181 research outputs found
Submillimetre surveys: The prospects for Herschel
Using the observed submillimetre source counts, from 250-1200 microns
(including the most recent 250, 350 and 500 micron counts from BLAST), we
present a model capable of reproducing these results, which is used as a basis
to make predictions for upcoming surveys with the SPIRE instrument aboard the
Herschel Space Observatory. The model successfully fits both the integral and
differential source counts of submillimetre galaxies in all wavebands,
predicting that while ultra-luminous infrared galaxies dominate at the
brightest flux densities, the bulk of the infrared background is due to the
less luminous infrared galaxy population. The model also predicts confusion
limits and contributions to the cosmic infrared background that are consistent
with the BLAST results. Applying this to SPIRE gives predicted source confusion
limits of 19.4, 20.5 and 16.1mJy in the 250, 350 and 500 micron bands
respectively. This means the SPIRE surveys should achieve sensitivities 1.5
times deeper than BLAST, revealing a fainter population of infrared-luminous
galaxies, and detecting approximately 2600, 1300, and 700 sources per square
degree in the SPIRE bands (with one in three sources expected to be a high
redshift ultra-luminous source at 500 microns). The model number redshift
distributions predict a bimodal distribution of local quiescent galaxies and a
high redshift peak corresponding to strongly evolving star-forming galaxies. It
suggests the very deepest surveys with Herschel-SPIRE ought to sample the
source population responsible for the bulk of the infrared background.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Indications and practical approach to non-invasive ventilation in acute heart failure
In acute heart failure (AHF) syndromes significant respiratory failure (RF) is essentially seen in patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (ACPE) or cardiogenic shock (CS). Non-invasive ventilation (NIV), the application of positive intrathoracic pressure through an interface, has shown to be useful in the treatment of moderate to severe RF in several scenarios. There are two main modalities of NIV: continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and pressure support ventilation (NIPSV) with positive end expiratory pressure. Appropriate equipment and experience is needed for NIPSV, whereas CPAP may be administered without a ventilator, not requiring special training. Both modalities have shown to be effective in ACPE, by a reduction of respiratory distress and the endotracheal intubation rate compared to conventional oxygen therapy, but the impact on mortality is less conclusive. Non-invasive ventilation is also indicated in patients with AHF associated to pulmonary disease and may be considered, after haemodynamic stabilization, in some patients with CS. There are no differences in the outcomes in the studies comparing both techniques, but CPAP is a simpler technique that may be preferred in low-equipped areas like the pre-hospital setting, while NIPSV may be preferable in patients with significant hypercapnia. The new modality 'high-flow nasal cannula' seems promising in cases of AHF with less severe RF. The correct selection of patients and interfaces, early application of the technique, the achievement of a good synchrony between patients and the ventilator avoiding excessive leakage, close monitoring, proactive management, and in some cases mild sedation, may warrant the success of the technique
The nature of proximate damped Lyman alpha systems
We present high resolution echelle spectra of 7 proximate damped Lyman alpha
(PDLA) systems whose relative velocity separation from the background quasar is
Delta V < 3000 km/s. Combining our sample with a further 9 PDLAs from the
literature we compare the chemical properties of the proximate systems with a
control sample of intervening DLAs. Taken at face value, the sample of 16 PDLAs
exhibits a wide range of metallicities, ranging from Z ~ 1/3 Z_sun down to Z ~
1/1000 Z_sun, including the DLA with the lowest N(SiII)/N(HI) yet reported in
the literature. We find several pieces of evidence that indicate enhanced
ionization and the presence of a hard ionizing spectrum in PDLAs which lead to
properties that contrast with the intervening DLAs, particularly when the N(HI)
is low. The abundances of Zn, Si and S in PDLAs with log N(HI) > 21, where
ionization corrections are minimized, are systematically higher than the
intervening population by a factor of around 3. We also find possible evidence
for a higher fraction of NV absorbers amongst the PDLAs, although the
statistics are still modest. 6/7 of our echelle sample show high ionization
species (SiIV, CIV, OVI or NV) offset by >100 km/s from the main low ion
absorption. We analyse fine-structure transitions of CII* and SiII* to
constrain the PDLA distance from the QSO. Lower limits range from tens of kpc
up to >160 kpc for the most stringent limit. We conclude that (at least some)
PDLAs do exhibit different characteristics relative to the intervening
population out to 3000 km/s (and possibly beyond). Nonetheless, the PDLAs
appear distinct from lower column density associated systems and the inferred
QSO-absorber separations mean they are unlikely to be associated with the QSO
host. We speculate that the PDLAs preferentially sample more massive galaxies
in more highly clustered regions of the high redshift universe.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Abstract abridged
Galaxy Zoo: Passive Red Spirals
We study the spectroscopic properties and environments of red spiral galaxies
found by the Galaxy Zoo project. By carefully selecting face-on, disk dominated
spirals we construct a sample of truly passive disks (not dust reddened, nor
dominated by old stellar populations in a bulge). As such, our red spirals
represent an interesting set of possible transition objects between normal blue
spirals and red early types. We use SDSS data to investigate the physical
processes which could have turned these objects red without disturbing their
morphology. Red spirals prefer intermediate density regimes, however there are
no obvious correlations between red spiral properties and environment -
environment alone is not sufficient to determine if a spiral will become red.
Red spirals are a small fraction of spirals at low masses, but are a
significant fraction at large stellar masses - massive galaxies are red
independent of morphology. We confirm that red spirals have older stellar popns
and less recent star formation than the main spiral population. While the
presence of spiral arms suggests that major star formation cannot have ceased
long ago, we show that these are not recent post-starbursts, so star formation
must have ceased gradually. Intriguingly, red spirals are ~4 times more likely
than normal spirals to host optically identified Seyfert or LINER, with most of
the difference coming from LINERs. We find a curiously large bar fraction in
the red spirals suggesting that the cessation of star formation and bar
instabilities are strongly correlated. We conclude by discussing the possible
origins. We suggest they may represent the very oldest spiral galaxies which
have already used up their reserves of gas - probably aided by strangulation,
and perhaps bar instabilities moving material around in the disk.Comment: MNRAS in press, 20 pages, 15 figures (v3
The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: the transition to large-scale cosmic homogeneity
We have made the largest-volume measurement to date of the transition to
large-scale homogeneity in the distribution of galaxies. We use the WiggleZ
survey, a spectroscopic survey of over 200,000 blue galaxies in a cosmic volume
of ~1 (Gpc/h)^3. A new method of defining the 'homogeneity scale' is presented,
which is more robust than methods previously used in the literature, and which
can be easily compared between different surveys. Due to the large cosmic depth
of WiggleZ (up to z=1) we are able to make the first measurement of the
transition to homogeneity over a range of cosmic epochs. The mean number of
galaxies N(<r) in spheres of comoving radius r is proportional to r^3 within
1%, or equivalently the fractal dimension of the sample is within 1% of D_2=3,
at radii larger than 71 \pm 8 Mpc/h at z~0.2, 70 \pm 5 Mpc/h at z~0.4, 81 \pm 5
Mpc/h at z~0.6, and 75 \pm 4 Mpc/h at z~0.8. We demonstrate the robustness of
our results against selection function effects, using a LCDM N-body simulation
and a suite of inhomogeneous fractal distributions. The results are in
excellent agreement with both the LCDM N-body simulation and an analytical LCDM
prediction. We can exclude a fractal distribution with fractal dimension below
D_2=2.97 on scales from ~80 Mpc/h up to the largest scales probed by our
measurement, ~300 Mpc/h, at 99.99% confidence.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Poorer without It? The Neglected Role of the Natural Environment in Poverty and Wellbeing
The relationship between sustainable development’s prime goal, human wellbeing, and the natural environment has been narrowly conceived. This paper focuses on the possibility and the implications of treating the natural environment as a ‘constituent’, or internal element, of the concepts of wellbeing and poverty, as opposed to a ‘determinant’, or instrumental, external factor. Our review of philosophical accounts and conceptual frameworks of wellbeing and poverty suggests that treating the environment as a constituent element is philosophically sound, conceptually robust and empirically grounded. We argue that failing to consider these missing environmental aspects can result in an incomplete capturing of the multiple dimensions of wellbeing and poverty, and their underlying drivers. This broader framing of the environment– wellbeing relationship has the potential to inform a new generation of individual level wellbeing and poverty indicators, creating measures of multidimensional poverty that reflect the broadened scope ambitiously articulated in the Sustainable Development Goals
The Evolution of K* and the Halo Occupation Distribution since z=1.5: Observations vs. Simulations
We study the evolution of the K-band luminosity function (LF) and the Halo
Occupation Distribution (HOD) using Subaru observations of 15 X-ray clusters at
z=0.8-1.5 and compare the results with mock clusters (0<z<1.3) extracted from
the Millennium Simulation and populated with galaxies using the semi-analytic
model (SAM) of Bower et al., matched in mass to our observed sample. We find
that the characteristic luminosity K* defined by a Shechter LF is consistent
with SAM predictions, which mimic well the evolution of K* in z>1 rich
clusters. However, we cannot distinguish between this model and a simple
stellar population synthesis model invoking passive evolution with a formation
redshift z~5 - consistent with the presence of an old red galaxy population
ubiquitous in rich clusters at z=1.5. We also see a small difference (\Delta
K*~0.5) between our clusters and studies of the field population at similar
redshifts, suggesting only a weak dependence of the luminous (L>L*) part of the
LF on environment. Turning to our HOD study, we find that within R_{500},
high-z clusters tend to host smaller numbers of galaxies to a magnitude K*+2
compared to their low-z counterparts. This behavior is also seen in the mock
samples and is relatively insensitive to the average mass of the cluster
haloes. In particular, we find significant correlations of the observed number
of member cluster galaxies (N) with both z and cluster mass:
.
Finally, we examine the spatial distribution of galaxies and provide a new
estimate of the concentration parameter for clusters at high z
(). Our result is consistent with predictions from
both our SAM mock clusters and literature's predictions for dark matter haloes.
The mock sample predictions rise slowly with decreasing redshift reaching
at z=0.Comment: 17 pages, 3 tables, 12 Figures. Accepted for publications in MNRAS.
Version 2: modified Figs. 4, 8 and 1
Effects of antiplatelet therapy on stroke risk by brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases: subgroup analyses of the RESTART randomised, open-label trial
Background
Findings from the RESTART trial suggest that starting antiplatelet therapy might reduce the risk of recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage compared with avoiding antiplatelet therapy. Brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases (such as cerebral microbleeds) are associated with greater risks of recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage. We did subgroup analyses of the RESTART trial to explore whether these brain imaging features modify the effects of antiplatelet therapy
A mobile ecology of resources for Covid-19 learning
Mobile devices and a vast array of accompanying applications offer significant affordances to create, consume, share, collaborate and communicate—affordances that could be easily leveraged to facilitate meaningful learning. A positive disruption arising from Covid-19 that aligns with the affordances of mobile learning is the uncoupling of time and space in the learning process. Traditionally formal learning is a process that is predominately viewed as an experience that is ‘timetabled’— scheduled to eventuate at a ‘place’—lecture or a tutorial (or similar) in a room or lecture theatre. In this concise paper, an ecology of resources is discussed along with guiding principles for designing and facilitating uncoupled authentic and student-determined learning post the emergency remote teaching phase
- …
