347 research outputs found
Mexico-UK Sub-millimeter Camera for AsTronomy
MUSCAT is a large format mm-wave camera scheduled for installation on the
Large Millimeter Telescope Alfonso Serrano (LMT) in 2018. The MUSCAT focal
plane is based on an array of horn coupled lumped-element kinetic inductance
detectors optimised for coupling to the 1.1mm atmospheric window. The detectors
are fed with fully baffled reflective optics to minimize stray-light
contamination. This combination will enable background-limited performance at
1.1 mm across the full 4 arcminute field-of-view of the LMT. The easily
accessible focal plane will be cooled to 100 mK with a new closed cycle
miniature dilution refrigerator that permits fully continuous operation. The
MUSCAT instrument will demonstrate the science capabilities of the LMT through
two relatively short science programmes to provide high resolution follow-up
surveys of Galactic and extra-galactic sources previously observed with the
Herschel space observatory, after the initial observing campaigns. In this
paper, we will provide an overview of the overall instrument design as well as
an update on progress and scheduled installation on the LMT.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Journal of Low Temperature Detector
The Progression of β-amyloid Deposition in the Frontal Cortex of the Aged Canine
Brains from 41 aged canines (≥10 years of age) were examined immunohistochemically to characterize the laminar distribution and age-related progression of β-amyloid (Aβ) in frontal cortex. We classified the Aβ patterns into four distinct types. Type I was characterized by small, faint deposits of Aβ in deep cortical layers. Type II consisted of diffuse deposits of Aβ mainly in layers V and VI. Type III had both dense plaques in superficial layers, and diffuse deposits in deep layers. Finally, Type IV had solely dense plaques throughout all layers of cortex. We compared the Aβ distribution pattern between the Old canines (10–15 years, n=22) and the Very Old canines (\u3e15 years, n=19). The Old group primarily had negative staining, or Type I and Type II patterns of amyloid deposition (73%). Conversely, the Very Old group had predominantly Types II, III and IV deposits (89.5%), a difference that was significant (Pβ deposition in canine frontal cortex is a progressive age-related process beginning with diffuse deposits in the deep cortical layers followed by the development of deposits in outer layers. In support of this hypothesis, the deeper layer diffuse plaques in the Very Old group of dogs also contain the largest proportion of β-amyloid with an isomerized aspartic acid residue at position 7, indicating that these deposits had been present for some time. We also observed fiber-like Aβ immunoreactivity within regions of diffuse Aβ deposits. These fibers appeared to be degenerating neurites, which were negative for hyperphosphorylated tau. Therefore, these fibers may represent a very early form of neuritic change that precede tau hyperphosphorylation or develop by an alternative pathway
Vehicle classification for road tunnel surveillance
Vehicle classification for tunnel surveillance aims to not only retrieve vehicle class statistics, but also prevent accidents by recognizing vehicles carrying dangerous goods. In this paper, we describe a method to classify vehicle images that experience different geometrical variations and challenging photometrical conditions such as those found in road tunnels. Unlike previous approaches, we propose a classification method that does not rely on the length and height estimation of the vehicles. Alternatively, we propose a novel descriptor based on trace transform signatures to extract salient and non-correlated information of the vehicle images. Also, we propose a metric that measures the complexity of the vehicles’ shape based on corner point detection. As a result, these features describe the vehicle’s appearance and shape complexity independently of the scale, pose, and illumination conditions. Experiments with vehicles captured from three different cameras confirm the saliency and robustness of the features proposed, achieving an overall accuracy of 97.5% for the classification of four different vehicle classes. For vehicles transporting dangerous goods, our classification scheme achieves an average recall of 97.6% at a precision of 98.6% for the combination of lorries and tankers, which is a very good result considering the scene conditions
Sudden cardiac death in patients with ischemic heart failure undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting results from the STICH randomized clinical trial (Surgical Treatment for Ischemic Heart Failure)
Background—The risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with heart failure following CABG has not been examined in a contemporary clinical trial of surgical revascularization. This analysis describes the incidence, timing and clinical predictors of SCD after CABG.
Methods—Patients enrolled in the Surgical Treatment of Ischemic Heart Failure (STICH) trial who underwent CABG with or without surgical ventricular reconstruction (SVR) were included. We excluded patients with prior ICD and those randomized only to medical therapy. The primary outcome was SCD as adjudicated by a blinded committee. A Cox model was used to examine and identify predictors of SCD. The Fine and Gray method was used to estimate the incidence of SCD accounting for the competing risk of other deaths.
Results—Over a median follow-up of 46 months, 113 patients of 1411 patients who received CABG without (n = 934) or with SVR (n = 477) had SCD; 311 died of other causes. The mean LVEF at enrollment was 28±9%. The 5-year cumulative incidence of SCD was 8.5%. Patients who had SCD and those who did not die were younger and had fewer comorbid conditions than those who died for reasons other than SCD. In the first 30 days after CABG, SCD (n=5) accounted for 7% of all deaths. The numerically greatest monthly rate of SCD was in the 31-90 day time period. In a multivariable analysis including baseline demographics, risk factors, coronary anatomy and LV function, ESVI and BNP were most strongly associated with SCD.
Conclusions—The monthly risk of SCD shortly after CABG among patients with a low LVEF is highest between the first and third month, suggesting that risk stratification for SCD should occur early in the postoperative period, particularly in patients with increased preoperative ESVI and/or BNP
Early Science with the Large Millimeter Telescope: COOL BUDHIES I - a pilot study of molecular and atomic gas at z~0.2
An understanding of the mass build-up in galaxies over time necessitates
tracing the evolution of cold gas (molecular and atomic) in galaxies. To that
end, we have conducted a pilot study called CO Observations with the LMT of the
Blind Ultra-Deep H I Environment Survey (COOL BUDHIES). We have observed 23
galaxies in and around the two clusters Abell 2192 (z = 0.188) and Abell 963 (z
= 0.206), where 12 are cluster members and 11 are slightly in the foreground or
background, using about 28 total hours on the Redshift Search Receiver (RSR) on
the Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT) to measure the CO J = 1 --> 0
emission line and obtain molecular gas masses. These new observations provide a
unique opportunity to probe both the molecular and atomic components of
galaxies as a function of environment beyond the local Universe. For our sample
of 23 galaxies, nine have reliable detections (S/N3.6) of the CO
line, and another six have marginal detections (2.0 < S/N < 3.6). For the
remaining eight targets we can place upper limits on molecular gas masses
roughly between and . Comparing our results to other
studies of molecular gas, we find that our sample is significantly more
abundant in molecular gas overall, when compared to the stellar and the atomic
gas component, and our median molecular gas fraction lies about above
the upper limits of proposed redshift evolution in earlier studies. We discuss
possible reasons for this discrepancy, with the most likely conclusion being
target selection and Eddington bias.Comment: MNRAS, submitte
Anti-staphylococcal properties of four plant extracts against sensitive and multi-resistant bacterial strains isolated from cattle and rabbits
Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most challenging of all bacterial pathogens owing largely to the dogged occurrence of antibiotic-resistant strains. This is obvious in the recent emergence of oxacillin sensitive S. aureus (SOSA1 and SOSA2), and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA1 and MRSA2), which was isolated in Denmark and United KingdomThe aim of this study is to investigate the biopotency of methanolic extracts of Vitex mollis, Psidium guajava, Dalbergia retusa, and Crescential alata leaves against various staphylococcal strains isolated from cattle and rabbits. Methicillin-resistant S. aureus strains were isolated from cattle, while other strains were isolated from rabbits using standard methodology. The total phytochemical phenolic and saponins contents were obtained being the main groups of the antinutritional factors. The antimicrobial activity of the extracts against the standard culture of S. aureus (control) and S. aureus isolated from cattle and rabbits were investigated comparatively relative to that of oxacillin. It was found that both the control S. aureus and the isolated S. aureus are susceptible to all the four plant extracts, and sensitive to oxacillin. Of all the S. aureus including the control, MRSA2 is the most susceptible to all the extracts at 1000 μg/mL, except that of V. mollis where it is the least susceptible. Among all the plant extracts, P. guajava is the most active against MRSA2 and SOSA2. Therefore, the isolates from cattle (MRSA1 and MRSA2) are more susceptible to all the plant extracts than the isolates from rabbits. Among all the rabbit isolates, CoNS3 is the least susceptible to the extracts. Since all the plant extracts exhibit remarkable inhibitory activities against all the S. aureus strains, they are promising towards the production of therapeutic drugs
Renormalisation-theoretic analysis of non-equilibrium phase transitions II: The effect of perturbations on rate coefficients in the Becker-Doring equations
We study in detail the application of renormalisation theory to models of
cluster aggregation and fragmentation of relevance to nucleation and growth
processes. In particular, we investigate the Becker-Doring (BD) equations,
originally formulated to describe and analyse non-equilibrium phase
transitions, but more recently generalised to describe a wide range of
physicochemical problems. We consider here rate coefficients which depend on
the cluster size in a power-law fashion, but now perturbed by small amplitude
random noise. Power-law rate coefficients arise naturally in the theory of
surface-controlled nucleation and growth processes. The noisy perturbations on
these rates reflect the effect of microscopic variations in such mean-field
coefficients, thermal fluctuations and/or experimental uncertainties. In the
present paper we generalise our earlier work that identified the nine classes
into which all dynamical behaviour must fall by investigating how random
perturbations of the rate coefficients influence the steady-state and kinetic
behaviour of the coarse-grained, renormalised system. We are hence able to
confirm the existence of a set of up to nine universality classes for such BD
systems.Comment: 30 pages, to appear in J Phys A Math Ge
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Further Examination of the Candidate Genes in Chromosome 12p13 Locus for Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease
A broad region on chromosome 12p13 has been intensely investigated for novel genetic variants associated with Alzheimer disease (AD). We examined this region with 23 microsatellite markers using 124 North European (NE) families and 209 Caribbean Hispanic families with late-onset AD (FAD). Significant evidence for linkage was present in a 5-cM interval near 20 cM in both the NE FAD (LOD = 3.5) and the Caribbean Hispanic FAD (LOD = 2.2) datasets. We further investigated these families and an independent NE case-control dataset using 14 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The initial screening of the region at approximately 20 cM in the NE case-control dataset revealed significant association between AD and seven SNPs in several genes, with the strongest result for rs2532500 in TAPBPL (p = 0.006). For rs3741916 in GAPDH, the C allele, rather than the G allele as was observed by Li et al. (Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101(44):15688-15693, 2004), was the risk allele. When the two family datasets were examined, none of the SNPs were significant in NE families, but two SNPs were associated with AD in Caribbean Hispanics: rs740850 in NCAPD2 (p = 0.0097) and rs1060620 in GAPDH (p = 0.042). In a separate analysis combining the Caribbean Hispanic families and NE cases and controls, rs740850 was significant after correcting for multiple testing (empirical p = 0.0048). Subsequent haplotype analyses revealed that two haplotype sets-haplotype C-A at SNPs 6-7 within NCAPD2 in Caribbean Hispanics, and haplotypes containing C-A-T at SNPs 8-10 within GAPDH in Caribbean Hispanic family and NE case-control datasets-were associated with AD. Taken together, these SNPs may be in linkage disequilibrium with a pathogenic variant(s) on or near NCAPD2 and GAPD
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