13 research outputs found

    Venezuela's humanitarian crisis, resurgence of vector-borne diseases, and implications for spillover in the region.

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    In the past 5-10 years, Venezuela has faced a severe economic crisis, precipitated by political instability and declining oil revenue. Public health provision has been affected particularly. In this Review, we assess the impact of Venezuela's health-care crisis on vector-borne diseases, and the spillover into neighbouring countries. Between 2000 and 2015, Venezuela witnessed a 359% increase in malaria cases, followed by a 71% increase in 2017 (411 586 cases) compared with 2016 (240 613). Neighbouring countries, such as Brazil, have reported an escalating trend of imported malaria cases from Venezuela, from 1538 in 2014 to 3129 in 2017. In Venezuela, active Chagas disease transmission has been reported, with seroprevalence in children (<10 years), estimated to be as high as 12·5% in one community tested (n=64). Dengue incidence increased by more than four times between 1990 and 2016. The estimated incidence of chikungunya during its epidemic peak is 6975 cases per 100 000 people and that of Zika virus is 2057 cases per 100 000 people. The re-emergence of many vector-borne diseases represents a public health crisis in Venezuela and has the possibility of severely undermining regional disease elimination efforts. National, regional, and global authorities must take action to address these worsening epidemics and prevent their expansion beyond Venezuelan borders

    C/O Ratios and the Formation of Wide-separation Exoplanets

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    The gas and solid-state C/O ratios provide context to potentially link the atmospheric composition of planets to that of the natal disk. We provide a synthesis of extant estimates of the gaseous C/O and C/H ratios in planet-forming disks obtained primarily through analysis of Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations. These estimates are compared to atmospheric abundances of wide-separation (>10 au) gas giants. The resolved disk gas C/O ratios, from seven systems, generally exhibit C/O ≥ 1 with subsolar, or depleted, carbon content. In contrast, wide-separation gas giants have atmospheric C/O ratios that cluster near or slightly above the presumed stellar value with a range of elemental C/H. From the existing disk composition, we infer that the solid-state millimeter/centimeter-sized pebbles have a total C/O ratio (solid cores and ices) that is solar (stellar) in content. We explore simple models that reconstruct the exoplanet atmospheric composition from the disk, while accounting for silicate cloud formation in the planet atmosphere. If wide-separation planets formed via the core-accretion mechanism, they must acquire their metals from pebble or planetesimal accretion. Further, the dispersion in giant planet C/H content is best matched by a disk composition with modest and variable factors of carbon depletion. An origin of the wide-separation gas giants via gravitational instability cannot be ruled out, as stellar C/O ratios should natively form in this scenario. However, the variation in planet metallicity with a stellar C/O ratio potentially presents challenges to these models

    High-contrast JWST-MIRI Spectroscopy of Planet-forming Disks for the JDISC Survey

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    The JWST Disk Infrared Spectral Chemistry Survey (JDISCS) aims to understand the evolution of the chemistry of inner protoplanetary disks using the Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). With a growing sample of >30 disks, the survey implements a custom method to calibrate the MIRI Medium Resolution Spectrometer (MRS) to contrasts of better than 1:300 across its 4.9–28 μ m spectral range. This is achieved using observations of Themis family asteroids as precise empirical reference sources. The high spectral contrast enables precise retrievals of physical parameters, searches for rare molecular species and isotopologues, and constraints on the inventories of carbon- and nitrogen-bearing species. JDISCS also offers significant improvements to the MRS wavelength and resolving power calibration. We describe the JDISCS calibrated data and demonstrate their quality using observations of the disk around the solar-mass young star FZ Tau. The FZ Tau MIRI spectrum is dominated by strong emission from warm water vapor. We show that the water and CO line emission originates from the disk surface and traces a range of gas temperatures of ∼500–1500 K. We retrieve parameters for the observed CO and H _2 O lines and show that they are consistent with a radial distribution represented by two temperature components. A high water abundance of n (H _2 O) ∼ 10 ^−4 fills the disk surface at least out to the 350 K isotherm at 1.5 au. We search the FZ Tau environs for extended emission, detecting a large (radius of ∼300 au) ring of emission from H _2 gas surrounding FZ Tau, and discuss its origin

    Taller de Instrumento I - MS197 - 202102

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    Taller de Instrumento I es un curso práctico dirigido a los estudiantes de segundo ciclo de la carrera de música. Se dicta de manera individual y se fundamenta en la ejecución de un instrumento musical a partir de la aplicación de elementos teóricos del lenguaje musical tales como el ritmo, melodía y armonía profundizando en 1las escalas y triadas, el ejercicio de la lectura musical instrumental, y la interpretación de géneros musicales peruanos y contemporáneos. El estudiante puede escoger uno de los siguientes instrumentos que ofrece la carrera: guitarra, voz, batería, percusión, piano, bajo, violín, trompeta, trombón, saxofón. El curso se dicta en nivel 1 y trabaja una competencia específica: Destreza musical sobre el instrumento, tiene como prerrequisito el curso Clínica y Ensamble y es requisito para Taller de Instrumento II. El propósito del curso es dar al estudiante una base sólida para la ejecución instrumental, a partir del trabajo técnico, desarrollo de un repertorio y aplicación de los fundamentos musicales en distintos géneros musicales contemporáneos

    Taller de Instrumento II - MS198 - 202101

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    Taller de Instrumento II es un curso práctico dirigido a los estudiantes de tercer ciclo de la carrera de música. Se dicta de manera individual y se fundamenta en la ejecución de un instrumento musical a partir de la aplicación de elementos teóricos del lenguaje musical tales como el ritmo, melodía y armonía profundizando en los modos de la escala mayor, las cuatriadas, el ejercicio de la lectura musical instrumental y la interpretación de géneros 1musicales peruanos y contemporáneos. El propósito del curso es dar al estudiante una base sólida para la ejecución instrumental a partir del trabajo técnico, el desarrollo de un repertorio y la aplicación de los fundamentos técnicos de ejecución en diversos géneros musicales contemporáneos. El curso se dicta en nivel 1 y trabaja dos competencias específicas: Destreza musical sobre el instrumento y destreza musical sobre el lenguaje musical. Tiene como prerrequisito el curso Taller de Instrumento I y Lectura y Entrenamiento Auditivo II. Es requisito para Taller de Instrumento III

    Venezuela's humanitarian crisis, resurgence of vector-borne diseases, and implications for spillover in the region

    No full text
    In the past 5–10 years, Venezuela has faced a severe economic crisis, precipitated by political instability and declining oil revenue. Public health provision has been affected particularly. In this Review, we assess the impact of Venezuela's health-care crisis on vector-borne diseases, and the spillover into neighbouring countries. Between 2000 and 2015, Venezuela witnessed a 359% increase in malaria cases, followed by a 71% increase in 2017 (411 586 cases) compared with 2016 (240 613). Neighbouring countries, such as Brazil, have reported an escalating trend of imported malaria cases from Venezuela, from 1538 in 2014 to 3129 in 2017. In Venezuela, active Chagas disease transmission has been reported, with seroprevalence in children ( less than 10 years), estimated to be as high as 12·5% in one community tested (n=64). Dengue incidence increased by more than four times between 1990 and 2016. The estimated incidence of chikungunya during its epidemic peak is 6975 cases per 100 000 people and that of Zika virus is 2057 cases per 100 000 people. The re-emergence of many vector-borne diseases represents a public health crisis in Venezuela and has the possibility of severely undermining regional disease elimination efforts. National, regional, and global authorities must take action to address these worsening epidemics and prevent their expansion beyond Venezuelan borders. © 2019 Elsevier Lt
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