708 research outputs found
The Swift X-ray Telescope Cluster Survey II. X-ray spectral analysis
(Abridged) We present a spectral analysis of a new, flux-limited sample of 72
X-ray selected clusters of galaxies identified with the X-ray Telescope (XRT)
on board the Swift satellite down to a flux limit of ~10-14 erg/s/cm2 (SWXCS,
Tundo et al. 2012). We carry out a detailed X-ray spectral analysis with the
twofold aim of measuring redshifts and characterizing the properties of the
Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM). Optical counterparts and spectroscopic or
photometric redshifts are obtained with a cross-correlation with NED.
Additional photometric redshifts are computed with a dedicated follow-up
program with the TNG and a cross-correlation with the SDSS. We also detect the
iron emission lines in 35% of the sample, and hence obtain a robust measure of
the X-ray redshift zX. We use zX whenever the optical redshift is not
available. Finally, for all the sources with measured redshift,
background-subtracted spectra are fitted with a mekal model. We perform
extensive spectral simulations to derive an empirical formula to account for
fitting bias. The bias-corrected values are then used to investigate the
scaling properties of the X-ray observables. Overall, we are able to
characterize the ICM of 46 sources. The sample is mostly constituted by
clusters with temperatures between 3 and 10 keV, plus 14 low-mass clusters and
groups with temperatures below 3 keV. The redshift distribution peaks around
z~0.25 and extends up to z~1, with 60% of the sample at 0.1<z<0.4. We derive
the Luminosity-Temperature relation for these 46 sources, finding good
agreement with previous studies. The quality of the SWXCS sample is comparable
to other samples available in the literature and obtained with much larger
X-ray telescopes. Our results have interesting implications for the design of
future X-ray survey telescopes, characterised by good-quality PSF over the
entire field of view and low background.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures; minor typos corrected. To be published in A&A,
Volume 567, July 2014. Websites of the SWXCS project:
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/SWXCS/ and http://swxcs.ustc.edu.cn
Socio-demographic and clinical characterization of patients with obsessive-compulsive tic-related disorder (OCTD) : An Italian multicenter study
© Copyright by Pacini Editore SrlIn the DSM-5 a new "tic-related" specifier for obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) has been introduced, highlighting the importance of an accurate characterization of patients suffering from obsessive-compulsive tic-related disorder ("OCTD"). In order to characterize OCTD from a socio-demographic and clinical perspective, the present multicenter study was carried out. The sample consists of 266 patients, divided in two groups with lifetime diagnoses of OCD and OCTD, respectively. OCTD vs OCD patients showed a significant male prevalence (68.5% vs 48.5%; p < .001), a higher rate of psychiatric comorbidities (69.4 vs 50%; p < .001) - mainly with neurodevelopmental disorders (24 vs 0%; p < .001), a lower education level and professional status (middle school diploma: 25 vs 7.6%; full-Time job 44.4 vs 58%; p < .001). Moreover, OCTD vs OCD patients showed significantly earlier age of OCD and psychiatric comorbidity onsets (16.1 ± 10.8 vs 22.1 ± 9.5 years; p < .001, and 18.3 ± 12.8 vs 25.6 ± 9.4: p < .001, respectively). Patients with OCTD patients were treated mainly with antipsychotic and with a low rate of benzodiazepine (74.2 vs 38.2% and 20.2 vs 31.3%, respectively; p < .001). Finally, OCTD vs OCD patients showed higher rates of partial treatment response (58.1 vs 38%; p < .001), lower rates of current remission (35.5 vs 54.8%; p < .001) and higher rates of suicidal ideation (63.2 vs 41.7%; p < .001) and attempts (28.9 vs 8.3%; p < .001). Patients with OCTD report several unfavorable socio-demographic and clinical characteristics compared to OCD patients without a history of tic. Additional studies on larger sample are needed to further characterize OCTD patients from clinical and therapeutic perspectives.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
NGPaaS framework for enriched and customized virtual network functions-as-a-service
This paper describes how the novel Next Generation Platform-as-a-Service (NGPaaS) framework can facilitate major benefits for Network Operators and Vertical Service Providers (VSPs) who wish to leverage Virtual Network Functions-as-a-Service (VNFaaS) capabilities. Network Operators can benefit by providing an "on demand" PaaS with required features for the VSPs, thus generating new revenue streams but with low operational overhead due to the high degree of automation. VSPs can benefit from the PaaS-oriented approach, by being able to flexibly on-board new VNF types and "value-added" service capabilities like monitoring, healing and profiling, to deliver customized service blueprints to meet the needs of their end customers. The paper outlines the design of an early prototype, built on the Open-CORD platform and using industry-standard Virtualised Network Functions (VNFs)
On the complementarity of pulsar timing and space laser interferometry for the individual detection of supermassive black hole binaries
Gravitational waves coming from Super Massive Black Hole Binaries (SMBHBs)
are targeted by both Pulsar Timing Array (PTA) and Space Laser Interferometry
(SLI). The possibility of a single SMBHB being tracked first by PTA, through
inspiral, and later by SLI, up to merger and ring down, has been previously
suggested. Although the bounding parameters are drawn by the current PTA or the
upcoming Square Kilometer Array (SKA), and by the New Gravitational Observatory
(NGO), derived from the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), this paper
also addresses sequential detection beyond specific project constraints. We
consider PTA-SKA, which is sensitive from 10^(-9) to p x 10^(-7) Hz (p=4, 8),
and SLI, which operates from s x 10^(-5) up to 1 Hz (s = 1, 3). A SMBHB in the
range 2x 10^(8) - 2 x 10^(9) solar masses (the masses are normalised to a (1+z)
factor, the red shift lying between z = 0.2 and z=1.5) moves from the PTA-SKA
to the SLI band over a period ranging from two months to fifty years. By
combining three Super Massive Black Hole (SMBH)-host relations with three
accretion prescriptions, nine astrophysical scenarios are formed. They are then
related to three levels of pulsar timing residuals (50, 5, 1 ns), generating
twenty-seven cases. For residuals of 1 ns, sequential detection probability
will never be better than 4.7 x 10^(-4) y^(-2) or 3.3 x 10^(-6) y^(-2) (per
year to merger and per year of survey), according to the best and worst
astrophysical scenarios, respectively; put differently this means one
sequential detection every 46 or 550 years for an equivalent maximum time to
merger and duration of the survey. The chances of sequential detection are
further reduced by increasing values of the s parameter (they vanish for s =
10) and of the SLI noise, and by decreasing values of the remnant spin. REST OF
THE ABSTRACT IN THE PDF FILE.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
The interstellar medium and feedback in the progenitors of the compact passive galaxies at z~2
Quenched galaxies at z>2 are nearly all very compact relative to z~0,
suggesting a physical connection between high stellar density and efficient,
rapid cessation of star-formation. We present restframe UV spectra of
Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) at z~3 selected to be candidate progenitors of
quenched galaxies at z~2 based on their compact restframe optical sizes and
high surface density of star-formation. We compare their UV properties to those
of more extended LBGs of similar mass and star formation rate (non-candidates).
We find that candidate progenitors have faster ISM gas velocities and higher
equivalent widths of interstellar absorption lines, implying larger velocity
spread among absorbing clouds. Candidates deviate from the relationship between
equivalent widths of Lyman-alpha and interstellar absorption lines in that
their Lyman-alpha emission remains strong despite high interstellar absorption,
possibly indicating that the neutral HI fraction is patchy such that
Lyman-alpha photons can escape. We detect stronger CIV P-Cygni features
(emission and absorption) and HeII emission in candidates, indicative of larger
populations of metal rich Wolf-Rayet stars compared to non-candidates. The
faster bulk motions, broader spread of gas velocity, and Lyman-alpha properties
of candidates are consistent with their ISM being subject to more energetic
feedback than non-candidates. Together with their larger metallicity (implying
more evolved star-formation activity) this leads us to propose, if
speculatively, that they are likely to quench sooner than non-candidates,
supporting the validity of selection criteria used to identify them as
progenitors of z~2 passive galaxies. We propose that massive, compact galaxies
undergo more rapid growth of stellar mass content, perhaps because the gas
accretion mechanisms are different, and quench sooner than normally-sized LBGs
at these early epochs.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
A Search for the Most Massive Galaxies. II. Structure, Environment and Formation
We study a sample of 43 early-type galaxies, selected from the SDSS because
they appeared to have velocity dispersion > 350 km/s. High-resolution
photometry in the SDSS i passband using HRC-ACS on board the HST shows that
just less than half of the sample is made up of superpositions of two or three
galaxies, so the reported velocity dispersion is incorrect. The other half of
the sample is made up of single objects with genuinely large velocity
dispersions. None of these objects has sigma larger than 426 +- 30 km/s. These
objects define rather different relations than the bulk of the early-type
galaxy population: for their luminosities, they are the smallest, most massive
and densest galaxies in the Universe. Although the slopes of the scaling
relations they define are rather different from those of the bulk of the
population, they lie approximately parallel to those of the bulk "at fixed
sigma". These objects appear to be of two distinct types: the less luminous
(M_r>-23) objects are rather flattened and extremely dense for their
luminosities -- their properties suggest some amount of rotational support and
merger histories with abnormally large amounts of gaseous dissipation. The more
luminous objects (M_r<-23) tend to be round and to lie in or at the centers of
clusters. Their properties are consistent with the hypothesis that they are
BCGs. Models in which BCGs form from predominantly radial mergers having little
angular momentum predict that they should be prolate. If viewed along the major
axis, such objects would appear to have abnormally large sigma for their sizes,
and to be abnormally round for their luminosities. This is true of the objects
in our sample once we account for the fact that the most luminous galaxies
(M_r<-23.5), and BCGs, become slightly less round with increasing luminosity.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Rest-Frame UV-Optical Selected Galaxies at 2.3 ≾ z ≾ 3.5: Searching for Dusty Star-forming and Passively Evolving Galaxies
A new set of color selection criteria (VJL) analogous with the BzK method is designed to select both star-forming galaxies (SFGs) and passively evolving galaxies (PEGs) at 2.3 ≾ z ≾ 3.5 by using rest-frame UV-optical (V – J versus J – L) colors. The criteria are thoroughly tested with theoretical stellar population synthesis models and real galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts to evaluate their efficiency and contamination. We apply the well-tested VJL criteria to the HST/WFC3 Early Release Science field and study the physical properties of selected galaxies. The redshift distribution of selected SFGs peaks at z ~ 2.7, slightly lower than that of Lyman break galaxies at z ~ 3. Comparing the observed mid-infrared fluxes of selected galaxies with the prediction of pure stellar emission, we find that our VJL method is effective at selecting massive dusty SFGs that are missed by the Lyman break technique. About half of the star formation in massive (M_(star) > 10^(10) M_☉) galaxies at 2.3 ≾ z ≾ 3.5 is contributed by dusty (extinction E(B – V) > 0.4) SFGs, which, however, only account for ~20% of the number density of massive SFGs. We also use the mid-infrared fluxes to clean our PEG sample and find that galaxy size can be used as a secondary criterion to effectively eliminate the contamination of dusty SFGs. The redshift distribution of the cleaned PEG sample peaks at z ~ 2.5. We find six PEG candidates at z > 3 and discuss possible methods to distinguish them from dusty contamination. We conclude that at least part of our candidates are real PEGs at z ~ 3, implying that these types of galaxies began to form their stars at z ≳ 5. We measure the integrated stellar mass density (ISMD) of PEGs at z ~ 2.5 and set constraints on it at z > 3. We find that the ISMD grows by at least about a factor of 10 in 1 Gyr at 3 < z <5 and by another factor of 10 in the next 3.5 Gyr (1 < z < 3)
Evidence for pH-dependent multiple conformers in iron(II) heme-human serum albumin: spectroscopic and kinetic investigation of carbon monoxide binding.
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