349 research outputs found
Is the Cygnus Loop two supernova remnants?
The Cygnus Loop is classified as a middle-aged supernova remnant (SNR)
located below the Galactic equator (l=74, b=-8.6) and 770 pc away from us. Its
large size and little confusion with Galactic emission makes it an ideal test
ground for evolutionary and structural theories of SNRs. New radio continuum
mapping of the Cygnus Loop at 2695 MHz with the Effelsberg 100-m telescope
provides indications that the Cygnus Loop consists of two separate SNRs.
Combining this result with data from the literature we argue that a secondary
SNR exists in the south with a recently detected neutron star close to its
center. Two interacting SNRs seem to be the best explanation to account for the
Cygnus Loop observations at all wavelengths.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Astron. Astrophys., accepte
A Survey of Hydroxyl Toward Supernova Remnants: Evidence for Extended 1720 MHz Maser Emission
We present the results of GBT observations of all four ground-state hydroxyl
(OH) transitions toward 15 supernova remnants (SNRs) which show OH(1720 MHz)
maser emission. This species of maser is well established as an excellent
tracer of an ongoing interaction between the SNR and dense molecular material.
For the majority of these objects we detect significantly higher flux densities
with a single dish than has been reported with interferometric observations. We
infer that spatially extended, low level maser emission is a common phenomenon
that traces the large-scale interaction in maser-emitting SNRs. Additionally we
use a collisional pumping model to fit the physical conditions under which OH
is excited behind the SNR shock front. We find the observed OH gas associated
with the SNR interaction having columns less than approximately 10^17 per
square cm, temperatures of 20 to 125 K, and densities 10^5 per cubic cm.Comment: 24 pages, 23 figures, Accepted to ApJ, March 26, 2008; v2 - added
Figure 6, minor clarifications to text in Sections 3 and
XMM-Newton observations of the supernova remnant IC443: I. soft X-ray emission from shocked interstellar medium
The shocked interstellar medium around IC443 produces strong X-ray emission
in the soft energy band (E<1.5 keV). We present an analysis of such emission as
observed with the EPIC MOS cameras on board the XMM-Newotn observatory, with
the purpose to find clear signatures of the interactions with the interstellar
medium (ISM) in the X-ray band, which may complement results obtained in other
wavelenghts. We found that the giant molecular cloud mapped in CO emission is
located in the foreground and gives an evident signature in the absorption of
X-rays. This cloud may have a torus shape and the part of torus interacting
with the IC443 shock gives rise to 2MASS-K emission in the southeast. The
measured density of emitting X-ray shocked plasma increases toward the
northeastern limb, where the remnant is interacting with an atomic cloud. We
found an excellent correlation between emission in the 0.3-0.5 keV band and
bright optical/radio filament on large spatial scales. The partial shell
structure seen in this band therefore traces the encounter with the atomic
cloud.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (20 September
2006, v649). For hi-res figures, see
http://www.astropa.unipa.it/Library/OAPA_preprints/ic443ele1.ps.g
Multiwavelength observations of the supernova remnant G349.7+02 interacting with a molecular cloud
We present molecular-line observations at millimetre, centimetre and infrared
wavelengths of the region containing OH(1720 MHz) masers in the supernova
remnant (SNR) G349.7+0.2, using the Australia Telescope (AT) Mopra antenna, the
Swedish-ESO Submillimeter Telescope, the AT Compact Array and the UNSW Infrared
Fabry-Perot narrow-band filter installed on the Anglo-Australian Telescope.
Several molecular transitions were observed between 1.6 and 3 mm to constrain
the physical parameters of the molecular cloud interacting with the SNR and to
investigate the effects of the SNR shock on the gas chemistry. We detected
shock-excited near-infrared H2 emission towards the centre of the SNR,
revealing highly clumped molecular gas and a good correlation with published
mid-infrared images from the Spitzer Space Telescope. An excellent correlation
between the H2 clumps and OH(1720 MHz) maser positions supports the shock
excitation of the OH(1720 MHz) maser emission. Furthermore, we detected OH
absorption at 1665 and 1667 MHz which shows a good correlation with the shocked
H2 emission and the masers. We found maser emission at 1665 MHz near the
OH(1720 MHz) masers in this SNR, which is found to be associated with a GLIMPSE
source SSTGLMC G349.7294+00.1747. We also detected 1665 and 1667 MHz OH masers,
and weak 4.8 GHz H2CO absorption towards the ultracompact HII region IRAS
17147-3725 located to the southeast of the SNR. We found no 4.7- or 6-GHz
excited-state OH masers or 6-GHz CH3OH maser towards either the SNR or the HII
region.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, published in MNRA
Copper as a target for prostate cancer therapeutics: copper-ionophore pharmacology and altering systemic copper distribution
Copper-ionophores that elevate intracellular bioavailable copper display significant therapeutic utility against prostate cancer cells in vitro and in TRAMP (Transgenic Adenocarcinoma of Mouse Prostate) mice. However, the pharmacological basis for their anticancer activity remains unclear, despite impending clinical trails. Herein we show that intracellular copper levels in prostate cancer, evaluated in vitro and across disease progression in TRAMP mice, were not correlative with copper-ionophore activity and mirrored the normal levels observed in patient prostatectomy tissues (Gleason Score 7 & 9). TRAMP adenocarcinoma cells harbored markedly elevated oxidative stress and diminished glutathione (GSH)-mediated antioxidant capacity, which together conferred selective sensitivity to prooxidant ionophoric copper. Copper-ionophore treatments [CuII(gtsm), disulfiram & clioquinol] generated toxic levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in TRAMP adenocarcinoma cells, but not in normal mouse prostate epithelial cells (PrECs). Our results provide a basis for the pharmacological activity of copper-ionophores and suggest they are amendable for treatment of patients with prostate cancer. Additionally, recent in vitro and mouse xenograft studies have suggested an increased copper requirement by prostate cancer cells. We demonstrated that prostate adenocarcinoma development in TRAMP mice requires a functional supply of copper and is significantly impeded by altered systemic copper distribution. The presence of a mutant copper-transporting Atp7b protein (tx mutation: A4066G/Met1356Val) in TRAMP mice changed copper-integration into serum and caused a remarkable reduction in prostate cancer burden (64% reduction) and disease severity (grade), abrogating adenocarcinoma development. Implications for current clinical trials are discussed
Foxp3 expression in macrophages associated with RENCA tumors in mice.
The transcription factor Foxp3 represents the most specific functional marker of CD4+ regulatory T cells (TRegs). However, previous reports have described Foxp3 expression in other cell types including some subsets of macrophages, although there are conflicting reports and Foxp3 expression in cells other than Treg is not well characterized. We performed detailed investigations into Foxp3 expression in macrophages in the normal tissue and tumor settings. We detected Foxp3 protein in macrophages infiltrating mouse renal cancer tumors injected subcutaneously or in the kidney. Expression was demonstrated using flow cytometry and Western blot with two individual monoclonal antibodies. Further analyses confirmed Foxp3 expression in macrophages by RT PCR, and studies using ribonucleic acid-sequencing (RNAseq) demonstrated a previously unknown Foxp3 messenger (m)RNA transcript in tumor-associated macrophages. In addition, depletion of Foxp3+ cells using diphtheria toxin in Foxp3DTR mice reduced the frequency of type-2 macrophages (M2) in kidney tumors. Collectively, these results indicate that tumor-associated macrophages could express Foxp3
The Relation Between the Surface Brightness and the Diameter for Galactic Supernova Remnants
In this work, we have constructed a relation between the surface brightness
() and diameter (D) of Galactic C- and S-type supernova remnants
(SNRs). In order to calibrate the -D dependence, we have carefully
examined some intrinsic (e.g. explosion energy) and extrinsic (e.g. density of
the ambient medium) properties of the remnants and, taking into account also
the distance values given in the literature, we have adopted distances for some
of the SNRs which have relatively more reliable distance values. These
calibrator SNRs are all C- and S-type SNRs, i.e. F-type SNRs (and S-type SNR
Cas A which has an exceptionally high surface brightness) are excluded. The
Sigma-D relation has 2 slopes with a turning point at D=36.5 pc: (at 1
GHz)=8.4 D
WmHzster (for
WmHzster and D36.5 pc) and (at 1
GHz)=2.7 10 D
WmHzster (for
WmHzster and D36.5 pc). We discussed the theoretical
basis for the -D dependence and particularly the reasons for the change
in slope of the relation were stated. Added to this, we have shown the
dependence between the radio luminosity and the diameter which seems to have a
slope close to zero up to about D=36.5 pc. We have also adopted distance and
diameter values for all of the observed Galactic SNRs by examining all the
available distance values presented in the literature together with the
distances found from our -D relation.Comment: 45 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomical and
Astrophysical Transaction
Machine Learning in Automated Text Categorization
The automated categorization (or classification) of texts into predefined
categories has witnessed a booming interest in the last ten years, due to the
increased availability of documents in digital form and the ensuing need to
organize them. In the research community the dominant approach to this problem
is based on machine learning techniques: a general inductive process
automatically builds a classifier by learning, from a set of preclassified
documents, the characteristics of the categories. The advantages of this
approach over the knowledge engineering approach (consisting in the manual
definition of a classifier by domain experts) are a very good effectiveness,
considerable savings in terms of expert manpower, and straightforward
portability to different domains. This survey discusses the main approaches to
text categorization that fall within the machine learning paradigm. We will
discuss in detail issues pertaining to three different problems, namely
document representation, classifier construction, and classifier evaluation.Comment: Accepted for publication on ACM Computing Survey
GBT Observations of IC 443: the Nature of OH(1720 MHz) Masers and OH Absorption
We present results of spectral line observations of the ground state
transitions of hydroxyl(OH) toward supernova remnant IC 443 carried out with
the Green Bank Telescope. At a spatial resolution of 7.2 arcminutes we detect
weak, extended OH(1720 MHz) maser emission with OH(1667/5,1612 MHz) absorption
along the southern extent of the remnant, where no bright compact maser sources
have been observed previously. These newly detected SNR-type masers are
coincident with known molecular clumps and a ridge of shocked molecular
hydrogen indicative of the SNR shock front interacting with the adjacent
molecular cloud. Simultaneous observation of all four ground-state transitions
of OH permits us to fit physical conditions of the shocked gas at the
interaction site. A simple two-component model for the line profiles yields the
physical parameters for detected regions of maser emission including excitation
temperature, OH column density and filling factor. Observed line profiles
suggest the shock is largely propagating toward the line-of-sight in the region
of these newly identified weak masers. The implications of shock geometry and
physical parameters in producing extended OH maser emission in SNRs are
explored. We also present VLA radio continuum observations at 330 MHz for
comparison with OH line observations of the remnant.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Ap
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