16,593 research outputs found
On the interaction of jets with stellar winds in XRBs
We present the first three-dimensional simulations of the evolution of a
microquasar jet inside the binary-star system. The aim is to study the
interaction of these jets with the stellar wind from a massive companion and
the possible locations of high-energy emission sites. We have simulated two
jets with different injection power in order to give a hint on the minimum
power required for the jet to escape the system and become visible in larger
scales. In the setup, we include a massive star wind filling the grid through
which the jet evolves. We show that jets should have powers of the order of
or more in order not to be destroyed by the stellar wind.
The jet-wind interaction results in regions in which high energy emission could
be produced. These results imply the possible existence of a population of
X-ray binaries not detected in the radio band due to jet disruption inside the
region dominated by the stellar wind.Comment: Published in Proceedings of High Energy Phenomena in Relativistic
Outflows II, held in Buenos Aires, 26-30 October 2009, ed. G. Romer
Effects of temperature and strain rate on the mechanical properties of T91 material tested in liquid lead bismuth eutectic
Stressful life events are associated with low secretion rates of immunoglobulin A in saliva in the middle aged and elderly
Whether chronic stress experience is related to down-regulation of secretory immunoglobulin A (S-IgA) was tested in two substantial cohorts, one middle-aged (N = 640) and one elderly (N = 582), comprising similar numbers of men (N = 556) and women (N = 666) and manual (N = 606) and non-manual (N = 602) workers. Participants indicated from a list of major stressful life events up to six they had experienced in the previous two years. They also rated how disruptive and stressful the events were, at the time and now, as well as their perceived seriousness; the products of these impact values and event frequency were adopted as measures of stress load. From unstimulated 2-minute saliva samples, saliva volume and S-IgA concentration were measured, and S-IgA secretion rate determined as their product. There was a negative association between the stress load measures and S-IgA secretion rate, still evident following adjustment for such variables as smoking and saliva volume. The associations also withstood adjustment for sex, cohort, and household occupational status. Although these associations are small in terms of the amount of variance explained, they nonetheless suggest that chronic stress experience either decreases IgA production by the local plasma cells or reduces the efficiency with which S-IgA is transported from the glandular interstitium into saliva. Given the importance of S-IgA in immune defence at mucosal surfaces and the frequency with which infections are initiated at these surfaces, S-IgA down-regulation could be a means by which chronic stress increases susceptibility to upper respiratory tract infection
Reproducibility of electrical caries measurements: A technical problem?
The currently available instrument for electrical detection of occlusal caries lesions {[}Electronic Caries Monitor (ECM)] uses a site-specific measurement with co-axial air drying. The reproducibility of this method has been reported to be fair to good. It was noticed that the measurement variation of this technique appeared to be non-random. It was the aim of this study to analyse how such a non-random reproducibility pattern arises and whether it could be observed for other operators and ECM models. Analysis of hypothetical measurement pairs showed that the pattern was related to measurements at the high and low end of the measurement range for the instrument. Data sets supplied by other researchers to a varying degree showed signs of a similar non-random pattern. These data sets were acquired at different locations, by different operators and using 3 different ECM models. The frequency distribution of measurements in all cases showed a single or double end-peaked distribution shape. It was concluded that the pattern was a general feature of the measurement method. It was tentatively attributed to several characteristics such as a high value censoring, insufficient probe contact and unpredictable probe contact. A different measurement technique, with an improved probe contact, appears to be advisable. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
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