Context. Detecting and characterizing Earth-like exoplanets is a critical scientific goal for the next generation of telescopes. However, current direct imaging instruments are hindered by evolving ...noncommon path aberrations (NCPAs), which lead to persistent speckles in the images. The differential optical transfer function (dOTF) is an image-based, noniterative, and model-independent wavefront sensor that combines differential images to estimate the complex field of the pupil. Aims. Given the objective of spectrally characterizing exoplanets to discern their composition and potentially detect biosignatures, we aim to explore the integration of the dOTF sensing method with an integral field unit (IFU) spectrograph. An IFU spectrograph generates a spectral data cube that contains diverse spectral information within a single dataset. Combining these two concepts is expected to improve the efficiency with which NCPAs can be spectrally measured and characterized. Methods. This Letter presents an implementation strategy for integrating dOTF and IFU spectroscopy data, enabling estimations of the electric field at various wavelengths simultaneously. Results. This method is specifically optimized to provide the most effective combination with minimal hardware requirements. It involves the use of multiple simultaneous deformable mirror actuator displacements in conjunction with an adapted Lyot stop employing a circular variable filter. Conclusions. The dOTF wavefront sensor coupled with an IFU spectrograph promises to be rapid and efficient, capable of measuring NCPAs across the entire spectrum provided by the spectrograph. Because the combination of dOTF and IFU spectroscopy is immediately applicable, it is of potential interest for various present-day on-sky instruments, as well as future IFU-based instruments coupled to the next generation of extremely large telescopes (ELTs).
Desert plants are hypothesized to survive the environmental stress inherent to these regions in part thanks to symbioses with microorganisms, and yet these microbial species, the communities they ...form, and the forces that influence them are poorly understood. Here we report the first comprehensive investigation of the microbial communities associated with species of Agave, which are native to semiarid and arid regions of Central and North America and are emerging as biofuel feedstocks. We examined prokaryotic and fungal communities in the rhizosphere, phyllosphere, leaf and root endosphere, as well as proximal and distal soil samples from cultivated and native agaves, through Illumina amplicon sequencing. Phylogenetic profiling revealed that the composition of prokaryotic communities was primarily determined by the plant compartment, whereas the composition of fungal communities was mainly influenced by the biogeography of the host species. Cultivated A. tequilana exhibited lower levels of prokaryotic diversity compared with native agaves, although no differences in microbial diversity were found in the endosphere. Agaves shared core prokaryotic and fungal taxa known to promote plant growth and confer tolerance to abiotic stress, which suggests common principles underpinning Agave–microbe interactions.
Context. Direct detection of exoplanets requires imaging in a highly dynamic range and exquisite image quality and stability. Wavefront error (atmospheric errors, manufacturing errors on optics, ...cophasing residuals, temperature variations, etc.) will limit the efficiency of this endeavor by creating various flavors of speckles that evolve with different timescales. Active wavefront-error correction using a deformable mirror requires measuring the wavefront aberrations in the science image with high accuracy and in a shorter time than the duration of the dominant speckle lifetime. Aims. The self-coherent camera (SCC) is a focal plane wavefront sensor exploiting the coherence of light to generate Fizeau fringes in the image plane to spatially encode speckles. The SCC combines a coronagraph and a modified Lyot stop to which a reference channel is added. The conventional SCC is restricted to long-exposure measurements because the light transmitted through the reference channel is limited. The SCC can correct quasi-static aberrations but precludes short-lived atmospheric aberrations from the measurement. Methods. I propose an alternative to the conventional SCC that I call the fast-modulated SCC. It uses a simplified Lyot stop design and an adequate Fourier filtering algorithm. The theory is established and confirmed by means of numerical simulations. Results. The SCC theory dictates that the separation between the classical Lyot stop and the reference channel must be larger than 1.5 times the Lyot stop diameter. The fast-modulated SCC allows for the reference channel to be placed anywhere, in particular in the vicinity of the pupil where the maximum of diffracted light is found. This alternative represents a complete game changer for the sensor: full compatibility with any type of coronagraph, easy installation in existing instruments, and versatility by accessing short- and long-time exposure measurements. Conclusions. While the conventional SCC can almost not be implemented in existing instruments because the optical beam footprint in the instrument must be wide enough to illuminate the reference channel, which is often seen as a significant shortcoming, the fast-modulated SCC does not require any constraint on this. The fast-modulated SCC also relaxes the high sampling requirement to resolve the fringes, which is usually incompatible with the observation of fainter targets because the fringes are larger. The fast-modulated SCC simultaneously counteracts the two original shortcomings of the SCC concept.
The uptake of macromolecules and larger energy-rich particles into the cell is known as phagocytosis. Phagocytosed material is enzymatically degraded in membrane-bound vesicles of the ...endosome/lysosome system (intracellular digestion). Whereas most, if not all, cells of the animal body are equipped with the molecular apparatus for phagocytosis and intracellular digestion, a few cell types are specialized for a highly efficient mode of phagocytosis. These are the (“professional”) macrophages, motile cells that seek out and eliminate pathogenic invaders or damaged cells. Macrophages form the backbone of the innate immune system. Developmentally, they derive from specialized compartments within the embryonic mesoderm and early vasculature as part of the process of hematopoiesis. Intensive research has revealed in detail molecular and cellular mechanisms of phagocytosis and intracellular digestion in macrophages. In contrast, little is known about a second type of cell that is “professionally” involved in phagocytosis, namely the “enteric phagocyte.” Next to secretory (zymogenic) cells, enteric phagocytes form one of the two major cell types of the intestine of most invertebrate animals. Unlike vertebrates, these invertebrates only partially digest food material in the intestinal lumen. The resulting food particles are absorbed by phagocytosis or pinocytosis and digested intracellularly. In this review, we provide a brief overview of the enteric phagocytes described electron microscopically for diverse invertebrate clades, to then to compare these cells with the “canonical” phagocyte ultrastructure established for macrophages. In addition, we will review observations and speculations associated with the hypothesis that macrophages are evolutionarily derived from enteric phagocytes. This idea was already proposed in the late nineteenth century by Elias Metschnikoff who pioneered the research of phagocytosis for both macrophages and enteric phagocytes. We presume that modern approaches to better understand phagocytosis will be helped by considering the deep evolutionary relationship between the two cell types.
Persistently Postwar Blai Guarné, Artur Lozano-Méndez, Dolores P. Martinez / Blai Guarné, Artur Lozano-Méndez, Dolores P. Martinez
03/2019
eBook
From melodramas to experimental documentaries to anime, mass media in Japan constitute a key site in which the nation's social memory is articulated, disseminated, and contested. Through a series of ...stimulating case studies, this volume examines the political and cultural representations of Japan's past, showing how they have reinforced personal and collective narratives while also formulating new cultural meanings, both on a local scale and in the context of transnational media production and consumption. Drawing upon diverse disciplinary insights and methodologies, these studies collectively offer a nuanced account in which mass media function as much more than a simple ideological tool.
Identifying and understanding COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy within distinct populations may aid future public health messaging. Using nationally representative data from the general adult populations of ...Ireland (N = 1041) and the United Kingdom (UK; N = 2025), we found that vaccine hesitancy/resistance was evident for 35% and 31% of these populations respectively. Vaccine hesitant/resistant respondents in Ireland and the UK differed on a number of sociodemographic and health-related variables but were similar across a broad array of psychological constructs. In both populations, those resistant to a COVID-19 vaccine were less likely to obtain information about the pandemic from traditional and authoritative sources and had similar levels of mistrust in these sources compared to vaccine accepting respondents. Given the geographical proximity and socio-economic similarity of the populations studied, it is not possible to generalize findings to other populations, however, the methodology employed here may be useful to those wishing to understand COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy elsewhere.
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected cities particularly hard. Here, we provide an in-depth characterization of disease incidence and mortality and their dependence on demographic and socioeconomic ...strata in Santiago, a highly segregated city and the capital of Chile. Our analyses show a strong association between socioeconomic status and both COVID-19 outcomes and public health capacity. People living in municipalities with low socioeconomic status did not reduce their mobility during lockdowns as much as those in more affluent municipalities. Testing volumes may have been insufficient early in the pandemic in those places, and both test positivity rates and testing delays were much higher. We find a strong association between socioeconomic status and mortality, measured by either COVID-19-attributed deaths or excess deaths. Finally, we show that infection fatality rates in young people are higher in low-income municipalities. Together, these results highlight the critical consequences of socioeconomic inequalities on health outcomes.
A
bstract
We present an updated global fit of neutrino oscillation data in the simplest three-neutrino framework. In the present study we include up-to-date analyses from a number of experiments. ...Concerning the atmospheric and solar sectors, besides the data considered previously, we give updated analyses of IceCube DeepCore and Sudbury Neutrino Observatory data, respectively. We have also included the latest electron antineutrino data collected by the Daya Bay and RENO reactor experiments, and the long-baseline T2K and NO
ν
A measurements, as reported in the Neutrino 2020 conference. All in all, these new analyses result in more accurate measurements of
θ
13
,
θ
12
,
Δ
m
21
2
and
Δ
m
31
2
. The best fit value for the atmospheric angle
θ
23
lies in the second octant, but first octant solutions remain allowed at ∼ 2
.
4
σ
. Regarding CP violation measurements, the preferred value of
δ
we obtain is 1.08
π
(1.58
π
) for normal (inverted) neutrino mass ordering. The global analysis still prefers normal neutrino mass ordering with 2.5
σ
statistical significance. This preference is milder than the one found in previous global analyses. These new results should be regarded as robust due to the agreement found between our Bayesian and frequentist approaches. Taking into account only oscillation data, there is a weak/moderate preference for the normal neutrino mass ordering of 2
.
00
σ
. While adding neutrinoless double beta decay from the latest Gerda, CUORE and KamLAND-Zen results barely modifies this picture, cosmological measurements raise the preference to 2
.
68
σ
within a conservative approach. A more aggressive data set combination of cosmological observations leads to a similar preference for normal with respect to inverted mass ordering, namely 2
.
70
σ
. This very same cosmological data set provides 2
σ
upper limits on the total neutrino mass corresponding to Σ
m
ν
<
0
.
12 (0
.
15) eV in the normal (inverted) neutrino mass ordering scenario. The bounds on the neutrino mixing parameters and masses presented in this up-to-date global fit analysis include all currently available neutrino physics inputs.
The over-purchasing and hoarding of necessities is a common response to crises, especially in developed economies where there is normally an expectation of plentiful supply. This behaviour was ...observed internationally during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. In the absence of actual scarcity, this behaviour can be described as 'panic buying' and can lead to temporary shortages. However, there have been few psychological studies of this phenomenon. Here we propose a psychological model of over-purchasing informed by animal foraging theory and make predictions about variables that predict over-purchasing by either exacerbating or mitigating the anticipation of future scarcity. These variables include additional scarcity cues (e.g. loss of income), distress (e.g. depression), psychological factors that draw attention to these cues (e.g. neuroticism) or to reassuring messages (eg. analytical reasoning) or which facilitate over-purchasing (e.g. income). We tested our model in parallel nationally representative internet surveys of the adult general population conducted in the United Kingdom (UK: N = 2025) and the Republic of Ireland (RoI: N = 1041) 52 and 31 days after the first confirmed cases of COVID-19 were detected in the UK and RoI, respectively. About three quarters of participants reported minimal over-purchasing. There was more over-purchasing in RoI vs UK and in urban vs rural areas. When over-purchasing occurred, in both countries it was observed across a wide range of product categories and was accounted for by a single latent factor. It was positively predicted by household income, the presence of children at home, psychological distress (depression, death anxiety), threat sensitivity (right wing authoritarianism) and mistrust of others (paranoia). Analytic reasoning ability had an inhibitory effect. Predictor variables accounted for 36% and 34% of the variance in over-purchasing in the UK and RoI respectively. With some caveats, the data supported our model and points to strategies to mitigate over-purchasing in future crises.