2,441 research outputs found
WISE J064336.71-022315.4: A Thick Disk L8 Gaia DR2-Discovered Brown Dwarf at 13.9 Parsecs
While spectroscopically characterizing nearby ultracool dwarfs discovered in
the Gaia Second Data Release with the TripleSpec spectrograph on the Palomar
200'' telescope, we encountered a particularly cool, nearby, new member of the
solar neighborhood: Gaia DR2 3106548406384807680 = WISE J064336.71-022315.4 =
2MASS J06433670-0223130. The parallax corresponds to a distance of
13.9 0.3 pc. Using our TripleSpec spectrum we classify W0643 as spectral
type L8, and measured a heliocentric radial velocity of 142 12 km
s. When combined with astrometry, we determine a Galactic
velocity (heliocentric; towards Galactic center) of = -109, -91,
-12 (10, 5, 3) km s. We estimate that W0643 passed within 1.4
pc away from the Sun 100,000 years ago
Pre-main-sequence isochrones - III: The Cluster Collaboration isochrone server
We present an isochrone server for semi-empirical pre-main-sequence model isochrones in the following systems: Johnson–Cousins, Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Two-Micron All-Sky Survey, Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) Wide-Field Camera and INT Photometric Hα Survey (IPHAS)/UV-Excess Survey (UVEX). The server can be accessed via the Cluster Collaboration webpage http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/timn/isochrones/. To achieve this, we have used the observed colours of member stars in young clusters with well-established age, distance and reddening to create fiducial loci in the colour–magnitude diagram. These empirical sequences have been used to quantify the discrepancy between the models and data arising from uncertainties in both the interior and atmospheric models, resulting in tables of semi-empirical bolometric corrections (BCs) in the various photometric systems. The model isochrones made available through the server are based on existing stellar interior models coupled with our newly derived semi-empirical BCs. As part of this analysis, we also present new cluster parameters for both the Pleiades and Praesepe, yielding ages of 135+20−11 and 665+14−7Myr as well as distances of 132 ± 2 and 184 ± 2 pc, respectively (statistical uncertainty only)
Exploring trainer and trainee emotional talk in narratives about workplace-based feedback processes
Emotion characterises learners' feedback experiences. While the failure-to-fail literature suggests that emotion may be important, little is known about the role of emotion for educators. Secondary analyses were therefore conducted on data exploring 110 trainers' and trainees' feedback experiences. Group and individual narrative interviews were conducted across three UK sites. We analysed 333 narratives for emotional talk using textual analysis: Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count. Furthermore, thematic framework analysis was conducted on the trainer narratives to explore aspects of feedback processes that are emotional. An additional in-depth little 'd' discourse analysis was conducted on selected trainer narratives to enable us to explore the complex relationship between the whats (reported events) and the hows (emotional talk). Trainer narratives did not differ significantly in positive or negative emotional talk from trainee narratives. By exploring the interplay of the whats and the hows, several aspects of feedback processes were identified as potentially emotional for trainers including trainers being concerned about upsetting learners and worried about patient safety. This was illustrated through numerous linguistic devices to establish emotional tone such as metaphoric talk and laughter. These findings suggest that feedback processes can be emotional for trainers. It highlights the need to better understand the 'filter' of emotion for trainers but also to better understand how emotion plays a role in feedback as a complex social process.</p
Pre-main-sequence isochrones - III. The cluster collaboration isochrone server
We present an isochrone server for semi-empirical pre-main-sequence model isochrones in the following systems: Johnson-Cousins, Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Two-Micron All-Sky Survey, Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) Wide-Field Camera and INT Photometric Ha Survey (IPHAS)/UV-Excess Survey (UVEX). The server can be accessed via the Cluster Collaboration webpage http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/timn/isochrones/. To achieve this, we have used the observed colours ofmember stars in young clusters with well-established age, distance and reddening to create fiducial loci in the colour-magnitude diagram. These empirical sequences have been used to quantify the discrepancy between the models and data arising from uncertainties in both the interior and atmospheric models, resulting in tables of semi-empirical bolometric corrections (BCs) in the various photometric systems. The model isochrones made available through the server are based on existing stellar interior models coupled with our newly derived semi-empirical BCs. As part of this analysis, we also present new cluster parameters for both the Pleiades and Praesepe, yielding ages of 135+20 -11 and 665+14 -7 Myr as well as distances of 132 ± 2 and 184 ± 2 pc, respectively (statistical uncertainty only).JMR is funded by a UK Science and Technology Facilities Council
(STFC) studentship. EEM acknowledges support from the National
Science Foundation (NSF) Award AST-1008908. The authors
would like to thank Emanuele Tognelli for the updated set of Pisa
models and John Stauffer for sharing his catalogue of Kron photometric
measurements of Pleiades members. The authors would also
like to thank the referee for comments which have vastly improved
the clarity of the manuscript.
This research has made use of data obtained at the Isaac Newton
Telescope, which is operated on the island of La Palma by the Isaac
Newton Group (ING) in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de
los Muchachos of the Institutio de Astrofisica de Canarias. This research
has made use of archival data products from the Two-Micron
All-Sky Survey (2MASS), which is a joint project of the University
of Massachusetts and the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center,
funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) and the National Science Foundation.
This research has made use of public data from the SDSS. Funding
for the SDSS was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation,
the Participating Institutions, the National Science Foundation, the
US Department of Energy, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration,
the Japanese Monbukagakusho, the Max Planck Society
and the Higher Education Funding Council for England. The
SDSS was managed by the Astrophysical Research Consortium for
the Participating Institutions
A Non-relativistic Logarithmic Conformal Field Theory from a Holographic Point of View
We study a fourth-order derivative scalar field configuration in a fixed
Lifshitz background. Using an auxiliary field we rewrite the equations of
motion as two coupled second order equations. We specialize to the limit that
the mass of the scalar field degenerates with that of the auxiliary field and
show that logarithmic modes appear. Using non-relativistic holographic methods
we calculate the two-point correlation functions of the boundary operators in
this limit and find evidence for a non-relativistic logarithmic conformal field
theory at the boundary.Comment: 17 pages, v2 : refs. adde
Design of an integrated assessment of re-distributed manufacturing for the sustainable, resilient city
Cytosine-to-Uracil Deamination by SssI DNA Methyltransferase
The prokaryotic DNA(cytosine-5)methyltransferase M.SssI shares the specificity of eukaryotic DNA methyltransferases (CG) and is an important model and experimental tool in the study of eukaryotic DNA methylation. Previously, M.SssI was shown to be able to catalyze deamination of the target cytosine to uracil if the methyl donor S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM) was missing from the reaction. To test whether this side-activity of the enzyme can be used to distinguish between unmethylated and C5-methylated cytosines in CG dinucleotides, we re-investigated, using a sensitive genetic reversion assay, the cytosine deaminase activity of M.SssI. Confirming previous results we showed that M.SssI can deaminate cytosine to uracil in a slow reaction in the absence of SAM and that the rate of this reaction can be increased by the SAM analogue 5’-amino-5’-deoxyadenosine. We could not detect M.SssI-catalyzed deamination of C5-methylcytosine (m5C). We found conditions where the rate of M.SssI mediated C-to-U deamination was at least 100-fold higher than the rate of m5C-to-T conversion. Although this difference in reactivities suggests that the enzyme could be used to identify C5-methylated cytosines in the epigenetically important CG dinucleotides, the rate of M.SssI mediated cytosine deamination is too low to become an enzymatic alternative to the bisulfite reaction. Amino acid replacements in the presumed SAM binding pocket of M.SssI (F17S and G19D) resulted in greatly reduced methyltransferase activity. The G19D variant showed cytosine deaminase activity in E. coli, at physiological SAM concentrations. Interestingly, the C-to-U deaminase activity was also detectable in an E. coli ung+ host proficient in uracil excision repair
Probes on D3-D7 Quark-Gluon Plasmas
We study the holographic dual model of quenched flavors immersed in a
quark-gluon plasma with massless dynamical quarks in the Veneziano limit. This
is modeled by embedding a probe D7 brane in a background where the backreaction
of massless D7 branes has been taken into account. The background, and hence
the effects, are perturbative in the Veneziano parameter N_f/N_c, therefore
giving small shifts of all magnitudes like the constituent mass, the quark
condensate, and several transport coefficients. We provide qualitative results
for the effect of flavor degrees of freedom on the probes. For example, the
meson melting temperature is enhanced, while the screening length is
diminished. The drag force is also enhanced.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figure
Kerr/CFT, dipole theories and nonrelativistic CFTs
We study solutions of type IIB supergravity which are SL(2,R) x SU(2) x
U(1)^2 invariant deformations of AdS_3 x S^3 x K3 and take the form of products
of self-dual spacelike warped AdS_3 and a deformed three-sphere. One of these
backgrounds has been recently argued to be relevant for a derivation of
Kerr/CFT from string theory, whereas the remaining ones are holographic duals
of two-dimensional dipole theories and their S-duals. We show that each of
these backgrounds is holographically dual to a deformation of the DLCQ of the
D1-D5 CFT by a specific supersymmetric (1,2) operator, which we write down
explicitly in terms of twist operators at the free orbifold point. The
deforming operator is argued to be exactly marginal with respect to the
zero-dimensional nonrelativistic conformal (or Schroedinger) group - which is
simply SL(2,R)_L x U(1)_R. Moreover, in the supergravity limit of large N and
strong coupling, no other single-trace operators are turned on. We thus propose
that the field theory duals to the backgrounds of interest are nonrelativistic
CFTs defined by adding the single Schroedinger-invariant (1,2) operator
mentioned above to the original CFT action. Our analysis indicates that the
rotating extremal black holes we study are best thought of as finite
right-moving temperature (non-supersymmetric) states in the above-defined
supersymmetric nonrelativistic CFT and hints towards a more general connection
between Kerr/CFT and two-dimensional non-relativistic CFTs.Comment: 48+8 pages, 4 figures; minor corrections and references adde
Qualitative study of the impact of an authentic electronic portfolio in undergraduate medical education
Background
Portfolios are increasingly used in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education. Four medical schools have collaborated with an established NHS electronic portfolio provider to develop and implement an authentic professional electronic portfolio for undergraduate students. We hypothesized that using an authentic portfolio would have significant advantages for students, particularly in familiarizing them with the tool many will continue to use for years after graduation. This paper describes the early evaluation of this undergraduate portfolio at two participating medical schools.
Methods
To gather data, a questionnaire survey with extensive free text comments was used at School 1, and three focus groups were held at School 2. This paper reports thematic analysis of students’ opinions expressed in the free text comments and focus groups.
Results
Five main themes, common across both schools were identified. These concerned the purpose, use and acceptability of the portfolio, advantages of and barriers to the use of the portfolio, and the impacts on both learning and professional identity.
Conclusions
An authentic portfolio mitigated some of the negative aspects of using a portfolio, and had a positive effect on students’ perception of themselves as becoming past of the profession. However, significant barriers to portfolio use remained, including a lack of understanding of the purpose of a portfolio and a perceived damaging effect on feedback
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