542 research outputs found
The sexual health needs of looked after young people; findings from qualitative interviews led through public health and health psychology.
Background - Looked after young people (LAYP) have poorer sexual health outcomes than their peers. However, research seldom examines the health needs of, or intervenes with, this group. The aim of the current study was to identify LAYP's perceived sexual health needs and explore sources of sexual health information, knowledge levels, concerns and service preferences.
Methods - Looked after young people within Fife, Scotland, were recruited through their workers and carers to participate in qualitative semi-structured interviews. Those aged 12–19 years were targeted for recruitment. National Health Services ethics approval was granted. Thematic analysis was conducted using NVivo.
Results - Interviews were conducted with 10 LAYP. Key themes included gaps in knowledge, and gaps between knowledge and behaviour. Being ‘looked after’ may have negative consequences on knowledge, sources of support and safer sex. A flexible, one-to-one service, aimed at several lifestyle issues, not solely sexual health, was preferred by respondents.
Conclusion - Looked after young people require support to bridge the gap between knowledge and behaviour and several theories relevant to the findings have been identified. Participants desired more support around a range of health issues, which may come from school, workers and carers, as well as health professionals. Further research examining effective interventions with this group is crucial to improve outcomes
An X-ray WHIM metal absorber from a Mpc-scale empty region of space
We report a detection of an absorption line at ~44.8 {\AA} in a > 500 ks
Chandra HRC-S/LETG X-ray grating spectrum of the blazar H 2356-309. This line
can be identified as intervening CV-K{\alpha} absorption, at z\approx0.112,
produced by a warm (log T = 5.1 K) intergalactic absorber. The feature is
significant at a 2.9{\sigma} level (accounting for the number of independent
redshift trials). We estimate an equivalent hydrogen column density of log
N_H=19.05 (Z/Zsun)^-1 cm^-2. Unlike other previously reported FUV/X-ray metal
detections of warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM), this CV absorber lies in a
region with locally low galaxy density, at ~2.2 Mpc from the closest galaxy at
that redshift, and therefore is unlikely to be associated with an extended
galactic halo. We instead tentatively identify this absorber with an
intervening Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium filament possibly permeating a
large-scale, 30 Mpc extended, structure of galaxies whose redshift centroid,
within a cylinder of 7.5 Mpc radius centered on the line of sight to H
2356-309, is marginally consistent (at a 1.8{\sigma} level) with the redshift
of the absorber.Comment: ApJ accepted, 6 pages, 3 figure
Warm-Hot Gas in and around the Milky Way: Detection and Implications of OVII Absorption toward LMC X-3
X-ray absorption lines of highly-ionized species such as OVII at about zero
redshift have been firmly detected in the spectra of several active galactic
nuclei. However, the location of the absorbing gas remains a subject of debate.
To separate the Galactic and extragalactic contributions to the absorption, we
have obtained Chandra LETG-HRC and FUSE observations of the black hole X-ray
binary LMC X--3. A joint analysis of the detected OVII and Ne IX Kalpha lines,
together with the non-detection of the OVII Kbeta and OVIII Kalpha lines, gives
the measurements of the temperature, velocity dispersion, and hot oxygen column
density. The X-ray data also allow us to place a 95% confidence lower limit to
the Ne/O ratio as 0.14. The OVII line centroid and its relative shift from the
Galactic OI Kalpha absorption line, detected in the same observations, are
inconsistent with the systemic velocity of LMC X--3 ().
The far-UV spectrum shows OVI absorption at Galactic velocities, but no OVI
absorption is detected at the LMC velocity at significance. Both
the nonthermal broadening and the decreasing scale height with the increasing
ionization state further suggest an origin of the highly-ionized gas in a
supernova-driven galactic fountain. In addition, we estimate the warm and hot
electron column densities from our detected OVII Kalpha line in the LMC X--3
X-ray spectra and from the dispersion measure of a pulsar in the LMC vicinity.
We then infer the O/H ratio of the gas to be ,
consistent with the chemically-enriched galactic fountain scenario. We conclude
that the Galactic hot interstellar medium should in general substantially
contribute to zero-redshift X-ray absorption lines in extragalactic sources.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
Modeling Rare Species Distribution at the Edge: The Case for the Vulnerable Endemic Pyrenean Desman in France
The endemic Pyrenean Desman (Galemys pyrenaicus) is an elusive, rare, and vulnerable species declining over its entire and narrow range (Spain, Portugal, France, and Andorra). The principal set of conservation measures in France is a 5-years National Action Plan based on 25 conservation actions. Priority is given to update its present distribution and develop tools for predictive distribution models. We aim at building the first species distribution model and map for the northern edge of the range of the Desman and confronting the outputs of the model to target conservation efforts in the context of environmental change. Contrasting to former comparable studies, we derive a simpler model emphasizing the importance of factors linked to precipitation and not to the temperature. If temperature is one of the climate change key factors, depicted shrinkage in Desman distribution could be lower or null at the northern (French) edge suggesting thus a major role for this northern population in terms of conservation of the species. Finally, we question the applied issue of temporal and spatial transferability for such environmental favourability models when it is made at the edge of the distribution range
X-raying the Intergalactic OVI Absorbers
The observed intergalactic OVI absorbers at z>0 have been regarded as a
significant reservoir of the ``missing baryons''. However, to fully understand
how these absorbers contribute to the baryon inventory, it is crucial to
determine whether the systems are collisionally ionized or photoionized (or
both). Using the identified intergalactic OVI absorbers as tracers, we search
for the corresponding X-ray absorption lines, which are useful for finding the
missing baryons and for revealing the nature of the OVI absorbers. Stacking the
Chandra grating spectra along six AGN sight lines, we obtain three spectra with
signal-to-noise ratios of 32, 28, and 10 per 12.5 mA spectral bin around the
expected OVII Kalpha wavelength. These spectra correspond to OVI absorbers with
various dynamic properties. We find no detectable NeIX, OVII, OVIII, NVII, or
CVI absorption lines in the spectra, but the high counting statistics allows us
to obtain firm upper limits on the corresponding ionic column densities (in
particular N(OVII)<=10 N(OVI) on average at the 95% confidence level). Jointly
analyzing these non-detected X-ray lines with the averaged OVI column density,
we further limit the average temperature of the OVI-bearing gas to be
log[T(K)]<=5.7 in collisional ionization equilibrium. We discuss the
implications of these results for physical properties of the putative warm-hot
intergalactic medium and its detection in future X-ray observations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables; minor changes following referee's
comments; Accepted for publication in Ap
Origins of altered reinforcement effects in ADHD
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), characterized by hyperactivity, impulsiveness and deficient sustained attention, is one of the most common and persistent behavioral disorders of childhood. ADHD is associated with catecholamine dysfunction. The catecholamines are important for response selection and memory formation, and dopamine in particular is important for reinforcement of successful behavior. The convergence of dopaminergic mesolimbic and glutamatergic corticostriatal synapses upon individual neostriatal neurons provides a favorable substrate for a three-factor synaptic modification rule underlying acquisition of associations between stimuli in a particular context, responses, and reinforcers. The change in associative strength as a function of delay between key stimuli or responses, and reinforcement, is known as the delay of reinforcement gradient. The gradient is altered by vicissitudes of attention, intrusions of irrelevant events, lapses of memory, and fluctuations in dopamine function. Theoretical and experimental analyses of these moderating factors will help to determine just how reinforcement processes are altered in ADHD. Such analyses can only help to improve treatment strategies for ADHD
XMM-{\em Newton} and FUSE Tentative Evidence for a WHIM filament along the Line of Sight to PKS~0558-504
We present a possible OVIII X-ray absorption line at
which, if confirmed, will be the first one associated with a broad HI Ly
(BLB: FWHM= km s) absorber. The absorber lies along the
line of sight to the nearby () Seyfert 1 galaxy PKS~0558-504,
consistent with being a WHIM filament. The X-ray absorber is marginally
detected in two independent XMM-Newton spectra of PKS~0558-504, a long ks Guest-Observer observation and a shorter, ks total,
calibration observation, with a combined single line statistical significance
of 2.8 (2.7 and 1.2 in the two spectra, respectively).
When fitted with our self-consistent hybrid-photoionization WHIM models, the
combined XMM-{\em Newton} spectrum is consistent with the presence of OVIII
K at . This model gives best fitting temperature
and equivalent H column density of the absorber of log
K, and logN cm. The
statistical sigificance of this single X-ray detection is increased by the
detection of broad and complex HI Ly absorption in archival FUSE spectra
of PKS~0558-504, at redshifts consistent with the
best-fitting redshift of the X-ray absorber. The single line statistical
significance of this line is 4.1 (3.7 if systematics are
considered), and thus the combined (HI+OVIII) statistical significance of the
detection is of 5.0.
The detection of both metal and H lines at a consistent redshift, in this hot
absorbing system, allows us to speculate on its metallicity. By associating the
bulk of the X-ray absorber with the BLB line detected in the FUSE spectrum at
, we obtain a metallicity of 1-4\% Solar.Comment: 37 pages, 12 figures, 3 Tables. Accepted for publication by the ApJ
Numerical simulations of shocks encountering clumpy regions
We present numerical simulations of the adiabatic interaction of a shock with
a clumpy region containing many individual clouds. Our work incorporates a
sub-grid turbulence model which for the first time makes this investigation
feasible. We vary the Mach number of the shock, the density contrast of the
clouds, and the ratio of total cloud mass to inter-cloud mass within the clumpy
region. Cloud material becomes incorporated into the flow. This "mass-loading"
reduces the Mach number of the shock, and leads to the formation of a dense
shell. In cases in which the mass-loading is sufficient the flow slows enough
that the shock degenerates into a wave. The interaction evolves through up to
four stages: initially the shock decelerates; then its speed is nearly
constant; next the shock accelerates as it leaves the clumpy region; finally it
moves at a constant speed close to its initial speed. Turbulence is generated
in the post-shock flow as the shock sweeps through the clumpy region. Clouds
exposed to turbulence can be destroyed more rapidly than a similar cloud in an
"isolated" environment. The lifetime of a downstream cloud decreases with
increasing cloud-to-intercloud mass ratio. We briefly discuss the significance
of these results for starburst superwinds and galaxy evolution.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A Spitzer-MIPS search for dust in compact high-velocity HI clouds
We employ three-band Spitzer-MIPS observations to search for cold dust
emission in three neutral hydrogen compact high-velocity clouds (CHVCs) in the
vicinity of the Milky Way. Far-infrared emission correlated with HI column
density was previously reported in HVC Complex C, indicating that this object
contains dust heated by the Galactic radiation field at its distance of ~10kpc.
Assuming published Spitzer, IRAS, and Planck IR-HI correlations for Complex C,
our Spitzer observations are of sufficient depth to directly detect 160um dust
emission in the CHVCs if it is present at the same level as in Complex C, but
no emission is detected in any of the targets. For one of the targets (CHVC289)
which has well-localized HI clumps, we therefore conclude that it is
fundamentally different from Complex C, with either a lower dust-to-gas ratio
or a greater distance from the Galactic disk (and consequently cooler dust
temperature). Firm conclusions cannot be drawn for the other two
Spitzer-observed CHVCs since their small-scale HI structures are not
sufficiently well known; nonetheless, no extended dust emission is apparent
despite their relatively high HI column densities. The lack of dust emission in
CHVC289 suggests that at least some compact high-velocity clouds objects may
exhibit very low dust-to-gas ratios and/or greater Galactocentric distances
than large HVC complexes.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, text and Figure 4 substantially revised to
include Planck results after referee repor
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