17,012 research outputs found
Postnatal debriefing: Have we thrown the baby out with the bathwater?
Postnatal debriefing is offered by 78% of maternity services in the UK despite little evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that it is effective. RCTs in this area have applied debriefing as a prophylactic to all or high risk women, rather than as a treatment for women who request it. This pragmatic trial therefore evaluated existing postnatal debriefing services that provide debriefing as a treatment for women who request it. Forty-six women who met criterion A for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and requested debriefing 1.3 to 72.2 months (median 16 weeks) postpartum completed measures of depression, PTSD, support and negative appraisals of the birth before and one month after debriefing. Women were compared with others who gave birth in the same hospitals during the same time period (n=34), who met criterion A for PTSD but had not requested debriefing. Results showed PTSD symptoms reduced over time in both groups but greater decreases were observed in women who attended debriefing. Debriefing also led to reduction in negative appraisals but did not affect symptoms of depression. Therefore, results suggest providing debriefing as a treatment to women who request or are referred to it may help to reduce symptoms of PTSD
The Einstein Ring 0047-2808 Revisited: A Bayesian Inversion
In a previous paper, we outlined a new Bayesian method for inferring the
properties of extended gravitational lenses, given data in the form of resolved
images. This method holds the most promise for optimally extracting information
from the observed image, whilst providing reliable uncertainties in all
parameters. Here, we apply the method to the well studied optical Einstein ring
0047-2808. Our results are in broad agreement with previous studies, showing
that the density profile of the lensing galaxy is aligned within a few degrees
of the light profile, and suggesting that the source galaxy (at redshift 3.6)
is a binary system, although its size is only of order 1-2 kpc. We also find
that the mass of the elliptical lensing galaxy enclosed by the image is
(2.910.01) M_{\sun}. Our method is able to achieve
improved resolution for the source reconstructions, although we also find that
some of the uncertainties are greater than has been found in previous analyses,
due to the inclusion of extra pixels and a more general lens model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Obituary: Jack Duloy, 1932â2005
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
Multi-Thread Hydrodynamic Modeling of a Solar Flare
Past hydrodynamic simulations have been able to reproduce the high
temperatures and densities characteristic of solar flares. These simulations,
however, have not been able to account for the slow decay of the observed flare
emission or the absence of blueshifts in high spectral resolution line
profiles. Recent work has suggested that modeling a flare as an sequence of
independently heated threads instead of as a single loop may resolve the
discrepancies between the simulations and observations. In this paper we
present a method for computing multi-thread, time-dependent hydrodynamic
simulations of solar flares and apply it to observations of the Masuda flare of
1992 January 13. We show that it is possible to reproduce the temporal
evolution of high temperature thermal flare plasma observed with the
instruments on the \textit{GOES} and \textit{Yohkoh} satellites. The results
from these simulations suggest that the heating time-scale for a individual
thread is on the order of 200 s. Significantly shorter heating time scales (20
s) lead to very high temperatures and are inconsistent with the emission
observed by \textit{Yohkoh}.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Seeing Star Formation Regions with Gravitational Microlensing
We qualitatively study the effects of gravitational microlensing on our view
of unresolved extragalactic star formation regions. Using a general
gravitational microlensing configuration, we perform a number of simulations
that reveal that specific imprints of the star forming region are imprinted,
both photometrically and spectroscopically, upon observations. Such
observations have the potential to reveal the nature and size of these star
forming regions, through the degree of variability observed in a monitoring
campaign, and hence resolve the star formation regions in distant galaxies
which are too small to be probed via more standard techniques.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, ApJ accepte
A Deep Multicolor Survey I. Imaging Observations and Catalog of Stellar Objects
We have used the KPNO 4-meter Mayall telescope to image 0.83 square degrees
of sky in six fields at high galactic latitude in six filters spanning
3000-10000\AA\ to magnitude limits ranging from 22.1 to 23.8. We have assembled
a catalog of 21,375 stellar objects detected in the fields for use primarily in
conducting a multicolor search for quasars. This paper describes the data
reduction techniques used on the CCD data, the methods used to construct the
stellar object catalog, and the simulations performed to understand its
completeness and contamination.Comment: To Appear in ApJ Supplement, 1996. 168k uuencoded gunzipped tarred
tex file (requires aas2pp4.sty and tighten.sty) and 4 PostScript figures.
Also available at http://astro.as.arizona.edu/~pathall/astro.html#preprint
Scientific Cooperation in the North Pacific: The PICES Project
While individuals carry out scientific research, their local, national, and international institutions also play an important role. This is particularly true in the case of marine science, where the vast scale and complexity of ocean resources demands not only cooperation among individuals and their institutions, but also an interdisciplinary approach that allows for interaction among fields such as physics and biology. Marine science also demands effective interaction between those who seek understanding of natural systems and their resources and those who wish to apply that understanding in utilizing those resources
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