4,160 research outputs found
Pellet analysis evidences flexibility in the diet of Brown Skua (Stercorarius antarcticus) during breeding at Esperanza/Hope Bay (Antarctic Peninsula)
At Esperanza/Hope Bay, Antarctic Peninsula, breeding Brown Skuas (Stercorarius antarcticus) coexist with a breeding colony of Adélie (Pygoscelis adeliae) and Gentoo (P. papua) penguins. Previously, we reported that the principal prey consumed by Brown Skuas was penguin, however, the contribution of marine resources to their diet was high. Besides, the number of conspecifics that compete for this resource gradually increases across the season. This prompted us to enquire into the ecological factors that may promote the use of marine resources during the breeding cycle. For this, during the 2014–2015 and 2015–2016 seasons, 400 regurgitated pellets were collected over the breeding season for different stages in the nesting cycle: incubation, early and late chick rearing. Prey items were classified according to different categories (penguin, fish, mollusk, and crustacea), and the occurrence frequency of each category was determined. As expected, penguins were the main prey consumed, but the occurrence of fish and mollusks increased for both early and late care of chicks. The flexibility in skua foraging behavior may be related to the changing degree of central place forager, and to the fluctuating energy requirements during each breeding stage. Moreover, the conspicuous decline in penguin availability or accessibility induced by intraspecific competition, may represent an alternative driving force in their foraging behavior over the breeding season.Fil: Ibañez, Andres Esteban. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. División Zoología de Vertebrados. Sección Ornitología; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; ArgentinaFil: Morales, Lara Mariel. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. División Zoología de Vertebrados. Sección Ornitología; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; ArgentinaFil: Torres, D. S.. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. División Zoología de Vertebrados. Sección Ornitología; ArgentinaFil: Borghello, P.. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. División Zoología de Vertebrados. Sección Ornitología; ArgentinaFil: Montalti, Diego. Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Comercio Interno y Culto. Dirección Nacional del Antártico. Instituto Antártico Argentino; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. División Zoología de Vertebrados. Sección Ornitología; Argentin
Presence of stratospheric humidity in the ozone column depletion on the west coast of South America
The ozone column depletion over the western coast of South America has been previously explained, based on the existence of winds in the area of the depletion, which cause compression and thinning of the ozone layer. However, the presence of humidity and methane transported by these winds to the stratosphere where the ozone depletion is present gives evidence that these compounds also participate
in the depletion of the ozone layer. These two compounds, humidity and methane, are analysed during the ozone depletion of January, 1998. It is observed that when humidity presents fluctuations, ozone has fluctuations too. A maximum of humidity corresponds to a minimum of ozone, but there is a shift in altitude between them. This shift is observed in the stratosphere and upper troposphere and
corresponds to approximately 500 m. It is important to point out that during this event El Ni˜no was present and the sources of methane are the Amazon forest and the Pacific Ocean. The data for this study was obtained from NASA and HALOE
Twenty-One New Light Curves of OGLE-TR-56b: New System Parameters and Limits on Timing Variations
Although OGLE-TR-56b was the second transiting exoplanet discovered, only one
light curve, observed in 2006, has been published besides the discovery data.
We present twenty-one light curves of nineteen different transits observed
between July 2003 and July 2009 with the Magellan Telescopes and Gemini South.
The combined analysis of the new light curves confirms a slightly inflated
planetary radius relative to model predictions, with R_p = 1.378 +/- 0.090 R_J.
However, the values found for the transit duration, semimajor axis, and
inclination values differ significantly from the previous result, likely due to
systematic errors. The new semimajor axis and inclination, a = 0.01942 +/-
0.00015 AU and i = 73.72 +/- 0.18 degrees, are smaller than previously
reported, while the total duration, T_14 = 7931 +/- 38 s, is 18 minutes longer.
The transit midtimes have errors from 23 s to several minutes, and no evidence
is seen for transit midtime or duration variations. Similarly, no change is
seen in the orbital period, implying a nominal stellar tidal decay factor of
Q_* = 10^7, with a three-sigma lower limit of 10^5.7.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Ap
GJ 3236: a new bright, very low-mass eclipsing binary system discovered by the MEarth observatory
We report the detection of eclipses in GJ 3236, a bright (I = 11.6) very low
mass binary system with an orbital period of 0.77 days. Analysis of light- and
radial velocity curves of the system yielded component masses of 0.38 +/- 0.02
and 0.28 +/- 0.02 Msol. The central values for the stellar radii are larger
than the theoretical models predict for these masses, in agreement with the
results for existing eclipsing binaries, although the present 5% observational
uncertainties limit the significance of the larger radii to approximately 1
sigma. Degeneracies in the light curve models resulting from the unknown
configuration of surface spots on the components of GJ 3236 currently dominate
the uncertainties in the radii, and could be reduced by obtaining precise,
multi-band photometry covering the full orbital period. The system appears to
be tidally synchronized and shows signs of high activity levels as expected for
such a short orbital period, evidenced by strong Halpha emission lines in the
spectra of both components. These observations probe an important region of
mass-radius parameter space around the predicted transition to fully-convective
stellar interiors, where there are a limited number of precise measurements
available in the literature.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 10 tables, emulateapj format. Accepted for
publication in Ap
A search for evidence of irradiation in Centaurus X-4 during quiescence
We present a study of the neutron star X-Ray Transient Cen X-4. Our aim is to
look for any evidence of irradiation of the companion with a detailed analysis
of its radial velocity curve, relative contribution of the donor star and
Doppler tomography of the main emission lines. To improve our study all our
data are compared with a set of simulations that consider different physical
parameters of the system, like the disc aperture angle and the mass ratio. We
conclude that neither the radial velocity curve nor the orbital variation of
the relative donor's contribution to the total flux are affected by
irradiation. On the other hand, we do see emission from the donor star at
H and HeI 5876 which we tentatively attribute to irradiation effects.
In particular, the H emission from the companion is clearly
asymmetric and we suggest is produced by irradiation from the hot-spot.
Finally, from the velocity of the HeI 5876 spot we constrain the disc opening
angle to alpha=7-14 deg.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A as a R
Teleophthalmology Support for Primary Care Diagnosis and Management
This study was performed to evaluate a healthcare strategy based on teleophthalmology for diagnosis and management of primary healthcare users. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted to review the medical records of patients from January 2013 to December 2014 from primary care units in the city of São Paulo. The units referred patients, who had diabetes or high blood pressure, and were users of chloroquine compounds, for a fundus examination. The images were sent to a reading center for review, diagnosis, and patient referrals. From 9173 analyzed patients, 570 (6.2%) were excluded because of poor image quality. Of the remaining patients, 4933 (57.3%) had diabetes, 7242 (84,2%) systemic hypertension, and 113 (1.3%) used chloroquine. Of these, 989 (11.5%) patients needed ophthalmologic treatment. The most frequently prescribed treatments were cataract extraction in 692 (70%) of 989 and photocoagulation in 245 (24.8%) of 989 cases. Overall, cataract extraction was indicated in 692 (8%) of 8603 cases and photocoagulation in 245 (2.8%) of 8603 cases. When only patients with diabetes were considered, the indication for photocoagulation increased to 4.5%.The results showed that non-medical professionals could produce good-quality ocular images for screening of ocular diseases in most cases; only 6.2% of ocular images did not meet quality requirements. Most patients referred for fundus examination did not need a specific treatment, indicating that this system could be an inexpensive and reliable tool for use in developing countries.Â
The magnetically-active, low-mass, triple system WDS 19312+3607
Aims: We investigated in detail the system WDS 19312+3607, whose primary is
an active M4.5Ve star previously thought to be young (tau ~ 300-500 Ma) based
on high X-ray luminosity. Methods: We collected intermediate- and
low-resolution optical spectra taken with 2 m-class telescopes, photometric
data from the to 8 mum bands, and eleven astrometric epochs with a time
baseline of over 56 years for the two components in the system, G 125-15 and G
125-14. Results: We derived M4.5V spectral types for both stars, confirmed
their common proper motion, estimated the heliocentric distance and projected
physical separation, determined the galactocentric space velocities, and
deduced a most-probable age older than 600 Ma. We discovered that the primary,
G 125-15, is in turn an inflated, double-lined, spectroscopic binary with a
short period of photometric variability of P ~ 1.6 d, which we associated to
orbital synchronisation. The observed X-ray and Halpha emissions, photometric
variability, and abnormal radius and effective temperature of G 125-15 AB
indicate strong magnetic activity, possibly due to fast rotation. Besides, the
estimated projected physical separation between G 125-15 AB and G 125-14 of
about 1200 AU makes WDS 19312+3607 to be one of the widest systems with
intermediate M-type primaries. Conclusions: G 125-15 AB is a nearby (d ~ 26
pc), bright (J ~ 9.6 mag), active spectroscopic binary with a single
proper-motion companion of the same spectral type at a wide separation. They
are thus ideal targets for specific follow-ups to investigate wide and close
multiplicity or stellar expansion and surface cooling due to reduced convective
efficiency.Comment: A&A, in pres
The Clusters AgeS Experiment (CASE). IV. Analysis of the Eclipsing Binary V69 in the Globular Cluster 47 Tuc
We use photometric and spectroscopic observations of the eclipsing binary
V69-47 Tuc to derive the masses, radii, and luminosities of the component
stars. Based on measured systemic velocity, distance, and proper motion, the
system is a member of the globular cluster 47 Tuc. The system has an orbital
period of 29.5 d and the orbit is slightly eccentric with e=0.056. We obtain
Mp=0.8762 +- 0.0048 M(Sun), Rp=1.3148 +-0.0051 R(Sun), Lp=1.94 +- 0.21 L(Sun)
for the primary and Ms=0.8588 +- 0.0060 M(Sun), Rs=1.1616 +- 0.0062 R(Sun),
Ls=1.53 +- 0.17 L(Sun) for the secondary. These components of V69 are the first
Population II stars with masses and radii derived directly and with an accuracy
of better than 1%. We measure an apparent distance modulus of (m-M)v=13.35 +-
0.08 to V69. We compare the absolute parameters of V69 with five sets of
stellar evolution models and estimate the age of V69 using mass-luminosity-age,
mass-radius-age, and turnoff mass - age relations. The masses, radii, and
luminosities of the component stars are determined well enough that the
measurement of ages is dominated by systematic differences between the
evolutionary models, in particular, the adopted helium abundance. By comparing
the observations to Dartmouth model isochrones we estimate the age of V69 to be
11.25 +- 0.21(random) +- 0.85(systematic) Gyr assuming [Fe/H]=-0.70,
[alpha/Fe]=0.4, and Y=0.255. The determination of the distance to V69, and
hence to 47Tuc, can be further improved when infrared eclipse photometry is
obtained for the variable.Comment: 49 pages, 15 figures, submitted to A
Teleophthalmology Support for Primary Care Diagnosis and Management
This study was performed to evaluate a healthcare strategy based on teleophthalmology for diagnosis and management of primary healthcare users. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted to review the medical records of patients from January 2013 to December 2014 from primary care units in the city of São Paulo. The units referred patients, who had diabetes or high blood pressure, and were users of chloroquine compounds, for a fundus examination. The images were sent to a reading center for review, diagnosis, and patient referrals. From 9173 analyzed patients, 570 (6.2%) were excluded because of poor image quality. Of the remaining patients, 4933 (57.3%) had diabetes, 7242 (84,2%) systemic hypertension, and 113 (1.3%) used chloroquine. Of these, 989 (11.5%) patients needed ophthalmologic treatment. The most frequently prescribed treatments were cataract extraction in 692 (70%) of 989 and photocoagulation in 245 (24.8%) of 989 cases. Overall, cataract extraction was indicated in 692 (8%) of 8603 cases and photocoagulation in 245 (2.8%) of 8603 cases. When only patients with diabetes were considered, the indication for photocoagulation increased to 4.5%.The results showed that non-medical professionals could produce good-quality ocular images for screening of ocular diseases in most cases; only 6.2% of ocular images did not meet quality requirements. Most patients referred for fundus examination did not need a specific treatment, indicating that this system could be an inexpensive and reliable tool for use in developing countries.
Characterization of high-power white leds for VLC applications
During the last years, visible light communications (VLC) have been proposed for providing connectivity while
ensuring satisfactory illumination in both indoor environments and also specific outdoor scenarios without the
need of deploying complex infrastructures for that purpose. Transmission for VLC is carried out through lightemitting
diodes (LEDs), which correspond to semiconductors based on PN-junction materials with a direct
gap. In this sense, the current flow plays a major role in the behavior and performance of these devices for VLC.
Therefore, characterizing the electrical response of high-power white LED results mandatory for the successful
implementation of VLC. At this point, it is worth noting that the electrical characterization is usually not
available for high-power LEDs since, in fact, determining these characterization results challenging. In this sense,
there exist some measurement instruments such as LCRs or impedance analyzers typically employed for characterizing
materials and passive electrical components. However, these kinds of instruments are subject to a
limited input impedance and a maximum value of forwarding current. In this work, the electrical characterization
of the LED LXHL-BW02 of Luxeon is analyzed to show that typically commercial instrumentation for
characterizing these devices is limited for high-power LEDs, which may provide polluted results when these
limitations are not considered. After that, the characterization of the LXHL-BW02 based on a lock-in amplifier is
proposed.This research was co-financed by Comunidad de Madrid and the
FSE/FEDER Program under grant SINFOTON2-CM (S2018/NMT-4326),
the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid under grant 2020/00038/001, and
the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación and Agencia Estatal de Investigación (PID2019-109072RB-C31), and the European Regional Development
Fund (ERDF) EXP 00119337/IDI-2019029
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