241,597 research outputs found

    The Angular Momenta of Neutron Stars and Black Holes as a Window on Supernovae

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    It is now clear that a subset of supernovae display evidence for jets and are observed as gamma-ray bursts. The angular momentum distribution of massive stellar endpoints provides a rare means of constraining the nature of the central engine in core-collapse explosions. Unlike supermassive black holes, the spin of stellar-mass black holes in X-ray binary systems is little affected by accretion, and accurately reflects the spin set at birth. A modest number of stellar-mass black hole angular momenta have now been measured using two independent X-ray spectroscopic techniques. In contrast, rotation-powered pulsars spin-down over time, via magnetic braking, but a modest number of natal spin periods have now been estimated. For both canonical and extreme neutron star parameters, statistical tests strongly suggest that the angular momentum distributions of black holes and neutron stars are markedly different. Within the context of prevalent models for core-collapse supernovae, the angular momentum distributions are consistent with black holes typically being produced in GRB-like supernovae with jets, and with neutron stars typically being produced in supernovae with too little angular momentum to produce jets via magnetohydrodynamic processes. It is possible that neutron stars are imbued with high spin initially, and rapidly spun-down shortly after the supernova event, but the available mechanisms may be inconsistent with some observed pulsar properties.Comment: ApJ Letters, accepte

    Lake Stones

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    Role of IL-33 in inflammation and disease

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    Interleukin (IL)-33 is a new member of the IL-1 superfamily of cytokines that is expressed by mainly stromal cells, such as epithelial and endothelial cells, and its expression is upregulated following pro-inflammatory stimulation. IL-33 can function both as a traditional cytokine and as a nuclear factor regulating gene transcription. It is thought to function as an 'alarmin' released following cell necrosis to alerting the immune system to tissue damage or stress. It mediates its biological effects via interaction with the receptors ST2 (IL-1RL1) and IL-1 receptor accessory protein (IL-1RAcP), both of which are widely expressed, particularly by innate immune cells and T helper 2 (Th2) cells. IL-33 strongly induces Th2 cytokine production from these cells and can promote the pathogenesis of Th2-related disease such as asthma, atopic dermatitis and anaphylaxis. However, IL-33 has shown various protective effects in cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiac remodeling. Thus, the effects of IL-33 are either pro-or anti-inflammatory depending on the disease and the model. In this review the role of IL-33 in the inflammation of several disease pathologies will be discussed, with particular emphasis on recent advances

    After San Jacinto: Santa Anna\u27s Role in Texas Independence

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    First Measurement Of The Jet Cross Section In Polarized p+p Collisions At s=200\sqrt{s}=200 GeV

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    We present preliminary measurements of the inclusive jet cross section in the transverse momentum region 5<pTp_{T}<50 GeV/\textit{c} from 0.2 pb−1pb^{-1} of polarized p+p data at s\sqrt{s}=200 GeV. The data were corrected for detector inefficiency and resolution using PYTHIA events processed through a full GEANT simulation. The measured jet cross section agrees well with NLO pQCD calculations over seven orders of magnitude. These "proof of principal" measurements pave the way for ongoing analyses of the higher statistics (∼\sim 3 pb−1pb^{-1}) data sample from the 2005 RHIC run.Comment: Proceedings from PANIC 200

    Compact Binaries as Sources of Gravitational Radiation

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    With current terrestrial gravitational wave detectors working at initial design sensitivities, and upgrades and space missions planned, it is likely that in the next five to ten years gravitational radiation will be detected directly from a variety of classes of objects. The most confidently expected of these classes is compact binaries, involving neutron stars or black holes. Detection of their coalescence, or their long-term orbits, has the potential to inform us about the evolutionary history of compact binaries and possibly even star formation over the past several billion years. We review what is currently known about compact binaries as sources of gravitational radiation, as well as the current uncertainties and what we expect to learn from future detections of gravitational waves from these systems.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the meeting "The Multicoloured Landscape of Compact Objects and their Explosive Origins", Cefalu, Italy, June 2006, to be published by AIP, Eds. L. Burderi et a
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