343 research outputs found
Digital flight control systems
The design of stable feedback control laws for sampled-data systems with variable rate sampling was investigated. These types of sampled-data systems arise naturally in digital flight control systems which use digital actuators where it is desirable to decrease the number of control computer output commands in order to save wear and tear of the associated equipment. The design of aircraft control systems which are optimally tolerant of sensor and actuator failures was also studied. Detection of the failed sensor or actuator must be resolved and if the estimate of the state is used in the control law, then it is also desirable to have an estimator which will give the optimal state estimate even under the failed conditions
New Elemental Abundances for V1974 Cygni
We present a new analysis of existing optical and ultraviolet spectra of the
ONeMg nova V1974 Cygni 1992. Using these data and the photoionization code
Cloudy, we have determined the physical parameters and elemental abundances for
this nova. Many of the previous studies of this nova have made use of incorrect
analyses and hence a new study was required. Our results show that the ejecta
are enhanced, relative to solar, in helium, nitrogen, oxygen, neon, magnesium
and iron. Carbon was found to be subsolar. We find an ejected mass of ~2x10e-4
solar masses. Our model results fit well with observations taken at IR, radio,
sub-millimeter and X-ray wavelengths.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Abundance Analysis of the Extremely Fast ONeMg Novae V838 Herculis and V4160 Sagittarii
V838 Her and V4160 Sgr were two of the fastest classical novae ever observed, exhibiting light curve declines of 2 mag in less than 2 days. Both novae also showed strong neon emission lines, indicative of an outburst occurring on an oxygen-neon-magnesium white dwarf. Being the brighter of the two, V838 Her has an extensive set of X-ray to radio observations obtained during its first year after outburst. V4160 Sgr has a more modest set of ultraviolet and optical spectra, which show it to be similar to V838 Her, not just in its light curve evolution but also in its spectral development. The observed attributes imply that these novae occurred on extremely massive white dwarfs. This paper uses the Cloudy photoionization code to fit multiple epochs of emission line spectra to determine the elemental abundances of the ejecta of V838 Her and V4160 Sgr
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Observational and theoretical studies of the nova outburst
A nova outburst is one consequence of the accretion of hydrogen rich material onto a white dwarf in a close binary system. The strong electron degeneracy of a massive white dwarf drives the temperatures in the nuclear burning region to values exceeding 108K under all circumstances. As a result, a major fraction of the CNO nuclei in the envelope are transformed into e{sup +}-decay nuclei, which constrains the nuclear energy generation and yields non-solar CNO isotopic abundance ratios. In addition, the observations demonstrate that white dwarf core material is dredged up into the accreted layers and these nuclei are the catalysts for producing peak rates of energy generation that can exceed 10{sup 16} erg gm{sup -1}s{sup -1}. Observations show that there are two compositional classes of novae, one that occurs on a carbon-oxygen white dwarf and the other that occurs on an oxygen-neon-magnesium white dwarf
Synthesis of intermediate-mass elements in classical novae: from Si to Ca
Thermonuclear runaways driven by accretion into degenerate white dwarf cores
are the source that power classical nova outbursts.
In this paper, we identify the dominant nuclear paths involved in the
synthesis of intermediate-mass elements, from Si to Ca, during such violent
events.
New evolutionary sequences of 1.35 Mo ONe novae have been computed, using
updated nuclear reaction rates.
The main nuclear activity in this region is powered by the leakage from the
NeNa-MgAl region, where the activity is confined during the early stages of the
explosion. We discuss the critical role played by 30P(p,gamma) in the synthesis
of nuclear species beyond sulfur and point out the large uncertainty that
affects its rate, which has dramatic consequences for studies of nova
nucleosynthesis in the Si-Ca mass region.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 23 pages
(aastex), 6 Postscript figure
Nucleosynthesis in ONeMg Novae: Models versus Observations to Constrain the Masses of ONeMg White Dwarfs and Their Envelopes
Nucleosynthesis in ONeMg novae has been investigated with the wide ranges of
three parameters, i.e., the white dwarf mass, the envelope mass at ignition,
and the initial composition. A quasi-analytic one-zone approach is used with an
up-to-date nuclear reaction network. The nucleosynthesis results show
correlation with the peak temperatures or the cooling timescales during
outbursts. Among the combinations of white dwarf and envelope masses which give
the same peak temperature, the explosion is more violent for a lower white
dwarf mass owing to its smaller gravitational potential. Comparison of the
nucleosynthesis results with observations implies that at least two-third of
the white dwarf masses for the observed ONeMg novae are ,
which are significantly lower than estimated by previous hydrodynamic studies
but consistent with the observations of V1974 Cyg. Moreover, the envelope
masses derived from the comparison are , which are in
good agreement with the ejecta masses estimated from observations but
significantly higher than in previous hydrodynamic studies. With such a low
mass white dwarf and a high mass envelope, the nova can produce interesting
amounts of -ray emitters Be, Na, and Al. We suggest
that V1974 Cyg has produced Na as high as the upper limit derived from
the COMPTEL survey. In addition, a non-negligible part of the Galactic
Al may originate from ONeMg novae, if not the major contributors. Both
the future INTEGRAL survey for these -ray emitters and abundance
estimates derived from ultraviolet, optical, and near infrared spectroscopies
will impose a severe constraint on the current nova models.Comment: 21 pages, 23 figures, to appear in the Astrophysical Journal, Vol.
523, No.1, September 20, 1999; preprint with embedded images can be obtained
from http://th.nao.ac.jp/~wanajo/journal/onenova.p
Spectroscopic analysis of DA white dwarfs from the McCook & Sion catalog
For some years now, we have been gathering optical spectra of DA white dwarfs
in an effort to study and define the empirical ZZ Ceti instability strip.
However, we have recently expanded this survey to include all the DA white
dwarfs in the McCook & Sion catalog down to a limiting visual magnitude of
V=17.5. We present here a spectroscopic analysis of over 1000 DA white dwarfs
from this ongoing survey. We have several specific areas of interest most
notably the hot DAO white dwarfs, the ZZ Ceti instability strip, and the DA+dM
binary systems. Furthermore, we present a comparison of the ensemble properties
of our sample with those of other large surveys of DA white dwarfs, paying
particular attention to the distribution of mass as a function of effective
temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Journal of Physics Conference
Proceedings for the 16th European White Dwarf Worksho
The early X-ray emission from V382 Velorum (=Nova Vel 1999): An internal shock model
We present the results of ASCA and RXTE observations of the early X-ray
emission from the classical nova V382 Velorum. Its ASCA spectrum was hard
(kT~10 keV) with a strong (10**23 cm**-2) intrinsic absorption. In the
subsequent RXTE data, the spectra became softer both due to a declining
temperature and a diminishing column. We argue that this places the X-ray
emission interior to the outermost ejecta produced by V382 Vel in 1999, and
therefore must have been the result of a shock internal to the nova ejecta. The
weakness of the Fe K alpha lines probably indicates that the X-ray emitting
plasmas are not in ionization equilibrium.Comment: 16 pages (including 4 figures), accepted for publication in Ap
Antiviral activity of silymarin against chikungunya virus
Citation: Lani, R., Hassandarvish, P., Chiam, C. W., Moghaddam, E., Chu, J. J. H., Rausalu, K., . . . Zandi, K. (2015). Antiviral activity of silymarin against chikungunya virus. Scientific Reports, 5, 10. doi:10.1038/srep11421The mosquito-borne chikungunya virus (CHIKV) causes chikungunya fever, with clinical presentations such as severe back and small joint pain, and debilitating arthritis associated with crippling pains that persist for weeks and even years. Although there are several studies to evaluate the efficacy of drugs against CHIKV, the treatment for chikungunya fever is mainly symptom-based and no effective licensed vaccine or antiviral are available. Here, we investigated the antiviral activity of three types of flavonoids against CHIKV in vitro replication. Three compounds: silymarin, quercetin and kaempferol were evaluated for their in vitro antiviral activities against CHIKV using a CHIKV replicon cell line and clinical isolate of CHIKV of Central/East African genotype. A cytopathic effect inhibition assay was used to determine their activities on CHIKV viral replication and quantitative reverse transcription PCR was used to calculate virus yield. Antiviral activity of effective compound was further investigated by evaluation of CHIKV protein expression using western blotting for CHIKV nsP1, nsP3, and E2E1 proteins. Briefly, silymarin exhibited significant antiviral activity against CHIKV, reducing both CHIKV replication efficiency and down-regulating production of viral proteins involved in replication. This study may have important consequence for broaden the chance of getting the effective antiviral for CHIKV infection
Time to onset of cannabidiol (CBD) treatment effect in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome: Analysis from two randomized controlled trials
OBJECTIVE: To estimate time to onset of cannabidiol (CBD) treatment effect (seizure reduction and adverse events [AEs]), we conducted post hoc analyses of data from two randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 3 trials, GWPCARE3 (NCT02224560) and GWPCARE4 (NCT02224690), of patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. METHODS: Patients received plant-derived pharmaceutical formulation of highly purified CBD (Epidiolex, 100 mg/ml oral solution) at 10 mg/kg/day (CBD10; GWPCARE3) or 20 mg/kg/day (CBD20; both trials) or placebo for 14 weeks. Treatment started at 2.5 mg/kg/day for all groups and reached 10 mg/kg/day on Day 7 and 20 mg/kg/day (CBD20 and matching placebo only) on Day 11. Percentage change from baseline in drop seizure frequency was calculated by cumulative day (i.e., including all previous days). Time to onset and resolution of AEs were evaluated. RESULTS: Overall, 235 patients received CBD (CBD10 [GWPCARE3 only], n = 67; CBD20 [pooled GWPCARE3&4], n = 168) and 161 received placebo. Mean (range) age was 15.3 years (2.6-48.0). Patients had previously discontinued a median (range) of six (0-28) antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) and were currently taking a median of three (0-5) AEDs. Differences in drop seizure reduction between placebo and CBD emerged during the titration period and became nominally significant by Day 6 (p = .008) for pooled CBD treatment groups. Separation between placebo and CBD in ≥50% responder rate emerged by Day 6. Onset of the first reported AE occurred during the titration period in 45% of patients (CBD10, 46%; CBD20, 52%; placebo, 38%). In patients with AEs, resolution occurred within 4 weeks of onset in 53% of placebo and 39% of CBD patients and by end of study in 63% of placebo and 61% of CBD patients. SIGNIFICANCE: Treatment effect (efficacy and AEs) of CBD may occur within 1 week of starting treatment. Although AEs lasted longer for CBD than placebo, most resolved within the 14-week period
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