785 research outputs found
Eccentric Ellipsoidal Red Giant Binaries in the LMC: Complete Orbital Solutions and Comments on Interaction at Periastron
Modelling ellipsoidal variables with known distances can lead to exact
determination of the masses of both components, even in the absence of
eclipses. We present such modelling using light and radial velocity curves of
ellipsoidal red giant binaries in the LMC, where they are also known as
sequence E stars. Stars were selected as likely eccentric systems on the basis
of light curve shape alone. We have confirmed their eccentric nature and
obtained system parameters using the Wilson-Devinney code. Most stars in our
sample exhibit unequal light maxima as well as minima, a phenomenon not
observed in sequence E variables with circular orbits. We find evidence that
the shape of the red giant changes throughout the orbit due to the high
eccentricity and the varying influence of the companion. Brief intervals of
pulsation are apparent in two of the red giants. We determine pulsation modes
and comment on their placement in the period-luminosity plane. Defining the
parameters of these systems paves the way for modelling to determine by what
mechanism eccentricity is maintained in evolved binaries.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures. Accepted to MNRAS 2012 January
Kinetics of fragmentation-annihilation processes
We investigate the kinetics of systems in which particles of one species
undergo binary fragmentation and pair annihilation. In the latter, nonlinear
process, fragments react at collision to produce an inert species, causing loss
of mass. We analyse these systems in the reaction-limited regime by solving a
continuous model within the mean-field approximation. The rate of
fragmentation, for a particle of mass to break into fragments of masses
and , has the form (), and the annihilation
rate is constant and independent of the masses of the reactants. We find that
the asymptotic regime is characterized by the annihilation of small-mass
clusters. The results are compared with those for a model with linear mass-loss
(i.e.\ with a sink). We also study more complex models, in which the processes
of fragmentation and annihilation are controlled by mutually-reacting
catalysts. Both pair- and linear-annihilation are considered. Depending on the
specific model and initial densities of the catalysts, the time-decay of the
cluster-density can now be very unconventional and even non-universal. The
interplay between the intervening processes and the existence of a scaling
regime are determined by the asymptotic behaviour of the average-mass and of
the mass-density, which may either decay indefinitely or tend to a constant
value. We discuss further developments of this class of models and their
potential applications.Comment: 16 pages(LaTeX), submitted to Phys. Rev.
Removal of steroid estrogens in carbonaceous and nitrifying activated sludge processes
This is the post-print version of the final paper published in Chemosphere. The published article is available from the link below. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. Copyright @ 2010 Elsevier B.V.A carbonaceous (heterotrophic) activated sludge process (ASP), nitrifying ASP and a nitrifying/denitrifying ASP have been studied to examine the role of process type in steroid estrogen removal. Biodegradation efficiencies for total steroid estrogens (ΣEST) of 80 and 91% were recorded for the nitrifying/denitrifying ASP and nitrifying ASP respectively. Total estrogen biodegradation (ΣEST) was only 51% at the carbonaceous ASP, however, the extent of biodegradation in the absence of nitrification clearly indicates the important role of heterotrophs in steroid estrogen removal. The low removal efficiency did not correlate with biomass activity for which the ASPcarbonaceous recorded 80 μg kg−1 biomass d−1 compared to 61 and 15 μg kg−1 biomass d−1 at the ASPnitrifying and ASPnitrifying/denitrifying respectively. This finding was explained by a moderate correlation (r2 = 0.55) between total estrogen loading (ΣEST mg m−3 d−1) and biomass activity (μg ΣEST degraded kg−1 d−1) and has established the impact of loading on steroid estrogen removal at full-scale. At higher solids retention time (SRT), steroid estrogen biodegradation of >80% was observed, as has previously been reported. It is postulated that hydraulic retention time (HRT) is as important as SRT as this governs both reaction time and loading. This observation is based on the high specific estrogen activity determined at the ASPcarbonaceous plant, the significance of estrogen loading and the positive linear correlation between SRT and HRT.Public Utilities Board of Singapore, Anglian Water Ltd., Severn Trent Water Ltd., Thames Water Utilities Ltd., United Utilities Plc., and Yorkshire Water Services Ltd
Multiwavelength Observations of a Flare from Markarian 501
We present multiwavelength observations of the BL Lacertae object Markarian
501 (Mrk 501) in 1997 between April 8 and April 19. Evidence of correlated
variability is seen in very high energy (VHE, E > 350 GeV) gamma-ray
observations taken with the Whipple Observatory gamma-ray telescope, data from
the Oriented Scintillation Spectrometer Experiment of the Compton Gamma-Ray
Observatory, and quicklook results from the All-Sky Monitor of the Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer while the Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment Telescope did not
detect Mrk 501. Short term optical correlations are not conclusive but the
U-band flux observed with the 1.2m telescope of the Whipple Observatory was 10%
higher than in March. The average energy output of Mrk 501 appears to peak in
the 2 keV to 100 keV range suggesting an extension of the synchrotron emission
to at least 100 keV, the highest observed in a blazar and ~100 times higher
than that seen in the other TeV-emitting BL Lac object, Mrk 421. The VHE
gamma-ray flux observed during this period is the highest ever detected from
this object. The VHE gamma-ray energy output is somewhat lower than the 2-100
keV range but the variability amplitude is larger. The correlations seen here
do not require relativistic beaming of the emission unless the VHE spectrum
extends to >5 TeV.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Predictive use of the Maximum Entropy Production principle for Past and Present Climates
In this paper, we show how the MEP hypothesis may be used to build simple
climate models without representing explicitly the energy transport by the
atmosphere. The purpose is twofold. First, we assess the performance of the MEP
hypothesis by comparing a simple model with minimal input data to a complex,
state-of-the-art General Circulation Model. Next, we show how to improve the
realism of MEP climate models by including climate feedbacks, focusing on the
case of the water-vapour feedback. We also discuss the dependence of the
entropy production rate and predicted surface temperature on the resolution of
the model
Birthing practices of traditional birth attendants in South Asia in the context of training programmes
Traditional Birth Attendants (TBA) training has been an important component of public health policy interventions to improve maternal and child health in developing countries since the 1970s. More recently, since the 1990s, the TBA training strategy has been increasingly seen as irrelevant, ineffective or, on the whole, a failure due to evidence that the maternal mortality rate (MMR) in developing countries had not reduced. Although, worldwide data show that, by choice or out of necessity, 47 percent of births in the developing world are assisted by TBAs and/or family members, funding for TBA training has been reduced and moved to providing skilled birth attendants for all births. Any shift in policy needs to be supported by appropriate evidence on TBA roles in providing maternal and infant health care service and effectiveness of the training programmes. This article reviews literature on the characteristics and role of TBAs in South Asia with an emphasis on India. The aim was to assess the contribution of TBAs in providing maternal and infant health care service at different stages of pregnancy and after-delivery and birthing practices adopted in home births. The review of role revealed that apart from TBAs, there are various other people in the community also involved in making decisions about the welfare and health of the birthing mother and new born baby. However, TBAs have changing, localised but nonetheless significant roles in delivery, postnatal and infant care in India. Certain traditional birthing practices such as bathing babies immediately after birth, not weighing babies after birth and not feeding with colostrum are adopted in home births as well as health institutions in India. There is therefore a thin precarious balance between the application of biomedical and traditional knowledge. Customary rituals and perceptions essentially affect practices in home and institutional births and hence training of TBAs need to be implemented in conjunction with community awareness programmes
Combined Analysis of the Binary-Lens Caustic-Crossing Event MACHO 98-SMC-1
We fit the data for the binary-lens microlensing event MACHO 98-SMC-1 from 5
different microlensing collaborations and find two distinct solutions
characterized by binary separation d and mass ratio q: (d,q)=(0.54,0.50) and
(d,q)=(3.65,0.36), where d is in units of the Einstein radius. However, the
relative proper motion of the lens is very similar in the two solutions, 1.30
km/s/kpc and 1.48 km/s/kpc, thus confirming that the lens is in the Small
Magellanic Cloud. The close binary can be either rotating or approximately
static but the wide binary must be rotating at close its maximum allowed rate
to be consistent with all the data. We measure limb-darkening coefficients for
five bands ranging from I to V. As expected, these progressively decrease with
rising wavelength. This is the first measurement of limb darkening for a
metal-poor A star.Comment: 29 pages + 9 figures + 2 tables, submitted to Ap
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Biomarker discovery and redundancy reduction towards classification using a multi-factorial MALDI-TOF MS T2DM mouse model dataset
Diabetes like many diseases and biological processes is not mono-causal. On the one hand multifactorial studies with complex experimental design are required for its comprehensive analysis. On the other hand, the data from these studies often include a substantial amount of redundancy such as proteins that are typically represented by a multitude of peptides. Coping simultaneously with both complexities (experimental and technological) makes data analysis a challenge for Bioinformatics
A Halomethane thermochemical network from iPEPICO experiments and quantum chemical calculations
Internal energy selected halomethane cations CH3Cl+, CH2Cl2+, CHCl3+, CH3F+, CH2F2+, CHClF2+ and CBrClF2+ were prepared by vacuum ultraviolet photoionization, and their lowest energy dissociation channel studied using imaging photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy (iPEPICO). This channel involves hydrogen atom loss for CH3F+, CH2F2+ and CH3Cl+, chlorine atom loss for CH2Cl2+, CHCl3+ and CHClF2+, and bromine atom loss for CBrClF2+. Accurate 0 K appearance energies, in conjunction with ab initio isodesmic and halogen exchange reaction energies, establish a thermochemical network, which is optimized to update and confirm the enthalpies of formation of the sample molecules and their dissociative photoionization products. The ground electronic states of CHCl3+, CHClF2+ and CBrClF2+ do not confirm to the deep well assumption, and the experimental breakdown curve deviates from the deep well model at low energies. Breakdown curve analysis of such shallow well systems supplies a satisfactorily succinct route to the adiabatic ionization energy of the parent molecule, particularly if the threshold photoelectron spectrum is not resolved and a purely computational route is unfeasible. The ionization energies have been found to be 11.47 ± 0.01 eV, 12.30 ± 0.02 eV and 11.23 ± 0.03 eV for CHCl3, CHClF2 and CBrClF2, respectively. The updated 0 K enthalpies of formation, ∆fHo0K(g) for the ions CH2F+, CHF2+, CHCl2+, CCl3+, CCl2F+ and CClF2+ have been derived to be 844.4 ± 2.1, 601.6 ± 2.7, 890.3 ± 2.2, 849.8 ± 3.2, 701.2 ± 3.3 and 552.2 ± 3.4 kJ mol–1, respectively. The ∆fHo0K(g) values for the neutrals CCl4, CBrClF2, CClF3, CCl2F2 and CCl3F and have been determined to be –94.0 ± 3.2, –446.6 ± 2.7, –702.1 ± 3.5, –487.8 ± 3.4 and –285.2 ± 3.2 kJ mol–1, respectively
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