2,907 research outputs found
Non-equilibrium chemistry and dust formation in AGB stars as probed by SiO line emission
We have performed high spatial resolution observations of SiO line emission
for a sample of 11 AGB stars using the ATCA, VLA and SMA interferometers.
Detailed radiative transfer modelling suggests that there are steep chemical
gradients of SiO in their circumstellar envelopes. The emerging picture is one
where the radial SiO abundance distribution starts at an initial high
abundance, in the case of M-stars consistent with LTE chemistry, that
drastically decreases at a radius of ~1E15 cm. This is consistent with a
scenario where SiO freezes out onto dust grains. The region of the wind with
low abundance is much more extended, typically ~1E16 cm, and limited by
photodissociation. The surpisingly high SiO abundances found in carbon stars
requires non-equilibrium chemical processes.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. To be published in the proceedings of the
conference "Why Galaxies Care about AGB Stars", held in Vienna, August 7-11,
2006; F. Kerschbaum, C. Charbonnel, B. Wing eds, ASP Conf.Ser. in pres
Dynamical Friction on Star Clusters near the Galactic Center
Numerical simulations of the dynamical friction suffered by a star cluster
near the Galactic center have been performed with a parallelized tree code.
Gerhard (2001) has suggested that dynamical friction, which causes a cluster to
lose orbital energy and spiral in towards the galactic center, may explain the
presence of a cluster of very young stars in the central parsec, where star
formation might be prohibitively difficult owing to strong tidal forces. The
clusters modeled in our simulations have an initial total mass of 10^5-10^6
Msun and initial galactocentric radii of 2.5-30 pc. We have identified a few
simulations in which dynamical friction indeed brings a cluster to the central
parsec, although this is only possible if the cluster is either very massive
(~10^6 Msun), or is formed near the central parsec (<~ 5 pc). In both cases,
the cluster should have an initially very dense core (> 10^6 Msun pc-3). The
initial core collapse and segregation of massive stars into the cluster core,
which typically happens on a much shorter time scale than that characterizing
the dynamical inspiral of the cluster toward the Galactic center, can provide
the requisite high density. Furthermore, because it is the cluster core which
is most likely to survive the cluster disintegration during its journey
inwards, this can help account for the observed distribution of presumably
massive HeI stars in the central parsec.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Networked aspects of lifelong work-integrated learning: The BUFFL case
The increasingly digitalised and continuously changing working life needs a continuous lifelong professional development that preferably is networked and work-integrated. This this study builds upon university teachers' and course participants’ experiences from a technology enhanced project called BUFFL A pilot project that combines truly work-integrated learning with lifelong learning, in a strive to address the contemporary need for continuous professional development. The important aim in the BUFFL project is to develop a model for collaborative, flexible, and lifelong professional development. A new and interesting concept in the BUFFL project was to involve concept of Bringing Your Own Data for activities in course modules. The aim of this study is to describe and discuss the lifelong work-integrated learning in the BUFFL project from a networked learning perspective. Data were gathered from e-mail interviews with teachers, e-mail conversations between teachers, facilitators and course participants, and from course evaluations. Results from the data sources have been grouped into three main themes in an inductive thematic analysis. Findings show that in academia, in industry, and in the in between a potential is found in the form of collaborative learning. A networked collaboration that should involve the theories from academia, combined with real-world-problems in the workplace, to achieve a fruitful meeting between academia and the industr
Dissection Technique for Cochleas Prepared for Scanning Electron Microscopy
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) permits a three-dimensional study of the surface morphology of the organ of Corti that is very useful in evaluating the condition of the apical end of the hair cells and the stereocilia. However, some laboratories have experienced problems with curling of the basilar membrane during critical point drying of cochlear specimens prepared For SEM evaluation using the Murakami or osmium thiocarbohydrazide-procedures. This curling of the basilar membrane can obstruct the view of the reticular lamina and the ciliary ends of the hair cells.
We have used a dissection method, referred to as the anchor technique, to overcome basilar membrane curling. This technique removes all the structures above the reticular lamina but leaves the basilar membrane attached to the spiral ligament and the lateral bone to which the spiral ligament is anchored. Individual cochlear turns are dissected in this manner and mounted on the same examination stub For SEM evaluation.
Maintenance of the lateral attachment of the basilar membrane requires additional dissection time but eliminates the problem of curling during critical point drying. An additional benefit is that mounting the individual turns on the same examination stub Facilitates evaluation and photomicroscopy of the surface morphology.
The anchor technique has been used successfully on the guinea pig and should be appropriate for most mammalian cochleas
Quantifying the Security of Recognition Passwords: Gestures and Signatures
Gesture and signature passwords are two-dimensional figures created by
drawing on the surface of a touchscreen with one or more fingers. Prior results
about their security have used resilience to either shoulder surfing, a human
observation attack, or dictionary attacks. These evaluations restrict
generalizability since the results are: non-comparable to other password
systems (e.g. PINs), harder to reproduce, and attacker-dependent. Strong
statements about the security of a password system use an analysis of the
statistical distribution of the password space, which models a best-case
attacker who guesses passwords in order of most likely to least likely.
Estimating the distribution of recognition passwords is challenging because
many different trials need to map to one password. In this paper, we solve this
difficult problem by: (1) representing a recognition password of continuous
data as a discrete alphabet set, and (2) estimating the password distribution
through modeling the unseen passwords. We use Symbolic Aggregate approXimation
(SAX) to represent time series data as symbols and develop Markov chains to
model recognition passwords. We use a partial guessing metric, which
demonstrates how many guesses an attacker needs to crack a percentage of the
entire space, to compare the security of the distributions for gestures,
signatures, and Android unlock patterns. We found the lower bounds of the
partial guessing metric of gestures and signatures are much higher than the
upper bound of the partial guessing metric of Android unlock patterns
The GOAL study: a prospective examination of the impact of factor V Leiden and ABO(H) blood groups on haemorrhagic and thrombotic pregnancy outcomes
Factor V Leiden (FVL) and ABO(H) blood groups are the common influences on haemostasis and retrospective studies have linked FVL with pregnancy complications. However, only one sizeable prospective examination has taken place. As a result, neither the impact of FVL in unselected subjects, any interaction with ABO(H) in pregnancy, nor the utility of screening for FVL is defined. A prospective study of 4250 unselected pregnancies was carried out. A venous thromboembolism (VTE) rate of 1·23/1000 was observed, but no significant association between FVL and pre-eclampsia, intra-uterine growth restriction or pregnancy loss was seen. No influence of FVL and/or ABO(H) on ante-natal bleeding or intra-partum or postpartum haemorrhage was observed. However, FVL was associated with birth-weights >90th centile [odds ratio (OR) 1·81; 95% confidence interval (CI<sub>95</sub>) 1·04–3·31] and neonatal death (OR 14·79; CI<sub>95</sub> 2·71–80·74). No association with ABO(H) alone, or any interaction between ABO(H) and FVL was observed. We neither confirmed the protective effect of FVL on pregnancy-related blood loss reported in previous smaller studies, nor did we find the increased risk of some vascular complications reported in retrospective studies
Quantitative Evaluation of Scanning Electron Microscopy-Examined Ciliary Morphological Changes in Control and Noise Exposed Guinea Pig Cochleas
Many investigations of noise-induced hearing loss have demonstrated a poor correlation between hearing threshold and hair cell loss. One reason for this is that more subtle changes in the hair cell, such as detailed morphological changes of stereocilia, have not been evaluated. However, examining such changes increases the problem of distinguishing experimental pathological changes from artefacts. Preparation of the specimen for scanning electron microscopy (SEM) may result in too many artefacts for an adequate quantification of defects due to noise exposure.
One problem with some earlier studies seems to be lack of controls and/or statistical analysis for the purpose of eliminating the influence of artefacts and spontaneous degeneration.
The aim of this study was to compare unexposed and noise-exposed cochleas examined with SEM in order to determine if subtle changes due to noise could be distinguished from preparation artefacts and from spontaneous deterioration.
Ten different types of hair cell changes were found in exposed and control animals. By means of using controls for statistical comparison with noise-exposed animals two cell damage categories hair cell loss and missing stereocilia were found to be produced by exposure to noise
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