6,012 research outputs found
The magnetized medium around the radio galaxy B2 0755+37: an interaction with the intra-group gas
We explore the magneto-ionic environment of the isolated radio galaxy B2
0755+37 using detailed imaging of the distributions of Faraday rotation and
depolarization over the radio source from Very Large Array observations at
1385,1465 and 4860 MHz and new X-ray data from XMM-Newton. The Rotation Measure
(RM) distribution is complex, with evidence for anisotropic fluctuations in two
regions. The approaching lobe shows low and uniform RM in an unusual `stripe'
along an extension of the jet axis and a linear gradient transverse to this
axis over its Northern half. The leading edge of the receding lobe shows
arc-like RM structures with sign reversals. Elsewhere, the RM structures are
reasonably isotropic. The RM power spectra are well described by cut-off power
laws with slopes ranging from 2.1 to 3.2 in different sub-regions. The
corresponding magnetic-field autocorrelation lengths, where well-determined,
range from 0.25 to 1.4 kpc. It is likely that the fluctuations are mostly
produced by compressed gas and field around the leading edges of the lobes. We
identify areas of high depolarization around the jets and inner lobes. These
could be produced by dense gas immediately surrounding the radio emission
containing a magnetic field which is tangled on small scales. We also identify
four ways in which the well known depolarization (Faraday depth) asymmetry
between jetted and counter-jetted lobes of extended radio sources can be
modified by interactions with the surrounding medium.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Full
resolution paper available at: ftp://ftp.ira.inaf.it/pub/outgoing/guidetti/
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO
Evaluation of the onset time and intubation conditions of rocuronium bromide in children
Publisher's copy made available with the permission of the publisher © 1997 Australian Society of AnaesthetistsWe have assessed, in children aged three to eight years, the intubating conditions after administration of rocuronium 0.6 mg/kg at 50 or 60 seconds, in groups of 15 patients. Intubating conditions were excellent in 11, good in 3 and fair in 1 patient at 50 seconds and excellent in 12 and good in 3 patients at 60 seconds. The mean onset time, for all patients, to when the first twitch of the train of four (T1), measured at the adductor pollicis, was depressed to less than 30% and 5% of control was 50 (SD 11.4) seconds and 94 (SD 31.7) seconds respectively. Depression of T1 to less than 30% of control, measured at the adductor pollicis in children, appears to indicate that intubating conditions will be clinically acceptable when using rocuronium.P.F. McDonald, D.A. Sainsbury, R.J. Lain
Structure of the magnetoionic medium around the FR Class I radio galaxy 3C 449
The goal of this work is to constrain the strength and structure of the
magnetic field associated with the environment of the radio source 3C 449,
using observations of Faraday rotation, which we model with a structure
function technique and by comparison with numerical simulations. We assume that
the magnetic field is a Gaussian, isotropic random variable and that it is
embedded in the hot intra-group plasma surrounding the radio source. For this
purpose, we present detailed rotation measure images for the polarized radio
source 3C 449, previously observed with the Very Large Array at seven
frequencies between 1.365 and 8.385 GHz. We quantify the statistics of the
magnetic-field fluctuations by deriving rotation measure structure functions,
which we fit using models derived from theoretical power spectra. We quantify
the errors due to sampling by making multiple two-dimensional realizations of
the best-fitting power spectrum.We also use depolarization measurements to
estimate the minimum scale of the field variations. We then make
three-dimensional models with a gas density distribution derived from X-ray
observations and a random magnetic field with this power spectrum. Under these
assumptions we find that both rotation measure and depolarization data are
consistent with a broken power-law magnetic-field power spectrum, with a break
at about 11 kpc and slopes of 2.98 and 2.07 at smaller and larger scales
respectively. The maximum and minimum scales of the fluctuations are around 65
and 0.2 kpc, respectively. The average magnetic field strength at the cluster
centre is 3.5 +/-1.2 micro-G, decreasing linearly with the gas density within
about 16 kpc of the nucleus.Comment: 19 pages; 14 figures; accepted for publication on A&A. For a high
quality version use ftp://ftp.eso.org/pub/general/guidetti
Multifrequency VLA observations of the FR I radio galaxy 3C 31: morphology, spectrum and magnetic field
We present high-quality VLA images of the FR I radio galaxy 3C 31 in the
frequency range 1365 to 8440 MHz with angular resolutions from 0.25 to 40
arcsec. Our new images reveal complex, well resolved filamentary substructure
in the radio jets and tails. We also use these images to explore the spectral
structure of 3C 31 on large and small scales. We infer the apparent magnetic
field structure by correcting for Faraday rotation. Some of the intensity
substructure in the jets is clearly related to structure in their apparent
magnetic field: there are arcs of emission where the degree of linear
polarization increases, with the apparent magnetic field parallel to the ridges
of the arcs. The spectral indices are significantly steeper (0.62) within 7
arcsec of the nucleus than between 7 and 50 arcsec (0.52 - 0.57). The spectra
of the jet edges are also slightly flatter than the average for their
surroundings. At larger distances, the jets are clearly delimited from
surrounding larger-scale emission both by their flatter radio spectra and by
sharp brightness gradients. The spectral index of 0.62 in the first 7 arcsec of
3C 31's jets is very close to that found in other FR I galaxies where their
jets first brighten in the radio and where X-ray synchrotron emission is most
prominent. Farther from the nucleus, where the spectra flatten, X-ray emission
is fainter relative to the radio. The brightest X-ray emission from FR I jets
is therefore not associated with the flattest radio spectra, but with a
particle-acceleration process whose characteristic energy index is 2.24. The
spectral flattening with distance from the nucleus occurs where our
relativistic jet models require deceleration, and the flatter-spectra at the
jet edges may be associated with transverse velocity shear. (Slightly abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
PCR for the detection of pathogens in neonatal early onset sepsis.
BACKGROUND: A large proportion of neonates are treated for presumed bacterial sepsis with broad spectrum antibiotics even though their blood cultures subsequently show no growth. This study aimed to investigate PCR-based methods to identify pathogens not detected by conventional culture. METHODS: Whole blood samples of 208 neonates with suspected early onset sepsis were tested using a panel of multiplexed bacterial PCRs targeting Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS), Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS), Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Ureaplasma parvum, Ureaplasma urealyticum, Mycoplasma hominis and Mycoplasma genitalium, a 16S rRNA gene broad-range PCR and a multiplexed PCR for Candida spp. RESULTS: Two-hundred and eight samples were processed. In five of those samples, organisms were detected by conventional culture; all of those were also identified by PCR. PCR detected bacteria in 91 (45%) of the 203 samples that did not show bacterial growth in culture. S. aureus, Enterobacteriaceae and S. pneumoniae were the most frequently detected pathogens. A higher bacterial load detected by PCR was correlated positively with the number of clinical signs at presentation. CONCLUSION: Real-time PCR has the potential to be a valuable additional tool for the diagnosis of neonatal sepsis
Ordered magnetic fields around radio galaxies: evidence for interaction with the environment
We present detailed imaging of Faraday rotation and depolarization for the
radio galaxies 0206+35, 3C 270, 3C 353 and M 84, based on Very Large Array
observations at multiple frequencies in the range 1365 to 8440 MHz. This work
suggests a more complex picture of the magneto-ionic environments of radio
galaxies than was apparent from earlier work. All of the sources show
spectacular banded rotation measure (RM) structures with contours of constant
RM perpendicular to the major axes of their radio lobes. We give a
comprehensive description of the banded RM phenomenon and present an initial
attempt to interpret it as a consequence of interactions between the sources
and their surroundings. We show that the material responsible for the Faraday
rotation is in front of the radio emission and that the bands are likely to be
caused by magnetized plasma which has been compressed by the expanding radio
lobes. A two-dimensional magnetic structure in which the field lines are a
family of ellipses draped around the leading edge of the lobe can produce RM
bands in the correct orientation for any source orientation. We also report the
first detections of rims of high depolarization at the edges of the inner radio
lobes of M 84 and 3C 270. These are spatially coincident with shells of
enhanced X-ray surface brightness, in which both the field strength and the
thermal gas density are likely to be increased by compression.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Full
resolution paper available at http://www.ira.inaf.it/~guidetti/bands/
Subjects: Astrophysics (astro-ph
Boson Sampling from Gaussian States
We pose a generalized Boson Sampling problem. Strong evidence exists that
such a problem becomes intractable on a classical computer as a function of the
number of Bosons. We describe a quantum optical processor that can solve this
problem efficiently based on Gaussian input states, a linear optical network
and non-adaptive photon counting measurements. All the elements required to
build such a processor currently exist. The demonstration of such a device
would provide the first empirical evidence that quantum computers can indeed
outperform classical computers and could lead to applications
Dynamical Phase Transitions In Driven Integrate-And-Fire Neurons
We explore the dynamics of an integrate-and-fire neuron with an oscillatory
stimulus. The frustration due to the competition between the neuron's natural
firing period and that of the oscillatory rhythm, leads to a rich structure of
asymptotic phase locking patterns and ordering dynamics. The phase transitions
between these states can be classified as either tangent or discontinuous
bifurcations, each with its own characteristic scaling laws. The discontinuous
bifurcations exhibit a new kind of phase transition that may be viewed as
intermediate between continuous and first order, while tangent bifurcations
behave like continuous transitions with a diverging coherence scale.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Structures of the magnetoionic media around the FR I radio galaxies 3C 31 and Hydra A
We use high-quality VLA images of the Fanaroff & Riley Class I radio galaxy
3C 31 at six frequencies in the range 1365 to 8440MHz to explore the spatial
scale and origin of the rotation measure (RM) fluctuations on the line of sight
to the radio source. We analyse the distribution of the degree of polarization
to show that the large depolarization asymmetry between the North and South
sides of the source seen in earlier work largely disappears as the resolution
is increased. We show that the depolarization seen at low resolution results
primarily from unresolved gradients in a Faraday screen in front of the
synchrotron-emitting plasma. We establish that the residual degree of
polarization in the short-wavelength limit should follow a Burn law and we fit
such a law to our data to estimate the residual depolarization at high
resolution. We show that the observed RM variations over selected areas of 3C
31 are consistent with a power spectrum of magnetic fluctuations in front of 3C
31 whose power-law slope changes significantly on the scales sampled by our
data. The power spectrum can only have the form expected for Kolmogorov
turbulence on scales <5 kpc. On larger scales we find a flatter slope. We also
compare the global variations of RM across 3C 31 with the results of
three-dimensional simulations of the magnetic-field fluctuations in the
surrounding magnetoionic medium. We show that our data are consistent with a
field distribution that favours the plane perpendicular to the jet axis -
probably because the radio source has evacuated a large cavity in the
surrounding medium. We also apply our analysis techniques to the case of Hydra
A, where the shape and the size of the cavities produced by the source in the
surrounding medium are known from X-ray data. (Abridged)Comment: 33 pages, 25 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Calibration and High Fidelity Measurement of a Quantum Photonic Chip
Integrated quantum photonic circuits are becoming increasingly complex.
Accurate calibration of device parameters and detailed characterization of the
prepared quantum states are critically important for future progress. Here we
report on an effective experimental calibration method based on Bayesian
updating and Markov chain Monte Carlo integration. We use this calibration
technique to characterize a two qubit chip and extract the reflectivities of
its directional couplers. An average quantum state tomography fidelity of
93.79+/-1.05% against the four Bell states is achieved. Furthermore, comparing
the measured density matrices against a model using the non-ideal device
parameters derived from the calibration we achieve an average fidelity of
97.57+/-0.96%. This pinpoints non-ideality of chip parameters as a major factor
in the decrease of Bell state fidelity. We also perform quantum state
tomography for Bell states while continuously varying photon distinguishability
and find excellent agreement with theory
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