1,388 research outputs found
Do OB Runaway Stars Have Pulsar Companions?
We have conducted a VLA search for radio pulsars at the positions of 44
nearby OB runaway stars. The observations involved both searching images for
point sources of continuum emission and a time series analysis. Our mean flux
sensitivity to pulsars slower than 50 ms was 0.2 mJy. No new pulsars were found
in the survey. The size of the survey, combined with the high sensitivity of
the observations, sets a significant constraint on the probability, , of a
runaway OB star having an observable pulsar companion. We find \%
with 95\% confidence, if the general pulsar luminosity function is applicable
to OB star pulsar companions. If a pulsar beaming fraction of \onethird\ is
assumed, then we estimate that fewer than 20\% of runaway OB stars have neutron
star companions, unless pulsed radio emission is frequently obscured by the OB
stellar wind. Our result is consistent with the dynamical (or cluster) ejection
model for the formation of OB runaways. The supernova ejection model is not
ruled out, but is constrained by these observations to allow only a small
binary survival fraction, which may be accommodated if neutron stars acquire
significant natal kicks. According to Leonard, Hills and Dewey (1994), a 20\%
survival fraction corresponds to a 3-d kick velocity of 420 km s. This
value is in close agreement with recent revisions of the pulsar velocity
distribution.Comment: Submitted to the Astronomical Journal. 16 pages. Latex uses
aaspp4.sty. 3 postscript figures. Address correspondence to Colin Philp
([email protected]). Revision was to replace .ps file with latex fil
Knowledge mediation in software quality engineering
The risk of failure of the software development process remains high despite many attempts to improve the quality of software engineering. Contemporary approaches to process assurance, such as the capability maturity model have not prevented systemic failures, nor have project management methodologies provided guarantees of software quality. The paper proposes an approach to software quality assurance based on a knowledge mediated concurrent audit, which incorporates essential feedback processes. Through a tightly integrated approach to quality audit, programmers would be empowered to use any chosen methodology to advantage, supported by intelligent monitoring of the essential interactions which occur in the development process. An experimental application implementing some aspects of the proposal is described <br /
The antibody loci of the domestic goat (Capra hircus)
The domestic goat (Capra hircus) is an important ruminant species both as a source of antibody-based reagents for research and biomedical applications and as an economically important animal for agriculture, particularly for developing nations that maintain most of the global goat population. Characterization of the loci encoding the goat immune repertoire would be highly beneficial for both vaccine and immune reagent development. However, in goat and other species whose reference genomes were generated using short-read sequencing technologies, the immune loci are poorly assembled as a result of their repetitive nature. Our recent construction of a long-read goat genome assembly (ARS1) has facilitated characterization of all three antibody loci with high confidence and comparative analysis to cattle. We observed broad similarity of goat and cattle antibody-encoding loci but with notable differences that likely influence formation of the functional antibody repertoire. The goat heavy-chain locus is restricted to only four functional and nearly identical IGHV genes, in contrast to the ten observed in cattle. Repertoire analysis indicates that light-chain usage is more balanced in goats, with greater representation of kappa light chains (~Â 20-30%) compared to that in cattle (~Â 5%). The present study represents the first characterization of the goat antibody loci and will help inform future investigations of their antibody responses to disease and vaccination
Social or economic class? False dichotomies, reductionism and abstract categories
Against the backdrop of socio-economic conflict, this paper analyses a number of approaches to classes in the economics, political economy and sociology literatures. Our argument is structured into two themes which consider: (i) class and individualism; (ii) social and economic classes. We also consider deductive and inductive class analyses within these themes. This typology is used to classify the methodological approaches of scholars from a variety of traditions, thereby providing a basis for assessing their congruence, and the plausibility of developing an integrated perspective on class, spanning heterodox economics and sociology. Initial discussion considers classical political economy and its Marxian derivatives, including Lenin’s criteria for categorising classes, and relatively recent approaches derived from economics, political economy (in the Marxian tradition), and sociology. Based on our analysis of the two themes identified we argue that the abstract pairs of categories — class-individual, social-economic — should not be falsely dichotomised. In addition, we argue that a reductionist approach to class (be it economic or micro-reductionism) only provides a partial account, and fails to capture the complexity of class in relation to other forms of social stratification
Good vibrations: Do electrical therapeutic massagers work?
Health, leisure and beauty activities are increasing in popularity, with a particular emphasis on self-help and alternative health practices. One product type that has increased sales with this expansion is the hand-held electric massager. These are products that use vibration as a means of alleviating muscular strains and pains, as well as promoting relaxation. Paradoxically, these products are extremely popular as gifts, but are soon discarded. A multi-disciplinary research team was commissioned by a British manufacturer of electrical consumer products to investigate user attitudes and perceptions of existing massagers, to identify areas of user dissatisfaction. The manufacturer was also concerned about a possible stigma attached to these products because of an association with sex aids. This paper provides an
account of the perceptions of both consumers and therapists regarding the use of these products. Identifying the differences between the perceptions of consumers and therapists should help provide a basis for effective integration
of user needs, manufacturer requirements, designers’ skills and sound therapeutic practice. The results provide insight to support the development of more effective hand-held massagers
Direct and indirect excitons in semiconductor coupled quantum wells in an applied electric field
An accurate calculation of the exciton ground and excited states in AlGaAs
and InGaAs coupled quantum wells (CQWs) in an external electric field is
presented. An efficient and straightforward algorithm of solving the
Schrodinger equation in real space has been developed and exciton binding
energies, oscillator strengths, lifetimes, and absorption spectra are
calculated for applied electric fields up to 100 kV/cm. It is found that in
symmetric 8-4-8 nm GaAs/Al(0.33)Ga(0.67)As CQW structure, the ground state of
the system switches from direct to indirect exciton at approximately 5 kV/cm
with dramatic changes of its binding energy and oscillator strength while the
bright excited direct-exciton state remains almost unaffected. It is shown that
the excitonic lifetime is dominated either by the radiative recombination or by
tunneling processes at small/large values of the electric field, respectively.
The calculated lifetime of the exciton ground state as a function of the bias
voltage is in a quantitative agreement with low-temperature photoluminescence
measurements. We have also made freely available a numerical code for
calculation of the optical properties of direct and indirect excitons in CQWs
in an electric field.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Chromatid Segregation at Anaphase Requires the barren Product, a Novel Chromosome-Associated Protein That Interacts with Topoisomerase II
AbstractWe have isolated a Drosophila gene, barren (barr), required for sister-chromatid segregation in mitosis. barr encodes a novel protein that is present in proliferating cells and has homologs in yeast and human. Mitotic defects in barr embryos become apparent during cycle 16, resulting in a loss of PNS and CNS neurons. Centromeres move apart at the metaphase–anaphase transition and Cyclin B is degraded, but sister chromatids remain connected, resulting in chromatin bridging. This phenotype is similar to that described in TOP2 mutants in yeast. Barren protein localizes to chromatin throughout mitosis. Colocalization and biochemical experiments indicate that Barren associates with Topoisomerase II throughout mitosis and alters the activity of Topoisomerase II. We propose that this association is required for proper chromosomal segregation by facilitating the decatenation of chromatids at anaphase
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