1,893 research outputs found
Surface Brightness and Stellar Populations at the Outer Edge of the Large Magellanic Cloud: No Stellar Halo Yet
We present a high quality CMD for a 36'x 36' field located 8 degrees (7 kpc)
from the LMC center, as well as a precise determination of the LMC surface
brightness derived from the resolved stellar population out to this large
galactocentric radius. This deep CMD shows for the first time the detailed age
distribution at this position, where the surface brightness is V=26.5 mag/sq".
At a radius R=474' the main sequence is well populated from the oldest turnoff
at I=21.5 to the 2.5 Gyr turnoff at I=19.5. Beyond this radius, a relatively
strong gradient in the density of stars with ages in the 2.5-4 Gyr range is
apparent. There are some stars brighter and bluer than the main population,
quite uniformly distributed over the whole area surveyed, which are well
matched by a 1.5 Gyr isochrone and may be indicative of a relatively recent
star formation, or merger, event. The surface brightness profile of the LMC
remains exponential to this large galactocentric radius and shows no evidence
of disk truncation. Combining the information on surface brightness and stellar
population we conclude that the LMC disk extends (and dominates over a possible
stellar halo) out to a distance of at least 7 kpc. These results confirm that
the absence of blue stars in the relatively shallow off-center CMDs of dIrr
galaxies is not necessarily evidence for an exclusively old stellar population
resembling the halo of the Milky Way.Comment: ApJLett, in press 13 pages including 3 color figure
A phenomenological representation of iridescent colors in butterfly wings
The representation of the color of butterflies has always
been a challenge to artis
ts, whatever the medium
involved. These colors are highly complex to reproduce, even with the use of computer generated images. This
article introduces a new algorithm developed to simulate and generate the iridescent colors that are found on the
wings of particular butterflies. The model presented here
is based on the scientific description of the butterfly
Morpho menelaus
. Wing color is determined by interference, diffraction, absorption and reflection of light on
microscopic wing's structures. The color varies dependi
ng on a combination of the following parameters: view
angle, incidence and characteristics of the light source, and surrounding medium. This algorithm which tends to
real-time imaging required by computer graphics artis
ts still renders images with a fairly high degree of
accuracy
The White Dwarf Cooling Age of M67
A deep imaging survey covering the entire 23\arcmin diameter of the old
open cluster M67 to has been carried out using the mosaic imager
(UHCam) on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. The cluster color-magnitude
diagram (CMD) can be traced from stars on its giant branch at down
through main sequence stars at least as faint as . Stars this low
in luminosity have masses below . A modest white dwarf (WD)
cooling sequence is also observed commencing slightly fainter than
and, after correction for background galaxy and stellar field contamination,
terminating near . The observed WDs follow quite closely a
theoretical cooling sequence for pure carbon core WDs with
hydrogen-rich atmospheres (DA WDs). The cooling time to an of 14.6 for
such WDs is 4.3 Gyr which we take as the WD cooling age of the cluster. A fit
of a set of isochrones to the cluster CMD indicates a turnoff age of 4.0 Gyr.
The excellent agreement between these results suggests that ages derived from
white dwarf cooling should be considered as reliable as those from other dating
techniques. The WDs currently contribute about 9% of the total cluster mass but
the number seen appears to be somewhat low when compared with the number of
giants observed in the cluster.Comment: 15 pages plus 3 diagrams, minor corrections, Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, to be published September 10, 199
A systematic review of the prevalence and risk factors for adverse drug reactions in the elderly in the acute care setting
© 2014 Alhawassi et al. Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are an important health issue. While prevalence and risk factors associated with ADRs in the general adult population have been well documented, much less is known about ADRs in the elderly population. The aim of this study was to review the published literature to estimate the prevalence of ADRs in the elderly in the acute care setting and identify factors associated with an increased risk of an ADR in the elderly. A systematic review of studies published between 2003 and 2013 was conducted in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, EMBASE, Google Scholar and MEDLINE. Key search terms included: “adverse drug reactions”, “adverse effects”, “elderly patients and hospital admission”, “drug therapy”, “drug adverse effects”, “drug related”, “aged”, “older patients”, “geriatric”, “hospitalization”, and “emergency admissions”. For inclusion in the review, studies had to focus on ADRs in the elderly and had to include an explicit definition of what was considered an ADR and/or an explicit assessment of causality, and a clear description of the method used for ADR identification, and had to describe factors associated with an increased risk of an ADR. Fourteen hospital-based observational studies exploring ADRs in the elderly in the acute care setting were eligible for inclusion in this review. The mean prevalence of ADRs in the elderly in the studies included in this review was 11.0% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 5.1%–16.8%). The median prevalence of ADRs leading to hospitalization was 10.0% (95% CI: 7.2%–12.8%), while the prevalence of ADRs occurring during hospitalization was 11.5% (95% CI: 0%–27.7%). There was wide variation in the overall ADR prevalence, from 5.8% to 46.3%. Female sex, increased comorbid complexity, and increased number of medications were all significantly associated with an increased risk of an ADR. Retrospective studies and those relying on identification by the usual treating team reported lower prevalence rates. From this review, we can conclude that ADRs constitute a significant health issue for the elderly in the acute care setting. While there was wide variation in the prevalence of ADRs in the elderly, based on the findings of this study, at least one in ten elderly patients will experience an ADR leading to or during their hospital stay. Older female patients and those with multiple comorbidities and medications appear to be at the highest risk of an ADR in the acute care setting
Is Cosmology Solved?
We have fossil evidence from the thermal background radiation that our
universe expanded from a considerably hotter denser state. We have a well
defined and testable description of the expansion, the relativistic
Friedmann-Lemaitre model. Its observational successes are impressive but I
think hardly enough for a convincing scientific case. The lists of
observational constraints and free hypotheses within the model have similar
lengths. The scorecard on the search for concordant measures of the mass
density parameter and the cosmological constant shows that the high density
Einstein-de Sitter model is challenged, but that we cannot choose between low
density models with and without a cosmological constant. That is, the
relativistic model is not strongly overconstrained, the usual test of a mature
theory. Work in progress will greatly improve the situation and may at last
yield a compelling test. If so, and the relativistic model survives, it will
close one line of research in cosmology: we will know the outlines of what
happened as our universe expanded and cooled from high density. It will not end
research: some of us will occupy ourselves with the details of how galaxies and
other large-scale structures came to be the way they are, others with the issue
of what our universe was doing before it was expanding. The former is being
driven by rapid observational advances. The latter is being driven mainly by
theory, but there are hints of observational guidance.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. To be published in PASP as part of the
proceedings of the Smithsonian debate, Is Cosmology Solved
Recommended from our members
Paris: The slightly altered, slightly metamorphosed CM that bridges the gap between CMs and Cos
A fresh, 1.3 kilo stone was found in Paris. It is a CM chondrite with metal, Fe-sulfide, FeS-rich PCPs and relict mesostasis and is ~3.0 ± 0.1. Petrographic and oxygen isotope evidence indicates that it has affinities with the CO chondrites
The Geneva-Copenhagen Survey of the Solar Neighbourhood
We report on a new survey of metallicities, ages, and Galactic orbits for a complete, magnitude-limited, and kinematically unbiased all-sky sample of 16 682 nearby F- and G-dwarfs. Our ∼ 63 000 new, accurate radial velocities for nearly 13 500 of the stars, combined with Hipparcos parallaxes and Tycho-2 proper motions, complete the kinematic data for 14 139 stars and allow us to identify most of the binary stars in the sample. Isochrone ages have been determined whenever reliable results are possible, with particular attention to realistic error estimates. Among the basic properties of the Galactic disk that can be reinvestigated from our data are the metallicity distribution of G-dwarfs and the age-metallicity and age-velocity relations of the solar neighbourhood. We confirm the lack of metal-poor G-dwarfs relative to classical model predictions (the 'G-dwarf problem'), the near-constancy of the mean metallicity since the formation of the thin disk, and the appearance of the kinematic signature of the thick disk ∼ 10 Gyr ag
Wall effects on granular heap stability
We investigate the effects of lateral walls on the angle of movement and on
the angle of repose of a granular pile. Our experimental results for beads
immersed in water are similar to previous results obtained in air and to recent
numerical simulations. All of these results, showing an increase of pile angles
with a decreasing gap width, are explained by a model based on the redirection
of stresses through the granular media. Two regimes are observed depending on
the bead diameter. For large beads, the range of wall effects corresponds to a
constant number of beads whereas it corresponds to a constant characteristic
length for small beads as they aggregate via van der Waals forces
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