266 research outputs found
An observationally-driven kinetic approach to coronal heating
Coronal heating through the explosive release of magnetic energy remains an
open problem in solar physics. Recent hydrodynamical models attempt an
investigation by placing swarms of 'nanoflares' at random sites and times in
modeled one-dimensional coronal loops. We investigate the problem in three
dimensions, using extrapolated coronal magnetic fields of observed solar active
regions. We apply a nonlinear force-free field extrapolation above an observed
photospheric magnetogram of NOAA active region (AR) 11158. We then determine
the locations, energy contents, and volumes of 'unstable' areas, namely areas
prone to releasing magnetic energy due to locally accumulated electric current
density. Statistical distributions of these volumes and their fractal dimension
are inferred, investigating also their dependence on spatial resolution.
Further adopting a simple resistivity model, we infer the properties of the
fractally distributed electric fields in these volumes. Next, we monitor the
evolution of 10^5 particles (electrons and ions) obeying an initial Maxwellian
distribution with a temperature of 10 eV, by following their trajectories and
energization when subjected to the resulting electric fields. For computational
convenience, the length element of the magnetic-field extrapolation is 1
arcsec, much coarser than the particles collisional mean free path in the low
corona. The presence of collisions traps the bulk of the plasma around the
unstable volumes, or current sheets (UCS), with only a tail of the distribution
gaining substantial energy. Assuming that the distance between UCS is similar
to the collisional mean free path we find that the low active-region corona is
heated to 100-200 eV, corresponding to temperatures exceeding 2 MK, within tens
of seconds for electrons and thousands of seconds for ions. Fractally
distributed, nanoflare-triggening fragmented UCS ...Comment: accepted by A&
Relative field line helicity of a large eruptive solar active region
Context. Magnetic helicity is a physical quantity of great importance in the
study of astrophysical and natural plasmas. Although a density for helicity
cannot be defined, a good proxy for it is field line helicity. The appropriate
quantity for use in solar conditions is relative field line helicity (RFLH).
Aims. This work aims to study in detail the behaviour of RFLH, for the first
time, in a solar active region (AR). Methods. The target active region is the
large, eruptive AR 11158. In order to compute RFLH and all other quantities of
interest we use a non-linear force-free reconstruction of the AR coronal
magnetic field of excelent quality. Results. We find that the photospheric
morphology of RFLH is quite different than that of the magnetic field or of the
electrical current, and this is not sensitive to the chosen gauge in the
computation of RFLH. The value of helicity experiences a large decrease, 25% of
its pre-flare value, during an X-class flare of the AR, a change that is also
depicted in the photospheric morphology of RFLH. Moreover, the area of this
change coincides with the area that encompasses the flux rope, the magnetic
structure that later erupted. Conclusions. The use of RFLH can provide
important information about the value and location of the magnetic helicity
expelled from the solar atmosphere during eruptive events.Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Histological insights into the pathogenesis of postâRouxâenâY hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia
Background ÎČâcell hyperplasia has been implicated in the aetiology of post RouxâenâY gastric bypass hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia, but the pathogenesis of this condition is still unclear. Case report We report a case of a 52âyearâold man with postâRouxâenâY gastric bypass hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia who underwent distal pancreatectomy to alleviate his symptoms. Pancreatic histopathology showed chronic pancreatitis with a corresponding loss of exocrine tissue and islet retention. Amyloid deposition was found in pancreatic islets. These features are more typically associated with Type 2 diabetes. Discussion This case highlights the potential multifactorial pathogenesis of symptomatic hypoglycaemia after RouxâenâY gastric bypass. What's new? We present a case of a patient with post RouxâenâY hypoglycaemia and pancreatic histology typically associated with diabetes. We show that hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia has a multifactorial aetiology.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109602/1/dme12571.pd
Birth weight percentile and the risk of term perinatal death.
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the association between birth weight percentile and the risk of perinatal death at term in relation to the cause of death. METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study of all term singleton births in delivery units in Scotland between 1992 and 2008 (n=784,576), excluding perinatal deaths ascribed to congenital anomaly. RESULTS: There were 1,700 perinatal deaths in the cohort, which were not the result of congenital anomaly (21.7/10,000 women at term). We observed a reversed J-shaped association between birth weight percentile and the risk of antepartum stillbirth in all women, but the associations significantly differed (P<.001) according to smoking status. The highest risk (adjusted odds ratio referent to 21st-80th percentile, 95% confidence interval) among nonsmokers was for birth weight third or less percentile (10.5, 8.2-13.3), but there were also positive associations for birth weight percentiles 4th-10th (3.8, 3.0-4.8), 11th-20th (1.9, 1.5-2.4), and 98th-100th (1.8, 1.3-2.4). Among smokers, the associations with being small were weaker and the associations with being large were stronger. We also observed a reversed J-shaped association between birth weight percentile and the risk of delivery-related perinatal death (ie, intrapartum stillbirth or neonatal death), but there was no interaction with smoking. The highest risk was for birth weight greater than the 97th percentile (2.3, 1.6-3.3), but there were also associations with third or less percentile (2.1, 1.4-3.1), 4th-10th (1.8, 1.4-2.4), and 11th-20th (1.5, 1.2-2.0). Analysis of the attributable fraction indicated that approximately one in three antepartum stillbirths and one in six delivery-related deaths at term could be related to birth weight percentile outside the range 21st-97th percentile. CONCLUSION: Effective detection of variation in fetal size at term has potential as a screening test for the risk of perinatal death. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.Supported by the NIHR Cambridge Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre.This version is the author accepted manuscript. This article can also be viewed in advanced access form on the publisher's website at: http://journals.lww.com/greenjournal/pages/articleviewer.aspx?year=9000&issue=00000&article=99411&type=abstract © 2014 by The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
The Effect of an Oxytocin Receptor Antagonist (Retosiban, GSK221149A) on the Response of Human Myometrial Explants to Prolonged Mechanical Stretch.
Multiple pregnancy is a major cause of spontaneous preterm birth, which is related to uterine overdistention. The objective of this study was to determine whether an oxytocin receptor antagonist, retosiban (GSK221149A), inhibited the procontractile effect of stretch on human myometrium. Myometrial biopsies were obtained at term planned cesarean delivery (n = 12). Each biopsy specimen was dissected into 8 strips that were exposed in pairs to low or high stretch (0.6 or 2.4 g) in the presence of retosiban (1 ÎŒM) or vehicle (dimethylsulfoxide) for 24 hours. Subsequently, we analyzed the contractile responses to KCl and oxytocin in the absence of retosiban. We found that incubation under high stretch in vehicle alone increased the response of myometrial explants to both KCl (P = .007) and oxytocin (P = .01). However, there was no statistically significant effect of stretch when explants were incubated with retosiban (P = .3 and .2, respectively). Incubation with retosiban in low stretch had no statistically significant effect on the response to either KCl or oxytocin (P = .8 and >.9, respectively). Incubation with retosiban in high stretch resulted in a statistically significant reduction (median fold change, interquartile range, P) in the response to both KCl (0.74, 0.60-1.03, P = .046) and oxytocin (0.71, 0.53-0.91, P = .008). The greater the effect of stretch on explants from a given patient, the greater was the inhibitory effect of retosiban (r = -0.65, P = .02 for KCl and r= -0.73, P = .007 for oxytocin). These results suggest that retosiban prevented stretch-induced stimulation of human myometrial contractility. Retosiban treatment is a potential approach for preventing preterm birth in multiple pregnancy.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Endocrine Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/en.2015-137
Additivity of relative magnetic helicity in finite volumes
CONTEXT: Relative magnetic helicity is conserved by magneto-hydrodynamic evolution even in the presence of moderate resistivity. For that reason, it is often invoked as the most relevant constraint on the dynamical evolution of plasmas in complex systems, such as solar and stellar dynamos, photospheric flux emergence, solar eruptions, and relaxation processes in laboratory plasmas. However, such studies often indirectly imply that relative magnetic helicity in a given spatial domain can be algebraically split into the helicity contributions of the composing subvolumes, in other words that it is an additive quantity. A limited number of very specific applications have shown that this is not the case. AIMS: Progress in understanding the nonadditivity of relative magnetic helicity requires removal of restrictive assumptions in favor of a general formalism that can be used in both theoretical investigations and numerical applications. METHODS: We derive the analytical gauge-invariant expression for the partition of relative magnetic helicity between contiguous finite volumes, without any assumptions on either the shape of the volumes and interface, or the employed gauge. RESULTS: We prove the nonadditivity of relative magnetic helicity in finite volumes in the most general, gauge-invariant formalism, and verify this numerically. We adopt more restrictive assumptions to derive known specific approximations, which yields a unified view of the additivity issue. As an example, the case of a flux rope embedded in a potential field shows that the nonadditivity term in the partition equation is, in general, non-negligible. CONCLUSIONS: The nonadditivity of relative magnetic helicity can potentially be a serious impediment to the application of relative helicity conservation as a constraint on the complex dynamics of magnetized plasmas. The relative helicity partition formula can be applied to numerical simulations to precisely quantify the effect of nonadditivity on global helicity budgets of complex physical processes
On the rapid TeV flaring activity of Markarian 501
Aims: We investigate the one-zone SSC model of TeV blazars in the presence of
electron acceleration. In this picture electrons reach a maximum energy where
acceleration saturates from a combination of synchrotron and inverse Compton
scattering losses. Methods: We solve the spatially averaged kinetic equations
which describe the simultaneous evolution of particles and photons, obtaining
the multi-wavelength spectrum as a function of time. Results: We apply the
model to the rapid flare of Mrk 501 of July 9, 2005 as this was observed by the
MAGIC telescope and obtain the relevant parameters for the pre-flare quasi
steady state and the ones during the flare. We show that a hard lag flare can
be obtained with parameters which lie well within the range already accepted
for this source. Especially the choice of a high value of the Doppler factor
seems to be necessary.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in A&A (Letters
A two-zone model for the emission from RX J1713.7-3946
We study the acceleration and radiation of charged particles in the shock
waves of supernova remnants using a recent version of the "box model".
According to this, particles are accelerated in an energy-dependent region
around the shock by the first order Fermi mechanism and lose energy through
radiation. The particle distribution function is obtained from a spatially
averaged kinetic equation that treats the energy losses self-consistently.
There exists also a second population that consists of those particles that
escape behind the shock where they also radiate. The energy distribution of
this population is calculated in a similar manner. The application of the model
to the supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946, which was recently confirmed as a TeV
source by H.E.S.S., shows that the X-ray emission can be attributed to electron
synchrotron radiation while in gamma-rays there are contributions from both
electrons and protons, with protons playing the dominant role. Additionally,
there are strong indications that particles diffuse in turbulence that has a
Kolmogorov spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
X-ray variability patterns in blazars
We study the expected variability patterns of blazars within the two-zone
acceleration model putting special emphasis on flare shapes and spectral lags.
We solve semi-analytically the kinetic equations which describe the particle
evolution in the acceleration and radiation zone. We then perturb the solutions
by introducing Lorentzian variations in its key parameters and examine the
flaring behavior of the system. We apply the above to the X-ray observations of
blazar 1ES 1218+304 which exhibited a hard lag behavior during a flaring
episode and discuss possibilities of producing it within the context of our
model. The steady-state radio to X-rays emission of 1ES 1218+304 can be
reproduced with parameters which lie well within the ones generally accepted
from blazar modeling. Additionally, we find that the best way to explain its
flaring behavior is by varying the rate of particles injected in the
acceleration zone.Comment: accepted by A&
In which shell-type SNRs should we look for gamma-rays and neutrinos from p-p collisions?
We present a simple analytic model for the various contributions to the
non-thermal emission from shell type SNRs, and show that this model's results
reproduce well the results of previous detailed calculations. We show that the
\geq 1 TeV gamma ray emission from the shell type SNRs RX J1713.7-3946 and RX
J0852.0-4622 is dominated by inverse-Compton scattering of CMB photons (and
possibly infra-red ambient photons) by accelerated electrons. Pion decay (due
to proton-proton collisions) is shown to account for only a small fraction,
\lesssim10^-2, of the observed flux, as assuming a larger fractional
contribution would imply nonthermal radio and X-ray synchrotron emission and
thermal X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission that far exceed the observed radio and
X-ray fluxes. Models where pion decay dominates the \geq 1 TeV flux avoid the
implied excessive synchrotron emission (but not the implied excessive thermal
X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission) by assuming an extremely low efficiency of
electron acceleration, K_ep \lesssim 10^-4 (K_ep is the ratio of the number of
accelerated electrons and the number of accelerated protons at a given energy).
We argue that observations of SNRs in nearby galaxies imply a lower limit of
K_ep \gtrsim 10^-3, and thus rule out K_ep values \lesssim 10^-4 (assuming that
SNRs share a common typical value of K_ep). It is suggested that SNRs with
strong thermal X-ray emission, rather than strong non-thermal X-ray emission,
are more suitable candidates for searches of gamma rays and neutrinos resulting
from proton-proton collisions. In particular, it is shown that the neutrino
flux from the SNRs above is probably too low to be detected by current and
planned neutrino observatories (Abridged).Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in JCAP, minor revision
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