Finally, I discuss several consequences
which follow if this view of the origin of HI in galaxies continues to be
successful.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures in 8 files, invited review paper for the
conference "Penetrating Bars Through Masks of Cosmic Dust: The Hubble Tuning
Fork Strikes a New Note", South Africa, June 2004. Proceedings to be
published by Kluwer, eds. D.L. Block, K.C. Freeman, I. Puerari, R. Groess, &
E.K. Bloc
Wilson Lines and a Canonical Basis of SU(4) Heterotic Standard Models
The spontaneous breaking of SU(4) heterotic standard models by Z_3 x Z_3
Wilson lines to the MSSM with three right-handed neutrino supermultiplets and
gauge group SU(3)_C x SU(2)_L x U(1) x U(1) is explored. The two-dimensional
subspace of the Spin(10) Lie algebra that commutes with su(3)_C + su(2)_L is
analyzed. It is shown that there is a unique basis for which the initial soft
supersymmetry breaking parameters are uncorrelated and for which the U(1) x
U(1) field strengths have no kinetic mixing at any scale. If the Wilson lines
"turn on" at different scales, there is an intermediate regime with either a
left-right or a Pati-Salam type model. We compute their spectra directly from
string theory, and adjust the associated mass parameter so that all gauge
parameters exactly unify. A detailed analysis of the running gauge couplings
and soft gaugino masses is presented.Comment: 59 pages, 9 figure
Heterotic Line Bundle Standard Models
In a previous publication, arXiv:1106.4804, we have found 200 models from
heterotic Calabi-Yau compactifications with line bundles, which lead to
standard models after taking appropriate quotients by a discrete symmetry and
introducing Wilson lines. In this paper, we construct the resulting standard
models explicitly, compute their spectrum including Higgs multiplets, and
analyze some of their basic properties. After removing redundancies we find
about 400 downstairs models, each with the precise matter spectrum of the
supersymmetric standard model, with one, two or three pairs of Higgs doublets
and no exotics of any kind. In addition to the standard model gauge group, up
to four Green-Schwarz anomalous U(1) symmetries are present in these models,
which constrain the allowed operators in the four-dimensional effective
supergravity. The vector bosons associated to these anomalous U(1) symmetries
are massive. We explicitly compute the spectrum of allowed operators for each
model and present the results, together with the defining data of the models,
in a database of standard models accessible at
http://www-thphys.physics.ox.ac.uk/projects/CalabiYau/linebundlemodels/index.html.
Based on these results we analyze elementary phenomenological properties. For
example, for about 200 models all dimension four and five proton decay
violating operators are forbidden by the additional U(1) symmetries.Comment: 55 pages, Latex, 3 pdf figure
Parents’ experiences of health visiting for children with Down syndrome
© MA Healthcare Limited.Children with Down syndrome have an increased likelihoodof experiencing serious health conditions. Health visitors canhave an important role in monitoring and promoting healthand development for young children with Down syndrome.This study aimed to explore parents’ experiences of healthvisiting services for children with Down syndrome. Twentyfour parents of children with Down syndrome aged 0–5 yearscompleted a brief questionnaire about the number and natureof visits from health visitors in the previous 12 months andtheir support needs. Some parents commented that otherprofessionals met the needs of their child, whereas others saidthat they would like more advice and support from healthvisitors. A further exploration of broader health serviceprovision, including health visiting, for young children withDown syndrome is needed.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Disease flare of ankylosing spondylitis presenting as reactive arthritis with seropositivity: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Concurrent rheumatoid factor seropositivity is occasionally detected in ankylosing spondylitis and often causes confusion in clinical routine. Overlap between various seronegative arthritides is a known but uncommon association. Differentiation of spondyloarthropathy from rheumatoid arthritis is important, since the natural history, complications, treatments and prognosis of the two diseases differ significantly.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>Here, we report the case of a 47-year-old Sri Lankan man who had a long history of intermittent joint pains worsening following a recent episode of self-resolving non-bloody diarrhea. Subsequently, he developed a skin rash suggestive of keratoderma blenorrhagica and circinate balanitis. He had classical radiological evidence of ankylosing spondylosis (previously undiagnosed) associated with human leukocyte antigen B27 antigen, but was positive for rheumatoid factor.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>A disease flare of ankylosing spondylitis prompted by a minor diarrheal illness showing well documented features of reactive arthritis is remarkable. The prognostic implications of seropositivity in spondyloarthritis are discussed.</p
G-flux and Spectral Divisors
We propose a construction of G-flux in singular elliptic Calabi-Yau fourfold
compactifications of F-theory, which in the local limit allow a spectral cover
description. The main tool of construction is the so-called spectral divisor in
the resolved Calabi-Yau geometry, which in the local limit reduces to the Higgs
bundle spectral cover. We exemplify the workings of this in the case of an E_6
singularity by constructing the resolved geometry, the spectral divisor and in
the local limit, the spectral cover. The G-flux constructed with the spectral
divisor is shown to be equivalent to the direct construction from suitably
quantized linear combinations of holomorphic surfaces in the resolved geometry,
and in the local limit reduces to the spectral cover flux.Comment: 30 page
Patients' perceptions of the potential of breathing training for asthma: a qualitative study.
Poor symptom control is common in asthma. Breathing training exercises may be an effective adjunct to medication; it is therefore important to understand facilitators and barriers to uptake of breathing training exercises
Heavy-to-light baryonic form factors at large recoil
We analyze heavy-to-light baryonic form factors at large recoil and derive
the scaling behavior of these form factors in the heavy quark limit. It is
shown that only one universal form factor is needed to parameterize Lambda_b to
p and Lambda_b to Lambda matrix elements in the large recoil limit of light
baryons, while hadronic matrix elements of Lambda_b to Sigma transition vanish
in the large energy limit of Sigma baryon due to the space-time parity
symmetry. The scaling law of the soft form factor eta(P^{\prime} \cdot v),
P^{\prime} and v being the momentum of nucleon and the velocity of Lambda_b
baryon, responsible for Lambda_b to p transitions is also derived using the
nucleon distribution amplitudes in leading conformal spin. In particular, we
verify that this scaling behavior is in full agreement with that from
light-cone sum rule approach in the heavy-quark limit. With these form factors,
we further investigate the Lambda baryon polarization asymmetry alpha in
Lambda_b to Lambda gamma and the forward-backward asymmetry A_{FB} in Lambda_b
to Lambda l^{+} l^{-}. Both two observables (alpha and A_{FB}) are independent
of hadronic form factors in leading power of 1/m_b and in leading order of
alpha_s. We also extend the analysis of hadronic matrix elements for Omega_b to
Omega transitions to rare Omega_b to Omega gamma and Omega_b to Omega l^{+}
l^{-} decays and find that radiative Omega_b to Omega gamma decay is probably
the most promising FCNC b to s radiative baryonic decay channel. In addition,
it is interesting to notice that the zero-point of forward-backward asymmetry
of Omega_b to Omega l^{+} l^{-} is the same as the one for Lambda_b to Lambda
l^{+} l^{-} to leading order accuracy provided that the form factors
\bar{\zeta}_i (i=3, 4, 5) are numerically as small as indicated from the quark
model.Comment: 19 page
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