179 research outputs found
Gamma-ray burst jet propagation, development of angular structure, and the luminosity function
The fate and observable properties of gamma-ray burst jets depend crucially
on their interaction with the progenitor material that surrounds the central
engine. We present a semi-analytical model of such interaction, which builds
upon several previous analytical and numerical works, aimed at predicting the
angular distribution of jet and cocoon energy and Lorentz factor after
breakout, given the properties of the ambient material and of the jet at
launch. Using this model, we construct synthetic populations of structured
jets, assuming either a collapsar (for long gamma-ray bursts -- LGRBs) or a
binary neutron star merger (for short gamma-ray bursts -- SGRBs) as progenitor.
We assume all progenitors to be identical, and we allow little variability in
the jet properties at launch: our populations therefore feature a
quasi-universal structure. These populations are able to reproduce the main
features of the observed LGRB and SGRB luminosity functions, although several
uncertainties and caveats remain to be addressed.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures. Revised version, submitted to A&A (several new
figures and expanded discussion. Conclusions unchanged). Comments and
suggestions are welcome
The rise and fall of the high-energy afterglow emission of GRB 180720B
The Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) 180720B is one of the brightest events detected by
the Fermi satellite and the first GRB detected by the H.E.S.S. telescope above
100 GeV. We analyse the Fermi (GBM and LAT) and Swift (XRT and BAT) data and
describe the evolution of the burst spectral energy distribution in the 0.5 keV
- 10 GeV energy range over the first 500 seconds of emission. We reveal a
smooth transition from the prompt phase, dominated by synchrotron emission in a
moderately fast cooling regime, to the afterglow phase whose emission has been
observed from the radio to the GeV energy range. The LAT (0.1 - 100 GeV) light
curve initially rises (), peaks at 78 s, and
falls steeply () afterwards. The peak, which we
interpret as the onset of the fireball deceleration, allows us to estimate the
bulk Lorentz factor under the assumption of a
wind-like (homogeneous) circum-burst medium density. We derive a flux upper
limit in the LAT energy range at the time of H.E.S.S. detection, but this does
not allow us to unveil the nature of the high energy component observed by
H.E.S.S. We fit the prompt spectrum with a physical model of synchrotron
emission from a non-thermal population of electrons. The 0 - 35 s spectrum
after its peak (at 1 - 2 MeV) is a steep power law extending to
hundreds of MeV. We derive a steep slope of the injected electron energy
distribution . Our fit parameters point towards a
very low magnetic field ( G) in the emission region.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, submitted to A&
Fine Scale Analysis of Crossover and Non-Crossover and Detection of Recombination Sequence Motifs in the Honeybee (Apis mellifera)
BACKGROUND: Meiotic exchanges are non-uniformly distributed across the genome of most studied organisms. This uneven distribution suggests that recombination is initiated by specific signals and/or regulations. Some of these signals were recently identified in humans and mice. However, it is unclear whether or not sequence signals are also involved in chromosomal recombination of insects. METHODOLOGY: We analyzed recombination frequencies in the honeybee, in which genome sequencing provided a large amount of SNPs spread over the entire set of chromosomes. As the genome sequences were obtained from a pool of haploid males, which were the progeny of a single queen, an oocyte method (study of recombination on haploid males that develop from unfertilized eggs and hence are the direct reflect of female gametes haplotypes) was developed to detect recombined pairs of SNP sites. Sequences were further compared between recombinant and non-recombinant fragments to detect recombination-specific motifs. CONCLUSIONS: Recombination events between adjacent SNP sites were detected at an average distance of 92 bp and revealed the existence of high rates of recombination events. This study also shows the presence of conversion without crossover (i. e. non-crossover) events, the number of which largely outnumbers that of crossover events. Furthermore the comparison of sequences that have undergone recombination with sequences that have not, led to the discovery of sequence motifs (CGCA, GCCGC, CCGCA), which may correspond to recombination signals
Clinical treatment adherence of health care workers and students exposed to potentially infectious biological material
OBJECTIVE To assess adherence to clinical appointments by health care workers (HCW) and students who suffered accidents with potentially infectious biological material. METHOD A retrospective cross-sectional study that assessed clinical records of accidents involving biological material between 2005 and 2010 in a specialized unit. RESULTS A total of 461 individuals exposed to biological material were treated, of which 389 (84.4%) were HCWs and 72 (15.6%) students. Of the 461 exposed individuals, 307 (66.6%) attended a follow-up appointment. Individuals who had suffered an accident with a known source patient were 29 times more likely to show up to their scheduled follow-up appointments (OR: 29.98; CI95%: 16.09-55.83). CONCLUSION The predictor in both univariate and multivariate analyses for adherence to clinical follow-up appointment was having a known source patient with nonreactive serology for the human immunodeficiency virus and/or hepatitis B and C
Factors influencing adherence to standard precautions among nursing professionals in psychiatric hospitals
OBJECTIVE Evaluate and correlate individual, work-related and organizational factors that influence adherence to standard precautions among nursing professionals of psychiatric hospitals in São Paulo. METHOD An exploratory cross-sectional study conducted with 35 nursing professionals, using the assessment tool for adherence to standard precautions through the Likert scale, ranging from 1 to 5. RESULTS Knowledge of the precautions received a high score (4.69); adherence received (3.86) and obstacles (3.78), while intermediaries and the scales of organizational factors received low scores (2.61). There was a strong correlation between the magnitude adherence scale and the personal protective equipment availability (r = 0.643; p = 0.000). The training scale for prevention of HIV exposure (p = 0.007) was statistically different between the nurses and nursing assistants. CONCLUSION The organizational factors negatively contributed to adherence to standard precautions, indicating that psychiatric institutions lack safe working conditions, ongoing training and management actions to control infections
Construction and demolition inert materials: petrochemical and petrophysical characterisation for concrete preparation
none4Sessione disciplinare GEO/09: Georisorse minerarie e applicazioni mineralogico-petrografiche per l’Ambiente ed i Beni CulturaliopenM. Borsa; E. Marrocchino; A. Toffano; C. VaccaroM., Borsa; Marrocchino, Elena; Toffano, Alice; Vaccaro, Carmel
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