7,559 research outputs found
Smoothness of the future and past trapped sets in Kerr-Newman-Taub-NUT spacetimes
We consider the sets of future/past trapped null geodesics in the exterior region of a sub-extremal Kerr-Newman-Taub-NUT spacetime. We show that, from the point of view of any timelike observer outside of such a black hole, trapping can be understood as two smooth sets of spacelike directions on the celestial sphere of the observer
Hiatoplasty with crura buttressing versus hiatoplasty alone during laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy
Introduction. In obese patients with hiatal hernia (HH), laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) with cruroplasty is an option but use of prosthetic mesh crura reinforcement is debated. The aim was to compare the results of hiatal closure with or without mesh buttressing during LSG. Methods. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) was assessed by the Health-Related Quality of Life (GERD-HRQL) questionnaire before and after surgery in two consecutive series of patients with esophageal hiatus ≤ 4 cm2. After LSG, patients in group A (12) underwent simple cruroplasty, whereas in group B patients (17), absorbable mesh crura buttressing was added. Results. At mean follow-up of 33.2 and 18.1 months for groups A and B, respectively (p = 0 006), the mean preoperative GERD-HRQL scores of 16.5 and 17.7 (p = 0 837) postoperatively became 9.5 and 2.4 (p = 0 071). In group A, there was no difference between pre- and postoperative scores (p = 0 279), whereas in group B, a highly significant difference was observed (p = 0 002). The difference (Δ) comparing pre- and postoperative mean scores between the two groups was significantly in favor of mesh placement (p = 0 0058). Conclusions. In obese patients with HH and mild-moderate GERD, reflux symptoms are significantly improved at medium term follow-up after cruroplasty with versus without crura buttressing during LSG.Introduction. In obese patients with hiatal hernia (HH), laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) with cruroplasty is an option but use of prosthetic mesh crura reinforcement is debated. The aim was to compare the results of hiatal closure with or without mesh buttressing during LSG. Methods. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) was assessed by the Health-Related Quality of Life (GERD-HRQL) questionnaire before and after surgery in two consecutive series of patients with esophageal hiatus ≤ 4 cm2. After LSG, patients in group A (12) underwent simple cruroplasty, whereas in group B patients (17), absorbable mesh crura buttressing was added. Results. At mean follow-up of 33.2 and 18.1 months for groups A and B, respectively (p = 0 006), the mean preoperative GERD-HRQL scores of 16.5 and 17.7 (p = 0 837) postoperatively became 9.5 and 2.4 (p = 0 071). In group A, there was no difference between pre- and postoperative scores (p = 0 279), whereas in group B, a highly significant difference was observed (p = 0 002). The difference (Δ) comparing pre- and postoperative mean scores between the two groups was significantly in favor of mesh placement (p = 0 0058). Conclusions. In obese patients with HH and mild-moderate GERD, reflux symptoms are significantly improved at medium term follow-up after cruroplasty with versus without crura buttressing during LSG
The formation heritage of Jupiter Family Comet 10P/Tempel 2 as revealed by infrared spectroscopy
We present spectral and spatial information for major volatile species in
Comet 10P/Tempel 2, based on high-dispersion infrared spectra acquired on UT
2010 July 26 (heliocentric distance Rh = 1.44 AU) and September 18 (Rh = 1.62
AU), following the comet's perihelion passage on UT 2010 July 04. The total
production rate for water on July 26 was (1.90 +/- 0.12) x 10^28 molecules s-1,
and abundances of six trace gases (relative to water) were: CH3OH (1.58% +/-
0.23), C2H6 (0.39% +/- 0.04), NH3 (0.83% +/- 0.20), and HCN (0.13% +/- 0.02). A
detailed analysis of intensities for water emission lines provided a rotational
temperature of 35 +/- 3 K. The mean OPR is consistent with nuclear spin
populations in statistical equilibrium (OPR = 3.01 +/- 0.18), and the (1-sigma)
lower bound corresponds to a spin temperature > 38 K. Our measurements were
contemporaneous with a jet-like feature observed at optical wavelengths. The
spatial profiles of four primary volatiles display strong enhancements in the
jet direction, which favors release from a localized vent on the nucleus. The
measured IR continuum is much more sharply peaked and is consistent with a
dominant contribution from the nucleus itself. The peak intensities for H2O,
CH3OH, and C2H6 are offset by ~200 km in the jet direction, suggesting the
possible existence of a distributed source, such as the release of icy grains
that subsequently sublimed in the coma. On UT September 18, no obvious emission
lines were present in our spectra, nevertheless we obtained a 3-sigma upper
limit Q(H2O) < 2.86 x 10^27 molecules s-1
A Measurement of Water Vapour amid a Largely Quiescent Environment on Europa
Previous investigations proved the existence of local density enhancements in Europas atmosphere, advancing the idea of a possible origination from water plumes. These measurement strategies, however, were sensitive either to total absorption or atomic emissions, which limited the ability to assess the water content. Here we present direct searches for water vapour on Europa spanning dates from February 2016 to May 2017 with the Keck Observatory. Our global survey at infrared wavelengths resulted in non-detections on 16 out of 17 dates, with upper limits below the water abundances inferred from previous estimates. On one date (26 April 2016) we measured 2,095 658 tonnes of water vapour at Europas leading hemisphere. We suggest that the outgassing ls than previously estimated, with only rare localized events of stronger activity
Causal Fermion Systems and the ETH Approach to Quantum Theory
After reviewing the theory of "causal fermion systems" (CFS theory) and the "Events, Trees, and Histories Approach" to quantum theory (ETH approach), we compare some of the mathematical structures underlying these two general frameworks and discuss similarities and differences. For causal fermion systems, we introduce future algebras based on causal relations inherent to a causal fermion system. These algebras are analogous to the algebras previously introduced in the ETH approach. We then show that the spacetime points of a causal fermion system have properties similar to those of "events", as defined in the ETH approach. Our discussion is underpinned by a survey of results on causal fermion systems describing Minkowski space that show that an operator representing a spacetime point commutes with the algebra in its causal future, up to tiny corrections that depend on a regularization length
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