514 research outputs found
Prospects for Gamma-Ray Bursts detection by the Cherenkov Telescope Array
The first Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) catalog presented by the Fermi-Large Area
Telescope (LAT) collaboration includes 28 GRBs, detected above 100 MeV over the
first three years since the launch of the Fermi mission. However, more than 100
GRBs are expected to be found over a period of six years of data collection
thanks to a new detection algorithm and to the development of a new LAT event
reconstruction, the so-called "Pass 8." Our aim is to provide revised prospects
for GRB alerts in the CTA era in light of these new LAT discoveries. We focus
initially on the possibility of GRB detection with the Large Size Telescopes
(LSTs). Moreover, we investigate the contribution of the Middle Size Telescopes
(MSTs), which are crucial for the search of larger areas on short post trigger
timescales. The study of different spectral components in the prompt and
afterglow phase, and the limits on the Extragalactic background light are
highlighted. Different strategies to repoint part of - or the entire array -
are studied in detail.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC
2015), The Hague, The Netherland
COVID-19 pandemic: what consequences for cardiac rehabilitation?
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic spreading all around the world has stressed over its capabilities and determined profound changes in the health systems in all countries and has caused hundreds of thousand deaths. Health professionals have been called to a tremendous effort to deal with this emergency, often contaminating or succumbing themselves to the disease
222Rn daughters influence on scaler mode of the ARGO-YBJ detector
The ARGO-YBJ experiment is a full coverage air shower array; its lowest
energy threshold is reached using the "scaler mode technique". Working in this
mode, the signals generated by any particle hitting each cluster are put in
coincidence every 150 ns and read by four independent scaler channels, giving
the counting rates of multiplicity \geq1, \geq2, \geq3 and \geq4 (C1, C2, C3
and C4, respectively). The study of these counting rates pointed out a
different behaviour of C1 respect to C2, C3 and C4, suggesting that C1 is
detecting not only cosmic rays. This work shows that the radon (222Rn) gamma
emitter daughters present in the ARGO-YBJ building air are contributing to C1
counts at the level of 1 Hz each Bq/m3 of radon. The uncertainty about this
contribution is great, because of the high variability of 222Rn concentration
and the building ventilation. The radon monitoring will allow the C1 correction
improving the sensitivity of the ARGO-YBJ experiment at its lowest energy
threshold.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the 32nd International Cosmic Ray
Conference (ICRC
Improvement of heart rate recovery after exercise training in older people.
Twenty-four subjects aged 70 and older were retrospectively selected from our archives and screened for symptoms of cardiovascular disease. Baseline exercise test was negative for myocardial ischemia in all subjects. All subjects had completed an 8-week program, performed for
a variety of indications and consisting of an aerobic physical training program including 30 minutes of cycling three times per week at 65% to 75% of maximum heart rate achieved at peak exercise test performed at enrollment, an educational intervention, dietary advice, and psychological
support. All subjects underwent a cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPX) before and at the end of
exercise training. At the end of each CPX, peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak), the rate of increase of ventilation per unit of increase of carbon dioxide production (VE/VCO2slope), and HRR were recorded. Twenty-five healthy subjects younger than 60 with no evidence of exercise-induced myocardial ischemia and not enrolled in any exercise training program were also retrospectively
selected from our archives and used as a control group for analyzing HRR. These patients performed two exercise tests several weeks apart. Several studies have shown that changes in vagal tone can be used as an outcome tool that helps identify patients or subjects with or without cardiovascular disease at risk for a cardiovascular event, although the evidence of a prognostic value of HRR in older subjects without cardiovascular disease is rather poor. In this study, exercise training resulted in HRR improvement in healthy elderly subjects, suggesting that exercise training improves vagal/sympathetic balance in older subjects without cardiovascular disease as well. Whether the observed improvement in HRR may have long-term beneficial prognostic effects was not the aim of the study, although a beneficial effect might be postulated, in light of the Framingham dat
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