1,083 research outputs found
A New Measurement of the Stellar Mass Density at z~5: Implications for the Sources of Cosmic Reionization
We present a new measurement of the integrated stellar mass per comoving
volume at redshift 5 determined via spectral energy fitting drawn from a sample
of 214 photometrically-selected galaxies with z'<26.5 in the southern GOODS
field. Following procedures introduced by Eyles et al. (2005), we estimate
stellar masses for various sub-samples for which reliable and unconfused
Spitzer IRAC detections are available. A spectroscopic sample of 14 of the most
luminous sources with =4.92 provides a firm lower limit to the stellar mass
density of 1e6 Msun/Mpc^3. Several galaxies in this sub-sample have masses of
order 10^11 Msun implying significant earlier activity occurred in massive
systems. We then consider a larger sample whose photometric redshifts in the
publicly-available GOODS-MUSIC catalog lie in the range 4.4 <z 5.6. Before
adopting the GOODS-MUSIC photometric redshifts, we check the accuracy of their
photometry and explore the possibility of contamination by low-z galaxies and
low-mass stars. After excising probable stellar contaminants and using the z'-J
color to exclude any remaining foreground red galaxies, we conclude that 196
sources are likely to be at z~5. The implied mass density from the unconfused
IRAC fraction of this sample, scaled to the total available, is 6e6 Msun/Mpc^3.
We discuss the uncertainties as well as the likelihood that we have
underestimated the true mass density. Including fainter and quiescent sources
the total integrated density could be as high as 1e7 Msun/Mpc^3. Using the
currently available (but highly uncertain) rate of decline in the star
formationhistory over 5 <z< 10, a better fit is obtained for the assembled mass
at z~5 if we admit significant dust extinction at early times or extend the
luminosity function to very faint limits. [abridged]Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ, 39 page
A synoptic view of solar transient evolution in the inner heliosphere using the Heliospheric Imagers on STEREO
By exploiting data from the STEREO/heliospheric imagers (HI) we extend a well-established technique developed for coronal analysis by producing time-elongation plots that reveal the nature of solar transient activity over a far more extensive region of the heliosphere than previously possible from coronagraph images. Despite the simplicity of these plots, their power in demonstrating how the plethora of ascending coronal features observed near the Sun evolve as they move antisunward is obvious. The time-elongation profile of a transient tracked by HI can, moreover, be used to establish its angle out of the plane-of-the-sky; an illustration of such analysis reveals coronal mass ejection material that can be clearly observed propagating out to distances beyond 1AU. This work confirms the value of the time-elongation format in identifying/characterising transient activity in the inner heliosphere, whilst also validating the ability of HI to continuously monitor solar ejecta out to and beyond 1A
Finding LoTSS of hosts for GRBs: a search for galaxy - gamma-ray burst coincidences at low frequencies with LOFAR
The LOFAR Two-Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) is an invaluable new tool for
investigating the properties of sources at low frequencies and has helped to
open up the study of galaxy populations in this regime. In this work, we
perform a search for host galaxies of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We use the
relative density of sources in Data Release 2 of LoTSS to define the
probability of a chance alignment, , and find 18 sources
corresponding to 17 GRBs which meet a <1% criterion. We examine
the nature and properties of these radio sources using both LOFAR data and
broadband information, including their radio spectral index, star formation
rate estimates and any contributions from active galactic nucleus emission.
Assuming the radio emission is dominated by star formation, we find that our
sources show high star formation rates (- yr)
compared with both a field galaxy sample and a sample of core-collapse
supernova hosts, and the majority of putative hosts are consistent with
ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) classifications. As a result of our
analyses, we define a final sample of eight likely GRB host candidates in the
LoTSS DR2 survey.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures and 6 tables. Accepted by MNRA
'Targeting care: tailoring non-surgical management according to clinical presentation'
International evidence-based guidelines recommend a multitude of nonsurgical treatment options for the management of osteoarthritis. This article summarizes the evidence available for patient characteristics that have been analyzed as potential predictors of response to nonsurgical interventions for patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. The specific variables targeted for this review include body mass index, psychological factors, muscle strength, tibiofemoral alignment, radiographic changes, and signs of inflammation. Several studies provide moderate to good evidence of potential predictors of response to nonsurgical treatments, and areas for future research are illuminated. Copyright 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
'Targeting care: tailoring non-surgical management according to clinical presentation'
International evidence-based guidelines recommend a multitude of nonsurgical treatment options for the management of osteoarthritis. This article summarizes the evidence available for patient characteristics that have been analyzed as potential predictors of response to nonsurgical interventions for patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. The specific variables targeted for this review include body mass index, psychological factors, muscle strength, tibiofemoral alignment, radiographic changes, and signs of inflammation. Several studies provide moderate to good evidence of potential predictors of response to nonsurgical treatments, and areas for future research are illuminated. Copyright 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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First imaging of corotating interaction regions using the STEREO spacecraft
Plasma parcels are observed propagating from the Sun out to the large coronal heights monitored by the Heliospheric Imagers (HI) instruments onboard the NASA STEREO spacecraft during September 2007. The source region of these out-flowing parcels is found to corotate with the Sun and to be rooted near the western boundary of an equatorial coronal hole. These plasma enhancements evolve during their propagation through the HI cameras’ fields of view and only becoming fully developed in the outer camera field of view. We provide evidence that HI is observing the formation of a Corotating Interaction Region(CIR) where fast solar wind from the equatorial coronal hole is interacting with the slow solar wind of the streamer belt located on the western edge of that coronal hole. A dense plasma parcel is also observed near the footpoint of the observed CIR at a distance less than 0.1AU from the Sun where fast wind would have not had time to catch up slow wind. We suggest that this low-lying plasma enhancement is a plasma parcel which has been disconnected from a helmet streamer and subsequently becomes embedded inside the corotating interaction region
Interpreting high [O III]/H β ratios with maturing starbursts
Star-forming galaxies at high redshift show ubiquitously high-ionization parameters, as measured by the ratio of optical emission lines. We demonstrate that local (z < 0.2) sources selected as Lyman break analogues also manifest high line ratios with a typical [O III]/Hβ=3.36+0.14−0.04 – comparable to all but the highest ratios seen in star-forming galaxies at z ∼ 2–4. We argue that the stellar population synthesis code BPASS can explain the high-ionization parameters required through the ageing of rapidly formed star populations, without invoking any AGN contribution. Binary stellar evolution pathways prolong the age interval over which a starburst is likely to show elevated line ratios, relative to those predicted by single stellar evolution codes. As a result, model galaxies at near-solar metallicities and with ages of up to ∼100 Myr after a starburst typically have a line ratio [O III]/Hβ ∼ 3, consistent with those seen in Lyman break galaxies and local sources with similar star formation densities. This emphasises the importance of including binary evolution pathways when simulating the nebular line emission of young or bursty stellar populations
STEREO observations of stars and the search for exoplanets
The feasibility of using data from the NASA STEREO mission for variable star and asteroseismology studies has been examined. A data analysis pipeline has been developed that is able to apply selected algorithms to the entire data base of nearly a million stars to search for signs of variability. An analysis limited to stars of magnitude 10.5 has been carried out, which has resulted in the extraction of 263 eclipsing binaries (EBs), of which 122 are not recorded as such in the SIMBAD online data base. The characteristics of the STEREO observations are shown to be extremely well suited to variable star studies with the ability to provide continuous phase coverage for extended periods as well as repeated visits that allow both short- and long-term variability to be observed. This will greatly inform studies of particular stars, such as the pre-cataclysmic variable V471 Tau, as well as the entire classes of stars, including many forms of rotational variability. The high-precision photometry has also revealed a potentially substellar companion to a bright (R= 7.5 mag) nearby star (HD 213597), detected with 5σ significance. This would provide a significant contribution to the exoplanet research if follow-up observations ascertain the mass to be within the planetary domain. Some particularly unusual EBs from the recovered sample are discussed, including a possible reclassification of a well-known star as an EB rather than a rotational variable (HR 7355) and several particularly eccentric systems, including very long period EBs
Barriers to participation in a placebo-surgical trial for lumbar spinal stenosis
© 2019 Background: Placebo-controlled trials are an important tool when assessing the efficacy of spinal surgical procedures. The most common spinal surgical procedure in older adults is decompression for lumbar spinal stenosis. Before conducting a placebo-surgical trial on decompression surgery, an investigation of patients’ willingness to participate in a placebo-controlled trial of decompression surgery and barriers to participation were explored. Materials: An online survey. Methods: Descriptive analyses of demographic and clinical data, and participants' willingness to participate in a placebo-surgical trial. Logistic regression was used to examine potential predictors of willingness to participate. Two independent researchers performed a coded framework analysis of patients’ barriers to participation. Results: 68 patients were invited and 63 participants completed the survey (91.3% response, mean (SD) age 69.5 (10.9) years, 52% females), 71% suffered from moderate to very severe pain. Ten participants (15.9%) were willing to participate in a placebo-controlled trial. Being married was associated with decreased odds of participating (OR: 0.2; 95% CI, 0.05 to 0.8; P = 0.03), while the main barriers were a lack of information about the procedure, reassurance of a positive outcome with participation, and concerns about the risks and benefits of placebo surgery. Conclusions: A minority of patients with lumbar spinal stenosis were willing to participate in a placebo-controlled trial of surgery. The identified barriers indicate that educating eligible patients about: the need for placebo-surgical trials, the personal risks and benefits of participation, and the importance and potential benefits of placebo trials to others, may be crucial to ensure adequate recruitment into the placebo-controlled surgical trial. Conclusions should be read cautiously however, given the small sample size present in this study
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