4,776 research outputs found
Descriptive Epidemiology of Physical Activity in Adolescents
This paper reviews the descriptive epidemiology of physical activity in adolescents. Large population-based studies were reviewed, along with smaller studies using objective monitoring of physical activity. Estimates showed that adolescents engage in physical activity of any intensity for a mean of one hour per day. Approximately two thirds of males and one quarter of females participate in moderate to vigorous activity for 20 min 3 or more days per week. Activity levels decline with increasing age across adolescence, and this decrease is more marked in females than in males. Comparison of these data to physical activity guidelines for adolescents suggests the vast majority are meeting the guideline of accumulating physical activity. However, a substantial number of males, and the majority of females, are not meeting the guideline for moderate to vigorous physical activity
Wavelength-Dependent Extinction and Grain Sizes in Dippers
We have examined inter-night variability of K2-discovered Dippers that are
not close to being viewed edge-on, as determined from previously-reported ALMA
images, using the SpeX spectrograph and the NASA Infrared Telescope facility
(IRTF). The three objects observed were EPIC 203850058, EPIC 205151387, and
EPIC 204638512 (2MASS J16042165-2130284). Using the ratio of the fluxes between
two successive nights, we find that for EPIC 204638512 and EPIC 205151387, we
find that the properties of the dust differ from that seen in the diffuse
interstellar medium and denser molecular clouds. However, the grain properties
needed to explain the extinction does resemble those used to model the disks of
many young stellar objects. The wavelength-dependent extinction models of both
EPIC 204638512 and EPIC 205151387 includes grains at least 500 microns in size,
but lacks grains smaller than 0.25 microns. The change in extinction during the
dips, and the timescale for these variations to occur, imply obscuration by the
surface layers of the inner disks. The recent discovery of a highly
mis-inclined inner disk in EPIC 204638512 is suggests that the variations in
this disk system may point to due to rapid changes in obscuration by the
surface layers of its inner disk, and that other face-on Dippers might have
similar geometries. The He I line at 1.083 microns in EPIC 205151387 and EPIC
20463851 were seen to change from night to night, suggesting that we are seeing
He I gas mixed in with the surface dust.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Variability of Disk Emission in Pre-Main Sequence and Related Stars IV. Investigating the Structural Changes in the Inner Disk Region of MWC 480
We present five epochs of near IR observations of the protoplanetary disk
around MWC 480 (HD31648) obtained with the SpeX spectrograph on NASA's Infrared
Telescope Facility (IRTF) between 2007 and 2013, inclusive. Using the measured
line fluxes in the Pa beta and Br gamma lines, we found the mass accretion
rates to be (1.43 - 2.61)x10^-8 Msun y^-1 and (1.81 - 2.41)x10^-8 Msun y^-1
respectively, but which varied by more than 50% from epoch to epoch. The
spectral energy distribution (SED)reveals a variability of about 30% between
1.5 and 10 microns during this same period of time. We investigated the
variability using of the continuum emission of the disk in using the
Monte-Carlo Radiative Transfer Code (MCRT) HOCHUNK3D. We find that varying the
height of the inner rim successfully produces a change in the NIR flux, but
lowers the far IR emission to levels below all measured fluxes. Because the
star exhibits bipolar flows, we utilized a structure that simulates an inner
disk wind to model the variability in the near IR, without producing flux
levels in the far IR that are inconsistent with existing data. For this object,
variable near IR emission due to such an outflow is more consistent with the
data than changing the scale height of the inner rim of the disk.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figure
XMMU J0541.8-6659, a new supernova remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud
The high sensitivity of the XMM-Newton instrumentation offers the opportunity
to study faint and extended sources in the Milky Way and nearby galaxies such
as the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) in detail. The ROSAT PSPC survey of the LMC
has revealed more than 700 X-ray sources, among which there are 46 supernova
remnants (SNRs) and candidates. We have observed the field around one of the
most promising SNR candidates in the ROSAT PSPC catalogue, labelled [HP99] 456
with XMM-Newton, to determine its nature. We investigated the XMM-Newton data
along with new radio-continuum, near infrared and optical data. In particular,
spectral and morphological studies of the X-ray and radio data were performed.
The X-ray images obtained in different energy bands reveal two different
structures. Below 1.0 keV the X-ray emission shows the shell-like morphology of
an SNR with a diameter of ~73 pc, one of the largest known in the LMC. For its
thermal spectrum we estimate an electron temperature of (0.49 +/- 0.12)keV
assuming non-equilibrium ionisation. The X-ray images above 1.0 keV reveal a
less extended source within the SNR emission, located ~1' west of the centre of
the SNR and coincident with bright point sources detected in radio-continuum.
This hard component has an extent of 0.9' (i.e. ~13 pc at a distance of ~50
kpc) and a non-thermal spectrum. The hard source coincides in position with the
ROSAT source [HP99] 456 and shows an indication for substructure. We firmly
identify a new SNR in the LMC with a shell-like morphology and a thermal
spectrum. Assuming the SNR to be in the Sedov phase yields an age of ~23 kyr.
We explore possible associations of the hard non-thermal emitting component
with a pulsar wind nebula (PWN) or background active galactic nuclei (AGN).Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Monitoring international migration flows in Europe. Towards a statistical data base combining data from different sources
The paper reviews techniques developed in demography, geography and statistics that are useful for bridging the gap between available data on international migration flows and the information required for policy making and research. The basic idea of the paper is as follows: to establish a coherent and consistent data base that contains sufficiently detailed, up-to-date and accurate information, data from several sources should be combined. That raises issues of definition and measurement, and of how to combine data from different origins properly. The issues may be tackled more easily if the statistics that are being compiled are viewed as different outcomes or manifestations of underlying stochastic processes governing migration. The link between the processes and their outcomes is described by models, the parameters of which must be estimated from the available data. That may be done within the context of socio-demographic accounting. The paper discusses the experience of the U.S. Bureau of the Census in combining migration data from several sources. It also summarizes the many efforts in Europe to establish a coherent and consistent data base on international migration.
The paper was written at IIASA. It is part of the Migration Estimation Study, which is a collaborative IIASA-University of Groningen project, funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). The project aims at developing techniques to obtain improved estimates of international migration flows by country of origin and country of destination
Galactic and Extragalactic Samples of Supernova Remnants: How They Are Identified and What They Tell Us
Supernova remnants (SNRs) arise from the interaction between the ejecta of a
supernova (SN) explosion and the surrounding circumstellar and interstellar
medium. Some SNRs, mostly nearby SNRs, can be studied in great detail. However,
to understand SNRs as a whole, large samples of SNRs must be assembled and
studied. Here, we describe the radio, optical, and X-ray techniques which have
been used to identify and characterize almost 300 Galactic SNRs and more than
1200 extragalactic SNRs. We then discuss which types of SNRs are being found
and which are not. We examine the degree to which the luminosity functions,
surface-brightness distributions and multi-wavelength comparisons of the
samples can be interpreted to determine the class properties of SNRs and
describe efforts to establish the type of SN explosion associated with a SNR.
We conclude that in order to better understand the class properties of SNRs, it
is more important to study (and obtain additional data on) the SNRs in galaxies
with extant samples at multiple wavelength bands than it is to obtain samples
of SNRs in other galaxiesComment: Final 2016 draft of a chapter in "Handbook of Supernovae" edited by
Athem W. Alsabti and Paul Murdin. Final version available at
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-20794-0_90-
Primates in Peril: The world's 25 most endangered primates 2008-2010
Introduction Here we report on the fifth iteration of the biennial listing of a consensus of 25 primate species considered to be amongst the most endangered worldwide and the most in need of urgent conservation measures. The first was drawn up in 2000 by the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group, together with Conservation International (Mittermeier et al. 2000). The list was subsequently reviewed and updated in 2002 during an open meeting held during the 19th Congress of the International Primatological Society (IPS) in Beijing, China (Mittermeier et al. 2002). That occasion provided for debate among primatologists working in the field who had first-hand knowledge of the causes of threats to primates, both in general and in particular with the species or communities they study. The meeting and the review of the list of the World’s 25 Most Endangered Primates resulted in its official endorsement by the IPS, and became as such a combined endeavor of the Primate Specialist Group, the IPS, and Conservation International. A third revision was carried out at a meeting in August 2004, at the 20th Congress of the IPS in Torino, Italy (Mittermeier et al. 2006). The fourth, covering the biennium 2006–2008, was the result of a meeting held during the 21st Congress of the International Primatological Society (IPS), in Entebbe, Uganda, 26–30 June 2006 (Mittermeier et al. 2007)
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