745 research outputs found
Authenticated web management system
In an era where web development is taking priority over other areas of development, the management of web based resources is still done in old ways, i.e., by closing the site down and making changes and uploading the changes back to the web server. There is a need for a more versatile management of the resource wherein the changes can be done to the content over the site from its original location over the web server. This project is based on an application that provides extended support for maintenance of the web management from its hosted environment. Web Manager is an ASP.NET Server Web Management System. The application is controlled by two users based upon the access levels allotted to them. The admin user can do every task with the application. Every user is specified with a minimum of one home directory (The application on which the person has the privilege to work with). Using Web Manager, only the sites which are authorized to a user can be managed. The web pages, pages related content can be newly created as well as modifications can be done on the existing documents, which will reflect a change on the outlook of the site. A single user can have authority to manage number of sites but only the site which is set as a home directory can be managed at a given moment of time. It also provides the features of uploading and downloading the files needed for management
Prevalence of diabetes and other cardiovascular risk factors in an Iranian population with acute coronary syndrome
BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease is the leading cause of death in industrialized countries and most patients with diabetes die from complications of atherosclerosis. The objective of this study was to determine the presence of diabetes mellitus and other conventional coronary heart disease risk factors (cigarette smoking, hypertension and hyperlipidemia) in patients with acute coronary events in an Iranian population. METHODS: The study included 514 patients with unstable angina or myocardial infarction (MI) out of 720 patients admitted to CCU ward of a general hospital from March 2003 to March 2005. History of diabetes, hypertension and cigarette smoking, demographic indices, coronary heart disease and diabetes mellitus treatment, myocardial enzymes, serum triglycerides (TG) and cholesterol and fasting and non fasting blood glucose levels and HbA1C of diabetics were recorded of admission sheets. The data were structured to appropriate one way ANOVA, T tests, and chi square test with SPSS 13 product for windows. RESULTS: Out of all patients 35.8% were female, 30% were diabetics (Duration 13.4 ± 8.7 years), 42% were smoker and 91% were hypertensive. Twenty four percent had MI and 76% had unstable angina. MI was significantly higher in diabetic patients (36.4% vs. 19.2%, P < 0.001). Location and extension of MI and myocardial enzymes did not differ between diabetics and non-diabetic patients. Diabetic patients were older than non diabetics (65 ± 11.6 vs. 59.7 ± 12.5 years, p < 0.05). Five (66.7%) out of 9 patients with fatal MI were diabetics (Odds Ratio = 2.98). Age, duration of diabetes and HbA1c levels, did not differ between diabetic patients with or without MI. Hypertension and current smoking was significantly higher in patients with MI compared to patients with unstable angina (p < 0.05). Serum TG, HDL-C, LDL-C and total cholesterol level did not differ between patients with MI and unstable angina. Diabetic patients compare to non diabetic patients were more hypertensive (96% vs. 88.7%, p < 0.005) and had higher serum triglyceride (TG over 200 mg/dl, 35.1% vs. 26.4, p <0.05). Diabetes was more frequent among women than men (36.4% vs. 26.4%, p < 0.05). Women were older than men (65 ± 11.6 vs. 59.2 ± 13 years, p < 0.005) and had higher total serum cholesterol (200 ± 41.8 vs. 192 ± 42.5 mg/dl, p < 0.05) and HDL-C levels (49.7 ± 22 vs. 40 ± 13 mg/dl, p < 0.005). Ninety seven percent of all patients had at least one of cardiovascular risk factors (hypertension, smoking, diabetes, high cholesterol and low HDL-cholesterol levels). CONCLUSION: In this study 19 out of 20 patients with acute coronary event have at least one of conventional cardiac risk factors. Diabetes and hypertension are leading risk factors, which may directly or indirectly interfere and predict more serious complications of coronary heart disease
The Microchannel X-ray Telescope on Board the SVOM Satellite
We present the Micro-channel X-ray Telescope (MXT), a new narrow-field (about
1{\deg}) telescope that will be flying on the Sino-French SVOM mission
dedicated to Gamma-Ray Burst science, scheduled for launch in 2021. MXT is
based on square micro pore optics (MPOs), coupled with a low noise CCD. The
optics are based on a "Lobster Eye" design, while the CCD is a focal plane
detector similar to the type developed for the seven eROSITA telescopes. MXT is
a compact and light (<35 kg) telescope with a 1 m focal length, and it will
provide an effective area of about 45 cmsq on axis at 1 keV. The MXT PSF is
expected to be better than 4.2 arc min (FWHM) ensuring a localization accuracy
of the afterglows of the SVOM GRBs to better than 1 arc min (90\% c.l. with no
systematics) provided MXT data are collected within 5 minutes after the
trigger. The MXT sensitivity will be adequate to detect the afterglows for
almost all the SVOM GRBs as well as to perform observations of non-GRB
astrophysical objects. These performances are fully adapted to the SVOM science
goals, and prove that small and light telescopes can be used for future small
X-ray missions.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, proceedings of the conference "Swift: 10 years of
Discovery", Rome, December 2-5, 2014. To be published by Po
The Microchannel X-ray Telescope for the Gamma-Ray Burst mission SVOM
We present the Microchannel X-ray Telescope, a new light and compact
focussing telescope that will be flying on the Sino-French SVOM mission
dedicated to Gamma-Ray Burst science. The MXT design is based on the coupling
of square pore micro-channel plates with a low noise pnCCD. MXT will provide an
effective area of about 50 cmsq, and its point spread function is expected to
be better than 3.7 arc min (FWHM) on axis. The estimated sensitivity is
adequate to detect all the afterglows of the SVOM GRBs, and to localize them to
better then 60 arc sec after five minutes of observation.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, to be published in SPIE Astronomical Telescopes
+ Instrumentation, Montreal, June 201
New light on gamma-ray burst host galaxies with Herschel
Until recently, dust emission has been detected in very few host galaxies of
gamma-ray bursts (GRBHs). With Herschel, we have now observed 17 GRBHs up to
redshift z~3 and detected seven of them at infrared (IR) wavelengths. This
relatively high detection rate (41%) may be due to the composition of our
sample which at a median redshift of 1.1 is dominated by the hosts of dark
GRBs. Although the numbers are small, statistics suggest that dark GRBs are
more likely to be detected in the IR than their optically-bright counterparts.
Combining our IR data with optical, near-infrared, and radio data from our own
datasets and from the literature, we have constructed spectral energy
distributions (SEDs) which span up to 6 orders of magnitude in wavelength. By
fitting the SEDs, we have obtained stellar masses, dust masses, star-formation
rate (SFR), and extinctions for our sample galaxies. We find that GRBHs are
galaxies that tend to have a high specfic SFR (sSFR), and like other
star-forming galaxies, their ratios of dust-to-stellar mass are well correlated
with sSFR. We incorporate our Herschel sample into a larger compilation of
GRBHs, and compare this combined sample to SFR-weighted median stellar masses
of the widest, deepest galaxy survey to date. This is done in order to
establish whether or not GRBs can be used as an unbiased tracer of cosmic
comoving SFR density (SFRD) in the universe. In contrast with previous results,
this comparison shows that GRBHs are medium-sized galaxies with relatively high
sSFRs; stellar masses and sSFRs of GRBHs as a function of redshift are similar
to what is expected for star-forming galaxy populations at similar redshifts.
We conclude that there is no strong evidence that GRBs are biased tracers of
SFRD; thus they should be able to reliably probe the SFRD to early epochs.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Revised to
include Fig. 6, mistakenly omitted in origina
Introducing nanoscaled surface morphology and percolation barrier network into mesoporous silica coatings
Mesoporous silica thin films were patterned at the sub-micron scale utilizing the ion hammering effect in order to combine the advantages of mesoporous character and surface morphology, while preserving the interconnected pore system or creating laterally separated porous volumes surrounded by nonpermeable compact zones. Porous silica coatings were prepared by a sol-gel method with an ordered and disordered pore system using micellar templates. A hexagonally ordered Langmuir-Blodgett type monolayer of silica spheres was applied as a mask against Xe+ ion irradiation. The ion energy was chosen according to Monte-Carlo simulations to achieve structures with high lateral contrast between irradiated and unirradiated, i.e., masked areas. The disordered pore system proved to be more resistant against ion bombardment. Although the created surface morphologies were similar, the main character of the pore system could be tailored to be interconnected or separated by controlling the ion fluence. Confocal fluorescence images and ellipsometric porosimetry measurements confirmed that the contribution of transition zone between the intact masked and damaged regions to the porosity is negligible. Furthermore, the majority of the porous volume can be preserved as an interconnected pore system by the application of low ion fluence. By increasing the fluence value, however, separated porous volumes can be created at the expense of the total pore volume
UV/Optical Detections of Candidate Tidal Disruption Events by GALEX and CFHTLS
We present two luminous UV/optical flares from the nuclei of apparently
inactive early-type galaxies at z=0.37 and 0.33 that have the radiative
properties of a flare from the tidal disruption of a star. In this paper we
report the second candidate tidal disruption event discovery in the UV by the
GALEX Deep Imaging Survey, and present simultaneous optical light curves from
the CFHTLS Deep Imaging Survey for both UV flares. The first few months of the
UV/optical light curves are well fitted with the canonical t^(-5/3) power-law
decay predicted for emission from the fallback of debris from a tidally
disrupted star. Chandra ACIS X-ray observations during the flares detect soft
X-ray sources with T_bb= (2-5) x 10^5 K or Gamma > 3 and place limits on hard
X-ray emission from an underlying AGN down to L_X (2-10 keV) <~ 10^41 ergs/s.
Blackbody fits to the UV/optical spectral energy distributions of the flares
indicate peak flare luminosities of > 10^44-10^45 ergs/s. The temperature,
luminosity, and light curves of both flares are in excellent agreement with
emission from a tidally disrupted main sequence star onto a central black hole
of several times 10^7 msun. The observed detection rate of our search over ~
2.9 deg^2 of GALEX Deep Imaging Survey data spanning from 2003 to 2007 is
consistent with tidal disruption rates calculated from dynamical models, and we
use these models to make predictions for the detection rates of the next
generation of optical synoptic surveys.Comment: 28 pages, 27 figures, 11 tables, accepted to ApJ, final corrections
from proofs adde
Analysis of malaria infection byproducts with Mueller matrix transmission ellipsometry
In this work, hemozoin, a microcrystalline byproduct of the malaria parasites was studied by transmission Mueller matrix ellipsometry. Measurement data was collected for different magnetic field orientations and as a function of the density of the hemozoin suspension. Our ellipsometric study demonstrates the magnetic alignment of the hemozoin crystals via the corresponding large linear birefringence and dichroism signals. These results reveal optical anisotropies of this material, which could be utilized for future optimization of detection schemes or optical instruments for diagnostic use
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