997 research outputs found
Anisotropic stresses in inhomogeneous universes
Anisotropic stress contributions to the gravitational field can arise from
magnetic fields, collisionless relativistic particles, hydrodynamic shear
viscosity, gravitational waves, skew axion fields in low-energy string
cosmologies, or topological defects. We investigate the effects of such
stresses on cosmological evolution, and in particular on the dissipation of
shear anisotropy. We generalize some previous results that were given for
homogeneous anisotropic universes, by including small inhomogeneity in the
universe. This generalization is facilitated by a covariant approach. We find
that anisotropic stress dominates the evolution of shear, slowing its decay.
The effect is strongest in radiation-dominated universes, where there is slow
logarithmic decay of shear.Comment: 7 pages Revte
Probing the primordial Universe with MeerKAT and DES
It is usually assumed that we will need to wait until next-generation surveys
like Euclid, LSST and SKA, in order to improve on the current best constraints
on primordial non-Gaussianity from the Planck experiment. We show that two
contemporary surveys, with the SKA precursor MeerKAT and the Dark Energy Survey
(DES), can be combined using the multi-tracer technique to deliver an accuracy
on measurement of that is up to three times better than Planck.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. We now marginalise over the bias, and
ensure that we exclude nonlinear scales, leading to small quantitative
corrections. Version accepted by MNRA
Antiretroviral therapeutic drug monitoring
Antiretroviral therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is an additional monitoring tool to assist in the management of HIV-infected patients. Antiretroviral TDM is frequently undertaken in Europe, but less often in the USA. This overview will assess the principles, current evidence for, and limitations of TDM. Lastly, the potential role of TDM in southern Africa will be discussed. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine Vol. 7 (2) 2006: pp. 10-1
Initiating antiretroviral therapy
Debate Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine Vol. 6 (3) 2005: pp. 49-5
Guidelines for antiretroviral therapy in adults
These guidelines are intended as an update to those published in the Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine in January 2008. Since the release of the previous guidelines, the scaleup of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Southern Africa has continued to grow. Cohort studies from the region showexcellent clinical outcomes; however, ART is still being started late (in advanced disease), resulting in relatively high early mortality rates. New data on antiretroviral (ARV) tolerability in the region and several new ARV drugs have become available. Although currently few in number, some patients in the region are failing protease inhibitor (PI)-based second-line regimens. To address this, guidelines on third-line (or ‘salvage’) therapy have been expanded
Probing the Cosmological Principle in the counts of radio galaxies at different frequencies
According to the Cosmological Principle, the matter distribution on very
large scales should have a kinematic dipole that is aligned with that of the
CMB. We determine the dipole anisotropy in the number counts of two all-sky
surveys of radio galaxies. For the first time, this analysis is presented for
the TGSS survey, allowing us to check consistency of the radio dipole at low
and high frequencies by comparing the results with the well-known NVSS survey.
We match the flux thresholds of the catalogues, with flux limits chosen to
minimise systematics, and adopt a strict masking scheme. We find dipole
directions that are in good agreement with each other and with the CMB dipole.
In order to compare the amplitude of the dipoles with theoretical predictions,
we produce sets of lognormal realisations. Our realisations include the
theoretical kinematic dipole, galaxy clustering, Poisson noise, simulated
redshift distributions which fit the NVSS and TGSS source counts, and errors in
flux calibration. The measured dipole for NVSS is times larger than
predicted by the mock data. For TGSS, the dipole is almost times
larger than predicted, even after checking for completeness and taking account
of errors in source fluxes and in flux calibration. Further work is required to
understand the nature of the systematics that are the likely cause of the
anomalously large TGSS dipole amplitude.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables; Significant improvements. Version
accepted by JCA
Nonperturbative gravito-magnetic fields
In a cold matter universe, the linearized gravito-magnetic tensor field
satisfies a transverse condition (vanishing divergence) when it is purely
radiative. We show that in the nonlinear theory, it is no longer possible to
maintain the transverse condition, since it leads to a non-terminating chain of
integrability conditions. These conditions are highly restrictive, and are
likely to hold only in models with special symmetries, such as the known
Bianchi and examples. In models with realistic inhomogeneity, the
gravito-magnetic field is necessarily non-transverse at second and higher
order.Comment: Minor changes to match published version; to appear in Phys. Rev.
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