1,668 research outputs found
The European Social Fund: sustainable development and eco-technologies
This research report is one of a series of 21 commissioned by the European Social Fund (ESF), a structural fund of the European Union, as part of their ongoing review of policy and implementation.
The report reviews two seven-year periods (2000–2006 & 2007–2013) of EU intervention in the area of sustainable development and eco-technologies, and offers a conceptual framework on sustainable development, eco-technologies, eco-innovation and green jobs. Research findings are based on analysis of quantitative data and relevant indicators of the operational programmes throughout member countries of the European Union. To this end, the report maps ESF activity related to sustainable development and eco-technologies throughout the regions of the EU, and evaluates output, result and impact indicators of this work.
Particular attention is focused on those EU countries that have implemented actions targeted at the environmental aspects of the issue, and the report offers two case studies from the UK and Spain, countries considered to have been most engaged in 'mainstreaming' sustainable development within ESF co-funded activities.
I was engaged as the lead researcher and author of this work. I worked with three European partner researchers / co-authors, and led a team of two UK-based project researchers
Endogenous cholinergic inputs and local circuit mechanisms govern the phasic mesolimbic dopamine response to nicotine
Nicotine exerts its reinforcing action by stimulating nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and boosting dopamine (DA) output from the ventral tegmental area (VTA). Recent data have led to a debate about the principal pathway of nicotine action: direct stimulation of the DAergic cells through nAChR activation, or disinhibition mediated through desensitization of nAChRs on GABAergic interneurons. We use a computational model of the VTA circuitry and nAChR function to shed light on this issue. Our model illustrates that the α4β2-containing nAChRs either on DA or GABA cells can mediate the acute effects of nicotine. We account for in vitro as well as in vivo data, and predict the conditions necessary for either direct stimulation or disinhibition to be at the origin of DA activity increases. We propose key experiments to disentangle the contribution of both mechanisms. We show that the rate of endogenous acetylcholine input crucially determines the evoked DA response for both mechanisms. Together our results delineate the mechanisms by which the VTA mediates the acute rewarding properties of nicotine and suggest an acetylcholine dependence hypothesis for nicotine reinforcement.Peer reviewe
Numerical simulations on the relative importance of starbursts and AGN in ultra-luminous infrared galaxies
We investigate the relative importance of starbursts and AGN in nuclear
activities of ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) based on chemodynamical
simulations combined with spectrophotometric synthesis codes. We numerically
investigate both the gas accretion rates (m_acc) onto super massive black holes
(SMBHs) and the star formation rates (m_sf) in ULIRGs formed by gas-rich galaxy
mergers and thereby discuss what powers ULIRGs. Our principal results, which
can be tested against observations, are as follows. (1) ULIRGs powered by AGN
can be formed by major merging between luminous, gas-rich disk galaxies with
prominent bulges containing SMBHs, owing to the efficient gas fuelling m_acc >
1 M_sun/yr of the SMBH. AGN in these ULIRGs can be surrounded by compact
poststarburst stellar populations (e.g., A-type stars). (2) ULIRGs powered by
starbursts with m_sf ~ 100 M_sun/yr can be formed by merging between gas-rich
disk galaxies with small bulges having the bulge-to-disk-ratio (f_b) as small
as 0.1. (3) The relative importance of starbursts and AGN can depend on
physical properties of merger progenitor disks, such as f_b, gas mass fraction,
and total masses. For example, more massive galaxy mergers are more likely to
become AGN-dominated ULIRGs. (4) For most models, major mergers can become
ULIRGs, powered either by starbursts or by AGN, only when the two bulges
finally merge. Interacting disk galaxies can become ULIRGs with well separated
two cores (> 20kpc) at their pericenter when they are very massive and have
small bulges. (5) Irrespective of the choice of model, interacting/merging
galaxies show the highest accretion rates onto the central SMBHs, and the
resultant rapid growth of the SMBHs occur when their star formation rates are
very high.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures (f1.jpg for color figure of figure 1), accepted
in MNRA
Deep, ultra-high-resolution radio imaging of submillimetre galaxies using Very Long Baseline Interferometry
We present continent-scale VLBI - obtained with the European VLBI Network
(EVN) at a wavelength of 18cm - of six distant, luminous submm-selected
galaxies (SMGs). Our images have a synthesized beam width of ~30 milliarcsec
FWHM - three orders of magnitude smaller in area than the highest resolution
VLA imaging at this wavelength - and are capable of separating radio emission
from ultra-compact radio cores (associated with active super-massive black
holes - SMBHs) from that due to starburst activity. Despite targeting compact
sources - as judged by earlier observations with the VLA and MERLIN - we
identify ultra-compact cores in only two of our targets. This suggests that the
radio emission from SMGs is produced primarily on larger scales than those
probed by the EVN, and therefore is generated by star formation rather than an
AGN - a result consistent with other methods used to identify the presence of
SMBHs in these systems.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Primary skin fibroblasts as a model of Parkinson's disease
Parkinson's disease is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disorder. While most cases occur sporadic mutations in a growing number of genes including Parkin (PARK2) and PINK1 (PARK6) have been associated with the disease. Different animal models and cell models like patient skin fibroblasts and recombinant cell lines can be used as model systems for Parkinson's disease. Skin fibroblasts present a system with defined mutations and the cumulative cellular damage of the patients. PINK1 and Parkin genes show relevant expression levels in human fibroblasts and since both genes participate in stress response pathways, we believe fibroblasts advantageous in order to assess, e.g. the effect of stressors. Furthermore, since a bioenergetic deficit underlies early stage Parkinson's disease, while atrophy underlies later stages, the use of primary cells seems preferable over the use of tumor cell lines. The new option to use fibroblast-derived induced pluripotent stem cells redifferentiated into dopaminergic neurons is an additional benefit. However, the use of fibroblast has also some drawbacks. We have investigated PARK6 fibroblasts and they mirror closely the respiratory alterations, the expression profiles, the mitochondrial dynamics pathology and the vulnerability to proteasomal stress that has been documented in other model systems. Fibroblasts from patients with PARK2, PARK6, idiopathic Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, and spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 demonstrated a distinct and unique mRNA expression pattern of key genes in neurodegeneration. Thus, primary skin fibroblasts are a useful Parkinson's disease model, able to serve as a complement to animal mutants, transformed cell lines and patient tissues
Galaxy Properties from the Ultra-violet to the Far-Infrared: Lambda-CDM models confront observations
We combine a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation with simple analytic
recipes describing the absorption and re-emission of starlight by dust in the
interstellar medium of galaxies. We use the resulting models to predict galaxy
counts and luminosity functions from the far-ultraviolet to the sub-mm, from
redshift five to the present, and compare with an extensive compilation of
observations. We find that in order to reproduce the rest-UV and optical
luminosity functions at high redshift, we must assume an evolving normalization
in the dust-to-metal ratio, implying that galaxies of a given bolometric
luminosity (or metal column density) must be less extinguished than their local
counterparts. In our best-fit model, we find remarkably good agreement with
observations from rest-frame 1500 Angstroms to 250 microns. At longer
wavelengths, most dramatically in the sub-mm, our models underpredict the
number of bright galaxies by a large factor. The models reproduce the observed
total IR luminosity function fairly well. We show the results of varying
several ingredients of the models, including various aspects of the dust
attenuation recipe, the dust emission templates, and the cosmology. We use our
models to predict the integrated Extragalactic Background Light (EBL), and
compare with an observationally-motivated EBL model and with other available
observational constraints.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, 1 table, accepted to MNRAS, this version
matches accepted manuscrip
Nutrition, diet and immunosenescence
Ageing is characterized by immunosenescence and the progressive decline in immunity in association with an increased frequency of infections and chronic disease. This complex process affects both the innate and adaptive immune systems with a progressive decline in most immune cell populations and defects in activation resulting in loss of function. Although host genetics and environmental factors, such as stress, exercise and diet can impact on the onset or course of immunosenescence, the mechanisms involved are largely unknown. This review focusses on identifying the most significant aspects of immunosenescence and on the evidence that nutritional intervention might delay this process, and consequently improve the quality of life of the elderly
Importance of private and communal lands to sustainable conservation of Africa's rhinoceroses
A new path for rhinoceros (rhino) conservation is needed. Recent data signal the alarming impact of poaching on populations in Africa's rhino stronghold, the state-run Kruger National Park (South Africa), which today supports one quarter the rhinos than a decade ago. We aggregated African rhino population data, highlighting the growing role of private and community rhino custodians, who likely now conserve >50% of Africa's rhinos. Their contribution has been enabled by a supportive policy and economic environment, but this arrangement is becoming more difficult to sustain as costs associated with protecting rhinos skyrocket and revenue-generating options become insufficient. Some privately held rhino populations are small or intensively managed, raising questions about their conservation value. As the role of private and community custodianship becomes increasingly central to the protection of Africa's remaining rhinos, its resilience must be strengthened through implementation of adaptive policies that incentivize rhino conservation. We outline policy pathways to provide an enabling environment for rhino conservation beyond state parks.Peer reviewe
An infrared study of local galaxy mergers
A. Carpineti, et al., “An infrared study of local galaxy mergers”, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Vol. 577, May 2015. This version of record is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201425276 Reproduced with Permission from Astronomy and Astrophysics, © ESO 2016.We combine a large, homogeneous sample of 3000 local mergers with the Imperial IRAS Faint Source Redshift Catalogue (IIFSCz), to perform a blind far-infrared (FIR) study of the local merger population. The IRAS-detected mergers are mostly () spiral-spiral systems, residing in low density environments, a median FIR luminosity of (which translates to a median star formation rate of around 15). The FIR luminosity -- and therefore the star formation rate -- shows little correlation with group richness and scales with the total stellar mass of the system, with little or no dependence on the merger mass ratio. In particular, minor mergers (mass ratios $Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Multifrequency monitoring of the blazar 0716+714 during the GASP-WEBT-AGILE campaign of 2007
Since the CGRO operation in 1991-2000, one of the primary unresolved
questions about the blazar gamma-ray emission has been its possible correlation
with the low-energy (in particular optical) emission. To help answer this
problem, the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT) consortium has organized the
GLAST-AGILE Support Program (GASP) to provide the optical-to-radio monitoring
data to be compared with the gamma-ray detections by the AGILE and GLAST
satellites. This new WEBT project started in early September 2007, just before
a strong gamma-ray detection of 0716+714 by AGILE. We present the GASP-WEBT
optical and radio light curves of this blazar obtained in July-November 2007,
about various AGILE pointings at the source. We construct NIR-to-UV spectral
energy distributions (SEDs), by assembling GASP-WEBT data together with UV data
from the Swift ToO observations of late October. We observe a contemporaneous
optical-radio outburst, which is a rare and interesting phenomenon in blazars.
The shape of the SEDs during the outburst appears peculiarly wavy because of an
optical excess and a UV drop-and-rise. The optical light curve is well sampled
during the AGILE pointings, showing prominent and sharp flares. A future
cross-correlation analysis of the optical and AGILE data will shed light on the
expected relationship between these flares and the gamma-ray events.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to be published in A&A (Letters); revised to
match the final version (changes in Fig. 5 and related text
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