1,255 research outputs found
The Golden Gate: Building Bridges Between Research and Operations
Previous research has discussed the ongoing dilemma of implementing research-based findings in an applied setting. This panel will discuss lessons learned from various examples where bridges have been forged between research and operations, and examine ways to promote and achieve similar collaborations in other areas in the future
Performance Data Report: Space Medicine Division, Human Research Program, Behavioural Health and Performance Research Element
This report is the result of a collaborative effort between NASA?s Behavioral Health & Performance (BHP) Research and Operations Group to investigate and determine the availability of data pertaining to behavioral performance (and other pertinent variables) that have been collected by the laboratories at NASA?s Johnson Space Center. BHP?s Operations and Research groups collaborated to systematically identify what types of performance data are needed in relevant BHP performance domains and also to conduct structured interviews with NASA personnel to identify which data do or do not exist currently (and for instances where such data exist, to evaluate the type, quality, accessibility, and confidentiality of those data). The authors defined outcome categories of performance that encapsulate BHP performance domains, mapped BHP Research Risks and Gaps onto those performance outcome categories, and identified and prioritized indicators for each outcome category. The team identified key points of contact (subject matter experts [SMEs]) as potential interviewees, created a template for structured interview questions about sources and accessibility of performance data, and coordinated and conducted structured interviews with the SMEs. The methodology, results, and implications of this effort, as well as forward work needed, are discussed in this report
Risk of Adverse Cognitive or Behavioral Conditions and Psychiatric Disorders: Evidence Report
In April 2010, President Obama declared a space pioneering goal for the United States in general and NASA in particular. "Fifty years after the creation of NASA, our goal is no longer just a destination to reach. Our goal is the capacity for people to work and learn and operate and live safely beyond the Earth for extended periods of time, ultimately in ways that are more sustainable and even indefinite." Thus NASA's Strategic Objective 1.1 emerged as "expand human presence into the solar system and to the surface of Mars to advance exploration, science, innovation, benefits to humanity, and international collaboration" (NASA 2015b). Any space flight, be it of long or short duration, occurs in an extreme environment that has unique stressors. Even with excellent selection methods, the potential for behavioral problems among space flight crews remain a threat to mission success. Assessment of factors that are related to behavioral health can help minimize the chances of distress and, thus, reduce the likelihood of adverse cognitive or behavioral conditions and psychiatric disorders arising within a crew. Similarly, countermeasures that focus on prevention and treatment can mitigate the cognitive or behavioral conditions that, should they arise, would impact mission success. Given the general consensus that longer duration, isolation, and confined missions have a greater risk for behavioral health ensuring crew behavioral health over the long term is essential. Risk, which within the context of this report is assessed with respect to behavioral health and performance, is addressed to deter development of cognitive and behavioral degradations or psychiatric conditions in space flight and analog populations, and to monitor, detect, and treat early risk factors, predictors and other contributing factors. Based on space flight and analog evidence, the average incidence rate of an adverse behavioral health event occurring during a space mission is relatively low for the current conditions. While mood and anxiety disturbances have occurred, no behavioral emergencies have been reported to date in space flight. Anecdotal and empirical evidence indicate that the likelihood of an adverse cognitive or behavioral condition or psychiatric disorder occurring greatly increases with the length of a mission. Further, while cognitive, behavioral, or psychiatric conditions might not immediately and directly threaten mission success, such conditions can, and do, adversely impact individual and crew health, welfare, and performance
The Rising Star-Formation Histories of Distant Galaxies and Implications for Gas Accretion with Time
Distant galaxies show correlations between their current star-formation rates
(SFRs) and stellar masses, implying that their star-formation histories (SFHs)
are highly similar. Moreover, observations show that the UV luminosities and
stellar masses grow from z=8 to 3, implying that the SFRs increase with time.
We compare the cosmologically averaged evolution in galaxies at 3 < z < 8 at
constant comoving number density, n = 2 x 10^-4 Mpc^-3. This allows us to study
the evolution of stellar mass and star formation in the galaxy predecessors and
descendants in ways not possible using galaxies selected at constant stellar
mass or SFR, quantities that evolve strongly in time. We show that the average
SFH of these galaxies increase smoothly from z=8 to 3 as SFR ~ t^alpha with
alpha = 1.7 +/- 0.2. This conflicts with assumptions that the SFR is either
constant or declines exponentially in time. We show that the stellar mass
growth in these galaxies is consistent with this derived SFH. This provides
evidence that the slope of the high-mass end of the IMF is approximately
Salpeter unless the duty cycle of star formation is much less than unity. We
argue that these relations follow from gas accretion (either through accretion
or delivered by mergers) coupled with galaxy disk growth under the assumption
that the SFR depends on the local gas surface density. This predicts that gas
fractions decrease from z=8 to 3 on average as f_gas ~ (1+z)^0.9 for galaxies
with this number density. The implied galaxy gas accretion rates at z > 4 are
as fast and may even exceed the SFR: this is the "gas accretion epoch". At z <
4 the SFR overtakes the implied gas accretion rate, indicating a period where
galaxies consume gas faster than it is acquired. At z < 3, galaxies with this
number density depart from these relations implying that star formation and gas
accretion are slowed at later times.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 13 pages, 7 figures. Comments
welcome. Updated with MNRAS-accepted versio
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich observations of galaxy clusters out to the virial radius with the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager
We present observations using the Small Array of the Arcminute Microkelvin
Imager (AMI; 14-18 GHz) of four Abell and three MACS clusters spanning
0.171-0.686 in redshift. We detect Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) signals in five of
these without any attempt at source subtraction, although strong source
contamination is present. With radio-source measurements from high-resolution
observations, and under the assumptions of spherical -model,
isothermality and hydrostatic equilibrium, a Bayesian analysis of the data in
the visibility plane detects extended SZ decrements in all seven clusters over
and above receiver noise, radio sources and primary CMB imprints. Bayesian
evidence ratios range from 10^{11}:1 to 10^{43}:1 for six of the clusters and
3000:1 for one with substantially less data than the others. We present
posterior probability distributions for, e.g., total mass and gas fraction
averaged over radii internal to which the mean overdensity is 1000, 500 and
200, r_200 being the virial radius. Reaching r_200 involves some extrapolation
for the nearer clusters but not for the more-distant ones. We find that our
estimates of gas fraction are low (compared with most in the literature) and
decrease with increasing radius. These results appear to be consistent with the
notion that gas temperature in fact falls with distance (away from near the
cluster centre) out to the virial radius.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, submitted to MNRAS (updated authors and fixed
Figure 1
Energy dependence of kaon-to-proton ratio fluctuations in central Pb+Pb collisions from = 6.3 to 17.3 GeV
Kaons and protons carry large parts of two conserved quantities, strangeness
and baryon number. It is argued that their correlation and thus also
fluctuations are sensitive to conditions prevailing at the anticipated
parton-hadron phase boundary. Fluctuations of the and
ratios have been measured for the first time by NA49 in central Pb+Pb
collisions at 5 SPS energies between = 6.3 GeV and 17.3 GeV.
Both ratios exhibit a change of sign in , a measure of
non-statistical fluctuations, around = 8 GeV. Below this
energy, is positive, indicating higher fluctuation
compared to a mixed event background sample, while for higher energies,
is negative, indicating correlated emission of kaons
and protons. The results are compared to UrQMD calculations which which give a
good description at the higher SPS energies, but fail to reproduce the
transition to positive values.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Weighing the Giants - I. Weak-lensing masses for 51 massive galaxy clusters: project overview, data analysis methods and cluster images
This is the first in a series of papers in which we measure accurate
weak-lensing masses for 51 of the most X-ray luminous galaxy clusters known at
redshifts 0.15<z<0.7, in order to calibrate X-ray and other mass proxies for
cosmological cluster experiments. The primary aim is to improve the absolute
mass calibration of cluster observables, currently the dominant systematic
uncertainty for cluster count experiments. Key elements of this work are the
rigorous quantification of systematic uncertainties, high-quality data
reduction and photometric calibration, and the "blind" nature of the analysis
to avoid confirmation bias. Our target clusters are drawn from RASS X-ray
catalogs, and provide a versatile calibration sample for many aspects of
cluster cosmology. We have acquired wide-field, high-quality imaging using the
Subaru and CFHT telescopes for all 51 clusters, in at least three bands per
cluster. For a subset of 27 clusters, we have data in at least five bands,
allowing accurate photo-z estimates of lensed galaxies. In this paper, we
describe the cluster sample and observations, and detail the processing of the
SuprimeCam data to yield high-quality images suitable for robust weak-lensing
shape measurements and precision photometry. For each cluster, we present
wide-field color optical images and maps of the weak-lensing mass distribution,
the optical light distribution, and the X-ray emission, providing insights into
the large-scale structure in which the clusters are embedded. We measure the
offsets between X-ray centroids and Brightest Cluster Galaxies in the clusters,
finding these to be small in general, with a median of 20kpc. For offsets
<100kpc, weak-lensing mass measurements centered on the BCGs agree well with
values determined relative to the X-ray centroids; miscentering is therefore
not a significant source of systematic uncertainty for our mass measurements.
[abridged]Comment: 26 pages, 19 figures (Appendix C not included). Accepted after minor
revisio
SN 2008S: an electron capture SN from a super-AGB progenitor?
We present comprehensive photometric and spectroscopic observations of the
faint transient SN 2008S discovered in NGC 6946. SN 2008S exhibited slow
photometric evolution and almost no spectral variability during the first nine
months, implying a high density CS medium. The light curve is similar in shape
to that of SN 1998S and SN 1979C, although significantly fainter at maximum
light. Our quasi-bolometric lightcurve extends to 300 days and shows a tail
phase decay rate consistent with that of ^{56}Co. We propose that this is
evidence for an explosion and formation of ^{56}Ni (0.0015 +/- 0.0004 M_Sun).
The large MIR flux detected shortly after explosion can be explained by a light
echo from pre-exisiting dust. The late NIR flux excess is plausibly due to a
combination of warm newly-formed ejecta dust together with shock-heated dust in
the CS environment. We reassess the progenitor object detected previously in
Spitzer archive images, supplementing this discussion with a model of the MIR
spectral energy distribution. This supports the idea of a dusty, optically
thick shell around SN 2008S with an inner radius of nearly 90AU and outer
radius of 450AU, and an inferred heating source of 3000 K and luminosity of L ~
10^{4.6} L_Sun. The combination of our monitoring data and the evidence from
the progenitor analysis leads us to support the scenario of a weak electron
capture supernova explosion in a super-AGB progenitor star (of initial mass 6-8
M_sun) embedded within a thick CS gaseous envelope. We suggest that all of main
properties of the electron capture SN phenomenon are observed in SN 2008S and
future observations may allow a definitive answer.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS (2009 May 7
Dark matter and structure formation a review
This paper provides a review of the variants of dark matter which are thought
to be fundamental components of the universe and their role in origin and
evolution of structures and some new original results concerning improvements
to the spherical collapse model. In particular, I show how the spherical
collapse model is modified when we take into account dynamical friction and
tidal torques
Search for squarks and gluinos in events with isolated leptons, jets and missing transverse momentum at s√=8 TeV with the ATLAS detector
The results of a search for supersymmetry in final states containing at least one isolated lepton (electron or muon), jets and large missing transverse momentum with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider are reported. The search is based on proton-proton collision data at a centre-of-mass energy s√=8 TeV collected in 2012, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 20 fb−1. No significant excess above the Standard Model expectation is observed. Limits are set on supersymmetric particle masses for various supersymmetric models. Depending on the model, the search excludes gluino masses up to 1.32 TeV and squark masses up to 840 GeV. Limits are also set on the parameters of a minimal universal extra dimension model, excluding a compactification radius of 1/R c = 950 GeV for a cut-off scale times radius (ΛR c) of approximately 30
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