1,343 research outputs found
WSO/UV: World Space Observatory/Ultraviolet
We summarize the capabilities of the World Space Observatory (UV) Project
(WSO/UV). An example of the importance of this project (with a planned launch
date of 2007/8) for the study of Classical Novae is given.Comment: 4 pages, To appear in the proceeedings of the "Classical Nova
Explosions" conference, eds. M. Hernanz and J. Jose, AI
The genetic defect of the original Norwegian lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency families
AbstractThree of the original Norwegian lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) deficiency families have been investigated for mutations in the gene for lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase by DNA sequencing of the exons amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. A single TâA transversion in codon 252 in exon 6 converting Met(ATG) to Lys(AAG) was observed in all homozygotes. In spite of the identical mutation, the disease phenotypes differed in severity. This was not reflected in the expression of LCAT in the heterozygotes
Anodic dissolution of metals in oxide-free cryolite melts
The anodic behavior of metals in molten cryolite-alumina melts has been investigated mostly for use as inert anodes for the Hall-HĂ©roult process. In the present work, gold, platinum, palladium, copper, tungsten, nickel, cobalt and iron metal electrodes were anodically polarized in an oxide-free cryolite melt (11%wt. excess AlF3 ; 5%wt. CaF2) at 1273 K. The aim of the experiments was to characterize the oxidation reactions of the metals occurring without the effect of oxygen-containing dissolved species. The anodic dissolution of each metal was demonstrated, and electrochemical reactions were assigned using reversible potential calculation. The relative stability of metals as well as the possibility of generating pure fluorine is discussed
Follow-up Studies of the Pulsating Magnetic White Dwarf SDSS J142625.71+575218.3
We present a follow-up analysis of the unique magnetic luminosity-variable
carbon-atmosphere white dwarf SDSS J142625.71+575218.3. This includes the
results of some 106.4 h of integrated light photometry which have revealed,
among other things, the presence of a new periodicity at 319.720 s which is not
harmonically related to the dominant oscillation (417.707 s) previously known
in that star. Using our photometry and available spectroscopy, we consider the
suggestion made by Montgomery et al. (2008) that the luminosity variations in
SDSS J142625.71+575218.3 may not be caused by pulsational instabilities, but
rather by photometric activity in a carbon-transferring analog of AM CVn. This
includes a detailed search for possible radial velocity variations due to rapid
orbital motion on the basis of MMT spectroscopy. At the end of the exercise, we
unequivocally rule out the interacting binary hypothesis and conclude instead
that, indeed, the luminosity variations are caused by g-mode pulsations as in
other pulsating white dwarfs. This is in line with the preferred possibility
put forward by Montgomery et al. (2008).Comment: 11 pages in emulateApJ, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The Effect of Posterior Tibial Slope on the Risk of Revision Surgery After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Background:
A significant proportion of patients undergoing anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) later experience graft failure. Some studies suggest an association between a steep posterior tibial slope (PTS) and graft failure.
Purpose:
To examine the PTS in a large cohort of patients about to undergo ACLR and to determine whether a steep PTS is associated with later revision surgery.
Study Design:
Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3.
Methods:
A retrospective review of a cohort undergoing isolated ACLR between 2002 and 2012 (with 8-19 years of follow-up) was conducted. Preoperative sagittal radiographs of knees in full extension were used for measurements of the PTS. There were 2 independent examiners who performed repeated measurements to assess the reliability of the method. Statistical analyses were performed to compare the PTS in the groups with and without later revision surgery.
Results:
A total of 728 patients, with a mean age of 28 years at the time of surgery, were included. Overall, 10% (n = 76) underwent revision surgery during the observation period. The group of injured knees had a significantly steeper PTS compared with the group of uninjured knees (9.5° vs 8.7°, respectively; P < .05). The mean PTS in the no revision group was 9.5° compared with 9.3° in the revision group (not significant). Dichotomized testing of revision rates related to PTS cutoff values of â„10°, â„12°, â„14°, â„16°, and â„18° showed no association of PTS steepness (not significant) to graft failure. Patients with revision were younger than the ones without (mean age, 24 ± 8 vs 29 ± 10 years, respectively) and had a shorter time from injury to ACLR (mean, 14 ± 27 vs 24 ± 44 months, respectively) as well as a smaller graft size (8.2 vs 8.4 mm, respectively; P = .040).
Conclusion:
The current study did not find any association between a steep PTS measured on lateral knee radiographs and revision ACL surgery. However, a steeper PTS was seen in the group of injured knees compared with the group of uninjured (contralateral) knees. Independent of the PTS, younger patients, those with a shorter time from injury to surgery, and those with a smaller graft size were found to undergo revision surgery more often.publishedVersio
Computed Tomography Assessment of Anatomic Graft Placement After ACL Reconstruction: A Comparative Study of Grid and Angle Measurements
Background: The anatomic placement of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) grafts is often assessed with postoperative imaging. In clinical practice, graft angles are measured to indicate anatomic placement on magnetic resonance imaging, whereas grid measurements are performed on computed tomography (CT). Recently, a study indicated that graft angle measurements could also be assessed on CT. No consensus has yet been reached on which measurement method is best suited to assess anatomic graft placement. Purpose: To compare the ability of grid measurements and angle measurements to identify anatomic versus nonanatomic tunnel placement on CT performed in patients undergoing ACL reconstruction. Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Methods: A total of 100 knees undergoing primary reconstruction with a hamstring graft (HAM group), 91 undergoing reconstruction with a boneâpatellar tendonâbone graft (BPTB group), and 117 undergoing revision ACL reconstruction (REV group) were assessed with CT. Grid measurements of the femoral and tibial tunnels and angle measurements of grafts were performed. Graft placement, rated as anatomic or nonanatomic, was assessed with both methods. Pearson chi-square, analysis of variance, Kruskal-Wallis, and weighted kappa tests were performed as appropriate. Results: The grid assessment classified 10% of the HAM group, 4% of the BPTB group, and 17% of the REV group as nonanatomic (P < .001). The angle assessment classified 37% of the HAM group, 54% of the BPTB group, and 47% of the REV group as nonanatomic. The weighted kappa between angle measurements and grid measurements was low in all groups (HAM: 0.009; BPTB: 0.065; REV: 0.041). Conclusion: The agreement between grid measurements and angle measurements was very low. The angle measurements seemed to overestimate nonanatomic tunnel placement. Grid measurements were better in identifying malpositioned grafts.publishedVersio
Hot White Dwarf Donors in Ultracompact X-Ray Binaries
The discovery of two accreting millisecond X-ray pulsars in binaries with 43
minute orbital periods allows for a new probe of the donor's structure. For XTE
J1751-305, only a hot white dwarf (WD) can fill the Roche Lobe. A cold He WD is
a possible solution for XTE J0929-314, though I will show that evolutionary
arguments make a hot WD more likely. In addition to being larger than the T=0
models, these finite entropy, low-mass (<0.03 solar masses) WDs have a minimum
mass for a fixed core temperature. If they remain hot as they lose mass and
expand, they can ``evaporate'' to leave an isolated millisecond radio pulsar.
They also adiabatically expand upon mass loss at a rate faster than the growth
of the Roche radius if the angular momentum deposited in the disk is not
returned to the donor. If the timescale of the resulting runaway mass transfer
is shorter than the viscous timescale in the outer disk, then the mass transfer
instability of Ruderman and Shaham for He WDs would be realized. However, my
estimates of these timescales still makes the instability unlikely for
adiabatic responses. I close by noting the possible impact of finite T WDs on
our understanding of AM CVn binaries.Comment: to appear in Astrophysical Journal Letter
Mining usage data for adaptive personalisation of smartphone based help-on-demand services
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.Mobile computing devices and their applications that encompass context aware components are becoming increasingly more prevalent. The context-awareness of these types of applications typically focuses on the services offered. In this paper we describe a framework that supports the monitoring and analysis of mobile application usage patterns with the goal of updating user models for adaptive services and user interface personalisation. This paper focuses on two aspects of the framework. The first is the modelling and storage of the usage data. The second focuses on the data mining component of the framework, outlining the five different capabilities of the adaptation in addition to the algorithms used. The proposed framework has been evaluated through specific case studies, with the results attained demonstrating the effectiveness of the data mining capabilities and in particular the adaptation of the User Interface. The accuracy and efficiency of the algorithms used are also evaluated with three users. The results of the evaluation show that the aims of the data mining component were achieved with the personalisation and adaptation of content and user interface, respectively
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