259 research outputs found
VLTI/MIDI 10 micron interferometry of the forming massive star W33A
We report on resolved interferometric observations with VLTI/MIDI of the
massive young stellar object (MYSO) W33A. The MIDI observations deliver
spectrally dispersed visibilities with values between 0.03 and 0.06, for a
baseline of 45m over the wavelength range 8-13 micron. The visibilities
indicate that W33A has a FWHM size of approximately 120AU (0.030'') at 8 micron
which increases to 240AU at 13 micron, scales previously unexplored among
MYSOs. This observed trend is consistent with the temperature falling off with
distance. 1D dust radiative transfer models are simultaneously fit to the
visibility spectrum, the strong silicate feature and the shape of the mid
infrared spectral energy distribution (SED). For any powerlaw density
distribution, we find that the sizes (as implied by the visibilities) and the
stellar luminosity are incompatible. A reduction to a third of W33A's
previously adopted luminosity is required to match the visibilities; such a
reduction is consistent with new high resolution 70 micron data from Spitzer's
MIPSGAL survey. We obtain best fits for models with shallow dust density
distributions of r^(-0.5) and r^(-1.0) and for increased optical depth in the
silicate feature produced by decreasing the ISM ratio of graphite to silicates
and using optical grain properties by Ossenkopf et al. (1992).Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for ApJ letter
Adaptive Optics Imaging of IRAS 18276-1431: a bipolar pre-planetary nebula with circumstellar "searchlight beams" and "arcs"
We present high-angular resolution images of the post-AGB nebula
IRAS18276-1431 (also known as OH17.7-2.0) obtained with the Keck II Adaptive
Optics (AO) system in its Natural Guide Star (NGS) mode in the Kp, Lp, and Ms
near-infrared bands. We also present supporting optical F606W and F814W HST
images as well as interferometric observations of the 12CO(J=1-0), 13CO(J=1-0),
and 2.6mm continuum emission with OVRO. The envelope of IRAS18276-1431 displays
a clear bipolar morphology in our optical and NIR images with two lobes
separated by a dark waist and surrounded by a faint 4.5"x3.4" halo. Our Kp-band
image reveals two pairs of radial ``searchlight beams'' emerging from the
nebula center and several intersecting, arc-like features. From our CO data we
derive a mass of M>0.38[D/3kpc]^2 Msun and an expansion velocity v_exp=17km/s
for the molecular envelope. The density in the halo follows a radial power-law
proportional to r^-3, which is consistent with a mass-loss rate increasing with
time. Analysis of the NIR colors indicates the presence of a compact central
source of ~300-500K dust illuminating the nebula in addition to the central
star. Modeling of the thermal IR suggests a two-shell structure in the dust
envelope: 1) an outer shell with inner and outer radius R_in~1.6E16cm and
R_out>~1.25E17cm, dust temperature T_d~105-50K, and a mean mass-loss rate of
Mdot~1E-3Msun/yr; and 2) an inner shell with R_in~6.3E14cm, T_dust~500-105K,
and Mdot~3E-5Msun/yr. An additional population of big dust grains (radius
a>~0.4mm) with T_dust=150-20K and mass M_dust=(0.16-1.6)E-3 [D/3kpc]^2 Msun can
account for the observed sub-mm and mm flux excess. The mass of the envelope
enclosed within R_out=1.25E17cm derived from SED modeling is ~1[D/3kpc]^2 Msun.Comment: 46 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ.
Figures 12 & 13 in low resolution. Full resolution versions are available
upon request to the first autho
Electroweak Bubble Nucleation, Nonperturbatively
We present a lattice method to compute bubble nucleation rates at radiatively
induced first order phase transitions, in high temperature, weakly coupled
field theories, nonperturbatively. A generalization of Langer's approach, it
makes no recourse to saddle point expansions and includes completely the
dynamical prefactor. We test the technique by applying it to the electroweak
phase transition in the minimal standard model, at an unphysically small Higgs
mass which gives a reasonably strong phase transition (lambda/g^2 =0.036, which
corresponds to m(Higgs)/m(W) = 0.54 at tree level but does not correspond to a
positive physical Higgs mass when radiative effects of the top quark are
included), and compare the results to older perturbative and other estimates.
While two loop perturbation theory slightly under-estimates the strength of the
transition measured by the latent heat, it over-estimates the amount of
supercooling by a factor of 2.Comment: 48 pages, including 16 figures. Minor revisions and typo fixes,
nothing substantial, conclusions essentially unchange
Diffraction-limited ultrabroadband terahertz spectroscopy
Diffraction is the ultimate limit at which details of objects can be resolved in conventional optical spectroscopy and imaging systems. In the THz spectral range, spectroscopy systems increasingly rely on ultra-broadband radiation (extending over more 5 octaves) making a great challenge to reach resolution limited by diffraction. Here, we propose an original easy-to-implement wavefront manipulation concept to achieve ultrabroadband THz spectroscopy system with diffraction-limited resolution. Applying this concept to a large-area photoconductive emitter, we demonstrate diffraction-limited ultra-broadband spectroscopy system up to 14.5 THz with a dynamic range of 103. The strong focusing of ultrabroadband THz radiation provided by our approach is essential for investigating single micrometer-scale objects such as graphene flakes or living cells, and besides for achieving intense ultra-broadband THz electric fields
Eco-bio-social determinants for house infestation by non-domiciliated Triatoma dimidiata in the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico
Background
Chagas disease is a vector-borne disease of major importance in the Americas. Disease prevention is mostly limited to vector control. Integrated interventions targeting ecological, biological and social determinants of vector-borne diseases are increasingly used for improved control.
Methodology/principal findings
We investigated key factors associated with transient house infestation by T. dimidiata in rural villages in Yucatan, Mexico, using a mixed modeling approach based on initial null-hypothesis testing followed by multimodel inference and averaging on data from 308 houses from three villages. We found that the presence of dogs, chickens and potential refuges, such as rock piles, in the peridomicile as well as the proximity of houses to vegetation at the periphery of the village and to public light sources are major risk factors for infestation. These factors explain most of the intra-village variations in infestation.
Conclusions/significance
These results underline a process of infestation distinct from that of domiciliated triatomines and may be used for risk stratification of houses for both vector surveillance and control. Combined integrated vector interventions, informed by an Ecohealth perspective, should aim at targeting several of these factors to effectively reduce infestation and provide sustainable vector control
Baryogenesis from Primordial Blackholes after Electroweak Phase Transition
Incorporating a realistic model for accretion of ultra-relativistic particles
by primordial blackholes (PBHs), we study the evolution of an Einstein-de
Sitter universe consisting of PBHs embedded in a thermal bath from the epoch
sec to sec. In this paper we use Barrow
et al's ansatz to model blackhole evaporation in which the modified Hawking
temperature goes to zero in the limit of the blackhole attaining a relic state
with mass . Both single mass PBH case as well as the case in which
blackhole masses are distributed in the range gm
have been considered in our analysis. Blackholes with mass larger than gm appear to survive beyond the electroweak phase transition and,
therefore, successfully manage to create baryon excess via
emissions, averting the baryon number wash-out due to sphalerons. In this
scenario, we find that the contribution to the baryon-to-entropy ratio by PBHs
of initial mass is given by , where
and are the CP-violating parameter and the initial mass
fraction of the PBHs, respectively. For larger than ,
the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe can be attributed to
the evaporation of PBHs.Comment: Latex2e file with seven figures included as postscript file
Testing the Efficacy of a Multi-Component DNA-Prime/DNA-Boost Vaccine against Trypanosoma cruzi Infection in Dogs
Immunization of dogs with DNA-prime/DNA-boost vaccine (TcVac1) enhanced the
Trypanosoma cruzi-specific type 1 antibody and
CD8+ T cell responses that resulted in an early control of
acute parasitemia and a moderate decline in pathological symptoms during chronic
phase. Further improvement of vaccine-induced immunity would be required to
achieve clinical and epidemiological benefits and prevent transmission of
parasites from vaccinated/infected dogs to triatomines
Binary IS Typing for Staphylococcus aureus
Background: We present an easily applicable test for rapid binary typing of Staphylococcus aureus: binary interspace (IS) typing. This test is a further development of a previously described molecular typing technique that is based on length polymorphisms of the 16S-23S rDNA interspace region of S. aureus. Methodology/Principal Findings: A novel approach of IS-typing was performed in which binary profiles are created. 424 human and animal derived MRSA and MSSA isolates were tested and a subset of these isolates was compared with multi locus sequence typing (MLST) and Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP). Binary IS typing had a high discriminatory potential and a good correlation with MLST and AFLP. Conclusions/Significance: Binary IS typing is easy to perform and binary profiles can be generated in a standardized fashion. These two features, combined with the high correlation with MLST clonal complexes, make the techniqu
Measuring the Broken Phase Sphaleron Rate Nonperturbatively
We present details for a method to compute the broken phase sphaleron rate
(rate of hot baryon number violation below the electroweak phase transition)
nonperturbatively, using a combination of multicanonical and real time lattice
techniques. The calculation includes the ``dynamical prefactor,'' which
accounts for prompt recrossings of the sphaleron barrier. The prefactor depends
on the hard thermal loops, getting smaller with increasing Debye mass; but for
realistic Debye masses the effect is not large. The baryon number erasure rate
in the broken phase is slower than a perturbative estimate by about exp(-3.6).
Assuming the electroweak phase transition has enough latent heat to reheat the
universe to the equilibrium temperature, baryon number is preserved after the
phase transition if the ratio of (``dimensionally reduced'' thermal) scalar to
gauge couplings (lambda / g^2) is less than .037.Comment: 41 pages, 13 figures included with psfig. Some wordings clarified,
nothing substantial change
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