625 research outputs found
Multi-level study of C3H2: The first interstellar hydrocarbon ring
Cyclic species in the interstellar medium have been searched for almost since the first detection of interstellar polyatomic molecules. Eleven different C3H2 rotational transitions were detected; 9 of which were studied in TMC-1, a nearby dark dust cloud, are shown. The 1 sub 10 yields 1 sub 01 and 2 sub 20 yields 2 sub 11 transitions were observed with the 43 m NRAO telescope, while the remaining transitions were detected with the 14 m antenna of the Five College Radio Observatory (FCRAO). The lines detected in TMC-1 have energies above the ground state ranging from 0.9 to 17.1 K and consist of both ortho and para species. Limited maps were made along the ridge for several of the transitions. The HC3N J = 2 yields 1 transition were mapped simultaneously with the C3H2 1 sub 10 yields 1 sub 01 line and therefore can compare the distribution of this ring with a carbon chain in TMC-1. C3H2 is distributed along a narrow ridge with a SE - NW extension which is slightly more extended than the HC2N J = 2 yields 1. Gaussian fits gives a FWHP extension of 8'5 for C3H2 while HC3N has a FWHP of 7'. The data show variations of the two velocity components along the ridge as a function of transition. Most of the transitions show a peak at the position of strongest HC3N emission while the 2 sub 21 yields 2 sub 10 transition shows a peak at the NH3 position
Active Resonator
A new electrical component-active resonator-is designed. The component consists of a common passive resonant circuit whose losses are compensated by an extra active circuit. Experimental verification was done with a TE/sub 01/spl delta// mode dielectric resonator with resonant frequency 10.4 GHz. Unloaded Q factor approaching infinity was achieved
The unrelaxed dynamical structure of the galaxy cluster Abell 85
For the first time, we explore the dynamics of the central region of a galaxy
cluster within ~kpc from its center by combining optical
and X-ray spectroscopy. We use (1) the caustic technique that identifies the
cluster substructures and their galaxy members with optical spectroscopic data,
and (2) the X-ray redshift fitting procedure that estimates the redshift
distribution of the intracluster medium (ICM). We use the spatial and redshift
distributions of the galaxies and of the X-ray emitting gas to associate the
optical substructures to the X-ray regions. When we apply this approach to
Abell 85 (A85), a complex dynamical structure of A85 emerges from our analysis:
a galaxy group, with redshift is passing through the
cluster center along the line of sight dragging part of the ICM present in the
cluster core; two additional groups, at redshift and
, are going through the cluster in opposite directions,
almost perpendicularly to the line of sight, and have substantially perturbed
the dynamics of the ICM. An additional group in the outskirts of A85, at
redshift , is associated to a secondary peak of the X-ray
emission, at redshift . Although our analysis and
results on A85 need to be confirmed by high-resolution spectroscopy, they
demonstrate how our new approach can be a powerful tool to constrain the
formation history of galaxy clusters by unveiling their central and surrounding
structures.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap
Predominance of KPC-3 in a Survey for Carbapenemase-Producing Enterobacteriaceae in Portugal
Free PMC Article: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4432220/Among the 2,105 Enterobacteriaceae tested in a survey done in Portugal, 165 were nonsusceptible to carbapenems, from which 35 (26 Klebsiella pneumoniae, 3 Escherichia coli, 2 Enterobacter aerogenes, and 3 Enterobacter cloacae isolates and 1 Klebsiella oxytoca isolate) were confirmed to be carbapenemase producers by the presence of 30 Tn4401d-blaKPC-3, 4 intI3-blaGES-5, and one intI1-blaVIM-2 gene, alone or in combination with other bla genes. The dissemination of blaKPC-3 gene carried by an IncF plasmid suggests lateral gene transfer as a major mechanism of dissemination.V. Manageiro was supported by grant SFRH/BPD/77486/2011 from the
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, Lisbon, Portugal. J. Almeida was
supported by grant BRJ-SUB/01/2012 from the National Institute of
Health Dr. Ricardo Jorge, Lisbon, Portugal. R. A. Bonomo was supported
by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National
Institutes of Health under awards R01 AI100560 and R01 AI063517, and
by the Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs, the Veterans Affairs
Merit Review Program, and the Geriatric Research Education and Clinical
Center VISN 10.
We thank the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) for project
grant PEst-OE/AGR/UI0211/2011-2014, Strategic Project UI211-
2011-2014
Gender effects in young road users on road safety attitudes, behaviors and risk perception
In the present study, we investigated gender-related effects on road safety attitudes in 2681 young drivers (1458 males, 54.4%; aged 18-22) who filled out several scales assessing attitudes toward road safety issues, driving behavior in specific hypothetical situations, accident risk perception, and concerns about such a risk. We focused only on young drivers to better understand the role of gender in road safety attitudes in a period of life in which risky behaviors are widespread for males and females. Indeed, there is still no agreement as to the nature of these gender differences. According to some authors, the effects of gender on being involved in a crash due to driving skills are either non-existent or largely explained by differences in alcohol consumption. In our study, we found gender differences in road safety attitudes (i.e., "negative attitude toward traffic rules and risky driving"; "negative attitude toward drugs and alcohol" and "tolerance toward speeding") and in driver behavior (i.e., "errors in inattentive driving" and "driving violations"). This result is consistent in all drivers coming from nine different European countries. Our analyses yielded an important finding concerning risk perception. The results indicate that the level of risk perception during driving is the same for males and females. However, these two groups differ in the level of concern about this risk, with males being less concerned about the risk of a road accident. This suggests that the main difference between these two groups is not strictly related to judgment of the perceived risk probability but rather to the level of concern experienced about the consequences of the risk. This difference between risk perception and worry could explain differences in the frequency of car accidents in the two groups. The present findings may provide new insights for the development of gender-based prevention program
Multipartite Interacting Scalar Dark Matter in the light of updated LUX data
We explore constraints on multipartite dark matter (DM) framework composed of
singlet scalar DM interacting with the Standard Model (SM) through Higgs portal
coupling. We compute relic density and direct search constraints including the
updated LUX bound for two component scenario with non-zero interactions between
two DM components in framework in
comparison with the one having symmetry. We point out
availability of a significantly large region of parameter space of such a
multipartite model with DM-DM interactions.Comment: Version accepted in JCA
Faster than thought: Detecting sub-second activation sequences with sequential fMRI pattern analysis
On the nonlinear influence of Reserve Bank of Australia interventions on exchange rates
This paper applies nonlinear econometric models to empirically investigate the effectiveness of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) exchange rate policy. First, results from a STARTZ model are provided revealing nonlinear mean reversion of the Australian dollar exchange rate in the sense that mean reversion increases with the degree of exchange rate misalignment. Second, a STR-GARCH model suggests that RBA interventions account for this result by strengthening foreign exchange traders' confidence in fundamental analysis. This in line with the so-called coordination channel of intervention effectiveness. --Foreign exchange intervention,market microstructure,smooth transition,nonlinear mean reversion
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