5,200 research outputs found
The First Galaxies: Clues from Element Abundances
It has recently become possible to measure directly the abundances of several
chemical elements in a variety of environments at redshifts up to z = 5. In
this review I summarise the latest observations of Lyman break galaxies, damped
Lyman alpha systems and the Lyman alpha forest with a view to uncovering any
clues which these data may offer to the first episodes of star formation. The
picture which is emerging is one where the universe at z = 3 already included
many of the components of today's galaxies--even at these early times we see
evidence for Populations I and II stars, while the `smoking gun' for Population
III objects may be hidden in the chemical composition of the lowest density
regions of the IGM, yet to be deciphered.Comment: 15 pages, LaTex, 8 Postscript Figures. To appear in the Philosophical
Transactions of The Royal Society, Series
Si and Mn Abundances in Damped Lya Systems with Low Dust Content
We have measured the abundances of Zn, Si, Mn, Cr, Fe, and Ni in three damped
Lyman alpha systems at redshifts z < 1 from high resolution echelle spectra of
QSOs recorded with the Keck I telescope. In all three cases the abundances of
Cr, Fe, and Ni relative to Zn indicate low levels of dust depletions. We
propose that when the proportion of refractory elements locked up in dust
grains is less than about 50 percent, it is plausible to assume an
approximately uniform level of depletion for all grain constituents and, by
applying a small dust correction, recover the intrisic abundances of Si and Mn.
We use this approach on a small sample of damped systems for which it is
appropriate, with the aim of comparing the metallicity dependence of the ratios
[Si/Fe] and [Mn/Fe] with analogous measurements in Milky Way stars. The main
conclusion is that the relative abundances of both elements in distant galaxies
are broadly in line with expectations based on Galactic data. Si displays a
mild enhancement at low metallicities, as expected for an alpha-capture
element, but there are also examples of near-solar [Si/Fe] at [Fe/H] < -1. The
underabundance of Mn at low metallicities is possibly even more pronounced than
that in metal-poor stars, and no absorption system has yet been found where
[Mn/Fe] is solar. The heterogeneous chemical properties of damped Lyman alpha
systems, evident even from this limited set of measurements, provide further
support for the conclusion from imaging studies that a varied population of
galaxies gives rise to this class of QSO absorbers.Comment: 29 pages, LaTex, 7 Postscript Figures. Accepted for Publication in
the Astrophysical Journa
Influence of stored aqueous ceftriaxone solutions on colony formation by neutrophil and macrophage precursor cells
Aqueous solutions of ceftriaxone in concentrations similar to those achieved in man and stored at temperatures of 4°C, 22°C and 37°C for up to four weeks were tested in methylcellulose cultures of normal bone marrow from ten donors. No significant differences were detected between the colony formation by neutrophil and macrophage precursors in control cultures and in cultures containing stored ceftriaxone. It is concluded that aqueous ceftriaxone solutions stored for up to four weeks at temperatures up to 37°C are not altered to such an extent that they adversely affect colony formation by bone marrow progenitor cells from healthy donor
s/alpha/Fe Abundance Ratios in Halo Field Stars: Is there a Globular Cluster Connection?
We try to understand the s- and r-process elements vs Ti/Fe plots derived by
Jehin et al. (1999) for mildly metal-poor stars within the framework of the
analytical semi-empirical models for these elements by Pagel & Tautvaisiene
(1995, 1997). Jehin et al. distinguished two Pop II subgroups: IIa with
alpha/Fe and s-elements/Fe increasing together, which they attribute to pure
SNII activity, and IIb with constant alpha/Fe and a range in s/Fe which they
attribute to a prolonged accretion phase in parent globular clusters. However,
their sample consists mainly of thick-disk stars with only 4 clear halo
members, of which two are `anomalous' in the sense defined by Nissen & Schuster
(1997). Only the remaining two halo stars (and one in Nissen & Schuster's
sample) depart significantly from Y/Ti (or s/alpha) ratios predicted by our
model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures To appear in: Roma-Trieste Workshop 1999: `The
Chemical Evolution of the Milky Way: Stars vs Clusters', Vulcano Sept. 1999.
F. Giovanelli & F. Matteucci (eds), Kluwer, Dordrech
Occupational closure in nursing work reconsidered: UK health care support workers and assistant practitioners: a focus group study
In healthcare, occupational groups have adopted tactics to maintain autonomy and control over their areas of work. Witz described a credentialist approach to occupational closure adopted by nursing in the United Kingdom during the 19th and early 20th centuries. However, the recent advancement of assistant, ânon-qualifiedâ workers by governments and managers forms part of a reconfiguration of traditional professional work. This research used focus groups with three cohorts of healthcare support workers undertaking assistant practitioner training at a London university from 2011-13 (6 groups, n=59). The aim was to examine how these workers positioned themselves as professionals and accounted for professional boundaries. A thematic analysis revealed a complex situation in which participants were divided between articulating an acceptance of a subordinate role within traditional occupational boundaries and a usurpatory stance towards these boundaries. Participants had usually been handpicked by managers and some were ambitious and confident in their abilities. Many aspired to train to be nurses claiming that they will gain recognition that they do not currently get but which they deserve. Their scope of practice is based upon their managersâ or supervisorsâ perception of their individual aptitude rather than on a credentialist claim. They âusurpâ nurses claim to be the healthcare worker with privileged access to patients, saying they have taken over what nursing has considered its core work, while nurses abandon it for largely administrative roles. We conclude that the participants are the not unwilling agents of a managerially led project to reshape the workforce that cuts across existing occupational boundaries
Galactic Cosmic Rays from Superbubbles and the Abundances of Lithium, Beryllium, and Boron
In this article we study the galactic evolution of the LiBeB elements within
the framework of a detailed model of the chemical evolution of the Galaxy that
includes galactic cosmic ray nucleosynthesis by particles accelerated in
superbubbles. The chemical composition of the superbubble consists of varying
proportions of ISM and freshly supernova synthesized material. The
observational trends of 6 LiBeB evolution are nicely reproduced by models in
which GCR come from a mixture of 25% of supernova material with 75% of ISM,
except for 6 Li, for which maybe an extra source is required at low
metallicities. To account for 7 Li evolution several additional sources have
been considered (neutrino-induced nucleosynthesis, nova outbursts, C-stars).
The model fulfills the energetic requirements for GCR acceleration.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Chemical Compositions of Four Metal-poor Giants
We present the chemical compositions of four K giants CS 22877-1, CS
22166-16, CS22169-35 and BS 16085 - 0050 that have [Fe/H] in the range -2.4 to
-3.1. Metal-poor stars with [Fe/H] < -2.5 are known to exhibit considerable
star - to - star variations of many elements. This quartet confirms this
conclusion. CS 22877-1 and CS 22166-16 are carbon-rich. There is significant
spread for [/Fe] within our sample where [/Fe] is computed from
the mean of the [Mg/Fe], and [Ca/Fe] ratios. BS 16085 - 0050 is remarkably
enriched with a mean [/Fe] of 0.7 but CS 22169-35 is
-poor. The aluminium abundance also shows a significant variation over
the sample. A parallel and unsuccessful search among high-velocity late-type
stars for metal-poor stars is described.Comment: 14 pages (text), 4 tables, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in
PAS
Data systems for improvement of reindeer production
This paper presents a calf selection program, a recording and a database system developed as a part of a joint Swedish - Norwegian development project where one of the main objectives is to improve identification, handling and production recording systems. The systems are used in a reindeer flock in the south parts of the reindeer area in Sweden. The additional marking system has been used in this flock since 1981 and procedures for identification of the mothers of the calves has been used since 1986
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