659 research outputs found
A closer look at the X-ray transient XTE J1908+094: identification of two new near-infrared candidate counterparts
We had reported in Chaty, Mignani, Israel (2002) on the near-infrared (NIR)
identification of a possible counterpart to the black hole candidate XTE
J1908+094 obtained with the ESO/NTT. Here, we present new, follow-up, CFHT
adaptive optics observations of the XTE J1908+094 field, which resolved the
previously proposed counterpart in two objects separated by about 0.8".
Assuming that both objects are potential candidate counterparts, we derive that
the binary system is a low-mass system with a companion star which could be
either an intermediate/late type (A-K) main sequence star at a distance of 3-10
kpc, or a late-type (K) main sequence star at a distance of 1-3 kpc.
However, we show that the brighter of the two objects (J ~ 20.1, H ~ 18.7, K' ~
17.8) is more likely to be the real counterpart of the X-ray source. Its
position is more compatible with our astrometric solution, and colours and
magnitudes of the other object are not consistent with the lower limit of 3 kpc
derived independently from the peak bolometric flux of XTE J1908+094. Further
multi-wavelength observations of both candidate counterparts are crucial in
order to solve the pending identification.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS, 5 pages, 3 figure
Simplified Model of the Catastrophe Theory for the Landslides Study Modelo simplificado de la teoría de la catástrofe para estudiar los derrumbes
Abstract In many real world problems the symmetries of the system are only an approximation; the parameters involved in those systems generate an imperfection, where different bifurcation types converge, leading to critical situations called catastrophes. In the dynamic model of a bead on a wire in a inclined and suspended position, the system represents a catastrophic, condition that to be studied and analyzed, was necessary to use the bifurcation and catastrophe's theories 1 . The results can be compared with the real world, by the landslide qualitative model, caused by a winter situation. Key words: Bifurcation Theory, Catastrophe Theory, Dynamic Systems, Fixed Points, Non-Linear, Stability. Resumen En muchos problemas del mundo real, las simetrías del sistema son solo una aproximación; los parámetros involucrados en tales sistemas generan una imperfección, en la cual convergen diferentes tipos de bifurcación, conduciendo a situaciones críticas, denominadas catástrofes. En el modelo dinámico de una cuenta sobre un alambre en posición inclinada y suspendida, el sistema representa una condición catastrófica, que para estudiarse y analizarse fue necesario utilizar las teorías de la bifurcación y las catástrofes. Los resultados pueden compararse con el mundo real, mediante el modelo cualitativo del derrumbe, causado por una situación de invierno. Palabras clave: Teoría de la bifurcación, Teoría de la catástrofe, Sistemas dinámicos, Puntos fijos, No lineal, Estabilidad
Giant natural optical rotation from chiral electromagnons in a collinear antiferromagnet
In NiTeO with a chiral crystal structure, we report on a giant
natural optical rotation of the lowest-energy magnon. This polarization
rotation, as large as 140 deg/mm, corresponds to a path difference between
right and left circular polarizations that is comparable to the sample
thickness. Natural optical rotation, being a measure of structural chirality,
is highly unusual for long-wavelength magnons. The collinear antiferromagnetic
order of NiTeO makes this giant effect even more peculiar: Chirality of
the crystal structure does not affect the magnetic ground state but is strongly
manifested in the lowest excited state. We show that the dynamic
magnetoelectric effect, turning this magnon to a magnetic- and electric-dipole
active hybrid mode, generates the giant natural optical rotation. In finite
magnetic fields, it also leads to a strong optical magnetochiral effect.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
A major star formation region in the receding tip of the stellar Galactic bar
We present an analysis of the optical spectroscopy of 58 stars in the
Galactic plane at \arcdeg, where a prominent excess in the flux
distribution and star counts have been observed in several spectral regions, in
particular in the Two Micron Galactic Survey (TMGS) catalog. The sources were
selected from the TMGS, to have a magnitude brighter than +5 mag and be
within 2 degrees of the Galactic plane. More than 60% of the spectra correspond
to stars of luminosity class I, and a significant proportion of the remainder
are very late giants which would also be fast evolving. This very high
concentration of young sources points to the existence of a major star
formation region in the Galactic plane, located just inside the assumed origin
of the Scutum spiral arm. Such regions can form due to the concentrations of
shocked gas where a galactic bar meets a spiral arm, as is observed at the ends
of the bars of face-on external galaxies. Thus, the presence of a massive star
formation region is very strong supporting evidence for the presence of a bar
in our Galaxy.Comment: 13 pages (latex) + 4 figures (eps), accepted in ApJ Let
Association of Simulated COVID-19 Vaccination and Nonpharmaceutical Interventions With Infections, Hospitalizations, and Mortality
IMPORTANCE Vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 has the potential to significantly reduce transmission and COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. The relative importance of vaccination strategies and nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) is not well understood. OBJECTIVE To assess the association of simulated COVID-19 vaccine efficacy and coverage scenarios with and without NPIs with infections, hospitalizations, and deaths. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS An established agent-based decision analytical model was used to simulate COVID-19 transmission and progression from March 24, 2020, to September 23, 2021. The model simulated COVID-19 spread in North Carolina, a US state of 10.5 million people. A network of 1 017 720 agents was constructed from US Census data to represent the statewide population. EXPOSURES Scenarios of vaccine efficacy (50% and 90%), vaccine coverage (25%, 50%, and 75% at the end of a 6-month distribution period), and NPIs (reduced mobility, school closings, and use of face masks) maintained and removed during vaccine distribution. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Risks of infection from the start of vaccine distribution and risk differences comparing scenarios. Outcome means and SDs were calculated across replications. RESULTS In the worst-case vaccination scenario (50% efficacy, 25%coverage), a mean (SD) of 2 231 134 (117 867) new infections occurred after vaccination began with NPIs removed, and a mean (SD) of 799 949 (60 279) new infections occurred with NPIs maintained during 11 months. In contrast, in the best-case scenario (90% efficacy, 75%coverage), a mean (SD) of 527 409 (40 637) new infections occurred with NPIs removed and a mean (SD) of 450 575 (32 716) new infections occurred with NPIs maintained. With NPIs removed, lower efficacy (50%) and higher coverage (75%) reduced infection risk by a greater magnitude than higher efficacy (90%) and lower coverage (25%) compared with theworst-case scenario (mean [SD] absolute risk reduction, 13%[1%] and 8%[1%], respectively). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Simulation outcomes suggest that removing NPIs while vaccines are distributed may result in substantial increases in infections, hospitalizations, and deaths. Furthermore, as NPIs are removed, higher vaccination coverage with less efficacious vaccines can contribute to a larger reduction in risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection compared with more efficacious vaccines at lower coverage. These findings highlight the need for well-resourced and coordinated efforts to achieve high vaccine coverage and continued adherence to NPIs before many prepandemic activities can be resumed
Seroprevalence of Trypanosoma cruzi in Rural Ecuador and Clustering of Seropositivity within Households
We performed a cross-sectional study of Trypanosoma cruzi seroprevalence in 14 communities in three provinces of Ecuador and estimated the magnitude of the association of seropositive individuals within households. A total of 3,286 subjects from 997 households were included. Seroprevalence was 5.7%, 1.0%, and 3.6% in subjects in the Manabí, Guayas, and Loja provinces, respectively. Seroprevalence increased with increasing age in Manabí and Guayas, whereas in Loja, the highest prevalence occurred in children ≤ 10 years of age. In the coastal provinces, clustering of seropositives within households was not observed after adjustment for other household factors. However, in the Andean province of Loja, the odds of seropositivity were more than two times greater for an individual living in a household with another seropositive person. Our results indicate that transmission of T. cruzi is ongoing in Ecuador, although intensity of transmission and mechanisms of interaction between humans and the insect vectors of disease vary between geographic regions
Design S-N curves for old Portuguese and French riveted bridges connection based on statistical analyses
Maintenance of ancient road and railway metallic bridges has become a major concern for governmental agencies in the past few decades. Indeed, since the construction of these structures, between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, traffic conditions have evolved, both in weight and frequency. In the purpose to assess the remaining life of old metallic bridges, some critical structural details have been identified and associated to S-N curves in order to be used in damage estimation (using Palmgren-Miner’s rule for cumulative damage, for example). These constructional details are described by design rules of several European and North American standards, such as the Eurocode 3, BS 5400 and AASHTO standards. The particularity of ancient bridges is that hot riveted assemblies, commonly used for their construction, are not represented in most construction standards. Further experiences on the matter by numerous research teams have suggested detail category C71 from the Eurocode 3 as appropriate. In this paper, experimental data from double shear assemblies manufactures from three different metallic ancient bridges is used to identify, through a statistical analysis, the S-N curves that best fit this constructional detail.
Portuguese and French puddled iron bridges were considered.The authors of this paper thank the National Society of French Railways and the SciTech - Science and
Technology for Competitive and Sustainable Industries, R&D project NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000022 cofinanced by Programa Operacional Regional do Norte ("NORTE2020"), through Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER) for their collaboration and support during this research works. The authors also acknowledge the Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT) for the financial support through the post-doctoral grant SFRH/BPD/107825/2015
Fungal and Bacterial Loads: Noninvasive Inflammatory Bowel Disease Biomarkers for the Clinical Setting
Malaltia inflamatòria intestinal; Càrrega microbiana; PrediccióEnfermedad inflamatoria intestinal; Carga microbiana; PredicciónInflammatory bowel disease; Microbial load; PredictionMicrobiome sequence data have been used to characterize Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Based on these data, we have previously identified microbiomarkers at the genus level to predict CD and CD relapse. However, microbial load was underexplored as a potential biomarker in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Here, we sought to study the use of fungal and bacterial loads as biomarkers to detect both CD and UC and CD and UC relapse. We analyzed the fecal fungal and bacterial loads of 294 stool samples obtained from 206 participants using real-time PCR amplification of the ITS2 region and the 16S rRNA gene, respectively. We combined the microbial data with demographic and standard laboratory data to diagnose ileal or ileocolonic CD and UC and predict disease relapse using the random forest algorithm. Fungal and bacterial loads were significantly different between healthy relatives of IBD patients and nonrelated healthy controls, between CD and UC patients in endoscopic remission, and between UC patients in relapse and non-UC individuals. Microbial load data combined with demographic and standard laboratory data improved the performance of the random forest models by 18%, reaching an average area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.842 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.65 to 0.98), for IBD diagnosis and enhanced CD and UC discrimination and CD and UC relapse prediction. Our findings show that fecal fungal and bacterial loads could provide physicians with a noninvasive tool to discriminate disease subtypes or to predict disease flare in the clinical setting.
IMPORTANCE Next-generation sequence data analysis has allowed a better understanding of the pathophysiology of IBD, relating microbiome composition and functions to the disease. Microbiome composition profiling may provide efficient diagnosis and prognosis tools in IBD. However, the bacterial and fungal loads of the fecal microbiota are underexplored as potential biomarkers of IBD. Ulcerative colitis (UC) patients have higher fecal fungal and bacterial loads than patients with ileal or ileocolonic CD. CD patients who relapsed harbor more-unstable fungal and bacterial loads than those of relapsed UC patients. Fecal fungal and bacterial load data improved prediction performance by 18% for IBD diagnosis based solely on clinical data and enhanced CD and UC discrimination and prediction of CD and UC relapse. Combined with existing laboratory biomarkers such as fecal calprotectin and C-reactive protein (CRP), microbial loads may improve the diagnostic accuracy of IBD and of ileal CD and UC disease activity and prediction of UC and ileal CD clinical relapse.This work was funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III, grant PI17/00614, cofinanced by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and by the PERIS (SLT002/16). F. Casellas has received research funding from AbbVie, Ferring, MSD, Shire, and Zambon and speaker fees from AbbVie, Chiesi, Ferring, Gebro, MSD, Shire, Takeda, and Zambon. S. Vermeire has received grant support from AbbVie, MSD, Pfizer, J&J, and Takeda; received speaker fees from AbbVie, MSD, Takeda, Ferring, Dr. Falk Pharma, Hospira, Pfizer Inc., and Tillots; and served as a consultant for AbbVie, MSD, Takeda, Ferring, Genentech/Roche, Robarts clinical trials, Gilead, Celgene, Prometheus, Avaxia, Prodigest, Shire, Pfizer Inc, Galapagos, Mundipharma, Hospira, Celgene, Second Genome, and Janssen. C. Manichanh has received financial support for research from Danone
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