12,671 research outputs found
Timing and spectral changes of the Be X-ray transient EXO 0531-6609.2 through high and low state
We report on spectral and timing analysis of BeppoSAX data of the 13.6 s
period transient X-ray pulsar EXO 0531-6609.2. Observations were carried out in
March 1997 and October 1998, catching the source during a high and a low
emission state, respectively. Correspondingly, the X-ray luminosity is found at
a level of 4.2x10^37 erg/s and 1.5x10^36 erg/s in the two states. In the high
state the X-ray emission in the energy range 1-100 keV is well fitted by an
absorbed power-law with photon index Gamma ~1.7 plus a blackbody component with
a characteristic temperature of ~3.5 keV. Moreover, we find an evidence of an
iron emission at ~6.8 keV, typical feature in this class of sources but never
revealed before in the EXO 0531-6609.2 spectrum. In the low state an absorbed
power-law with Gamma ~0.4 is sufficient to fit the 1-10 keV data. During
BeppoSAX observations EXO 0531-6609.2 display variations of the pulse profile
with the X-ray flux: it showed single peaked and double peaked profiles in the
low and high state, respectively. Based on these two observations we infer a
spin-up period derivative of -(1.14+/-0.08)x10^-10 s/s. By comparing these with
other period measurements reported in literature we find an alternating spin-up
and spin-down behaviour that correlates well with the X-ray luminosity.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, A&
Parallax and Distance Estimates for Twelve Cataclysmic Variable Stars
We report parallax and distance estimates for twelve more cataclysmic
binaries and related objects observed with the 2.4m Hiltner telescope at MDM
Observatory. The final parallax accuracy is typically about 1 mas. For only one
of the twelve objects, IR Gem, do we fail to detect a significant parallax.
Notable results include distances for V396 Hya (CE 315), a helium double
degenerate with a relatively long orbital period, and for MQ Dra
(SDSSJ155331+551615), a magnetic system with a very low accretion rate. We find
that the Z Cam star KT Persei is physically paired with a K main-sequence star
lying 15 arcsec away. Several of the targets have distance estimates in the
literature that are based on the white dwarf's effective temperature and flux;
our measurements broadly corroborate these estimates, but tend to put the stars
a bit closer, indicating that the white dwarfs may have rather larger masses
than assumed. As a side note, we briefly describe radial velocity spectroscopy
that refines the orbital period of V396 Hya to 65.07 +- 0.08 min.Comment: Accepted for Astronomical Journal. 19 pages, no figure
Survey of the needs of patients with spinal cord injury: impact and priority for improvement in hand function in tetraplegics\ud
Objective: To investigate the impact of upper extremity deficit in subjects with tetraplegia.\ud
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Setting: The United Kingdom and The Netherlands.\ud
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Study design: Survey among the members of the Dutch and UK Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Associations.\ud
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Main outcome parameter: Indication of expected improvement in quality of life (QOL) on a 5-point scale in relation to improvement in hand function and seven other SCI-related impairments.\ud
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Results: In all, 565 subjects with tetraplegia returned the questionnaire (overall response of 42%). Results in the Dutch and the UK group were comparable. A total of 77% of the tetraplegics expected an important or very important improvement in QOL if their hand function improved. This is comparable to their expectations with regard to improvement in bladder and bowel function. All other items were scored lower.\ud
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Conclusion: This is the first study in which the impact of upper extremity impairment has been assessed in a large sample of tetraplegic subjects and compared to other SCI-related impairments that have a major impact on the life of subjects with SCI. The present study indicates a high impact as well as a high priority for improvement in hand function in tetraplegics.\ud
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Chandra observations of Cygnus OB2
Cygnus OB2 is the nearest example of a massive star forming region,
containing over 50 O-type stars and hundreds of B-type stars. We have analyzed
two Chandra pointings in Cyg OB2, detecting ~1700 X-ray sources, of which ~1450
are thought to be members of the association. Optical and near-IR photometry
has been obtained for ~90% of these sources from recent deep Galactic plane
surveys. We have performed isochrone fits to the near-IR color-magnitude
diagram, deriving ages of 3.5(+0.75,-1.0) and 5.25(+1.5,-1.0) Myrs for sources
in the two fields, both with considerable spreads around the pre-MS isochrones.
The presence of a second population in the region, somewhat older than the
present-day O-type stars, has been suggested by other authors and fits with the
ages derived here. The fraction of sources with inner circumstellar disks (as
traced by the K-band excess) is found to be very low, but appropriate for a
population of age ~5 Myrs. We measure the stellar mass functions and find a
power-law slope of Gamma = -1.09 +/- 0.13, in good agreement with the global
mean value estimated by Kroupa. A steepening of the mass function at high
masses is observed and we suggest this is due to the presence of the previous
generation of stars that have lost their most massive members. Finally,
combining our mass function and an estimate of the radial density profile of
the association suggests a total mass of Cyg OB2 of ~30,000 Msun, similar to
that of many of our Galaxy's most massive star forming regions.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, conference proceedings for JENAM 2010: Star
Clusters in the Era of Large Surveys, Editors: A.Moitinho and J. Alve
Exponential and moment inequalities for U-statistics
A Bernstein-type exponential inequality for (generalized) canonical
U-statistics of order 2 is obtained and the Rosenthal and Hoffmann-J{\o}rgensen
inequalities for sums of independent random variables are extended to
(generalized) U-statistics of any order whose kernels are either nonnegative or
canonicalComment: 22 page
Constraints on the Formation of the Galactic Bulge from Na, Al, and Heavy Element Abundances in Plaut's Field
We report chemical abundances of Na, Al, Zr, La, Nd, and Eu for 39 red giant
branch (RGB) stars and 23 potential inner disk red clump stars located in
Plaut-s low extinction window. We also measure lithium for a super Li-rich RGB
star. The abundances were determined by spectrum synthesis of high resolution
(R~25,000), high signal-to-noise (S/N~50-100 pixel-1) spectra obtained with the
Blanco 4m telescope and Hydra multifiber spectrograph. For the bulge RGB stars,
we find a general increase in the [Na/Fe] and [Na/Al] ratios with increasing
metallicity, and a similar decrease in [La/Fe] and [Nd/Fe]. Additionally, the
[Al/Fe] and [Eu/Fe] abundance trends almost identically follow those of the
{\alpha}-elements, and the [Zr/Fe] ratios exhibit relatively little change with
[Fe/H]. The consistently low [La/Eu] ratios of the RGB stars indicate that at
least a majority of bulge stars formed rapidly (<1 Gyr) and before the main
s-process could become a significant pollution source. In contrast, we find
that the potential inner disk clump stars exhibit abundance patterns more
similar to those of the thin and thick disks. Comparisons between the abundance
trends at different bulge locations suggest that the inner and outer bulge
formed on similar timescales. However, we find evidence of some abundance
differences between the most metal-poor and metal-rich stars in various bulge
fields. The data also indicate that the halo may have had a more significant
impact on the outer bulge initial composition than the inner bulge composition.
The [Na/Fe] and to a lesser extent [La/Fe] abundances further indicate that the
metal-poor bulge, at least at ~1 kpc from the Galactic center, and thick disk
may not share an identical chemistry.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 66 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables;
prior to publication, data tables in electronic form will be made available
upon reques
Transference Principles for Log-Sobolev and Spectral-Gap with Applications to Conservative Spin Systems
We obtain new principles for transferring log-Sobolev and Spectral-Gap
inequalities from a source metric-measure space to a target one, when the
curvature of the target space is bounded from below. As our main application,
we obtain explicit estimates for the log-Sobolev and Spectral-Gap constants of
various conservative spin system models, consisting of non-interacting and
weakly-interacting particles, constrained to conserve the mean-spin. When the
self-interaction is a perturbation of a strongly convex potential, this
partially recovers and partially extends previous results of Caputo,
Chafa\"{\i}, Grunewald, Landim, Lu, Menz, Otto, Panizo, Villani, Westdickenberg
and Yau. When the self-interaction is only assumed to be (non-strongly) convex,
as in the case of the two-sided exponential measure, we obtain sharp estimates
on the system's spectral-gap as a function of the mean-spin, independently of
the size of the system.Comment: 57 page
Duality covariant quantum field theory on noncommutative Minkowski space
We prove that a scalar quantum field theory defined on noncommutative
Minkowski spacetime with noncommuting momentum coordinates is covariant with
respect to the UV/IR duality which exchanges coordinates and momenta. The proof
is based on suitable resonance expansions of charged noncommutative scalar
fields in a background electric field, which yields an effective description of
the field theory in terms of a coupled complex two-matrix model. The two
independent matrix degrees of freedom ensure unitarity and manifest
CT-invariance of the field theory. The formalism describes an analytic
continuation of the renormalizable Grosse-Wulkenhaar models to Minkowski
signature.Comment: 32 pages; v2: Typos corrected; v3: Further typos corrected - Final
version to appear in JHE
To respond or not to respond - a personal perspective of intestinal tolerance
For many years, the intestine was one of the poor relations of the immunology world, being a realm inhabited mostly by specialists and those interested in unusual phenomena. However, this has changed dramatically in recent years with the realization of how important the microbiota is in shaping immune function throughout the body, and almost every major immunology institution now includes the intestine as an area of interest. One of the most important aspects of the intestinal immune system is how it discriminates carefully between harmless and harmful antigens, in particular, its ability to generate active tolerance to materials such as commensal bacteria and food proteins. This phenomenon has been recognized for more than 100 years, and it is essential for preventing inflammatory disease in the intestine, but its basis remains enigmatic. Here, I discuss the progress that has been made in understanding oral tolerance during my 40 years in the field and highlight the topics that will be the focus of future research
Characteristics of outdoor falls among older people: A qualitative study
Background Falls are a major threat to older people’s health and wellbeing. Approximately half of falls occur in outdoor environments but little is known about the circumstances in which they occur. We conducted a qualitative study to explore older people’s experiences of outdoor falls to develop understanding of how they may be prevented. Methods We conducted nine focus groups across the UK (England, Wales, and Scotland). Our sample was from urban and rural settings and different environmental landscapes. Participants were aged 65+ and had at least one outdoor fall in the past year. We analysed the data using framework and content analyses. Results Forty-four adults aged 65 – 92 took part and reported their experience of 88 outdoor falls. Outdoor falls occurred in a variety of contexts, though reports suggested the following scenarios may have been more frequent: when crossing a road, in a familiar area, when bystanders were around, and with an unreported or unknown attribution. Most frequently, falls resulted in either minor or moderate injury, feeling embarrassed at the time of the fall, and anxiety about falling again. Ten falls resulted in fracture, but no strong pattern emerged in regard to the contexts of these falls. Anxiety about falling again appeared more prevalent among those that fell in urban settings and who made more visits into their neighbourhood in a typical week. Conclusions This exploratory study has highlighted several aspects of the outdoor environment that may represent risk factors for outdoor falls and associated fear of falling. Health professionals are recommended to consider outdoor environments as well as the home setting when working to prevent falls and increase mobility among older people
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