117 research outputs found
Compact coaxial connector for printed circuit adds reliability
Soldering and welding techniques are used to connect a coaxial cable to a printed circuit board. This device aids reliability control of equipment as standard connectors are bulky and heavy
NGC 3628: Ejection Activity Associated with Quasars
NGC3628 is a well-studied starburst/low level AGN galaxy in the Leo Triplet
noted for its extensive outgassed plumes of neutral hydrogen. QSOs are shown to
be concentrated around NGC3628 and aligned with the HI plumes. The closest high
redshift quasar has z=2.15 and is at the tip of an X-ray filament emerging
along the minor axis HI plume. Location at this point has an accidental
probability of ~2x10^-4. In addition a coincident chain of optical objects
coming out along the minor axis ends on this quasar. More recent measures on a
pair of strong X-ray sources situated at 3.2 and 5.4 arcmin on either side of
NGC3628 along its minor axis, reveal that they have nearly identical redshifts
of z=0.995 and 0.981. The closer quasar lies directly in the same X-ray
filament which extends from the nucleus out 4.1 arcmin to end on the quasar of
z=2.15. The chain of objects SW along the minor axis of NGC3628 has been imaged
in four colors with the VLT. Images and spectra of individual objects within
the filament are reported. It is suggested that material in various physical
states and differing intrinsic redshifts is ejected out along the minor axis of
this active, disturbed galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. Postscript file
including full resolution figures at
http://www.eso.org/~fpatat/ngc3628/paper_ngc3628.ps.g
A Catalog of Candidate Intermediate-luminosity X-ray Objects
ROSAT, and now Chandra, X-ray images allow studies of extranuclear X-ray
point sources in galaxies other than our own. X-ray observations of normal
galaxies with ROSAT and Chandra have revealed that off-nuclear, compact,
Intermediate-luminosity (Lx[2-10 keV] >= 1e39 erg/s) X-ray Objects (IXOs,
a.k.a. ULXs [Ultraluminous X-ray sources]) are quite common. Here we present a
catalog and finding charts for 87 IXOs in 54 galaxies, derived from all of the
ROSAT HRI imaging data for galaxies with cz <= 5000 km/s from the Third
Reference Catalog of Bright Galaxies (RC3). We have defined the cutoff Lx for
IXOs so that it is well above the Eddington luminosity of a 1.4 Msun black hole
(10^38.3 erg/s), so as not to confuse IXOs with ``normal'' black hole X-ray
binaries. This catalog is intended to provide a baseline for follow-up work
with Chandra and XMM, and with space- and ground-based survey work at
wavelengths other than X-ray. We demonstrate that elliptical galaxies with IXOs
have a larger number of IXOs per galaxy than non-elliptical galaxies with IXOs,
and note that they are not likely to be merely high-mass X-ray binaries with
beamed X-ray emission, as may be the case for IXOs in starburst galaxies.
Approximately half of the IXOs with multiple observations show X-ray
variability, and many (19) of the IXOs have faint optical counterparts in DSS
optical B-band images. Follow-up observations of these objects should be
helpful in identifying their nature.Comment: 29 pages, ApJS, accepted (catalog v2.0) (full resolution version of
paper and future releases of catalog at http://www.xassist.org/ixocat_hri
ROSAT Blank Field Sources I: Sample Selection and Archival Data
We have identified a population of blank field sources (or `blanks') among
the ROSAT bright unidentified X-ray sources with faint optical counterparts.
The extreme X-ray over optical flux ratio of blanks is not compatible with the
main classes of X-ray emitters except for extreme BL Lacertae objects. From the
analysis of ROSAT archival data we found no indication of variability and
evidence for only three sources, out of 16, needing absorption in excess of the
Galactic value. We also found evidence for an extended nature for only one of
the 5 blanks with a serendipitous HRI detection; this source (1WGAJ1226.9+3332)
was confirmed as a z=0.89 cluster of galaxies. Palomar images reveal the
presence of a red (O-E~2) counterpart in the X-ray error circle for 6 blanks.
The identification process brought to the discovery of another high z cluster
of galaxies, one (possibly extreme) BL Lac, two ultraluminous X-ray sources in
nearby galaxies and two apparently normal type1 AGNs. These AGNs, together with
4 more AGN-like objects seem to form a well defined group: they present
unabsorbed X-ray spectra but red Palomar counterparts. We discuss the possible
explanations for the discrepancy between the X-ray and optical data, among
which: a suppressed big blue bump emission, an extreme dust to gas (~40-60 the
Galactic ratio), a high redshift (z>3.5) QSO nature, an atypical dust grain
size distribution and a dusty warm absorber. These AGN-like blanks seem to be
the bright (and easier to study) analogs of the sources which are found in deep
Chandra observations. Three more blanks have a still unknown nature.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, accepted by ApJ main journa
The Distribution of Redshifts in New Samples of Quasi-stellar Objects
Two new samples of QSOs have been constructed from recent surveys to test the
hypothesis that the redshift distribution of bright QSOs is periodic in
. The first of these comprises 57 different redshifts among all
known close pairs or multiple QSOs, with image separations 10\arcsec,
and the second consists of 39 QSOs selected through their X-ray emission and
their proximity to bright comparatively nearby active galaxies. The redshift
distributions of the samples are found to exhibit distinct peaks with a
periodic separation of in identical to that claimed
in earlier samples but now extended out to higher redshift peaks and 4.47, predicted by the formula but never seen before. The periodicity
is also seen in a third sample, the 78 QSOs of the 3C and 3CR catalogues. It is
present in these three datasets at an overall significance level -
, and appears not to be explicable by spectroscopic or similar
selection effects. Possible interpretations are briefly discussed.Comment: submitted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, 15 figure
Selection-Independent Generation of Gene Knockout Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells Using Zinc-Finger Nucleases
Gene knockout in murine embryonic stem cells (ESCs) has been an invaluable tool to study gene function in vitro or to generate animal models with altered phenotypes. Gene targeting using standard techniques, however, is rather inefficient and typically does not exceed frequencies of 10−6. In consequence, the usage of complex positive/negative selection strategies to isolate targeted clones has been necessary. Here, we present a rapid single-step approach to generate a gene knockout in mouse ESCs using engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs). Upon transient expression of ZFNs, the target gene is cleaved by the designer nucleases and then repaired by non-homologous end-joining, an error-prone DNA repair process that introduces insertions/deletions at the break site and therefore leads to functional null mutations. To explore and quantify the potential of ZFNs to generate a gene knockout in pluripotent stem cells, we generated a mouse ESC line containing an X-chromosomally integrated EGFP marker gene. Applying optimized conditions, the EGFP locus was disrupted in up to 8% of ESCs after transfection of the ZFN expression vectors, thus obviating the need of selection markers to identify targeted cells, which may impede or complicate downstream applications. Both activity and ZFN-associated cytotoxicity was dependent on vector dose and the architecture of the nuclease domain. Importantly, teratoma formation assays of selected ESC clones confirmed that ZFN-treated ESCs maintained pluripotency. In conclusion, the described ZFN-based approach represents a fast strategy for generating gene knockouts in ESCs in a selection-independent fashion that should be easily transferrable to other pluripotent stem cells
Chandra X-ray Observations of the Spiral Galaxy M81
A Chandra X-Ray Observatory ACIS-S imaging observation is used to study the
population of X-ray sources in the nearby Sab galaxy M81 (NGC 3031). A total of
177 sources are detected with 124 located within the D25 isophote to a limiting
X-ray luminosity of 3e36 ergs/cm2/s. Source positions, count rates,
luminosities in the 0.3-8.0 keV band, limiting optical magnitudes, and
potential counterpart identifications are tabulated. Spectral and timing
analysis of the 36 brightest sources are reported including the low-luminosity
active galactic nucleus, SN 1993J, and the Einstein-discovered ultra-luminous
X-ray source X6.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, 2 tables, submitted to Ap
Oncolytic measles viruses encoding interferon β and the thyroidal sodium iodide symporter gene for mesothelioma virotherapy
Mesothelioma usually leads to death within 8–14 months of diagnosis. To increase the potency of oncolytic measles viruses (MVs) for mesothelioma therapy, we inserted the interferon β (IFNβ) gene alone or with the human thyroidal sodium iodide symporter (NIS) gene into attenuated MV of the Edmonston lineage. The corresponding mouse IFNβ (mIFNβ) viruses, MV-mIFNβ and MV-mIFNβ-NIS, successfully propagated in human mesothelioma cells, leading to intercellular fusion and cell death. High levels of mIFNβ were detected in the supernatants of the infected cells, and radioiodine uptake was substantial in the cells infected with MV-mIFNβ-NIS. MV with mIFNβ expression triggered CD68-positive immune cell infiltration 2–4 times higher than MV-GFP injected into the tumor site. The numbers of CD31-positive vascular endothelial cells within the tumor were decreased at day 7 after intratumoral injection of MV-mIFNβ or MV-mIFNβ-NIS, but not after MV-GFP and PBS administration. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that MV-mIFNβ changed the microenvironment of the mesothelioma by increasing innate immune cell infiltration and inhibiting tumor angiogenesis. Oncolytic MVs coding for IFNβ effectively retarded growth of human mesotheliomas and prolonged survival time in several mesothelioma tumor models. The results suggest that oncolytic MVs that code for IFNβ and NIS will be potent and versatile agents for the treatment of human mesothelioma
An HST Survey of the mid-UV Morphology of Nearby Galaxies
(Abbreviated) We present an imaging survey of 37 nearby galaxies observed
with HST/WFPC2 in the mid-UV F300W filter and in F814W. 11 galaxies were also
imaged in F255W. These galaxies were selected to be detectable with WFPC2 in
one orbit, and cover a wide range of Hubble types and inclinations. The mid-UV
spans the gap between our groundbased optical/NIR images and far-UV images
available from the Astro/UIT missions. Our first qualitative results are:
(1) Early-type galaxies show a significant decrease in surface brightness
going from the red to the mid-UV, and in some cases the presence of dust lanes.
Some galaxies would be classified different when viewed in the mid-UV, some
become dominated by a blue nuclear feature or point source.
(2) Half of the mid-type spiral and star-forming galaxies appear as a later
morphological type in the mid-UV, as Astro/UIT also found in the far-UV. Some-
times these differences are dramatic. The mid-UV images show a considerable
range in the scale and surface brightness of individual star-forming regions.
Almost all mid-type spirals have their small bulges bi-sected by a dust-lane.
(3) Most of the heterogeneous subset of late-type, irregular, peculiar, and
merging galaxies display F300W morphologies that are similar to those seen in
F814W, but with differences due to recognizable dust features absorbing the
bluer light, and due to UV-bright hot stars, star-clusters, and star-forming
ridges.
In the rest-frame mid-UV, early- to mid-type galaxies are more likely to be
misclassified as later types than vice versa. This morphological K-correction
explains only part of the excess faint blue galaxies seen in deep HST fields.Comment: 30 pages, LateX (AASTeX5.0), 2 figures and 3 tables included, mid-UV
atlas and pan-chromatic atlas provided as 63 JPG figures. Full resolution PS
version (~100Mb) available upon request. Accepted for publication in ApJ
- …