5,177 research outputs found
Do Childhood Vaccines Have Non-Specific Effects on Mortality
A recent article by Kristensen et al. suggested that measles vaccine and bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine might\ud
reduce mortality beyond what is expected simply from protection against measles and tuberculosis. Previous reviews of the potential effects of childhood vaccines on mortality have not considered methodological features of reviewed studies. Methodological considerations play an especially important role in observational assessments, in which selection factors for vaccination may be difficult to ascertain. We reviewed 782 English language articles on vaccines and childhood mortality and found only a few whose design met the criteria for methodological rigor. The data reviewed suggest that measles vaccine delivers its promised reduction in mortality, but there is insufficient evidence to suggest a mortality benefit above that caused by its effect on measles disease and its sequelae. Our review of the available data in the literature reinforces how difficult answering these considerations has been and how important study design will be in determining the effect of specific vaccines on all-cause mortality.\u
Field-calibrated model of melt, refreezing, and runoff for polar ice caps : Application to Devon Ice Cap
Acknowledgments R.M.M. was supported by the Scottish Alliance for Geoscience, Environment and Society (SAGES). The field data collection contributed to the validation of the European Space Agency Cryosat mission and was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canada, the Meteorological Service of Canada (CRYSYS program), the Polar Continental Shelf Project (an agency of Natural Resources Canada), and by UK Natural Environment Research Council consortium grant NER/O/S/2003/00620. Support for D.O.B. was provided by the Canadian Circumpolar Institute and the Climate Change Geoscience Program, Earth Sciences Sector, Natural Resources Canada (ESS contribution 20130371). Thanks are also due to the Nunavut Research Institute and the communities of Resolute Bay and Grise Fjord for permission to conduct fieldwork on Devon Ice Cap. M.J. Sharp, A. Gardner, F. Cawkwell, R. Bingham, S. Williamson, L. Colgan, J. Davis, B. Danielson, J. Sekerka, L. Gray, and J. Zheng are thanked for logistical support and field assistance during the data collection. We thank Ruzica Dadic, two other anonymous reviewers, and the Editor, Bryn Hubbard, for their helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper and which resulted in significant improvements.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
WISE Brown Dwarf Binaries: The Discovery of a T5+T5 and a T8.5+T9 System
The multiplicity properties of brown dwarfs are critical empirical constraints for formation theories, while multiples themselves provide unique opportunities to test evolutionary and atmospheric models and examine empirical trends. Studies using high-resolution imaging cannot only uncover faint companions, but they can also be used to determine dynamical masses through long-term monitoring of binary systems. We have begun a search for the coolest brown dwarfs using preliminary processing of data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer and have confirmed many of the candidates as late-type T dwarfs. In order to search for companions to these objects, we are conducting observations using the Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics system on Keck II. Here we present the first results of that search, including a T5 binary with nearly equal mass components and a faint companion to a T8.5 dwarf with an estimated spectral type of T9
Hepatic effects of tartrazine (E 102) after systemic exposure are independent of oestrogen receptor interactions in the mouse
Tartrazine is a food colour that activates the transcriptional function of the human oestrogen receptor alpha in an in vitro cell model. Since oestrogens are cholestatic, we hypothesised tartrazine will cause periportal injury to the liver in vivo. To test this hypothesis, tartrazine was initially administered systemically to mice resulting in a periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells, increased serum alkaline phosphatase activity and mild periportal fibrosis. To determine whether an oestrogenic effect may be a key event in this response, tartrazine, sulphonated metabolites and a food additive contaminant were screened for their ability to interact with murine oestrogen receptors. In all cases, there were no interactions as agonists or antagonists and further, no oestrogenicity was observed with tartrazine in an in vivo uterine growth assay. To examine the relevance of the hepatic effects of tartrazine to its use as a food additive, tartrazine was orally administered to transgenic NF-κB-Luc mice. Pre- and concurrent oral treatment with alcohol was incorporated given its potential to promote gut permeability and hepatic inflammation. Tartrazine alone induced NF- κB activities in the colon and liver but there was no periportal recruitment of inflammatory cells or fibrosis. Tartrazine, its sulphonated metabolites and the contaminant inhibited sulphotransferase activities in murine hepatic S9 extracts. Given the role of sulfotransferases in bile acid excretion, the initiating event giving rise to periportal inflammation and subsequent hepatic pathology through systemic tartrazine exposure is therefore potentially associated an inhibition of bile acid sulphation and excretion and not on oestrogen receptor-mediated transcriptional function. However, these effects were restricted to systemic exposures to tartrazine and did not occur to any significant effect after oral exposure
Hubble Space Telescope Spectroscopy of Brown Dwarfs Discovered with the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
We present a sample of brown dwarfs identified with the {\it Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer} (WISE) for which we have obtained {\it Hubble Space
Telescope} ({\it HST}) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) near-infrared grism
spectroscopy. The sample (twenty-two in total) was observed with the G141 grism
covering 1.101.70 m, while fifteen were also observed with the G102
grism, which covers 0.901.10 m. The additional wavelength coverage
provided by the G102 grism allows us to 1) search for spectroscopic features
predicted to emerge at low effective temperatures (e.g.\ ammonia bands) and 2)
construct a smooth spectral sequence across the T/Y boundary. We find no
evidence of absorption due to ammonia in the G102 spectra. Six of these brown
dwarfs are new discoveries, three of which are found to have spectral types of
T8 or T9. The remaining three, WISE J082507.35280548.5 (Y0.5), WISE
J120604.38840110.6 (Y0), and WISE J235402.77024015.0 (Y1) are the
nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first spectroscopically confirmed Y dwarfs to
date. We also present {\it HST} grism spectroscopy and reevaluate the spectral
types of five brown dwarfs for which spectral types have been determined
previously using other instruments.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 20 pages, 18
figures, 7 table
Submillimetre observations of WISE-selected high-redshift, luminous, dusty galaxies
We present SCUBA-2 850um submillimetre (submm) observations of the fields of
10 dusty, luminous galaxies at z ~ 1.7 - 4.6, detected at 12um and/or 22um by
the WISE all-sky survey, but faint or undetected at 3.4um and 4.6um; dubbed
hot, dust-obscured galaxies (Hot DOGs). The six detected targets all have total
infrared luminosities greater than 10^13 L_sun, with one greater than 10^14
L_sun. Their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) are very blue from
mid-infrared to submm wavelengths and not well fitted by standard AGN SED
templates, without adding extra dust extinction to fit the WISE 3.4um and 4.6um
data. The SCUBA-2 850um observations confirm that the Hot DOGs have less cold
and/or more warm dust emission than standard AGN templates, and limit an
underlying extended spiral or ULIRG-type galaxy to contribute less than about
2% or 55% of the typical total Hot DOG IR luminosity, respectively. The two
most distant and luminous targets have similar observed submm to mid-infrared
ratios to the rest, and thus appear to have even hotter SEDs. The number of
serendipitous submm galaxies (SMGs) detected in the 1.5-arcmin-radius SCUBA-2
850um maps indicates there is a significant over-density of serendipitous
sources around Hot DOGs. These submm observations confirm that the
WISE-selected ultra-luminous galaxies have very blue mid-infrared to submm
SEDs, suggesting that they contain very powerful AGN, and are apparently
located in unusual arcmin-scale overdensities of very luminous dusty galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Exemplar T8 Subdwarf Companion of Wolf 1130
We have discovered a wide separation (188.5") T8 subdwarf companion to the
sdM1.5+WD binary Wolf 1130. Companionship of WISE J200520.38+542433.9 is
verified through common proper motion over a ~3 year baseline. Wolf 1130 is
located 15.83 +/- 0.96 parsecs from the Sun, placing the brown dwarf at a
projected separation of ~3000 AU. Near-infrared colors and medium resolution
(R~2000-4000) spectroscopy establish the uniqueness of this system as a
high-gravity, low-metallicity benchmark. Although there are a number of
low-metallicity T dwarfs in the literature, WISE J200520.38+542433.9 has the
most extreme inferred metallicity to date with [Fe/H] = -0.64 +/- 0.17 based on
Wolf 1130. Model comparisons to this exemplar late-type subdwarf support it
having an old age, a low metallicity, and a small radius. However, the
spectroscopic peculiarities of WISE J200520.38+542433.9 underscore the
importance of developing the low-metallicity parameter space of the most
current atmospheric models.Comment: Accepted to ApJ on 05 September 2013; 33 pages in preprint format, 8
figures, 3 table
Threshold switching via electric field induced crystallization in phase-change memory devices
Copyright © 2012 American Institute of PhysicsPhase-change devices exhibit characteristic threshold switching from the reset (off) to the set (on) state. Mainstream understanding of this electrical switching phenomenon is that it is initiated electronically via the influence of high electric fields on inter-band trap states in the amorphous phase. However, recent work has suggested that field induced (crystal) nucleation could instead be responsible. We compare and contrast these alternative switching “theories” via realistic simulations of device switching both with and without electric field dependent contributions to the system free energy. Results show that although threshold switching can indeed be obtained purely by electric field induced nucleation, the fields required are significantly larger than experimentally measured values
NEOWISE-R Observation of the Coolest Known Brown Dwarf
The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft has been
reactivated as NEOWISE-R to characterize and search for Near Earth Objects. The
brown dwarf WISE J085510.83-071442.5 has now been reobserved by NEOWISE-R, and
we confirm the results of Luhman (2014b), who found a very low effective
temperature ( K), a very high proper motion (8.1 +/- 0.1
arcsec/yr) , and a large parallax (454 +/- 45 mas). The large proper motion has
separated the brown dwarf from the background sources that influenced the 2010
WISE data, allowing a measurement of a very red WISE color of W1-W2
mag. A re-analysis of the 2010 WISE astrometry using only the W2 band, combined
with the new NEOWISE-R 2014 position, gives an improved parallax of 448 +/- 33
mas and proper motion of 8.08 +/- 0.05\; arcsec/yr. These are all consistent
with Luhman (2014b).Comment: 6 pages, AJ accepte
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