155 research outputs found

    Numerically generated quasi-equilibrium orbits of black holes: Circular or eccentric?

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    We make a comparison between results from numerically generated, quasi-equilibrium configurations of compact binary systems of black holes in close orbits, and results from the post-Newtonian approximation. The post-Newtonian results are accurate through third PN order (O(v/c)^6 beyond Newtonian gravity), and include rotational and spin-orbit effects, but are generalized to permit orbits of non-zero eccentricity. Both treatments ignore gravitational radiation reaction. The energy E and angular momentum J of a given configuration are compared between the two methods as a function of the orbital angular frequency \Omega. For small \Omega, corresponding to orbital separations a factor of two larger than that of the innermost stable orbit, we find that, if the orbit is permitted to be slightly eccentric, with e ranging from \approx 0.03 to \approx 0.05, and with the two objects initially located at the orbital apocenter (maximum separation), our PN formulae give much better fits to the numerically generated data than do any circular-orbit PN methods, including various ``effective one-body'' resummation techniques. We speculate that the approximations made in solving the initial value equations of general relativity numerically may introduce a spurious eccentricity into the orbits.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev.

    SARS-CoV-2: Immune Response Elicited by Infection and Development of Vaccines and Treatments

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    Indexación ScopusThe World Health Organization (WHO) announced in March a pandemic caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). This new infectious disease was named Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19), and at October 2020, more than 39,000,000 cases of SARS-CoV-2 have been detected worldwide leading to near 1,100,000 deaths. Clinically, COVID-19 is characterized by clinical manifestations, such as fever, dry cough, headache, and in more severe cases, respiratory distress. Moreover, neurological-, cardiac-, and renal-related symptoms have also been described. Clinical evidence suggests that migration of immune cells to the affected organs can produce an exacerbated release of proinflammatory mediators that contribute to disease and render the immune response as a major player during the development of the COVID-19 disease. Due to the current sanitary situation, the development of vaccines is imperative. Up to the date, 42 prototypes are being tested in humans in different clinical stages, with 10 vaccine candidates undergoing evaluation in phase III clinical trials. In the same way, the search for an effective treatment to approach the most severe cases is also in constant advancement. Several potential therapies have been tested since COVID-19 was described, including antivirals, antiparasitic and immune modulators. Recently, clinical trials with hydroxychloroquine—a promising drug in the beginning—were suspended. In addition, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved convalescent serum administration as a treatment for SARS-CoV-2 patients. Moreover, monoclonal antibody therapy is also under development to neutralize the virus and prevent infection. In this article, we describe the clinical manifestations and the immunological information available about COVID-19 disease. Furthermore, we discuss current therapies under study and the development of vaccines to prevent this disease. © Copyright © 2020 Canedo-Marroquín, Saavedra, Andrade, Berrios, Rodríguez-Guilarte, Opazo, Riedel and Kalergis.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2020.569760/ful

    Harnessing content and context for enhanced decision making

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    In a time in which a significant amount of interpersonal interactions take place online, one must enquire to which extent are these milieus suitable for supporting the complexity of our communication. This is especially important in more sensitive domains, such as the one of Online Dispute Resolution, in which inefficient communication environments may result in misunderstandings, poor decisions or the escalation of the conflict. The conflict manager, in particular, may find his skills severely diminished, namely in what concerns the accurate perception of the state of the parties. In this paper the development of a rich communication framework is detailed that conveys contextual information about their users, harnessed from the transparent analysis of their behaviour while communicating. Using it, the conflict manager may not only better perceive the conflict and how it affects each party but also take better contextualized decisions, closer to the ones taken in face-to-face settings.This work is part-funded by ERDF - European Regional Development Fund through the COMPETE Programme (operational programme for competitiveness) and by National Funds through the FCT { Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) within project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-028980 (PTDC/EEI-SII/1386/2012) and project PEst- OE/EEI/UI0752/2014

    Antihypertensive therapeutic potential of citronellal

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    Cardiovascular effects induced by citronellal in rats were investigated in this study. In LNAME hypertensive rats, the oral acute administration of citronellal (200 mg/kg) was able to significantly reduce the blood pressure. In normotensive rats, citronellal (5-40 mg/kg, i.v.) induced hypotension, which was not affected by pre-treatment with atropine, hexamethonium, L-NAME or indomethacin, and bradycardia, which was abolished by atropine and hexamethonium, but not by L-NAME or indomethacin. ECG records revealed that citronellal induced sinoatrial block, which was abolished after atropine. In intact rings of rat mesenteric artery pre-contracted with phenylephrine (10 μM), citronellal (10 –6 to 10 –1 M) was able to induce relaxations (Emax = 106.3 ± 9.4 %) that were not affected by endothelium removal or after pre-contraction with KCl 80 mM. In conclusion, these results demonstrate that citronellal reduces blood pressure. Furthermore, citronellal induces endothelium-independent vasorelaxation in rat artery that appears to involve inhibition of Ca2+ influx.Colegio de Farmacéuticos de la Provincia de Buenos Aire

    Dilatonic current-carrying cosmic strings

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    We investigate the nature of ordinary cosmic vortices in some scalar-tensor extensions of gravity. We find solutions for which the dilaton field condenses inside the vortex core. These solutions can be interpreted as raising the degeneracy between the eigenvalues of the effective stress-energy tensor, namely the energy per unit length U and the tension T, by picking a privileged spacelike or timelike coordinate direction; in the latter case, a phase frequency threshold occurs that is similar to what is found in ordinary neutral current-carrying cosmic strings. We find that the dilaton contribution for the equation of state, once averaged along the string worldsheet, vanishes, leading to an effective Nambu-Goto behavior of such a string network in cosmology, i.e. on very large scales. It is found also that on small scales, the energy per unit length and tension depend on the string internal coordinates in such a way as to permit the existence of centrifugally supported equilibrium configuration, also known as vortons, whose stability, depending on the very short distance (unknown) physics, can lead to catastrophic consequences on the evolution of the Universe.Comment: 10 pages, ReVTeX, 2 figures, minor typos corrected. This version to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Edaphic fauna in soil profile after three decades of different soil management and cover crops in a subtropical region

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    Abstract This research evaluated the effects of long-term (30 years) winter cover crops under conventional farming system and no-tillage system on edaphic fauna in a Rhodic Hapludox soil, from Paraná State, Brazil. We used three winter cover crops (black oat, hairy vetch and fallow), and as a reference a fragment of natural forest. Soil monoliths were collected at two times, one during the flowering of maize (April 2013) and the other during the flowering of soybean (January 2014). The extraction of the monoliths was carried out in three layers in the soil profile (0-10, 10-20 and 20-30 cm). Seventeen taxonomic groups were sampled. The density of the edaphic fauna is inversely related to soil depth. The winter crops associated with the no-tillage system in long-term resulted in fauna densities similar to the natural environment, with a higher density (density increase of 2.2x) at a depth of 10-20 cm in areas with black oat. At 0-10 cm depth, black oat and vetch under no-tillage systems resulted in an increase of 62% and 69% (April 2013) and 46 and 44% (January 2014), respectively, in the density of soil fauna, when compared to the same winter crops in conventional farming system
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