2,856 research outputs found
Positioning Children’s Voice in Clinical Trials Research: A New Model for Planning, Collaboration, and Reflection
Following the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, there has been considerable growth in research with children about health and services that affect them. Creative methods to engage with children have also been developed. One area where progress has been slower is the inclusion of children’s perspectives in qualitative research in the context of clinical trials or feasibility studies. Addressing this gap, this article discusses experiences of, and reflections on, the process of researching children’s views as part of a clinical feasibility study. The article considers what worked well and highlights remaining dilemmas. A new continuum of children’s engagement in research is presented, designed to assist researchers to make explicit the contingent demands on their research, and to suggest a range of techniques from within the broader fields of health, childhood studies, and education research that could be used to forward qualitative research in clinical contexts
Discovery of a 3.6-hr Eclipsing Luminous X-Ray Binary in the Galaxy NGC 4214
We report the discovery of an eclipsing X-ray binary with a 3.62-hr period
within 24" of the center of the dwarf starburst galaxy NGC 4214. The orbital
period places interesting constraints on the nature of the binary, and allows
for a few very different interpretations. The most likely possibility is that
the source lies within NGC 4214 and has an X-ray luminosity of up to 7 e38
ergs/s. In this case the binary may well be comprised of a naked He-burning
donor star with a neutron-star accretor, though a stellar-mass black-hole
accretor cannot be completely excluded. There is no obvious evidence for a
strong stellar wind in the X-ray orbital light curve that would be expected
from a massive He star; thus, the mass of the He star should be <3-4 solar
masses. If correct, this would represent a new class of very luminous X-ray
binary -- perhaps related to Cyg X-3. Other less likely possibilities include a
conventional low-mass X-ray binary that somehow manages to produce such a high
X-ray luminosity and is apparently persistent over an interval of years; or a
foreground AM Her binary of much lower luminosity that fortuitously lies in the
direction of NGC 4214. Any model for this system must accommodate the lack of
an optical counterpart down to a limiting magnitude of 22.6 in the visible.Comment: 7 pages, ApJ accepted versio
A Study of the Shortest-Period Planets Found With Kepler
We present the results of a survey aimed at discovering and studying
transiting planets with orbital periods shorter than one day
(ultra--short-period, or USP, planets), using data from the {\em Kepler}
spacecraft. We computed Fourier transforms of the photometric time series for
all 200,000 target stars, and detected transit signals based on the presence of
regularly spaced sharp peaks in the Fourier spectrum. We present a list of 106
USP candidates, of which 18 have not previously been described in the
literature. In addition, among the objects we studied, there are 26 USP
candidates that had been previously reported in the literature which do not
pass our various tests. All 106 of our candidates have passed several standard
tests to rule out false positives due to eclipsing stellar systems. A low false
positive rate is also implied by the relatively high fraction of candidates for
which more than one transiting planet signal was detected. By assuming these
multi-transit candidates represent coplanar multi-planet systems, we are able
to infer that the USP planets are typically accompanied by other planets with
periods in the range 1-50 days, in contrast with hot Jupiters which very rarely
have companions in that same period range. Another clear pattern is that almost
all USP planets are smaller than 2 , possibly because gas giants in
very tight orbits would lose their atmospheres by photoevaporation when subject
to extremely strong stellar irradiation. Based on our survey statistics, USP
planets exist around approximately of G-dwarf stars, and
of K-dwarf stars.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to ApJ. This version has been
reviewed by a refere
Departure from Axisymmetry in Planetary Nebulae
Many planetary nebulae (PNe) exhibit distinctly non-axisymmetric structure in
either (i) the shape of the nebula, or (ii) in the off-centered position of the
illuminating star. By examining a large number of well resolved images of PNe
we estimate that about 30-50 percents of all PNe exhibit distinctly
non-axisymmetric structure. In this paper, we discuss how such departures from
axisymmetry can arise from the binary nature of the progenitors of the PNe. The
scenarios include (a) relatively close binaries with eccentric orbits, and (b)
longer orbital period systems with either circular or eccentric orbits. In
order to assess the fraction of PNe whose non-axisymmetric morphologies are
expected to arise in binary systems, we have carried out a detailed population
synthesis study. The expected deviations from axisymmetry are classified for
each binary and the results tabulated. We find that about 25 percents of
elliptical and 30-50 percents of bipolar PNe are expected to acquire
non-axisymmetric structure from binary interactions.Comment: 15 pages + 4 tables; Submitted to Ap
Cardiac-specific Conditional Knockout of the 18-kDa Mitochondrial Translocator Protein Protects from Pressure Overload Induced Heart Failure.
Heart failure (HF) is characterized by abnormal mitochondrial calcium (Ca2+) handling, energy failure and impaired mitophagy resulting in contractile dysfunction and myocyte death. We have previously shown that the 18-kDa mitochondrial translocator protein of the outer mitochondrial membrane (TSPO) can modulate mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. Experiments were designed to test the role of the TSPO in a murine pressure-overload model of HF induced by transverse aortic constriction (TAC). Conditional, cardiac-specific TSPO knockout (KO) mice were generated using the Cre-loxP system. TSPO-KO and wild-type (WT) mice underwent TAC for 8 weeks. TAC-induced HF significantly increased TSPO expression in WT mice, associated with a marked reduction in systolic function, mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake, complex I activity and energetics. In contrast, TSPO-KO mice undergoing TAC had preserved ejection fraction, and exhibited fewer clinical signs of HF and fibrosis. Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake and energetics were restored in TSPO KO mice, associated with decreased ROS, improved complex I activity and preserved mitophagy. Thus, HF increases TSPO expression, while preventing this increase limits the progression of HF, preserves ATP production and decreases oxidative stress, thereby preventing metabolic failure. These findings suggest that pharmacological interventions directed at TSPO may provide novel therapeutics to prevent or treat HF
Multi-Color Light Curves of Type Ia Supernovae on the Color-Magnitude Diagram: a Novel Step Toward More Precise Distance and Extinction Estimates
We show empirically that fits to the color-magnitude relation of Type Ia
supernovae after optical maximum can provide accurate relative extragalactic
distances. We report the discovery of an empirical color relation for Type Ia
light curves: During much of the first month past maximum, the magnitudes of
Type Ia supernovae defined at a given value of color index have a very small
magnitude dispersion; moreover, during this period the relation between
magnitude and color (or or color) is strikingly linear, to
the accuracy of existing well-measured data. These linear relations can provide
robust distance estimates, in particular, by using the magnitudes when the
supernova reaches a given color. After correction for light curve strech factor
or decline rate, the dispersion of the magnitudes taken at the intercept of the
linear color-magnitude relation are found to be around 0.08 for the
sub-sample of supernovae with \BVm , and around 0.11 for the
sub-sample with \BVm . This small dispersion is consistent with
being mostly due to observational errors. The method presented here and the
conventional light curve fitting methods can be combined to further improve
statistical dispersions of distance estimates. It can be combined with the
magnitude at maximum to deduce dust extinction. The slopes of the
color-magnitude relation may also be used to identify intrinsically different
SN Ia systems. The method provides a tool that is fundamental to using SN Ia to
estimate cosmological parameters such as the Hubble constant and the mass and
dark energy content of the universe.Comment: ApJ, in pres
Transits and Occultations of an Earth-Sized Planet in an 8.5-Hour Orbit
We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet () in
an 8.5-hour orbit around a late G-type star (KIC 8435766, Kepler-78). The
object was identified in a search for short-period planets in the {\it Kepler}
database and confirmed to be a transiting planet (as opposed to an eclipsing
stellar system) through the absence of ellipsoidal light variations or
substantial radial-velocity variations. The unusually short orbital period and
the relative brightness of the host star ( = 11.5) enable robust
detections of the changing illumination of the visible hemisphere of the
planet, as well as the occultations of the planet by the star. We interpret
these signals as representing a combination of reflected and reprocessed light,
with the highest planet dayside temperature in the range of 2300 K to 3100 K.
Follow-up spectroscopy combined with finer sampling photometric observations
will further pin down the system parameters and may even yield the mass of the
planet.Comment: Accepted for publication, ApJ, 10 pages and 6 figure
New DVD supports trachoma surgery training
The first part of this article introduces a new comprehensive TT surgery training DVD. The second part presents an extract from the DVD covering using a steam autoclave to sterilise the instruments used in trachoma surgery
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