466 research outputs found
High blood pressure at old age : The Leiden 85 plus study
The last decades have shown an increasing interest in treatment of high blood pressure. Copious amounts of data have been published on the mortality and morbidity risks of high blood pressure. Overall these data have resulted in an increasing awareness of the deleterious effects of only modest elevation of blood pressure on morbidity and mortality. Moreover, treatment of high blood pressure resulted in substantial benefits in terms of reduced morbidity and mortality. This has resulted in official guidelines about treatment for hypertension that have become stricter with every decade. However, most of the evidence has been generated from middle-aged people. Only a few trials have included people of 80 year and older. [7-9] Looking at the results in detail within that age group the evidence is not robust. Given the increasing lifespan worldwide, physicians are confronted with many elderly patients over eighty. Hence, there is an increasing urge to generate more knowledge in regard to the effects of high blood pressure in the elderly.UBL - phd migration 201
ISOPHOT observations of 3CR quasars and radio galaxies
In order to check for consistency with the radio-loud AGN unification scheme, ISOPHOT data obtained for two small sets of intermediate redshift steep-spectrum 3CR radio galaxies and quasars are being examined. Supplementary submillimeter and centimeter radio data for the quasars are also taken into account, in order to assess the magnitude of any beamed nonthermal radiation. The fact that we find broad-lined objects to be somewhat more luminous in their far-infrared output than narrow-lined objects, hints at a contradiction to the unification scheme. However, as the sample objects are not particularly well matched, the sample size is small, and the FIR radiation may still be partly anisotropic, this evidence is, at the moment, weak
Green Function Monte Carlo with Stochastic Reconfiguration
A new method for the stabilization of the sign problem in the Green Function
Monte Carlo technique is proposed. The method is devised for real lattice
Hamiltonians and is based on an iterative ''stochastic reconfiguration'' scheme
which introduces some bias but allows a stable simulation with constant sign.
The systematic reduction of this bias is in principle possible. The method is
applied to the frustrated J1-J2 Heisenberg model, and tested against exact
diagonalization data. Evidence of a finite spin gap for J2/J1 >~ 0.4 is found
in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX + 3 encapsulated postscript figure
A prototype integrated medical workstation environment
Abstract
In this paper the requirements, design, and implementation of a prototype integrated medical workstation environment are outlined. The aim of the workstation is to provide user-friendly, task-oriented support for clinicians, based on existing software and data. The prototype project has been started to investigate the technical possibilities of graphical user-interfaces, network technology, client-server approaches, and software encapsulation. Experience with the prototype encouraged discussion on both the limitations and the essential features for an integrated medical workstation
Spitzer Observations of 3C Quasars and Radio Galaxies: Mid-Infrared Properties of Powerful Radio Sources
We have measured mid-infrared radiation from an orientation-unbiased sample
of 3CRR galaxies and quasars at redshifts 0.4 < z < 1.2 with the IRS and MIPS
instruments on the Spitzer Space Telescope. Powerful emission (L_24micron >
10^22.4 W/Hz/sr) was detected from all but one of the sources. We fit the
Spitzer data as well as other measurements from the literature with synchrotron
and dust components. The IRS data provide powerful constraints on the fits. At
15 microns, quasars are typically four times brighter than radio galaxies with
the same isotropic radio power. Based on our fits, half of this difference can
be attributed to the presence of non-thermal emission in the quasars but not
the radio galaxies. The other half is consistent with dust absorption in the
radio galaxies but not the quasars. Fitted optical depths are anti-correlated
with core dominance, from which we infer an equatorial distribution of dust
around the central engine. The median optical depth at 9.7 microns for objects
with core-dominance factor R > 10^-2 is approximately 0.4; for objects with R <
10^-2, it is 1.1. We have thus addressed a long-standing question in the
unification of FR II quasars and galaxies: quasars are more luminous in the
mid-infrared than galaxies because of a combination of Doppler-boosted
synchrotron emission in quasars and extinction in galaxies, both
orientation-dependent effects.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures plus two landscape tables. Accepted for
publication in Ap
Ionospheric Calibration of Low Frequency Radio Interferometric Observations using the Peeling Scheme: I. Method Description and First Results
Calibration of radio interferometric observations becomes increasingly
difficult towards lower frequencies. Below ~300 MHz, spatially variant
refractions and propagation delays of radio waves traveling through the
ionosphere cause phase rotations that can vary significantly with time, viewing
direction and antenna location. In this article we present a description and
first results of SPAM (Source Peeling and Atmospheric Modeling), a new
calibration method that attempts to iteratively solve and correct for
ionospheric phase errors. To model the ionosphere, we construct a time-variant,
2-dimensional phase screen at fixed height above the Earth's surface. Spatial
variations are described by a truncated set of discrete Karhunen-Loeve base
functions, optimized for an assumed power-law spectral density of free
electrons density fluctuations, and a given configuration of calibrator sources
and antenna locations. The model is constrained using antenna-based gain phases
from individual self-calibrations on the available bright sources in the
field-of-view. Application of SPAM on three test cases, a simulated visibility
data set and two selected 74 MHz VLA data sets, yields significant improvements
in image background noise (5-75 percent reduction) and source peak fluxes (up
to 25 percent increase) as compared to the existing self-calibration and
field-based calibration methods, which indicates a significant improvement in
ionospheric phase calibration accuracy.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
Changes in v2: Corrected minor error in Equations A.3 and A.12. Extended
acknowledgment
Three-dimensional radiative transfer models of clumpy tori in Seyfert galaxies
Tori of Active Galactic Nuclei are made up of a mixture of hot and cold gas,
as well as dust. In order to protect the dust grains from destruction by the
hot gas as well as by the energetic radiation of the accretion disk, the dust
is often assumed to be distributed in clouds. In our new 3D model of AGN dust
tori, the torus is modelled as a wedge-shaped disk in which dusty clouds are
randomly distributed, by taking the dust density distribution of the
corresponding continuous model into account. We especially concentrate on the
differences between clumpy and continuous models in terms of the temperature
distributions, the surface brightness distributions and interferometric
visibilities, as well as spectral energy distributions. To this end, we employ
radiative transfer calculations with the help of the 3D Monte Carlo code MC3D.
In a second step, interferometric visibilities are calculated from the
simulated surface brightness distributions, which can be directly compared to
observations with the MIDI instrument. The radial temperature distributions of
clumpy models possess significantly enhanced scatter compared to the continuous
cases. Even at large distances, clouds can be heated directly by the central
accretion disk. The existence of the silicate 10 micron-feature in absorption
or in emission depends sensitively on the distribution, the size and optical
depth of clouds in the innermost part of the torus, due to shadowing effects of
clouds there. This explains failure and success of previous modelling efforts
of clumpy tori. After adapting the parameters of our clumpy standard model to
the circumstances of the Seyfert 2 Circinus galaxy, it can qualitatively
explain recent mid-infrared interferometric observations performed with MIDI,
as well as high resolution spectral data.Comment: 15 pages, 23 figures, accepted by A&
Current practice patterns of outpatient management of acute pulmonary embolism: A post-hoc analysis of the YEARS study
Background: Studies have shown the safety of home treatment of patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) at low risk of adverse events. Management studi
A parsec-scale faint jet in the nearby changing-look Seyfert galaxy Mrk 590
Broad Balmer emission lines in active galactic nuclei (AGN) may display
dramatic changes in amplitude, even disappearance and re-appearance in some
sources. As a nearby galaxy at a redshift of z = 0.0264, Mrk 590 suffered such
a cycle of Seyfert type changes between 2006 and 2017. Over the last fifty
years, Mrk 590 also underwent a powerful continuum outburst and a slow fading
from X-rays to radio wavelengths with a peak bolometric luminosity reaching
about ten per cent of the Eddington luminosity. To track its past accretion and
ejection activity, we performed very long baseline interferometry (VLBI)
observations with the European VLBI Network (EVN) at 1.6 GHz in 2015. The EVN
observations reveal a faint (~1.7 mJy) radio jet extending up to ~2.8 mas
(projected scale ~1.4 pc) toward north, and probably resulting from the very
intensive AGN activity. To date, such a parsec-scale jet is rarely seen in the
known changing-look AGN. The finding of the faint jet provides further strong
support for variable accretion as the origin of the type changes in Mrk 590.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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