839 research outputs found
Calcification in Aging Canine Aortic Valve
Aging changes of aortic valves are thought to underlie the mechanism of calcification, which leads to calcific aortic stenosis in humans. The study of calcification in the aging valvular connective tissue has been hindered by the lack of a suitable animal model. In search of the model, canine aortic valves demonstrated age changes including calcification remarkably similar to those in humans. The mechanism of calcification was studied in the aortic valves of aged Beagles by electron microscopy. Fibroblasts in the canine aortic valves showed the most prominent age changes. The cells accumulated numerous residual bodies and appeared to disintegrate. The resultant membranous cellular degradation products which sequestered in the extracellular space were the nidi of calcification. It appeared that the membrane of cell debris played an important role in calcification. Canine aortic valve is an ideal model for the study of calcification in relation to aging of the valvular connective tissue
Linking black-hole growth with host galaxies: The accretion-stellar mass relation and its cosmic evolution
Previous studies suggest that the growth of supermassive black holes (SMBHs)
may be fundamentally related to host-galaxy stellar mass (). To
investigate this SMBH growth- relation in detail, we calculate
long-term SMBH accretion rate as a function of and redshift
[] over ranges of
and . Our
is constrained by high-quality survey data
(GOODS-South, GOODS-North, and COSMOS), and by the stellar mass function and
the X-ray luminosity function. At a given , is
higher at high redshift. This redshift dependence is stronger in more massive
systems (for , is
three decades higher at than at ), possibly due to AGN feedback.
Our results indicate that the ratio between and average
star formation rate () rises toward high at a
given redshift. This dependence on
does not support the scenario that SMBH and galaxy growth are in
lockstep. We calculate SMBH mass history [] based on our
and the from the literature, and
find that the - relation has weak redshift evolution since
. The ratio is higher toward massive galaxies:
it rises from at to at . Our predicted ratio
at high is similar to that observed in local giant ellipticals,
suggesting that SMBH growth from mergers is unlikely to dominate over growth
from accretion.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures, 2 tables; MNRAS accepte
Does black-hole growth depend on the cosmic environment?
It is well known that environment affects galaxy evolution, which is broadly related to supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth. We investigate whether SMBH evolution also depends on host-galaxy local (sub-Mpc) and global (≈1–10 Mpc) environment. We construct the surface-density field (local environment) and cosmic web (global environment) in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) field at z = 0.3–3.0. The environments in COSMOS range from the field to clusters (Mhalo ≲ 1014 M⊙), covering the environments where ≈99 per cent of galaxies in the Universe reside. We measure sample-averaged SMBH accretion rate ( BHAR¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯ ) from X-ray observations, and study its dependence on overdensity and cosmic-web environment at different redshifts while controlling for galaxy stellar mass (M⋆). Our results show that BHAR¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯ does not significantly depend on overdensity or cosmic-web environment once M⋆ is controlled, indicating that environment-related physical mechanisms (e.g. tidal interaction and ram-pressure stripping) might not significantly affect SMBH growth. We find that BHAR¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯ is strongly related to host-galaxy M⋆, regardless of environment
Peroxisomes in intestinal and gallbladder epithelial cells of the stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus L. (Teleostei)
The occurrence of microbodies in the epithelial cells of the intestine and gallbladder of the stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus L., is described. In the intestine the organelles are predominantly located in the apical and perinuclear zone of the cells and may contain small crystalline cores. In gallbladder epithelial cells the microbodies are distributed randomly. The latter organdies are characterized by the presence of large crystalloids. Cytochemical and biochemical experiments show that catalase and D-amino acid oxidase are main matrix components of the microbodies in both the intestinal and gallbladder epithelia. These organelles therefore are considered peroxisomes. In addition, in intestinal mucosa but not in gallbladder epithelium a low activity of palmitoyl CoA oxidase was detected biochemically. Urate oxidase and L-α hydroxy acid oxidase activities could not be demonstrated.
Identifying Luminous AGN in Deep Surveys: Revised IRAC Selection Criteria
Spitzer IRAC selection is a powerful tool for identifying luminous AGN. For
deep IRAC data, however, the AGN selection wedges currently in use are heavily
contaminated by star-forming galaxies, especially at high redshift. Using the
large samples of luminous AGN and high-redshift star-forming galaxies in
COSMOS, we redefine the AGN selection criteria for use in deep IRAC surveys.
The new IRAC criteria are designed to be both highly complete and reliable, and
incorporate the best aspects of the current AGN selection wedges and of
infrared power-law selection while excluding high redshift star-forming
galaxies selected via the BzK, DRG, LBG, and SMG criteria. At QSO-luminosities
of log L(2-10 keV) (ergs/s) > 44, the new IRAC criteria recover 75% of the hard
X-ray and IRAC-detected XMM-COSMOS sample, yet only 38% of the IRAC AGN
candidates have X-ray counterparts, a fraction that rises to 52% in regions
with Chandra exposures of 50-160 ks. X-ray stacking of the individually X-ray
non-detected AGN candidates leads to a hard X-ray signal indicative of heavily
obscured to mildly Compton-thick obscuration (log N_H (cm^-2) = 23.5 +/- 0.4).
While IRAC selection recovers a substantial fraction of luminous unobscured and
obscured AGN, it is incomplete to low-luminosity and host-dominated AGN.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, full
resolution version available at http://www.stsci.edu/~donley/iragn_paper
Chandra X-Ray Observations of Two Unusual BAL Quasars
We report sensitive Chandra X-ray non-detections of two unusual, luminous
Iron Low-Ionization Broad Absorption Line Quasars (FeLoBALs). The observations
do detect a non-BAL, wide-binary companion quasar to one of the FeLoBAL
quasars. We combine X-ray-derived column density lower limits (assuming solar
metallicity) with column densities measured from ultraviolet spectra and CLOUDY
photoionization simulations to explore whether constant density slabs at broad
line region densities can match the physical parameters of these two BAL
outflows, and find that they cannot. In the "overlapping-trough" object SDSS
J0300+0048, we measure the column density of the X-ray absorbing gas to be N_H
>= 1.8 x 1024 cm-2. From the presence of Fe II UV78 absorption but lack of Fe
II UV195/UV196 absorption, we infer the density in that part of the absorbing
region to be n_e ~ 106 cm-3. We do find that a slab of gas at that density
might be able to explain this object's absorption. In the Fe III-dominant
object SDSS J2215-0045, the X-ray absorbing column density of N_H >= 3.4 x 1024
cm-2 is consistent with the Fe III-derived N_H >= 2 x 1022 cm-2 provided the
ionization parameter is log U > 1.0 for both the n_e = 1011 cm-3 and n_e = 1012
cm-3 scenarios considered (such densities are required to produce Fe III
absorption without Fe II absorption). However, the velocity width of the
absorption rules out its being concentrated in a single slab at these
densities. Instead, this object's spectrum can be explained by a low density,
high ionization and high temperature disk wind that encounters and ablates
higher density, lower ionization Fe III-emitting clumps.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
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