1,626 research outputs found
High Energy Gamma-rays from Globular Clusters
It is expected that specific globular clusters can contain up to a hundred of
millisecond pulsars. These pulsars can accelerate leptons at the shock waves
originated in collisions of the pulsar winds and/or inside the pulsar
magnetospheres. Energetic leptons diffuse gradually through the globular
cluster comptonizing stellar and microwave background radiation. We calculate
the GeV-TeV -ray spectra for different models of injection of leptons
and parameters of the globular clusters assuming reasonable, of the order of
1%, efficiency of energy conversion from the pulsar winds into the relativistic
leptons. It is concluded that leptons accelerated in the globular cluster cores
should produce well localized -ray sources which are concentric with
these globular clusters. The results are shown for four specific globular
clusters (47 Tuc, Ter 5, M13, and M15), in which significant population of
millisecond pulsars have been already discovered. We argue that the best
candidates, which might be potentially detected by the present Cherenkov
telescopes and the planned satellite telescopes (AGILE, GLAST), are 47 Tuc on
the southern hemisphere, and M13 on the northern hemisphere. We conclude that
detection (or non-detection) of GeV-TeV -ray emission from GCs by these
instruments put important constraints on the models of acceleration of leptons
by millisecond pulsars.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted to MNRA
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On the interpretation of responses from hydrogel based distributed microbend fibre optic sensors
This contribution discuses the physicochemical aspects associated with the response of hydrogel based distributed fibre optic microbend sensors to different humidity conditions. We explain that the swelling of the hydrogel which leads to the observed change in the OTDR signal should be attributed to a change in the water potential of the hydrogel being at an equilibrium with the water potential of its immediate physicochemical environment. Since the water potential in the hydrogel matrix is the result of several equilibration processes from multiple species that are interacting in the immediate environment surrounding the sensor, the observed fibre deformation should be attributed to all of the components of the chemical potential. The work draws attention to the necessity to fully characterize the hydrogel system used in each sensing application. The analysis is of relevance to all types of fibre optic biosensors that utilize hydrogels in the measurement process
Recommended from our members
On the interpretation of responses from hydrogel based distributed microbend fibre optic sensors
This contribution discuses the physicochemical aspects associated with the response of hydrogel based distributed fibre optic microbend sensors to different humidity conditions. We explain that the swelling of the hydrogel which leads to the observed change in the OTDR signal should be attributed to a change in the water potential of the hydrogel being at an equilibrium with the water potential of its immediate physicochemical environment. Since the water potential in the hydrogel matrix is the result of several equilibration processes from multiple species that are interacting in the immediate environment surrounding the sensor, the observed fibre deformation should be attributed to all of the components of the chemical potential. The work draws attention to the necessity to fully characterize the hydrogel system used in each sensing application. The analysis is of relevance to all types of fibre optic biosensors that utilize hydrogels in the measurement process
The formation of ultra-compact dwarf galaxies and nucleated dwarf galaxies
Ultra compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) have similar properties as massive
globular clusters or the nuclei of nucleated galaxies. Recent observations
suggesting a high dark matter content and a steep spatial distribution within
groups and clusters provide new clues as to their origins. We perform
high-resolution N-body / smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations designed
to elucidate two possible formation mechanisms for these systems: the merging
of globular clusters in the centre of a dark matter halo, or the massively
stripped remnant of a nucleated galaxy. Both models produce density profiles as
well as the half light radii that can fit the observational constraints.
However, we show that the first scenario results to UCDs that are underluminous
and contain no dark matter. This is because the sinking process ejects most of
the dark matter particles from the halo centre. Stripped nuclei give a more
promising explanation, especially if the nuclei form via the sinking of gas,
funneled down inner galactic bars, since this process enhances the central dark
matter content. Even when the entire disk is tidally stripped away, the nucleus
stays intact and can remain dark matter dominated even after severe stripping.
Total galaxy disruption beyond the nuclei only occurs on certain orbits and
depends on the amount of dissipation during nuclei formation. By comparing the
total disruption of CDM subhaloes in a cluster potential we demonstrate that
this model also leads to the observed spatial distribution of UCDs which can be
tested in more detail with larger data sets.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, final version accepted for publication in MNRA
Detection of solvents using a distributed fibre optic sensor
A fibre optic sensor that is capable of distributed detection of liquid solvents is presented. Sensor interrogation using optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR) provides the capability of locating solvent spills to a precision of ±2 m over a total sensor length that may extend to 20 km
Modeling the disruption of the globular cluster Pal5 by Galactic tides
In order to understand the extended massive tidal tails of the globular
cluster Pal5, its very low mass and velocity dispersion, and its size, which is
much larger than the theoretical tidal radius, we performed more than 1000
N-body simulations. Tidal shocks at disk crossings near perigalacticon dominate
the evolution of extended low-concentration clusters, resulting in massive
tidal tails and often in a quick destruction of the cluster. The overlarge size
of Pal5 can be explained as the result of an expansion following the heating
induced by the last strong disk shock ~150Myr ago. The models can reproduce the
low observed velocity dispersion and the relative fractions of stars in the
tails and between the inner and outer parts of the tails. The tidal tails of
Pal5 show substantial structure not seen in our simulations. We argue that this
structure is probably caused by Galactic substructure, such as giant molecular
clouds, spiral arms, and dark-matter clumps.
Clusters initially larger than their theoretical tidal limit remain so,
because, after being shocked, they settle into a new equilibrium near
apogalacticon, where they are unaffected by the perigalactic tidal field. This
implies that, contrary to previous wisdom, globular clusters on eccentric
orbits may well remain super-tidally limited and hence vulnerable to strong
disk shocks, which dominate their evolution until destruction. Our simulations
unambiguously predict the destruction of Pal5 at its next disk crossing in
\~110Myr. This corresponds to only 1% of the cluster lifetime, suggesting that
many more similar systems could once have populated the inner parts of the
Milky Way, but have been transformed into debris streams by the Galactic tidal
field. (Abridged)Comment: accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journa
Robert Hadow : a case study of an appeaser
Historians differ over the origins of Britain's policy of appeasement, and many analyses concentrate on the objectives of policy using the growth of overseas obligations or more recent historical markers such as the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. The approach of this thesis involves relating appeasement to the personal beliefs and decisions of those responsible for foreign policy. By pin-pointing Robert Hadow, a First Secretary in the Foreign Office, as an example of an appeaser, such an approach demonstrates how intelligent and capable men in Britain fell victim to a policy which, in retrospect, appears blind and irrational. An examination of Hadow's fear of war, bias against bolshevism, and sympathy for the German minority in Czechoslovakia is made in this thesis through detailed research of Foreign Office despatches and Hadow's reports, memoranda, and personal correspondence. Much of this hitherto unpublished material sheds new light on the course of events from the collapse of the Kredit Anstalt in Austria to the outbreak of World War II. By following the course of Hadow's career during this period, this thesis seeks to explain the mentality that produced the foreign policy followed by Britain in the 1930s
Subcellular fractionation of primary chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells to monitor nuclear/ cytoplasmic protein trafficking
Nuclear export of macromolecules is often deregulated in cancer cells. Tumor suppressor proteins, such as p53, can be rendered inactive due to aberrant cellular localization disrupting their mechanism of action. The survival of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) cells, among other cancer cells, is assisted by the deregulation of nuclear to cytoplasmic shuttling, at least in part through deregulation of the transport receptor XPO1 and the constitutive activation of PI3K-mediated signaling pathways. It is essential to understand the role of individual proteins in the context of their intracellular location to gain a deeper understanding of the role of such proteins in the pathobiology of the disease. Furthermore, identifying processes that underlie cell stimulation and the mechanism of action of specific pharmacological inhibitors, in the context of subcellular protein trafficking, will provide a more comprehensive understanding of the mechanism of action. The protocol described here enables the optimization and subsequent efficient generation of nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions from primary chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. These fractions can be used to determine changes in protein trafficking between the nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions upon cell stimulation and drug treatment. The data can be quantified and presented in parallel with immunofluorescent images, thus providing robust and quantifiable data
Is the Fast Evolution Scenario for Virialized Compact Groups Really Compelling? The Role of a Dark Massive Group Halo
We report on results of N-body simulations aimed at testing the hypothesis
that galaxies in X-ray emitting (i.e., virialized) Compact Groups are not
tidally stripped when they are embedded in a common, massive, quiescent dark
matter halo. To disentangle the effects of interactions from spurious effects
due to an incorrect choice of the initial galaxy model configurations, these
have been chosen to be tidally-limited King spheres, representing systems in
quasi-equilibrium within the tidal field of the halo. The potential of the halo
has been assumed to be frozen and the braking due to dynamical friction
neglected. Our results confirm the hypothesis of low rates of tidal stripping
and suggest a scenario for virialized Compact Group evolution in their
quiescent phases with only very moderate tidally induced galaxy evolution can
be generally expected. This implies the group stability, provided that the
dynamical friction timescales in these systems are not much shorter than the
Hubble time. We discuss briefly this possibility, in particular taking account
of the similarity between the velocity dispersions of a typical virialized
Compact Groups and the internal velocity dispersion of typical member galaxies.
A number of puzzling observational data on Compact Groups can be easily
explained in this framework. Other observations would be better understood as
the result of enhanced merging activity in the proto-group environment, leading
to virialized Compact Group formation through mergers of lower mass halos, as
predicted by hierarchical scenarios of structure formation.Comment: 18 pages, 1 postscript file, 2 tables, to be published in ApJLet
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