3,265 research outputs found
Escherichia coli O157:H7 reduction in hamburgers with regard to premature browning of minced beef, colour score and method for determining doneness
This study investigated the effect of premature browning (PMB) on the survival of Escherichia coli O157:H7 in beef hamburgers after cooking with respect to interior colour of the hamburger and recommendations to cook hamburgers to a core temperature of 71 degrees C. Assessment of doneness by visual inspection or measurement of internal temperature was compared in terms of survival and the increased relative risk of illness due to PMB was estimated. At the last consume-by-day, hamburgers made from minced meat packaged in 80/20 O-2/CO2 (MAP hamburger) and from meat minced at retail packaged in atmospheric condition (control hamburger) were inoculated with a gfp-tagged strain of E. coli O157:H7 (E. coli O157:H7gfp+). Hamburgers were cooked for different times during assessment of the core temperature every 30 s and cut in halves after cooking. Doneness was evaluated based on visual judgement of the internal colour using a score chart (C-score) from 'uncooked' (score 1) to 'tan with no evidence of pink' (score 5). An alternative five point score chart (TCC-score) including texture of the meat, clarity of meat juice and internal colour was also developed. Enumeration of viable E. coli O157:H7gfp+ in cooked hamburgers was based on fluorescent colonies recovered from plates. Results showed that MAP hamburgers developed PMB when compared with controls (P = 0.0003) and that the shortest cooking time for the highest C-score was 6 and 11 min for MAP and control hamburgers, respectively. The mean temperature in the MAP hamburger was then 60.3 degrees C. The TCC-score reduced the difference between MAP and control hamburgers. It was also shown that the survival of E. coli O157:H7gfp+ was highest in MAP hamburgers. The predicted absolute risks for illness were highest for MAP hamburgers for all C-scores and the relative risk associated with PMB increased with doneness. For a C-score of 4 (slightly pink) the predicted relative risk for illness was 300 times higher for MAP hamburger than for controls. A variable pathogen reduction was observed when cooking hamburgers to temperatures of 70-76 degrees C (the 5th and 95th percentile range was around 33 log CFU). The lower reductions, at the 5th percentile, may, depending on initial contamination levels, not be enough to ensure sufficient and safe inactivation of E. coli O157:H7. Efforts to inform consumers about PMB in minced meat packaged in high oxygen packages (>= 60% O-2) are needed with the aim to make consumers use thermometers correctly or at least not determine doneness based only on meat colour
Preliminary results on SiO v=3 J=1-0 maser emission from AGB stars
We present the results of SiO maser observations at 43GHz toward two AGB
stars using the VLBA. Our preliminary results on the relative positions of the
different J=1-0 SiO masers (v=1,2 and 3) indicate that the current ideas on SiO
maser pumping could be wrong at some fundamental level. A deep revision of the
SiO pumping models could be necessary.Comment: poster, 2 pages, 2 figures, Proc. IAU Symp. 287 "Cosmic Masers: from
OH to H0", R.S. Booth, E.M.L. Humphreys and W.H.T. Vlemmings, ed
SiO masers from AGB stars in the vibrationally excited v=1,v=2, and v=3 states
The v=1 and v=2 J=1-0 (43 GHz), and v=1 J=2-1 (86 GHz) SiO masers are intense
in AGB stars and have been mapped using VLBI showing ring-like distributions.
Those of the v=1, v=2 J=1-0 masers are similar, but the spots are rarely
coincident, while the v=1 J=2-1 maser arises from a well separated region
farther out. These relative locations can be explained by models tools that
include the overlap of two IR lines of SiO and H2O. The v=3 J=1-0 line is not
directly affected by any line overlap and its spot structure and position,
relative to the other lines, is a good test to the standard pumping models. We
present single-dish and simultaneous VLBI observations of the v=1, v=2, and v=3
J=1-0 maser transitions of 28SiO in several AGB stars. The spatial distribution
of the SiO maser emission in the v=3 J=1-0 transition from AGB stars is
systematically composed of a series of spots that occupy a ring-like structure.
The overall ring structure is extremely similar to that found in the other 43
GHz transitions and is very different from the structure of the v=1 J=2-1
maser. The positions of the individual spots of the different 43 GHz lines are,
however, very rarely coincident, which in general is separated by about 0.3 AU
(between 1 and 5 mas). These results are very difficult to reconcile with
standard pumping models, which predict that the masers of rotational
transitions within a given vibrational state require very similar excitation
conditions, while the transitions of different vibrational states should appear
in different positions. However, models including line overlap tend to predict
v=1, v=2, v=3 J=1-0 population inversion to occur under very similar
conditions, while the requirements for v=1 J=2-1 appear clearly different, and
are compatible with the observational results.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures accepted by A&
Recommended from our members
Electrostatic Turbulence and Debye-scale Structures in Collisionless Shocks
We present analysis of more than 100 large-amplitude bipolar electrostatic structures in a quasi-perpendicular supercritical Earth's bow shock crossing, measured by the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. The occurrence of the bipolar structures is shown to be tightly correlated with magnetic field gradients in the shock transition region. The bipolar structures have negative electrostatic potentials and spatial scales of a few Debye lengths. The bipolar structures propagate highly oblique to the shock normal with velocities (in the plasma rest frame) of the order of the ion-acoustic velocity. We argue that the bipolar structures are ion phase space holes produced by the two-stream instability between incoming and reflected ions. This is the first identification of the ion two-stream instability in collisionless shocks
SiO Maser Forest at the Galactic Center
A moderately deep survey of stellar maser sources toward the Galactic center
has been made in the SiO J=1-0 v=1 and v=2 transitions (~ 43 GHz) with the
Nobeyama 45-m telescope of a beam size of about 40". At the Galactic center
(Sgr A*), 7 (4 new) SiO maser sources were detected in one beam. In order to
investigate the spatial distribution of SiO maser sources, we have also
observed the offset positions by +- 40" in Galactic longitude from the Galactic
center. In total, 7 (4 new) SiO maser sources were detected at the offset
positions. Taking into account the shorter integration time at the offset
positions, we find that the surface number density of SiO maser sources is
nearly constant at the Galactic center. The number density of SiO maser sources
is found to be an order of magnitude higher than the density of OH 1612 MHz
objects. A radial-velocity gradient in Galactic longitude was not detected.
These facts indicate that the SiO maser sources seen toward the Galactic center
are mostly associated with the stellar population of a Galactic stellar nuclear
disk of more than a few arc minute radius.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, Astrophysical Journal (Letters) in pres
The GOAL study: a prospective examination of the impact of factor V Leiden and ABO(H) blood groups on haemorrhagic and thrombotic pregnancy outcomes
Factor V Leiden (FVL) and ABO(H) blood groups are the common influences on haemostasis and retrospective studies have linked FVL with pregnancy complications. However, only one sizeable prospective examination has taken place. As a result, neither the impact of FVL in unselected subjects, any interaction with ABO(H) in pregnancy, nor the utility of screening for FVL is defined. A prospective study of 4250 unselected pregnancies was carried out. A venous thromboembolism (VTE) rate of 1·23/1000 was observed, but no significant association between FVL and pre-eclampsia, intra-uterine growth restriction or pregnancy loss was seen. No influence of FVL and/or ABO(H) on ante-natal bleeding or intra-partum or postpartum haemorrhage was observed. However, FVL was associated with birth-weights >90th centile [odds ratio (OR) 1·81; 95% confidence interval (CI<sub>95</sub>) 1·04–3·31] and neonatal death (OR 14·79; CI<sub>95</sub> 2·71–80·74). No association with ABO(H) alone, or any interaction between ABO(H) and FVL was observed. We neither confirmed the protective effect of FVL on pregnancy-related blood loss reported in previous smaller studies, nor did we find the increased risk of some vascular complications reported in retrospective studies
G359.87+0.18: An FR II Radio Galaxy 15 Arcminutes from Sgr A*. Implications for the Scattering Region in the Galactic Center
G359.87+0.18 is an enigmatic object located 15' from Sgr A*. It has been
variously classified as an extragalactic source, Galactic jet source, and young
supernova remnant. We present new observations of G359.87+0.18 between 0.33 and
15 GHz and use these to argue that this source is an Faranoff-Riley II radio
galaxy. We are able to place a crude limit on its redshift of z > 0.1. The
source has a spectral index \alpha < -1 (S \propto \nu^\alpha), suggestive of a
radio galaxy with a redshift z >~ 2.
The scattering diameters of Sgr A* and several nearby OH masers (~ 1" at 1
GHz) indicate that a region of enhanced scattering is along the line of sight
to the Galactic center. If the region covers the Galactic center uniformly, the
implied diameter for a background source is at least 600" at 0.33 GHz, in
contrast with the observed 20" diameter of G359.87+0.18. Using the scattering
diameter of a nearby OH maser OH 359.762+0.120 and the widths of two, nearby,
non-thermal threads, G0.08+0.15 and G359.79+0.17, we show that a uniform
scattering region should cover G359.87+0.18. We therefore conclude that the
Galactic center scattering region is inhomogeneous on a scale of 5' (~ 10 pc at
a distance of 8.5 kpc). This scale is comparable to the size scale of molecular
clouds in the Galactic center. The close agreement between these two lengths
scales is an indication that the scattering region is linked intimately to the
Galactic center molecular clouds.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ, vol. 515, LaTeX2e manuscript
using aaspp4 macro, 19 pages, 8 figures in 11 PostScript file
The proper motion of the Arches cluster with Keck Laser-Guide Star Adaptive Optics
We present the first measurement of the proper motion of the young, compact
Arches cluster near the Galactic center from near-infrared adaptive optics (AO)
data taken with the recently commissioned laser-guide star (LGS) at the Keck
10-m telescope. The excellent astrometric accuracy achieved with LGS-AO
provides the basis for a detailed comparison with VLT/NAOS-CONICA data taken
4.3 years earlier. Over the 4.3 year baseline, a spatial displacement of the
Arches cluster with respect to the field population is measured to be 24.0 +/-
2.2 mas, corresponding to a proper motion of 5.6 +/- 0.5 mas/yr or 212 +/- 29
km/s at a distance of 8 kpc. In combination with the known line-of-sight
velocity of the cluster, we derive a 3D space motion of 232 +/- 30 km/s of the
Arches relative to the field. The large proper motion of the Arches cannot be
explained with any of the closed orbital families observed in gas clouds in the
bar potential of the inner Galaxy, but would be consistent with the Arches
being on a transitional trajectory from x1 to x2 orbits. We investigate a
cloud-cloud collision as the possible origin for the Arches cluster. The
integration of the cluster orbit in the potential of the inner Galaxy suggests
that the cluster passes within 10 pc of the supermassive black hole only if its
true GC distance is very close to its projected distance. A contribution of
young stars from the Arches cluster to the young stellar population in the
inner few parsecs of the GC thus appears increasingly unlikely. The measurement
of the 3D velocity and orbital analysis provides the first observational
evidence that Arches-like clusters do not spiral into the GC. This confirms
that no progenitor clusters to the nuclear cluster are observed at the present
epoch.Comment: 22 pdflatex pages including 12 figures, reviewed version accepted by
Ap
The slope of the black-hole mass versus velocity dispersion correlation
Observations of nearby galaxies reveal a strong correlation between the mass
of the central dark object M and the velocity dispersion sigma of the host
galaxy, of the form log(M/M_sun) = a + b*log(sigma/sigma_0); however, published
estimates of the slope b span a wide range (3.75 to 5.3). Merritt & Ferrarese
have argued that low slopes (<4) arise because of neglect of random measurement
errors in the dispersions and an incorrect choice for the dispersion of the
Milky Way Galaxy. We show that these explanations account for at most a small
part of the slope range. Instead, the range of slopes arises mostly because of
systematic differences in the velocity dispersions used by different groups for
the same galaxies. The origin of these differences remains unclear, but we
suggest that one significant component of the difference results from Ferrarese
& Merritt's extrapolation of central velocity dispersions to r_e/8 (r_e is the
effective radius) using an empirical formula. Another component may arise from
dispersion-dependent systematic errors in the measurements. A new determination
of the slope using 31 galaxies yields b=4.02 +/- 0.32, a=8.13 +/- 0.06, for
sigma_0=200 km/s. The M-sigma relation has an intrinsic dispersion in log M
that is no larger than 0.3 dex. In an Appendix, we present a simple model for
the velocity-dispersion profile of the Galactic bulge.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figure
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