127 research outputs found
Filaments as Possible Signatures of Magnetic Field Structure in Planetary Nebulae
We draw attention to the extreme filamentary structures seen in
high-resolution optical images of certain planetary nebulae. We determine the
physical properties of the filaments in the nebulae IC 418, NGC 3132, and NGC
6537, and based on their large length-to-width ratios, longitudinal coherence,
and morphology, we suggest that they may be signatures of the underlying
magnetic field. The fields needed for the coherence of the filaments are
probably consistent with those measured in the precursor circumstellar
envelopes. The filaments suggest that magnetic fields in planetary nebulae may
have a localized and thread-like geometry.Comment: 26 pages with 7 figures. To be published in PASP. For full resolution
images see http://physics.nyu.edu/~pjh
Spectroscopic confirmation of the planetary nebula nature of PM1-242, PM1-318 and PM1-333 and morphological analysis of the nebulae
We present intermediate resolution long-slit spectra and narrow-band Halpha,
[NII] and [OIII] images of PM1-242, PM318 and PM1-333, three IRAS sources
classified as possible planetary nebulae. The spectra show that the three
objects are true planetary nebulae and allow us to study their physical
properties; the images provide a detailed view of their morphology. PM1-242 is
a medium-to-high-excitation (e.g., HeII4686/Hbeta ~0.4; [NII]6584/Halpha ~0.3)
planetary nebula with an elliptical shape containing [NII] enhanced
point-symmetric arcs. An electron temperature [Te([SIII])] of ~10250 K and an
electron density [Ne([SII])] of ~2300 cm-3 are derived for PM1-242. Abundance
calculations suggest a large helium abundance (He/H ~0.29) in PM1-242. PM1-318
is a high-excitation (HeII4686/Hbeta ~1) planetary nebula with a ring-like
inner shell containing two enhanced opposite regions, surrounded by a fainter
round attached shell brighter in the light of [OIII]. PM1-333 is an extended
planetary nebula with a high-excitation (HeII4686/Hbeta up to ~0.9) patchy
circular main body containing two low-excitation knotty arcs. A low Ne([SII])
of ~450 cm-3 and Te([OIII]) of ~15000 K are derived for this nebula. Abundance
calculations suggest that PM1-333 is a type I planetary nebula. The lack of a
sharp shell morphology, low electron density, and high-excitation strongly
suggest that PM1-333 is an evolved planetary nebula. PM1-333 also shows two
low-ionization polar structures whose morphology and emission properties are
reminiscent of collimated outflows. We compare PM1-333 with other evolved
planetary nebulae with collimated outflows and find that outflows among evolved
planetary nebulae exhibit a large variety of properties, in accordance with
these observed in younger planetary nebula.Comment: Accepted in The Astronomical Journal, 23 pages, 6 figure
Automated detection of lung nodules in low-dose computed tomography
A computer-aided detection (CAD) system for the identification of pulmonary
nodules in low-dose multi-detector computed-tomography (CT) images has been
developed in the framework of the MAGIC-5 Italian project. One of the main
goals of this project is to build a distributed database of lung CT scans in
order to enable automated image analysis through a data and cpu GRID
infrastructure. The basic modules of our lung-CAD system, consisting in a 3D
dot-enhancement filter for nodule detection and a neural classifier for
false-positive finding reduction, are described. The system was designed and
tested for both internal and sub-pleural nodules. The database used in this
study consists of 17 low-dose CT scans reconstructed with thin slice thickness
(~300 slices/scan). The preliminary results are shown in terms of the FROC
analysis reporting a good sensitivity (85% range) for both internal and
sub-pleural nodules at an acceptable level of false positive findings (1-9
FP/scan); the sensitivity value remains very high (75% range) even at 1-6
FP/scanComment: 4 pages, 2 figures: Proceedings of the Computer Assisted Radiology
and Surgery, 21th International Congress and Exhibition, Berlin, Volume 2,
Supplement 1, June 2007, pp 357-35
PI3K Orchestrates T Follicular Helper Cell Differentiation in a Context Dependent Manner: Implications for Autoimmunity
T follicular helper (Tfh) cells are a specialized population of CD4+ T cells that provide help to B cells for the formation and maintenance germinal centers, and the production of high affinity class-switched antibodies, long-lived plasma cells, and memory B cells. As such, Tfh cells are essential for the generation of successful long-term humoral immunity and memory responses to vaccination and infection. Conversely, overproduction of Tfh cells has been associated with the generation of autoantibodies and autoimmunity. Data from gene-targeted mice, pharmacological inhibitors, as well as studies of human and mice expressing activating mutants have revealed that PI3Kδ is a key regulator of Tfh cell differentiation, acting downstream of ICOS to facilitate inactivation of FOXO1, repression of Klf2 and induction of Bcl6. Nonetheless, here we show that after acute LCMV infection, WT and activated-PI3Kδ mice (Pik3cdE1020K/+) show comparable ratios of Tfh:Th1 viral specific CD4+ T cells, despite higher polyclonal Tfh cells in Pik3cdE1020K/+ mice. Thus, the idea that PI3K activity primarily drives Tfh cell differentiation may be an oversimplification and PI3K-mediated pathways are likely to integrate multiple signals to promote distinct effector T cell lineages. The consequences of dysregulated Tfh cell generation will be discussed in the context of the human primary immunodeficiency “Activated PI3K-delta Syndrome” (APDS), also known as “p110 delta-activating mutation causing senescent T cells, lymphadenopathy and immunodeficiency” (PASLI). Overall, these data underscore a major role for PI3K signaling in the orchestration of T lymphocyte responses
GD (Generative design) applied to a plastics recovery drone (PRD) using IDeS (industrial design structure)
The evolution of innovative and systematic design methodologies over time has widened the design concept involvement from the product development phase, which also includes the production and start-up phases. Literature findings have presented to accomplish a Generative Design (GD) approach through the application of an innovative method called Industrial Structure Design (IDeS), a systematic design method able to discover the customer’s needs and the fundamental technical solutions to obtain a good innovative product, involving the whole organization for this achievement. Nevertheless, there is a social demand for solutions to the dramatic and growing problem of marine pollution from plastic materials, encouraging the designers to conceive a new innovative drone for waste collection at sea. Therefore, this study aims to merge all the most advanced design technologies with IDeS in an integrated way, by generating a structure that can also be adopted to plan the organization of a production company. The approach is validated with the design of the Recovery Plastic Drone (RPD) obtained with the IDeS methodology, combining Design and Product development phases, leading to a better and innovative solution for the market
Abundances of Planetary Nebula M1-42
The spectra of the planetary nebula M1-42 is reanalysed using spectral
measurements made in the mid-infrared with the Spitzer Space Telescope. The aim
is to determine the chemical composition of this object. We also make use of
ISO, IUE and ground based spectra. Abundances determined from the mid- and
far-infrared lines, which are insensitive to electron temperature, are used as
the basis for the determination of the composition, which are found to
substantially differ from earlier results. High values of neon, argon and
sulfur are found. They are higher than in other PN, with the exception of
NGC6153, a nebula of very similar abundances. The high values of helium and
nitrogen found indicate that the second dredge-up and hot bottom burning has
occurred in the course of evolution and that the central star was originally
more massive than 4Msun. The present temperature and luminosity of the central
star is determined and at first sight may be inconsistent with such a high
mass.Comment: 9 pages, 8 tables, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in A&
Lung Nodule Detection in Screening Computed Tomography
A computer-aided detection (CAD) system for the identification of pulmonary
nodules in low-dose multi-detector helical Computed Tomography (CT) images with
1.25 mm slice thickness is presented. The basic modules of our lung-CAD system,
a dot-enhancement filter for nodule candidate selection and a neural classifier
for false-positive finding reduction, are described. The results obtained on
the collected database of lung CT scans are discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures; Proceedings of the IEEE NNS and MIC Conference,
Oct. 29 - Nov. 4, 2006, San Diego, Californi
Variability of Hot Supergiant IRAS 19336-0400 in the Early Phase of its Planetary Nebula Ionization
We present photoelectric and spectral observations of a hot candidate
proto-planetary nebula - early B-type supergiant with emission lines in
spectrum - IRAS 19336-0400. The light and color curves display fast irregular
brightness variations with maximum amplitudes Delta V=0.30 mag, Delta B=0.35
mag, Delta U=0.40 mag and color-brightness correlations. By the variability
characteristics IRAS 19336-0400 appears similar to other hot proto-planetary
nebulae. Based on low-resolution spectra in the range lambda 4000-7500 A we
have derived absolute intensities of the emission lines H_alpha, H_beta,
H_gamma, [SII], [NII], physical conditions in gaseous nebula: n_e=10^4 cm^{-3},
T_e=7000 \pm 1000 K. The emission line H_alpha, H_beta equivalent widths are
found to be considerably variable and related to light changes. By
UBV-photometry and spectroscopy the color excess has been estimated:
E_{B-V}=0.50-0.54. Joint photometric and spectral data analysis allows us to
assume that the star variability is caused by stellar wind variations.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in Pis'ma
Astron. Zh. (Astronomy Letters
Candidate planetary nebulae in the IPHAS photometric catalogue
Original article can be found at: http://www.aanda.org/ Copyright European Southern Observatory. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200912002Context. We have carried out a semi-automated search for planetary nebulae (PNe) in the INT photometric H-alpha survey (IPHAS) catalogue. We present the PN search and the list of selected candidates. We cross correlate the selected candidates with a number of existing infrared galactic surveys in order to gain further insight into the nature of the candidates. Spectroscopy of a subset of objects is used to estimate the number of PNe present in the entire candidate list. Aims. The overall aim of the IPHAS PN project is to carry out a deep census of PNe in the northern Galactic plane, an area where PN detections are clearly lacking. Methods. The PN search is carried out on the IPHAS photometric catalogue. The candidate selection is based on the IPHAS and 2MASS/UKIDSS colours of the objects and the final candidate selection is made visually. Results. From the original list of ~600 million IPHAS detections we have selected a total of 1005 objects. Of these, 224 are known objects, leaving us with 781 PN candidates. Based on the initial follow-up spectroscopy, we expect the list to include very young and proto-PNe in addition to genuine, normal PNe (~16%) and emission line objects other than PNe. We present additional criteria to select the most probable PN candidates from our candidate list.Peer reviewe
The Halo and Rings of the Planetary Nebula NGC 40 in the Mid-Infrared
We present imaging and spectroscopy of NGC 40 acquired using the Spitzer
Space Telescope (Spitzer), and the Infrared Space observatory (ISO). These are
used to investigate the nature of emission from the central nebular shell, from
the nebular halo, and from the associated circumnebular rings. It is pointed
out that a variety of mechanisms may contribute to the mid-infrared (MIR)
fluxes, and there is evidence for a cool dust continuum, strong ionic
transitions, and appreciable emission by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs). Prior observations at shorter wavelengths also indicate the presence of
warmer grains, and the possible contribution of H2 transitions. It is suggested
that an apparent jet-like structure to the NE of the halo represents one of the
many emission spokes that permeate the shell. The spokes are likely to be
caused by the percolation of UV photons through a clumpy interior shell, whilst
the jet-like feature is enhanced due to locally elevated electron densities; a
result of interaction between NGC 40 and the interstellar medium. It is finally
noted that the presence of the PAH, 21 microns and 30 microns spectral features
testifies to appreciable C/O ratios within the main nebular shell. Such a
result is consistent with abundance determinations using collisionally excited
lines, but not with those determined using optical recombination linesComment: 13 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 37 pages in
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