39 research outputs found

    Southern African Large Telescope Spectroscopy of BL Lacs for the CTA project

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    In the last two decades, very-high-energy gamma-ray astronomy has reached maturity: over 200 sources have been detected, both Galactic and extragalactic, by ground-based experiments. At present, Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) make up about 40% of the more than 200 sources detected at very high energies with ground-based telescopes, the majority of which are blazars, i.e. their jets are closely aligned with the line of sight to Earth and three quarters of which are classified as high-frequency peaked BL Lac objects. One challenge to studies of the cosmological evolution of BL Lacs is the difficulty of obtaining redshifts from their nearly featureless, continuum-dominated spectra. It is expected that a significant fraction of the AGN to be detected with the future Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observatory will have no spectroscopic redshifts, compromising the reliability of BL Lac population studies, particularly of their cosmic evolution. We started an effort in 2019 to measure the redshifts of a large fraction of the AGN that are likely to be detected with CTA, using the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT). In this contribution, we present two results from an on-going SALT program focused on the determination of BL Lac object redshifts that will be relevant for the CTA observatory

    Different expressions of high voltage-activated Ca2+ channel types in the rostral reticular thalamic nucleus of the absence epileptic WAG/Rij rat.

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    Contains fulltext : 57934.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In the WAG/Rij rat, a model for human absence epilepsy, spike-wave discharges (SWD) and absence epileptic behavior develop after the age of 3 months. The rostral part of the reticular thalamic nucleus (rRTN) is involved in SWD. Ca(2+) channels play a central role in the initiation and maintenance of burst firing activity of thalamic cells. We hypothesize that a changed expression of alpha(1)-subunits of one or more high voltage-activated Ca(2+) channel types in the rRTN underlies the development of SWD. To test this hypothesis we compared 3- and 6-month-old WAG/Rij rats with nonepileptic, age-matched control rats. By immunocytochemistry, the expressions of alpha(1)1.3-, alpha(1)2.1-, alpha(1)2.2-, and alpha(1)2.3-subunits were shown in both strains, demonstrating the presence of Ca(v)1.3, Ca(v)2.1, Ca(v)2.2, and Ca(v)2.3 channels, respectively. Quantification of channel expression indicates that the development of SWD in WAG/Rij rats is concomitant with an increased expression of Ca(v)2.1 channels in the rRTN. These channels are mainly presynaptic, as revealed by double immunofluorescence involving the presynapse marker syntaxin. The mechanism by which this increase could be related to the occurrence of SWD has been discussed
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