Wednesday, December 04, 2024

SPACE/COSMOS

Astronomers close to solving mystery of how universe’s giant galaxies formed



University of Southampton
Two antennae galaxies colliding 

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Two antennae galaxies colliding - photo by NASA

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Credit: Photo by NASA




Astronomers say they are close to solving an intergalactic mystery about the creation of the universe's biggest galaxies which has puzzled experts for decades.

Scientists have discovered the birth sites of gigantic elliptical galaxies which they claim offer new clues about how they were formed.

The creation of these ancient galaxies, which look like bulging footballs compared to our flat disk-like Milky Way, remains a mystery to astrophysicists.

But now academics from the University of Southampton, working with experts across the world, say their new study may finally unravel the enigma.

Dr Annagrazia Puglisi from Southampton, who co-authored the research, said it is likely that large flows of cold gas and collisions between galaxies in the early universe created these giant systems.

She added: “Two disk galaxies smashing together caused gas – the fuel from which stars are formed – to sink towards their centre, generating trillions of new stars.

“These cosmic collisions happened some eight to 12 billion years ago, when the universe was in a much more active phase of its evolution.

“Our findings take us closer to solving a long-standing mystery in astronomy that will redefine our understanding of how galaxies were created in the early universe.”

The study, published in Nature, was a collaboration between Southampton, the Purple Mountain Observatory in China and the Chinese Academy of Science, among others.

Experts analysed more than 100 star-forming galaxies in the distant universe using the world’s largest radio telescope, known as ALMA, located in Chile’s Atacama desert.

The scientists made the discovery using a new technique which looked at the distribution of light emitted by distant and highly-luminous galaxies, said study lead Dr Qing-Hua Tan from the Purple Mountain Observatory.

She added: “This is the first real evidence that spheroids form directly through intense episodes of star formation located in the cores of distant galaxies.

“Astrophysicists have sought to understand this process for decades.

“These galaxies form quickly – gas is sucked inwards to feed black holes and triggers bursts of stars, which are created at rates ten to 100 times faster than our Milky Way.”

Researchers used the open-source A3COSMOS and A3GOODSS archival projects which enabled them to gather high-quality observations of many distant galaxies.

The scientists say they will combine their findings with data taken from telescopes aboard the JWST and Euclid satellites, as well as the Chinese Space Station, to map the stellar components of galaxies.

Dr Puglisi from Southampton added: “This will give us a more complete picture of early galaxy formation and deepen our understanding of how the universe has evolved since the beginning of time.”

Read more at www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08201-6.

ENDS
428 WORDS

 QUALITY OF LIFE


Owning a home in the US linked to longer life



University of Oxford




Dr Casey Breen, Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Oxford University’s Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science and Department of Sociology, conducted the study, published today in Demography.

 

The study found that homeownership was associated with 0.36 years of additional life expectancy for Black male Americans who were born in the early twentieth century, and 0.42 years for their White counterparts.

 

Dr Casey Breen said ‘My study finds homeownership has a meaningful positive impact on life expectancy. These results suggest that social policies that equitably expand homeownership opportunities for Black Americans may help narrow the gap between Black and White male life expectancy in the US.’

 

According to the study, expanding homeownership opportunities for racial minorities could help mitigate the profound racial disparities in mortality the US is currently experiencing. The study also highlights significant disparities in homeownership rates in the twentieth century, with White Americans being almost twice as likely to own a house than Black Americans. Due to systemic historical issues such as slavery and racism, Black Americans had far fewer opportunities to own their home in 1940 with fewer than 10% doing so between the ages of 18–25 in 1940, and only 40% over the age of 65 owning their homes.

 

Using data from the 1920 and 1940 census records that were linked to social security mortality records, and a sibling-based identification strategy, the study was able to analyse the different outcomes in life expectancy for American male adults owning a home between the ages of 24 and 35.

 

While owning a home as opposed to renting can help in the accumulation of wealth, and is associated with better health and living longer, the study found that the property’s value had very little impact on life expectancy. The study also discusses other reasons for this increase in life expectancy for homeowners including a stronger social community, the psychological benefits of homeownership, and better living conditions.

 

Dr Casey Breen said ‘This study also shows that there is a meaningful, statistically significant difference in life expectancy between Americans owning their home and those who rent, with homeowners in early adulthood living approximately six months longer at age 65 than those who rent.’

 

The study controlled for factors such as education attainment, race, income, marital status, and shared family background to provide a snapshot of how US homeownership affected life expectancy in the twentieth century. However, it is important to note that the sample was restricted in terms of gender, ethnicity, nationality and historical context, and is unlikely to be representative of other populations.

 

Editor’s notes

 

The full paper, ‘The Longevity Benefits of Homeownership: Evidence from Early 20th-Century U.S. Male Birth Cohorts’, is under embargo until 09:00 ET (14:00 GMT) on Wednesday 4 December 2024 and will be published in Demography at https://doi.org/10.1215/00703370-11680975 and available at https://read.dukeupress.edu/demography/advance-publication

 

For more information, interviews and a copy of the paper under embargo, please contact the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science’s Media and Communications Officer Bradley Hall-Smith (LCDS.Media@demography.ox.ac.uk) and the study author Dr Casey Breen (casey.breen@demography.ox.ac.uk)

 

About the University of Oxford’s Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science

Based at Oxford Population Health, the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science and Demographic Science Unit are at the forefront of demographic research, disrupting and realigning demography for the benefit of populations around the world. Focussing on inequality, family, biosocial, digital, geospatial, and computational research, our researchers use new types of data, methods and unconventional approaches to tackle the most challenging demographic and population problems of our time.

 

About the University of Oxford’s Department of Sociology

Oxford Sociology is at the forefront of ground-breaking empirical research which spans the full spectrum of the social world. We apply a diverse range of rigorous methods to real-world issues in order to address the most pressing societal challenges of our times. Our commitment to collaborative research ensures that our researchers have the freedom to transcend disciplinary boundaries, foster international partnerships, and explore innovative research. Our research themes include demography, life course research, political sociology and social movements, social inequality, gender and the family, cybercrime and justice, international comparative research, and computational social science.

 

Approaching the unexplored “plasma phase-space” with data science



Contributing to solving the challenges of fusion energy development



National Institutes of Natural Sciences

Figure 1. Schematic illustration of three-dimensional (3D) tomography (left) and phase-space tomography (right). 

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3D spatial tomography estimates the 3D structure of a subject from images taken from multiple directions. On the other hand, newly developed phase-space tomography estimates the plasma phase-space distribution by combining data obtained from highly resolved measurements in (A) velocity versus space, (B) velocity versus time, and (C) time versus space, respectively.

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Credit: National Institute for Fusion Science




A paper summarizing the results of this research was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on November 8.

Fusion energy is being researched and developed as a new source of electric power that will contribute to the realization of a carbon-neutral society. At the National Institute for Fusion Science, research on magnetically confined plasma is being conducted using the Large Helical Device*2 (LHD). The major difference between plasma and other gases is its low density. The density of magnetically confined plasma is only about one millionth that of the atmosphere, and collisions between constituent particles occur only rarely. As a result, the histogram of particle motion, called the velocity distribution function*3, is distorted. Distortions in the velocity distribution function can cause unexpected plasma dynamics, such as sudden changes in plasma temperature and the generation of currents; therefore, an understanding of the background physics is desired.

Spectroscopy, which measures the light emitted from plasma, is often used to determine the plasma velocity distribution function. Because the total amount of light is limited, spatial resolution has to be given up in order to measure the time variation of the velocity distribution function. On the other hand, knowing the change in phase-space distribution of the plasma, resolved in velocity and space coordinates, is essential to predict and control the plasma and to realize a fusion power reactor.

A research group led by Associate Professor Tatsuya Kobayashi, Assistant Professor Mikiro Yoshinuma, and Professor Katsumi Ida of the National Institute for Fusion Science has successfully achieved a high-speed measurement of plasma phase distribution with high precision, by utilizing tomography technology used in the medical field. 

They newly installed a “high-speed luminescence intensity monitor” in addition to the existing “high-resolution spectrometer” and “high-speed spectrometer,” and performed a coordinated operation of the three types of instruments. The obtained data were integrated and tomographic analysis was done to reconstruct the original plasma phase-space distribution. As a result, it became possible for the first time in the world to measure the plasma phase-space distribution at a high speed of 10,000 Hz (10,000 times per second). This is a 50-fold improvement over the previous two hundred hertz. 

Phase-space tomography was applied to the observation of energy exchange between plasma particles and beam particles via waves in the LHD experiment, and revealed evolutions in the plasma phase-space distribution. It is known that particles moving at velocities close to those of waves are accelerated by the waves and gain energy (wave-particle interaction). This phenomenon is analogous to how surfers accelerate by moving simultaneously with waves. Plasma heating via waves is an essential element in achieving highly efficient fusion energy. It has been observed that waves travel primarily in the toroidal direction and interact with the plasma. Phase-space tomography has newly discovered cases where rightward and leftward waves occur simultaneously. Those waves accelerate more particles, which is thought to lead to more efficient plasma heating (Figure 2).

This research has demonstrated that simultaneous operation of different diagnostic systems and integrating data can provide measurement performance that exceeds that from each instrument. It is expected that this measurement technique will be utilized in future research on fusion energy experiments to find a way to control plasmas according to information from the plasma phase-space distribution. Collisionless plasmas are commonly found not only in magnetic confinement plasmas but also in astronomical objects, the sun, and auroras. Therefore, detailed measurements of plasma phase-space distribution are desired for these different systems as well. Phase-space tomography is expected to play a role in different fields in the future.

 

Glossary

*1 Tomography

An analysis method that infers the internal structure of objects that are difficult to observe directly, such as the human body, historical cultural properties, and products before shipment, by combining observations from multiple directions. For example, in medical tomography, projection imaging using X-rays or proton beams is performed from multiple directions, and the internal structure is estimated from the results. In plasma diagnostics, signal integration is performed in time, space, and velocity directions to increase the signal level. The resolution lost in this process is recovered by tomographic techniques. This method is called phase-space tomography.

 

*2 Large Helical Device (LHD)

LHD is an experimental device of the National Institute for Fusion Science. LHD is one of the world's largest plasma confinement devices using superconducting coils. LHD started experiments in 1998. Recently, experiments have been conducted in collaboration with researchers from other fields, such as, astrophysics and life sciences. 

 

*3 Velocity distribution function

In gases and plasmas composed of a large number of particles, it is important to know the statistical properties of the constituent particles, rather than focusing on the dynamics of each particle individually. A histogram of particle velocity, the velocity distribution function, is often used to describe the statistical properties of a gas or plasma. Figure 3 shows an example. The velocity distribution function is described by taking the particle velocity on the horizontal axis and showing the number of particles in that velocity range on the vertical axis. The width of the histogram narrows when particle motion is moderate and widens when it is intense. It is known that when particle collisions are frequent, the shape of the velocity distribution function becomes the normal distribution (Maxwell distribution in physics terminology). In this case, density, temperature, and flow velocity correspond to the area, width, and peak position of the distribution, respectively. In high-temperature plasmas with rare collisions, the velocity distribution function may deviate from the normal distribution and become distorted. In such a situation, the physical properties of the plasma, namely, thermal and electrical conductivity, are considered to drastically change. The plasma distribution resolved in space and velocity coordinates is called plasma phase-space distribution. Experimental observations are underway to understand the physical properties of plasma with a distorted plasma phase space distribution.

Diagnostic systems labeled by A-C correspond to A-C in Figure 1 right.

Schematics of particle motion and velocity distribution function (velocity histogram) for low temperature (left) and high temperature (right) plasmas.

Credit

National Institute for Fusion Science

 

The heart has its own ‘brain’



Karolinska Institutet




New research from Karolinska Institutet and Columbia University shows that the heart has a mini-brain – its own nervous system that controls the heartbeat. A better understanding of this system, which is much more diverse and complex than previously thought, could lead to new treatments for heart diseases. The study, conducted on zebrafish, is published in Nature Communications

The heart has long been thought to be controlled solely by the autonomic nervous system, which transmits signals from the brain. The heart’s neural network, which is embedded in the superficial layers of the heart wall, has been considered a simple structure that relays the signals from the brain. However, recent research suggests that it has a more advanced function than that.

Controlling the heartbeat

Scientists have now discovered that the heart has its own complex nervous system that is crucial to controlling its rhythm.

“This ‘little brain’ has a key role in maintaining and controlling the heartbeat, similar to how the brain regulates rhythmic functions such as locomotion and breathing,” explains Konstantinos Ampatzis, principal researcher and docent at the Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, who led the study.

The researchers identified several types of neurons in the heart that have different functions, including a small group of neurons with pacemaker properties. The finding challenges the current view on how the heartbeat is controlled, which may have clinical implications.

Similar to the human heart

“We were surprised to see how complex the nervous system within the heart is,” says Konstantinos Ampatzis. “Understanding this system better could lead to new insights into heart diseases and help develop new treatments for diseases such as arrhythmias.”

The study was conducted on zebrafish, an animal model that exhibits strong similarities to human heart rate and overall cardiac function. The researchers were able to map out the composition, organisation and function of neurons within the heart using a combination of methods such as single-cell RNA sequencing, anatomical studies and electrophysiological techniques.

New therapeutic targets

“We will now continue to investigate how the heart’s brain interacts with the actual brain to regulate heart functions under different conditions such as exercise, stress, or disease,” says Konstantinos Ampatzis. “We aim to identify new therapeutic targets by examining how disruptions in the heart’s neuronal network contribute to different heart disorders.”

The study was done in close collaboration with researchers at Columbia University, USA, and was funded by, among others, the Dr. Margaretha Nilsson Foundation, Erik and Edith Fernström Foundation, StratNeuro and Karolinska Institutet. There are no reported conflicts of interest.

Publication: ”Decoding the molecular, cellular, and functional heterogeneity of zebrafish intracardiac nervous system”, Andrea Pedroni, Elanur Yilmaz, Lisa Del Vecchio, Prabesh Bhattarai, Inés Talaya Vidal, Yu-Wen E. Dai, Konstantinos Koutsogiannis, Caghan Kizil, Konstantinos Ampatzis, Nature Communications, online 4 December 2024, doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-54830-w.

 

70% of young people with long Covid recover within two years



University College London





Most young people who were confirmed to have long Covid three months after a positive PCR test had recovered within 24 months, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.

The Children and young people with Long Covid (CLoCK) study, published in Nature Communications Medicine and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), is the world’s largest longitudinal cohort study on long Covid in children.

The researchers, led by Professor Sir Terence Stephenson and Professor Roz Shafran (both UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health), asked young people aged 11 to 17 about their health three, six, 12 and 24 months after taking a PCR test for the Covid virus between September 2020 and March 2021. They also asked them to recall their symptoms at the time of taking the test.

In February 2022, the researchers published a consensus definition of long Covid* which involved a young person having more than one symptom (such as tiredness, trouble sleeping, shortness of breath or headaches) alongside problems with either mobility, self-care, doing usual activities, having pain/discomfort, or feeling very worried or sad.

The researchers used this definition for their new study, which examined data from 12,632 young people who had a PCR test for SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes Covid-19).  They found that around 25-30% of young people met the research definition of long Covid 24 months after their initial PCR test.

Of the 12,632 young people in total, there were 943 who had tested positive when first approached and who provided answers at every time point: three, six, 12 and 24 months after their original test.

Of these 943 young people, 233 met the research definition of long Covid three months after their initial positive test. At six months,135 continued to meet the research definition of long Covid. At 12 months, 94 continued to fulfil the long Covid research definition.

However, only 68 of these 943 children and young people (7.2%) continued to fulfil the long Covid research definition when contacted 24 months after their initial positive test.

This means that 24 months after a proven Covid infection, 165 of the 233 young people (70%) who had long Covid three months after the infection and provided information at every time point in the research had recovered. But 68 of the 233 (30%) had not.

Older teenagers and the most deprived were less likely to have recovered. And, strikingly, females were almost twice as likely to still meet the research definition of long Covid at 24 months, compared to males.  

However, the researchers note that they did not assess menstruation and some symptoms (such as headaches and tiredness) may be attributable to pre-menstrual syndrome given the high proportion of girls.

Study Chief Investigator and first author, Professor Sir Terence Stephenson, said: “Our findings show that for teenagers who fulfilled our research definition of long Covid three months after a positive test for the Covid virus, the majority have recovered after two years. This is good news but we intend to do further research to try to better understand why 68 teenagers had not recovered.”

The CLoCK study is a major study funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) to help improve understanding of the causes, symptoms and treatment of the longer-term effects of Covid-19 in people who have not become unwell enough to be admitted to hospital.

The study was co-led by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) in collaboration with researchers at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust (GOSH), Imperial College London, King’s College London, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, the Universities of Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Manchester and Oxford, and University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. CLoCK also works closely with a patient and public involvement advisory group.

Following the 24-month results, data from all time points are now publicly available for other researchers.

The UCL researchers recently published a commentary**, alongside colleagues at GOSH and the University of Brighton, on why better collaboration is needed between clinicians, interventionalists, epidemiologists, statisticians and those with lived experience to ensure a more effective, coordinated response ahead of future pandemics.

Study limitations

The symptoms reported by participants at the time of testing are subject to recall bias as they were reported at the time of first contact with the CLoCK study. However, three-month, six-month, 12-month and 24-month symptoms were reported at the time they were being experienced.

Of the 31,012 children and young people invited to fill in a questionnaire 24-months post-PCR test, 12,632 of them participated and so this is a self-selected group which may introduce bias in the results.

Original PCR tests were taken before the Delta and Omicron variants became dominant, so the findings may not reflect the long-term effects of these variants.

Children and young people self-reported their symptoms. In some instances, such as to assess shortness of breath, it may have been better to conduct in-person medical interviews. However, this was not feasible or practical during the study period.

Importantly, the study primarily focuses on children and young people in England and the findings may not be directly applicable to other populations or countries with different healthcare systems, vaccination rates and demographics.

https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2022/feb/first-research-definition-long-covid-children-and-young-people

** https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01410768241262661