1,072 research outputs found

    Patient safety in Europe: medication errors and hospital-acquired infections

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    The Report was commissioned by the European Federation of Nurses Associations (EFN) in November 2007 in order to support its policy statements on Patient Safety (June 2004). In that statement the EFN declares its belief that European Union health services should operate within a culture of safety that is based on working towards an open culture and the immediate reporting of mistakes; exchanging best practice and research; and lobbying for the systematic collection of information and dissemination of research findings. This Report adressess specifically the culture of highly reliable organisations using the work of James Reason (2000). Medication errors and hospital-acquired infections are examined in line with the Reprt´s parameters and a range of European studies are used as evidence. An extensive reference list is provided that allows EFN to explore work in greater detail as required

    The effect of surface temperature and Reynolds number on the leeward heat-transfer for a shuttle orbiter

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    The effect of windward surface temperature on the heat transfer to the leeward surface of the shuttle orbiter was investigated. Heat-transfer distributions, surface-pressure distributions, and schlieren photographs were obtained for an 0.01-scale model of the 37-0 shuttle orbiter at angles-of-attack of 30 deg and of 40 deg. Similar data were obtained for a fuselage-only configuration at angles-of-attack of 30 deg and of 90 deg. Data were obtained for various Mach numbers, Reynolds numbers, and surface temperatures

    Deep imaging of Eridanus II and its lone star cluster

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    We present deep imaging of the most distant dwarf discovered by the Dark Energy Survey, Eridanus II (Eri II). Our Magellan/Megacam stellar photometry reaches ∼\sim33 mag deeper than previous work, and allows us to confirm the presence of a stellar cluster whose position is consistent with Eri II's center. This makes Eri II, at MV=−7.1M_V=-7.1, the least luminous galaxy known to host a (possibly central) cluster. The cluster is partially resolved, and at MV=−3.5M_V=-3.5 it accounts for ∼\sim4%4\% of Eri II's luminosity. We derive updated structural parameters for Eri II, which has a half-light radius of ∼\sim280280 pc and is elongated (ϵ\epsilon∼\sim0.480.48), at a measured distance of DD∼\sim370370 kpc. The color-magnitude diagram displays a blue, extended horizontal branch, as well as a less populated red horizontal branch. A central concentration of stars brighter than the old main sequence turnoff hints at a possible intermediate-age (∼\sim33 Gyr) population; alternatively, these sources could be blue straggler stars. A deep Green Bank Telescope observation of Eri II reveals no associated atomic gas.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; ApJL accepte

    Hunting The Most Distant Stars in the Milky Way: Methods and Initial Results

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    We present a new catalog of 404 M giant candidates found in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS). The 2,400 deg2^2 available in the UKIDSS Large Area Survey Data Release 8 resolve M giants through a volume four times larger than that of the entire Two Micron All Sky Survey. Combining near-infrared photometry with optical photometry and proper motions from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey yields an M giant candidate catalog with less M dwarf and quasar contamination than previous searches for similarly distant M giants. Extensive follow-up spectroscopy of this sample will yield the first map of our Galaxy's outermost reaches over a large area of sky. Our initial spectroscopic follow-up of ∼\sim 30 bright candidates yielded the positive identification of five M giants at distances ∼20−90\sim 20-90 kpc. Each of these confirmed M giants have positions and velocities consistent with the Sagittarius stream. The fainter M giant candidates in our sample have estimated photometric distances ∼200\sim 200 kpc (assuming [Fe/H][Fe/H] = 0.0), but require further spectroscopic verification. The photometric distance estimates extend beyond the Milky Way's virial radius, and increase by ∼50%\sim 50\% for each 0.5 dex decrease in assumed [Fe/H][Fe/H]. Given the number of M giant candidates, initial selection efficiency, and volume surveyed, we loosely estimate that at least one additional Sagittarius-like accretion event could have contributed to the hierarchical build-up of the Milky Way's outer halo.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, emulateapj format. Accepted by A

    Antlia B: A faint dwarf galaxy member of the NGC 3109 association

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    We report the discovery of Antlia B, a faint dwarf galaxy at a projected distance of ∼\sim72 kpc from NGC 3109 (MVM_{V}∼\sim−-15 mag), the primary galaxy of the NGC 3109 dwarf association at the edge of the Local Group. The tip of the red giant branch distance to Antlia B is DD=1.29±\pm0.10 Mpc, which is consistent with the distance to NGC 3109. A qualitative analysis indicates the new dwarf's stellar population has both an old, metal poor red giant branch (≳\gtrsim10 Gyr, [Fe/H]∼\sim−-2), and a younger blue population with an age of ∼\sim200-400 Myr, analogous to the original Antlia dwarf, another likely satellite of NGC 3109. Antlia B has \ion{H}{1} gas at a velocity of vhelio,HIv_{helio,HI}=376 km s−1^{-1}, confirming the association with NGC 3109 (vheliov_{helio}=403 km s−1^{-1}). The HI gas mass (MHI_{HI}=2.8±\pm0.2×\times105^{5} M⊙_{\odot}), stellar luminosity (MVM_{V}=−-9.7±\pm0.6 mag) and half light radius (rhr_{h}=273±\pm29 pc) are all consistent with the properties of dwarf irregular and dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local Volume, and is most similar to the Leo P dwarf galaxy. The discovery of Antlia B is the initial result from a Dark Energy Camera survey for halo substructure and faint dwarf companions to NGC 3109 with the goal of comparing observed substructure with expectations from the Λ\Lambda+Cold Dark Matter model in the sub-Milky Way regime.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to ApJ

    Dynamical evidence for a strong tidal interaction between the Milky Way and its satellite, Leo V

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    We present a chemodynamical analysis of the Leo~V dwarf galaxy, based on Keck II DEIMOS spectra of 8 member stars. We find a systemic velocity for the system of ⟨vr⟩=170.9−1.9+2.1\langle v_r\rangle = 170.9^{+ 2.1}_{-1.9}kms−1^{-1}, and barely resolve a velocity dispersion for the system, with σvr=2.3−1.6+3.2\sigma_{vr} = 2.3^{+3.2}_{-1.6}kms−1^{-1}, consistent with previous studies of Leo~V. The poorly resolved dispersion means we are unable to adequately constrain the dark matter content of Leo~V. We find an average metallicity for the dwarf of [Fe/H]=−2.48±0.21 = -2.48\pm0.21, and measure a significant spread in the iron abundance of its member stars, with −3.1≤-3.1\le[Fe/H]≤−1.9\le-1.9 dex, which cleanly identifies Leo~V as a dwarf galaxy that has been able to self-enrich its stellar population through extended star formation. Owing to the tentative photometric evidence for tidal substructure around Leo~V, we also investigate whether there is any evidence for tidal stripping or shocking of the system within its dynamics. We measure a significant velocity gradient across the system, of dvdχ=−4.1−2.6+2.8\frac{{\rm d}v}{{\rm d}\chi} = -4.1^{+2.8}_{-2.6}kms−1^{-1} per arcmin (or dvdχ=−71.9−45.6+50.8\frac{{\rm d}v}{{\rm d}\chi} = -71.9^{+50.8}_{-45.6}kms−1^{-1}~kpc−1^{-1}), which points almost directly toward the Galactic centre. We argue that Leo~V is likely a dwarf on the brink of dissolution, having just barely survived a past encounter with the centre of the Milky Way.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Updated to include minor revisions from referee proces

    UK Trades Unions and the Problems of Collective Action

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    This paper looks at the financial resources of trades unions in the UK, both updating previous work and attempting to understand the management of first and second order collective action problems. First order problems refer to the problems of initiating collective action and second order problems refer to the management of collective action organisations. Unions are ‘cost disease’ organisations in which expenditure outstrips inflation but revenue may not. Their economic model cannot survive without some form of external subsidy. Both aggregate and case study data – from the largest UK union, Unite – are presented to illustrate the cost disease problem and to suggest options for its management

    The Most Distant Stars in the Milky Way

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    We report on the discovery of the most distant Milky Way (MW) stars known to date: ULAS J001535.72++015549.6 and ULAS J074417.48++253233.0. These stars were selected as M giant candidates based on their infrared and optical colors and lack of proper motions. We spectroscopically confirmed them as outer halo giants using the MMT/Red Channel spectrograph. Both stars have large estimated distances, with ULAS J001535.72++015549.6 at 274±74274 \pm 74 kpc and ULAS J074417.48++253233.0 at 238 ±\pm 64 kpc, making them the first MW stars discovered beyond 200 kpc. ULAS J001535.72++015549.6 and ULAS J074417.48++253233.0 are both moving away from the Galactic center at 52±1052 \pm 10 km s−1^{-1} and 24±1024 \pm 10 km s−1^{-1}, respectively. Using their distances and kinematics, we considered possible origins such as: tidal stripping from a dwarf galaxy, ejection from the MW's disk, or membership in an undetected dwarf galaxy. These M giants, along with two inner halo giants that were also confirmed during this campaign, are the first to map largely unexplored regions of our Galaxy's outer halo.Comment: Accepted and in print by ApJL. Seven pages, 2 figure
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