2,277 research outputs found
An evolutionary model for GHz Peaked Spectrum Sources. Predictions for high frequency surveys
We have explored, in the general framework of the ``young source'' scenario,
evolutionary models for GHz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) galaxies and quasars which
reproduce the observed counts, redshift and peak frequency distributions of
currently available samples. Substantially different cosmological evolution
properties are found for the two populations: the quasar luminosity function
must evolve strongly up to , while the data on galaxies may be
consistent with no evolution. The models show that GPS sources (mostly quasars)
may comprise quite a significant fraction of bright (Jy) radio sources
at GHz if the intrinsic distribution of peak frequencies extends
up to GHz. In any case, however, their fraction decreases rapidly
with decreasing flux and their contribution to small scale fluctuations in the
frequency range covered by the forthcoming space missions MAP and Planck
Surveyor is expected to be minor.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, A&A accepte
The Planck-ATCA Co-eval Observations (PACO) project: the bright sample
The Planck-ATCA Co-eval Observations (PACO) have provided flux density
measurements of well defined samples of AT20G radio sources at frequencies
below and overlapping with Planck frequency bands, almost simultaneously with
Planck observations. We have observed with the Australia Telescope Compact
Array (ATCA) a total of 482 sources in the frequency range between 4.5 and 40
GHz in the period between July 2009 and August 2010. Several sources were
observed more than once. In this paper we present the aims of the project, the
selection criteria, and the observation and data reduction procedures. We also
discuss the data in total intensity for a complete sample of 189 sources with
S(20 GHz)>500 mJy, Galactic latitude |b|>5deg, and declination <-30deg, and
some statistical analysis of the spectral behaviour and variability of this
sample, referred to as the "bright PACO sample". Finally we discuss how these
data could be used to transfer absolute calibrations to ground based telescopes
using the CMB dipole calibrated flux densities measured by the Planck
satellite, and we provide some test fluxes on bright calibrators.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure. Accepted for publication on MNRAS. Catalogue
availabl
Adhesion of thin metallic layers on Au surfaces
We carried out first-principles density-functional theory calculations to study the work of separation for five different metal-metal interfaces, each of them comprising thin layers of selected metals (Cr, W, Ta, Al or Ti) lying on top of Au surfaces. We found that the highest work of separation is obtained for one-atom-thick layers. Increasing the number of atomic layers leads the work of separation to oscillate with the thickness, and ultimately tend to a limiting value for a large number of layers. Interestingly, for most cases the lowest work of separation is obtained for two-atom layers. We find that this behaviour is mirrored by the quantity of charge transferred between the two metals on the one hand, and their spatial distance on the othe
Polarization Properties of Extragalactic Radio Sources and Their Contribution to Microwave Polarization Fluctuations
We investigate the statistical properties of the polarized emission of
extragalactic radio sources and estimate their contribution to the power
spectrum of polarization fluctuations in the microwave region. The basic
ingredients of our analysis are the NVSS polarization data, the multifrequency
study of polarization properties of the B3-VLA sample (Mack et al. 2002) which
has allowed us to quantify Faraday depolarization effects, and the 15 GHz
survey by Taylor et al. (2001), which has provided strong constraints on the
high-frequency spectral indices of sources. The polarization degree of both
steep- and flat-spectrum at 1.4 GHz is found to be anti-correlated with the
flux density. The median polarization degree at 1.4 GHz of both steep- and
flat-spectrum sources brighter than mJy is . The data by Mack et al. (2002) indicate a substantial mean Faraday
depolarization at 1.4 GHz for steep spectrum sources, while the depolarization
is undetermined for most flat/inverted-spectrum sources. Exploiting this
complex of information we have estimated the power spectrum of polarization
fluctuations due to extragalactic radio sources at microwave frequencies. We
confirm that extragalactic sources are expected to be the main contaminant of
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarization maps on small angular scales. At
frequencies GHz the amplitude of their power spectrum is expected to be
comparable to that of the -mode of the CMB. At higher frequencies, however,
the CMB dominates.Comment: 10 pages, A&A in pres
Integration of cranial base and face in growing subject
Background: many papers investigate the role of the cranial base in facial development, but the results are not in agreement. This can be due to a difference between the central and lateral parts of the cranial base. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the relationship between the central and the lateral cranial base and the facial skeleton in pre-pubertal peak subjects and at the end of growth. Material/Methods: a total sample of 52 latero-lateral cranial teleradiographs were analyzed. To test the correlation between structures, the "Partial Least Square" analysis was performed. Geometric morphometric analysis were applied and partial least square analysis was used to test correlation. Integration was studied removing the effect of allometry. Results: facial skeleton has no significant relation with central cranial base. Facial skeleton has significant relationships with the lateral portion of the cranial base. This relationship is higher in the post-peak phase of growth. Conclusion: the Integration between facial structures and cranial base is significant. The Spatial orientation and shape of the facial structures are both influenced by cranial base. This is mainly due to the lateral portion of cranial base
Individual and contextual factors associated with school staff responses to homophobic bullying
This cross-sectional research investigates the individual (i.e., sexual prejudice, contact with lesbian and gay [LG] people, and perceived seriousness of homophobic epithets) and contextual (i.e., homophobic bullying observed by school staff and perceived colleague reactions to homophobic bullying) factors as predictors of school staff intervention against vs. legitimization of homophobic bullying. Data were collected in secondary schools in the North of Italy via a paper-and-pencil survey. Participants were school staff members (N = 273) from 24 Italian secondary schools. The results have indicated that the higher the sexual prejudice and the lower the contact with LG individuals, the higher the legitimization of homophobic bullying. Also, perceiving colleagues as legitimizing or intervening in cases of homophobic bullying predicted similar reactions on the part of school staff participants. The findings are discussed with respect to the current literature regarding homophobic bullying, and applied interventions for school staff training programs to tackle homophobic bullying at school are put forward.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
A snapshot of knowledge about oral cancer in italy: A 505 person survey
Objectives: Patients’ knowledge about oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) plays an important role in primary prevention, early diagnosis, and prognosis and survival rate. The aim of this study was to assess OSCC awareness attitudes among general population in order to provide information for educational interventions. Methods: A survey delivered as a web-based questionnaire was submitted to 505 subjects (aged from 18 to 76 years) in Italy, and the answers collected were statistically analyzed. Information was collected about existence, incidence, features of lesions, risk factors of oral cancer, and self-inspection habits, together with details about professional reference figures and preventive behaviors. Results: Chi-square tests of independence with adjusted standardized residuals highlighted correlations between population features (age, gender, educational attainment, provenance, medical relationship, or previous diagnoses of oral cancer in family) and knowledge about oral cancer. Conclusions: Knowledge about OSCC among the Italian population is limited, and it might be advisable to implement nudging and sensitive customized campaigns in order to promote awareness and therefore improve the prognosis of this disease
Non-blind catalogue of extragalactic point sources from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) first 3--year survey data
We have used the MHW2 filter to obtain estimates of the flux densities at the
WMAP frequencies of a complete sample of 2491 sources, mostly brighter than 500
mJy at 5 GHz, distributed over the whole sky excluding a strip around the
Galactic equator (b < 5 degrees). After having detected 933 sources above the 3
sigma level in the MHW2 filtered maps - our New Extragalactic WMAP Point Source
(NEWPS_3sigma) Catalogue - we are left with 381 sources above 5 sigma in at
least one WMAP channel, 369 of which constitute our NEWPS_5sigma catalogue. It
is remarkable to note that 98 (i.e. 26%) sources detected above 5 sigma are
`new', they are not present in the WMAP catalogue. Source fluxes have been
corrected for the Eddington bias. Our flux density estimates before such
correction are generally in good agreement with the WMAP ones at 23 GHz. At
higher frequencies WMAP fluxes tend to be slightly higher than ours, probably
because WMAP estimates neglect the deviations of the point spread function from
a Gaussian shape. On the whole, above the estimated completeness limit of 1.1
Jy at 23 GHz we detected 43 sources missed by the blind method adopted by the
WMAP team. On the other hand, our low-frequency selection threshold left out 25
WMAP sources, only 12 of which, however, are 5 sigma detections and only 3 have
fluxes S at 23 GHz > 1.1 Jy. Thus, our approach proved to be competitive with,
and complementary to the WMAP one.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
The Planck Surveyor mission: astrophysical prospects
Although the Planck Surveyor mission is optimized to map the cosmic microwave
background anisotropies, it will also provide extremely valuable information on
astrophysical phenomena. We review our present understanding of Galactic and
extragalactic foregrounds relevant to the mission and discuss on one side,
Planck's impact on the study of their properties and, on the other side, to
what extent foreground contamination may affect Planck's ability to accurately
determine cosmological parameters. Planck's multifrequency surveys will be
unique in their coverage of large areas of the sky (actually, of the full sky);
this will extend by two or more orders of magnitude the flux density interval
over which mm/sub-mm counts of extragalactic sources can be determined by
instruments already available (like SCUBA) or planned for the next decade (like
the LSA-MMA or the space mission FIRST), which go much deeper but over very
limited areas. Planck will thus provide essential complementary information on
the epoch-dependent luminosity functions. Bright radio sources will be studied
over a poorly explored frequency range where spectral signatures, essential to
understand the physical processes that are going on, show up. The
Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect, with its extremely rich information content, will be
observed in the direction of a large number of rich clusters of Galaxies.
Thanks again to its all sky coverage, Planck will provide unique information on
the structure and on the emission properties of the interstellar medium in the
Galaxy. At the same time, the foregrounds are unlikely to substantially limit
Planck's ability to measure the cosmological signals. Even measurements of
polarization of the primordial Cosmic Microwave background fluctuations appear
to be feasible.Comment: 20 pages, Latex (use aipproc2.sty, aipproc2.cls, epsfig.sty), 10
PostScript figures; invited review talk, Proc. of the Conference: "3 K
Cosmology", Roma, Italy, 5-10 October 1998, AIP Conference Proc, in press
Note: Figures 6 and 7 have been replaced by new and correct version
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