2,347 research outputs found
Noble gases in twenty Yamato H-chondrites: Comparison with Allan Hills chondrites and modern falls
Concentration and isotopic composition of noble gases have been measured in 20 H-chrondrites found on the Yamato Mountains ice fields in Antarctica. The distribution of exposure ages as well as of radiogenic He-4 contents is similar to that of H-chrondrites collected at the Allan Hills site. Furthermore, a comparison of the noble gas record of Antarctic H-chrondrites and finds or falls from non-Antarctic areas gives no support to the suggestion that Antarctic H-chrondrites and modern falls derive from differing interplanetary meteorite populations
Performance of the AMS-02 Transition Radiation Detector
For cosmic particle spectroscopy on the International Space Station the AMS
experiment will be equipped with a Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) to
improve particle identification. The TRD has 20 layers of fleece radiator with
Xe/CO2 proportional mode straw tube chambers. They are supported in a conically
shaped octagon structure made of CFC-Al-honeycomb. For low power consumption VA
analog multiplexers are used as front-end readout. A 20 layer prototype built
from final design components has achieved proton rejections from 100 to 2000 at
90% electron efficiency for proton beam energies up to 250 GeV with cluster
counting, likelihood and neural net selection algorithms.Comment: 11 pages, 25 figures, espcrc2.sty (elsevier 2-column
A surprising method for polarising antiprotons
We propose a method for polarising antiprotons in a storage ring by means of
a polarised positron beam moving parallel to the antiprotons. If the relative
velocity is adjusted to the cross section for spin-flip is
as large as about barn as shown by new QED-calculations of
the triple spin-cross sections. Two possibilities for providing a positron
source with sufficient flux density are presented. A polarised positron beam
with a polarisation of 0.70 and a flux density of approximately /(mm s) appears to be feasible by means of a radioactive C
dc-source. A more involved proposal is the production of polarised positrons by
pair production with circularly polarised photons. It yields a polarisation of
0.76 and requires the injection into a small storage ring. Such polariser
sources can be used at low (100 MeV) as well as at high (1 GeV) energy storage
rings providing a time of about one hour for polarisation build-up of about
antiprotons to a polarisation of about 0.18. A comparison with other
proposals show a gain in the figure-of-merit by a factor of about ten.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures; v2: minor language and signification corrections
v3: (14 pages, 12 figures) major error, nonapplicable polarisation transfer
cross sections replaced by the mandatory spin-flip cross section
New Herbig Ae/Be stars confirmed via high-resolution optical spectroscopy
We present FEROS high-resolution (R~45000) optical spectroscopy of 34 Herbig
Ae/Be star candidates with previously unknown or poorly constrained spectral
types. Within the sample, 16 sources are positionally coincident with nearby
(d<250 pc) star-forming regions (SFRs). All the candidates have IR excess. We
determine the spectral type and luminosity class of the sources, derive their
radial and rotational velocities, and constrain their distances employing
spectroscopic parallaxes. We confirm 13 sources as Herbig Ae/Be stars and find
one classical T Tauri star. Three sources are emission line early-type giants
and may be Herbig Ae/Be stars. One source is a main-sequence A-type star.
Fourteen sources are post-main-sequence giant and supergiant stars. Two sources
are extreme emission-line stars. Most of the sources appear to be background
stars at distances over 700 pc. We show that high-resolution optical
spectroscopy is a crucial tool for distinguishing young stars from post-main
sequence stars in samples taken from emission-line star catalogs based on
low-resolution spectroscopy. Within the sample, 3 young stars (CD-38 4380, Hen
3-1145, and HD 145718) and one early-type luminosity class III giant with
emission lines (Hen 3-416) are at distances closer than 300 pc and are
positionally coincident with a nearby SFR. These 4 sources are likely to be
nearby young stars and are interesting for follow-up observations at
high-angular resolution. Furthermore, seven confirmed Herbig Ae/Be stars at
d>700 pc (Hen 2-80, Hen 3-1121 N&S, HD 313571, MWC 953, WRAY 15-1435, and Th
17-35) are inside or close (<5') to regions with extended 8 micron continuum
emission and in their 20' vicinity have astronomical sources characteristic of
SFRs. These 7 sources are likely to be members of SFRs. These regions are
attractive for future studies of their stellar content.Comment: 24 pages, 6 Figures, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics, in
press
Adaptive Lévy processes and area-restricted search in human foraging
A considerable amount of research has claimed that animals’ foraging behaviors display movement lengths with power-law distributed tails, characteristic of Lévy flights and Lévy walks. Though these claims have recently come into question, the proposal that many animals forage using Lévy processes nonetheless remains. A Lévy process does not consider when or where resources are encountered, and samples movement lengths independently of past experience. However, Lévy processes too have come into question based on the observation that in patchy resource environments resource-sensitive foraging strategies, like area-restricted search, perform better than Lévy flights yet can still generate heavy-tailed distributions of movement lengths. To investigate these questions further, we tracked humans as they searched for hidden resources in an open-field virtual environment, with either patchy or dispersed resource distributions. Supporting previous research, for both conditions logarithmic binning methods were consistent with Lévy flights and rank-frequency methods–comparing alternative distributions using maximum likelihood methods–showed the strongest support for bounded power-law distributions (truncated Lévy flights). However, goodness-of-fit tests found that even bounded power-law distributions only accurately characterized movement behavior for 4 (out of 32) participants. Moreover, paths in the patchy environment (but not the dispersed environment) showed a transition to intensive search following resource encounters, characteristic of area-restricted search. Transferring paths between environments revealed that paths generated in the patchy environment were adapted to that environment. Our results suggest that though power-law distributions do not accurately reflect human search, Lévy processes may still describe movement in dispersed environments, but not in patchy environments–where search was area-restricted. Furthermore, our results indicate that search strategies cannot be inferred without knowing how organisms respond to resources–as both patched and dispersed conditions led to similar Lévy-like movement distributions
A tuberkulózis előfordulása egy XVIII. századi váci családban
Two individuals of the Nigrovits family from the
Vác Mummy Collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum were the subjects of
multidisciplinary, anthropological, paleopathological, radiological, paleomicrobiological and
paleoproteomic studies. The father, József Nigrovits (No 29), died at the age of 55 on the 11th of
November 1793; his son, Antal Nigrovits (No 54), died on the 16th of July 1803, at the age of 22.
They lived in the 18th century in a small town of northern Hungary. The macroscopic examination
of body No 54 showed a severely deformed neck and back region; body No 29 had no
characteristic marks of any illnesses. The CT scan data of the bodies and their 3D reconstructions
showed no skeletal evidence of tuberculosis, despite the positive results of their
paleomicrobiological studies. The deformity of body No 54 turned to be a developmental
abnormality of unknown origin, but no Pott’s gibbus was present
Evolutionary distances in the twilight zone -- a rational kernel approach
Phylogenetic tree reconstruction is traditionally based on multiple sequence
alignments (MSAs) and heavily depends on the validity of this information
bottleneck. With increasing sequence divergence, the quality of MSAs decays
quickly. Alignment-free methods, on the other hand, are based on abstract
string comparisons and avoid potential alignment problems. However, in general
they are not biologically motivated and ignore our knowledge about the
evolution of sequences. Thus, it is still a major open question how to define
an evolutionary distance metric between divergent sequences that makes use of
indel information and known substitution models without the need for a multiple
alignment. Here we propose a new evolutionary distance metric to close this
gap. It uses finite-state transducers to create a biologically motivated
similarity score which models substitutions and indels, and does not depend on
a multiple sequence alignment. The sequence similarity score is defined in
analogy to pairwise alignments and additionally has the positive semi-definite
property. We describe its derivation and show in simulation studies and
real-world examples that it is more accurate in reconstructing phylogenies than
competing methods. The result is a new and accurate way of determining
evolutionary distances in and beyond the twilight zone of sequence alignments
that is suitable for large datasets.Comment: to appear in PLoS ON
Systematic review of communication technologies to promote access and engagement of young people with diabetes into healthcare
Background: Research has investigated whether communication technologies (e.g. mobile telephony, forums,
email) can be used to transfer digital information between healthcare professionals and young people who live
with diabetes. The systematic review evaluates the effectiveness and impact of these technologies on
communication.
Methods: Nine electronic databases were searched. Technologies were described and a narrative synthesis of all
studies was undertaken.
Results: Of 20,925 publications identified, 19 met the inclusion criteria, with 18 technologies assessed. Five
categories of communication technologies were identified: video-and tele-conferencing (n = 2); mobile telephony
(n = 3); telephone support (n = 3); novel electronic communication devices for transferring clinical information (n =
10); and web-based discussion boards (n = 1). Ten studies showed a positive improvement in HbA1c following the
intervention with four studies reporting detrimental increases in HbA1c levels. In fifteen studies communication
technologies increased the frequency of contact between patient and healthcare professional. Findings were
inconsistent of an association between improvements in HbA1c and increased contact. Limited evidence was
available concerning behavioural and care coordination outcomes, although improvement in quality of life, patientcaregiver
interaction, self-care and metabolic transmission were reported for some communication technologies.
Conclusions: The breadth of study design and types of technologies reported make the magnitude of benefit and
their effects on health difficult to determine. While communication technologies may increase the frequency of
contact between patient and health care professional, it remains unclear whether this results in improved
outcomes and is often the basis of the intervention itself. Further research is needed to explore the effectiveness
and cost effectiveness of increasing the use of communication technologies between young people and
healthcare professionals
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