22,409 results on '"Waddell"'
Search Results
2. #41. Discovery of novel tubulin code in bone metastasis of breast cancer
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Shreya Patel, Marcus Winogradzki, Waddell Holmes, Ahmad H. Othman, Alan Blank, Ryan Ross, and Jitesh Pratap
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Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2024
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3. WALLABY Pilot Survey: kNN identification of perturbed galaxies through HI morphometrics
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Holwerda, B. W., Dénes, Helga, Rhee, J., Leahy, D., Koribalsky, B., Yu, N., Deg, N., Westmeier, T., Lee-Waddell, K., Ascasibar, Y., Saraf, M., Lin, X., Catinella, B., and Hess, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxy morphology in stellar light can be described by a series of "non-parametric" or "morphometric" parameters, such as concentration-asymmetry-smoothness, Gini, $M_{20}$, and Sersic fit. These parameters can be applied to column density maps of atomic hydrogen (HI). The HI distribution is susceptible to perturbations by environmental effects, e.g. inter-galactic medium pressure and tidal interactions. Therefore, HI morphology can potentially identify galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping or tidal interactions. We explore three fields in the WALLABY Pilot HI survey and identify perturbed galaxies based on a k-nearest Neighbor (kNN) algorithm using an HI morphometric feature space. For training, we used labeled galaxies in the combined NGC 4808 and NGC 4636 fields with six HI morphometrics to train and test a kNN classifier. The kNN classification is proficient in classifying perturbed galaxies with all metrics -- accuracy, precision and recall -- at 70-80%. By using the kNN method to identify perturbed galaxies in the deployment field, the NGC 5044 mosaic, we find that in most regards, the scaling relations of perturbed and unperturbed galaxies have similar distribution in the scaling relations of stellar mass vs star formation rate and the Baryonic Tully-Fisher relation, but the HI and stellar mass relation flatter than of the unperturbed galaxies. Our results for NGC 5044 provide a prediction for future studies on the fraction of galaxies undergoing interaction in this catalogue and to build a training sample to classify such galaxies in the full WALLABY survey., Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, 8 tables, accepted by PASA
- Published
- 2025
4. WALLABY Pilot Survey & ASymba: Comparing HI Detection Asymmetries to the SIMBA Simulation
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Perron-Cormier, Mathieu, Deg, Nathan, Spekkens, Kristine, Richardson, Mark L. A., Glowacki, Marcin, Oman, Kyle A., Verheijen, Marc A. W., Hank, Nadine A. N., Blyth, Sarah, Dénes, Helga, Rhee, Jonghwan, Elagali, Ahmed, Shen, Austin Xiaofan, Raja, Wasim, Lee-Waddell, Karen, Cortese, Luca, Catinella, Barbara, and Westmeier, Tobias
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
An avenue for understanding cosmological galaxy formation is to compare morphometric parameters in observations and simulations of galaxy assembly. In this second paper of the ASymba: Asymmetries of HI in SIMBA Galaxies series, we measure atomic gas HI asymmetries in spatially-resolved detections from the untargetted WALLABY survey, and compare them to realizations of WALLABY-like mock samples from the SIMBA cosmological simulations. We develop a Scanline Tracing method to create mock galaxy HI datacubes which minimizes shot noise along the spectral dimension compared to particle-based methods, and therefore spurious asymmetry contributions. We compute 1D and 3D asymmetries for spatially-resolved WALLABY Pilot Survey detections, and find that the highest 3D asymmetries A3D>0.5 stem from interacting systems or detections with strong bridges or tails. We then construct a series of WALLABY-like mock realizations drawn from the SIMBA 50 Mpc simulation volume, and compare their asymmetry distributions. We find that the incidence of high A3D detections is higher in WALLABY than in the SIMBA mocks, but that difference is not statistically significant (p-value = 0.05). The statistical power of quantitative comparisons of asymmetries such as the one presented here will improve as the WALLABY survey progresses, and as simulation volumes and resolutions increase., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
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- 2025
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5. Low-Frequency Turnover Star Forming Galaxies I: Radio Continuum Observations and Global Properties
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Grundy, J. A., Seymour, N., Wong, O. I., Lee-Waddell, K., Galvin, T. J., and Cluver, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The broad-band radio spectral energy distribution (SED) of star-forming galaxies (SFGs) contains a wealth of complex physics. We aim to determine the physical emission and loss processes causing radio SED curvature and steepening to see which observed global astrophysical properties are correlated with radio SED complexity. We have acquired radio continuum data between 70 MHz and 17 GHz for a sample of 19 southern local (z < 0.04) SFGs. Of this sample 11 are selected to contain low-frequency (< 300 MHz) turnovers (LFTOs) in their SEDs and eight are control galaxies with similar global properties. We model the radio SEDs for our sample using a Bayesian framework whereby radio emission (synchrotron and free-free) and absorption or loss processes are included modularly. We find that without the inclusion of higher frequency data, single synchrotron power-law based models are always preferred for our sample; however, additional processes including free-free absorption (FFA) and synchrotron losses are often required to accurately model radio SED complexity in SFGs. The fitted synchrotron spectral indices range from -0.45 to -1.07 and are strongly anticorrelated with stellar mass suggesting that synchrotron losses are the dominant mechanism acting to steepen the spectral index in larger nearby SFGs. We find that LFTOs in the radio SED are independent from the inclination. The merging systems in our SFG sample have elevated specific star formation rates and flatter fitted spectral indices with unconstrained LFTOs. Lastly, we find no significant separation in global properties between SFGs with or without modelled LFTOs. Overall LFTOs are likely caused by a combination of FFA and ionisation losses in individual recent starburst regions with specific orientations and interstellar medium properties that, when averaged over the entire galaxy, do not correlate with global astrophysical properties., Comment: 34 pages, 18 figures, 12 tables. Accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2024
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6. Is it time to reduce the age of screening for colorectal cancer?
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Waddell, Oliver, Glyn, Tamara, and Frizelle, Frank
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- 2023
7. Cryptographic tests of the python's lunch conjecture
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May, Alex, Pasterski, Sabrina, Waddell, Chris, and Xu, Michelle
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
In the AdS/CFT correspondence, a subregion of the CFT allows for the recovery of a corresponding subregion of the bulk known as its entanglement wedge. In some cases, an entanglement wedge contains a locally but not globally minimal surface homologous to the CFT subregion, in which case it is said to contain a python's lunch. It has been proposed that python's lunch geometries should be modelled by tensor networks that feature projective operations where the wedge narrows. This model leads to the python's lunch (PL) conjecture, which asserts that reconstructing information from past the locally minimal surface is computationally difficult. In this work, we invoke cryptographic tools pertaining to a primitive known as the Conditional Disclosure of Secrets (CDS) to develop consequences of the projective tensor network model that can be checked directly in AdS/CFT. We argue from the tensor network picture that the mutual information between appropriate CFT subregions is lower bounded linearly by an area difference associated with the geometry of the lunch. Recalling that the mutual information is also computed by bulk extremal surfaces, this gives a checkable geometrical consequence of the tensor network model. We prove weakened versions of this geometrical statement in asymptotically AdS$_{2+1}$ spacetimes satisfying the null energy condition, and confirm it in some example geometries, supporting the tensor network model and by proxy the PL conjecture. On the other hand, we point out a tension between the PL conjecture and a plausible cryptographically inspired lower bound on the mutual information involving the complexity of reconstructing operators inside the lunch; this suggests the existence of protocols for computationally secure CDS requiring unexpectedly small entanglement., Comment: An important update to the estimated security parameter for holographic CDS is given, leading to a different conjectured lower bound than in v1. Updates to the structure of the paper reflect this change
- Published
- 2024
8. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Gas-Rich Galaxy Scaling Relations from Marginally-Resolved Kinematic Models
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Deg, N., Arora, N., Spekkens, K., Halloran, R., Catinella, B., Jones, M. G., Courtois, H., Glazebrook, K., Bosma, A., Cortese, L., Dénes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kamphuis, P., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Piña, P. E. Mancera, Mould, J., Rhee, J., Shao, L., Staveley-Smith, L., Wang, J., Westmeier, T., and Wong, O. I.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first set of galaxy scaling relations derived from kinematic models of the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY) pilot phase observations. Combining the results of the first and second pilot data releases, there are 236 available kinematic models. We develop a framework for robustly measuring HI disk structural properties from these kinematic models; applicable to the full WALLABY survey. Utilizing this framework, we obtained the HI size, a measure of the rotational velocity, and angular momentum for 148 galaxies. These comprise the largest sample of galaxy properties from an untargetted, uniformly observed and modelled HI survey to date. We study the neutral atomic Hydrogen (HI) size-mass, size-velocity, mass-velocity, and angular momentum-mass scaling relations. We calculate the slope, intercept, and scatter for these scaling relations and find that they are similar to those obtained from other HI surveys. We also obtain stellar masses for 92 of the 148 robustly measured galaxies using multiband photometry through the Dark Energy Sky Instrument Legacy Imaging Survey Data Release-10 images. We use a subset of 61 of these galaxies that have consistent optical and kinematic inclinations to examine the stellar and baryonic Tully Fisher relations, the gas fraction-disk stability and gas fraction-baryonic mass relations. These measurements and relations demonstrate the unprecedented resource that WALLABY will represent for resolved galaxy scaling relations in HI., Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, Table 1 data available for download with package, accepted to ApJ
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- 2024
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9. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Star Formation Enhancement and Suppression in Gas-rich Galaxy Pairs
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Huang, Qifeng, Wang, Jing, Lin, Xuchen, Oh, Se-Heon, Chen, Xinkai, Catinella, Barbara, Deg, Nathan, Dénes, Helga, For, Bi-Qing, Koribalski, Baerbel, Lee-Waddell, Karen, Rhee, Jonghwan, Shen, Austin, Shao, Li, Spekkens, Kristine, Staveley-Smith, Lister, Westmeier, Tobias, Wong, O. Ivy, and Bosma, Albert
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxy interactions can significantly affect the star formation in galaxies, but it remains a challenge to achieve a consensus on the star formation rate (SFR) enhancement in galaxy pairs. Here, we investigate the SFR enhancement of gas-rich galaxy pairs detected by the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY). We construct a sample of 278 paired galaxies spanning a stellar mass ($M_\ast$) range from $10^{7.6}$ to $10^{11.2}M_\odot$. We obtain individual masses of atomic hydrogen (HI) for these paired galaxies, using a novel deblending algorithm for HI data cubes. Quantifying the interaction stages and strengths with parameters motivated by first principles, we find that at fixed stellar and HI mass, the alteration in SFR of galaxy pairs starts when their dark matter halos encounter. For galaxies with stellar mass lower than $10^9M_\odot$, their SFRs show tentative suppression of 1.4 sigma after the halo encounter, and then become enhanced when their HI disks overlap, regardless of mass ratios. In contrast, the SFRs of galaxies with $M_\ast > 10^9M_\odot$ increase monotonically toward smaller projected distances and radial velocity offsets. When a close companion is present, a pronounced SFR enhancement is found for the most HI-poor high-mass galaxies in our sample. Collecting the observational evidence, we provide a coherent picture of the evolution of galaxy pairs, and discuss how the tidal effects and hydrodynamic processes shape the SFR enhancement. Our results provide a coherent picture of gas-rich galaxy interactions and impose constraints on the underlying physical processes., Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2024
10. An X-ray flaring event and a variable soft X-ray excess in the Seyfert LCRS B040659.9-385922 as detected with eROSITA
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Krishnan, S., Markowitz, A. G., Krumpe, M., Homan, D., Brogan, R., Haemmerich, S., Gromadzki, M., Saha, T., Schramm, M., Reichart, D. E., Winkler, H., Waddell, S., Wilms, J., Rau, A., Liu, Z., and Grotova, I.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Extreme continuum variability in AGNs can indicate extreme changes in accretion flows onto supermassive black holes. We explore the multiwavelength nature of a continuum flare in the Seyfert LCRS B040659.9$-$385922. The all-sky X-ray surveys conducted by the eROSITA showed that its X-ray flux increased by a factor of roughly five over six months, and concurrent optical photometric monitoring with the ATLAS showed a simultaneous increase. We triggered a multiwavelength follow-up monitoring program (XMM, NICER; optical spectroscopy) to study the evolution of the accretion disk, broad-line region, and X-ray corona. During the campaign, X-ray and optical continuum flux subsided over roughly six months. We detected a soft X-ray excess near the flare peak and after it subsided, both exhibiting a power-law (nonthermal) behavior. We modeled the broadband optical/UV/X-ray spectral energy distribution at both the flare peak and post-flare times with the AGNSED model, incorporating thermal disk emission into the optical/UV and warm thermal Comptonization in the soft X-rays. Additionally, we find that the broad Heii $\lambda$4686 emission line fades significantly as the optical/UV/X-ray continuum fades, which could indicate a substantial flare of disk emission above 54 eV. We also observed a redshifted broad component in the H${\beta}$ emission line that is present during the high flux state of the source and disappears in subsequent observations. We witnessed a likely sudden strong increase in local accretion rate, which manifested itself via an increase in accretion disk emission and thermal Comptonization emission in the soft X-rays, followed by a decrease in accretion and Comptonized luminosity. The physical processes leading to such substantial variations are still an open question, and future continuous monitoring along with multi-wavelength studies will shed some light on it., Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures
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- 2024
11. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Public data release of ~1800 HI sources and high-resolution cut-outs from Pilot Survey Phase 2
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Murugeshan, C., Deg, N., Westmeier, T., Shen, A. X., For, B. -Q., Spekkens, K., Wong, O. I., Staveley-Smith, L., Catinella, B., Lee-Waddell, K., Dénes, H., Rhee, J., Cortese, L., Goliath, S., Halloran, R., van der Hulst, J. M., Kamphuis, P., Koribalski, B. S., Kraan-Korteweg, R. C., Lelli, F., Venkataraman, P., Verdes-Montenegro, L., and Yu, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the Pilot Survey Phase 2 data release for the Wide-field ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY), carried-out using the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP). We present 1760 HI detections (with a default spatial resolution of 30") from three pilot fields including the NGC 5044 and NGC 4808 groups as well as the Vela field, covering a total of ~180 deg$^2$ of the sky and spanning a redshift up to $z \simeq 0.09$. This release also includes kinematic models for over 126 spatially resolved galaxies. The observed median rms noise in the image cubes is 1.7 mJy per 30" beam and 18.5 kHz channel. This corresponds to a 5$\sigma$ HI column density sensitivity of $\sim 9.1\times10^{19}(1 + z)^4$ cm$^{-2}$ per 30" beam and $\sim 20$ km/s channel, and a 5$\sigma$ HI mass sensitivity of $\sim 5.5\times10^8 (D/100$ Mpc)$^{2}$ M$_{\odot}$ for point sources. Furthermore, we also present for the first time 12" high-resolution images ("cut-outs") and catalogues for a sub-sample of 80 sources from the Pilot Survey Phase 2 fields. While we are able to recover sources with lower signal-to-noise ratio compared to sources in the Public Data Release 1, we do note that some data quality issues still persist, notably, flux discrepancies that are linked to the impact of side lobes associated with the dirty beams due to inadequate deconvolution. However, in spite of these limitations, the WALLABY Pilot Survey Phase 2 has already produced roughly a third of the number of HIPASS sources, making this the largest spatially resolved HI sample from a single survey to date., Comment: 25 pages, 16 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia (PASA)
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- 2024
12. WALLABY Pilot Survey: HI source-finding with a machine learning framework
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Wang, Li, Wong, O. Ivy, Westmeier, Tobias, Murugeshan, Chandrashekar, Lee-Waddell, Karen, Cai, Yuanzhi., Liu, Xiu., Shen, Austin Xiaofan, Rhee, Jonghwan, Dénes, Helga, Deg, Nathan, Kamphuis, Peter, and Catinella, Barbara
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The data volumes generated by the WALLABY atomic Hydrogen (HI) survey using the Australiian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) necessitate greater automation and reliable automation in the task of source-finding and cataloguing. To this end, we introduce and explore a novel deep learning framework for detecting low Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) HI sources in an automated fashion. Specfically, our proposed method provides an automated process for separating true HI detections from false positives when used in combination with the Source Finding Application (SoFiA) output candidate catalogues. Leveraging the spatial and depth capabilities of 3D Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), our method is specifically designed to recognise patterns and features in three-dimensional space, making it uniquely suited for rejecting false positive sources in low SNR scenarios generated by conventional linear methods. As a result, our approach is significantly more accurate in source detection and results in considerably fewer false detections compared to previous linear statistics-based source finding algorithms. Performance tests using mock galaxies injected into real ASKAP data cubes reveal our method's capability to achieve near-100% completeness and reliability at a relatively low integrated SNR~3-5. An at-scale version of this tool will greatly maximise the science output from the upcoming widefield HI surveys., Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
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- 2024
13. Early-onset colorectal cancer : never too young
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Waddell, Oliver, Keenan, Jacqueline, and Frizelle, Frank
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- 2022
14. The First Large Absorption Survey in HI (FLASH): II. Pilot Survey data release and first results
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Yoon, Hyein, Sadler, Elaine M., Mahony, Elizabeth K., Aditya, J. N. H. S., Allison, James R., Glowacki, Marcin, Kerrison, Emily F., Moss, Vanessa A., Su, Renzhi, Weng, Simon, Whiting, Matthew, Wong, O. Ivy, Callingham, Joseph R., Curran, Stephen J., Darling, Jeremy, Edge, Alastair C., Ellison, Sara L., Emig, Kimberly L., Garratt-Smithson, Lilian, German, Gordon, Grasha, Kathryn, Koribalski, Baerbel S., Morganti, Raffaella, Oosterloo, Tom, Péroux, Céline, Pettini, Max, Pimbblet, Kevin A., Zheng, Zheng, Zwaan, Martin, Ball, Lewis, Bock, Douglas C. -J., Brodrick, David, Bunton, John D., Cooray, F. R., Edwards, Philip G., Hayman, Douglas B., Hotan, Aidan W., Lee-Waddell, K., McClure-Griffiths, N. M., Ng, A., Phillips, Chris J., Raja, Wasim, Voronkov, Maxim A., and Westmeier, Tobias
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The First Large Absorption Survey in HI (FLASH) is a large-area radio survey for neutral hydrogen in the redshift range 0.4
1$, and appear to be a mixture of intervening and associated systems. The overall detection rate for HI absorption lines in the Pilot Surveys (0.3 to 0.5 lines per ASKAP field) is a factor of two below the expected value. There are several possible reasons for this, but one likely factor is the presence of a range of spectral-line artefacts in the Pilot Survey data that have now been mitigated and are not expected to recur in the full FLASH survey. A future paper will discuss the host galaxies of the HI absorption systems identified here., Comment: 46 pages, 25 figures, 10 tables. Submitted to PASA - Published
- 2024
15. WALLABY Pilot Survey: the Tully-Fisher relation in the NGC 4808, Vela and NGC 5044 fields
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Mould, Jeremy, Jarrett, T. H., Courtois, Hélène, Bosma, Albert, Deg, Nathan, Dupuy, Alexandra, Staveley-Smith, Lister, Taylor, E. N., English, Jayanne, Rajohnson, S. H. A., Kraan-Korteweg, Renée, Forbes, Duncan, Dénes, Helga, Lee-Waddell, Karen, Shen, Austin, Wong, O. I., Holwerda, Benne, Koribalski, Bärbel, Leahy, Denis, Piña, Pavel Mancera, and Yu, Niankun
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Tully-Fisher Relation (TFR) is a well-known empirical relationship between the luminosity of a spiral galaxy and its circular velocity, allowing us to estimate redshift independent distances. Here we use high signal-to-noise HI 21-cm integrated spectra from the second pilot data release (PDR2, 180 deg2) of the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY). In order to prepare for the full WALLABY survey, we have investigated the TFR in phase 2 of the pilot survey with a further three fields. The data were obtained with wide-field Phased Array Feeds on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) and have an angular resolution of 30 arcsec and a velocity resolution of ~4 km/s. Galaxy luminosities have been measured from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), and optical galaxy inclinations from the Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey. We present TFRs for wavelengths from 0.8-3.4{\mu}m. We examine sources of galaxy inclination data and investigate magnitudes from the DECam Local Volume Exploration Survey (DELVE) and DENIS catalogues and the 4HS target catalogue based on the VISTA Hemisphere Survey (VHS). We consider the baryonic TFR. These are all of interest for TFR using the full WALLABY survey of 200,000 galaxies. We demonstrate that WALLABY TFR distances can take their place among state of the art studies of the local velocity field., Comment: to appear in MNRAS. One figure removed
- Published
- 2024
16. Holographic motivations and observational evidence for decreasing dark energy
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Van Raamsdonk, Mark and Waddell, Chris
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
Negative lambda gravitational effective field theories dual to holographic CFTs have potentially realistic cosmological solutions. Generic cosmological solutions of these effective field theories have scalar field evolution that can lead to a period of accelerated expansion when the scalar field is at positive values of its potential (Fig. 1). If such a model describes our universe, significant evolution of dark energy is expected over a Hubble time as the scalar descends from positive to negative values of its potential towards the AdS extremum. Our recent observational study 2305.04946 based on supernova and baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) observations suggests that significant evolution of dark energy associated with a descending scalar field may be preferred by data (Fig. 2). Taking a linear approximation to the scalar potential around the present value, a standard likelihood analysis gives an $e^{- \chi^2/2}$ distribution in which $dV/dt$ is presently negative in $99.99 \%$ of the distribution, with a mean fractional variation of the potential of $36 \%$ over the period $z \lessapprox 2$ over which supernova data is available. In this note, we review these theoretical and observational results and provide an update on the question of how the physics of these cosmological solutions can be related to the physics of the underlying CFT., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures
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- 2024
17. Trial of Eczema allergy Screening Tests (TEST) feasibility study
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Matthew Ridd, Douglas Webb, Kirsty Roberts, Turner Nicholas, Santer Miriam, Chalmers Joanne, Marriage Deborah, Waddell Lisa, Garfield Kirsty, Coast Joanna, Selman Lucy, Clement Clare, Angier Elizabeth, and Boyle Robert
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Published
- 2020
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18. Conditional disclosure of secrets with quantum resources
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Asadi, Vahid R., Kuroiwa, Kohdai, Leung, Debbie, May, Alex, Pasterski, Sabrina, and Waddell, Chris
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
The conditional disclosure of secrets (CDS) primitive is among the simplest cryptographic settings in which to study the relationship between communication, randomness, and security. CDS involves two parties, Alice and Bob, who do not communicate but who wish to reveal a secret $z$ to a referee if and only if a Boolean function $f$ has $f(x,y)=1$. Alice knows $x,z$, Bob knows $y$, and the referee knows $x,y$. Recently, a quantum analogue of this primitive called CDQS was defined and related to $f$-routing, a task studied in the context of quantum position-verification. CDQS has the same inputs, outputs, and communication pattern as CDS but allows the use of shared entanglement and quantum messages. We initiate the systematic study of CDQS, with the aim of better understanding the relationship between privacy and quantum resources in the information theoretic setting. We begin by looking for quantum analogues of results already established in the classical CDS literature. Doing so we establish a number of basic properties of CDQS, including lower bounds on entanglement and communication stated in terms of measures of communication complexity. Because of the close relationship to the $f$-routing position-verification scheme, our results have relevance to the security of these schemes.
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- 2024
19. Biodiversity impacts of the 2019–2020 Australian megafires
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Driscoll, Don A., Macdonald, Kristina J., Gibson, Rebecca K., Doherty, Tim S., Nimmo, Dale G., Nolan, Rachael H., Ritchie, Euan G., Williamson, Grant J., Heard, Geoffrey W., Tasker, Elizabeth M., Bilney, Rohan, Porch, Nick, Collett, Rachael A., Crates, Ross A., Hewitt, Alison C., Pendall, Elise, Boer, Matthias M., Gates, Jody, Boulton, Rebecca L., Mclean, Christopher M., Groffen, Heidi, Maisey, Alex C., Beranek, Chad T., Ryan, Shelby A., Callen, Alex, Hamer, Andrew J., Stauber, Andrew, Daly, Garry J., Gould, John, Klop-Toker, Kaya L., Mahony, Michael J., Kelly, Oliver W., Wallace, Samantha L., Stock, Sarah E., Weston, Christopher J., Volkova, Liubov, Black, Dennis, Gibb, Heloise, Grubb, Joshua J., McGeoch, Melodie A., Murphy, Nick P., Lee, Joshua S., Dickman, Chris R., Neldner, Victor J., Ngugi, Michael R., Miritis, Vivianna, Köhler, Frank, Perri, Marc, Denham, Andrew J., Mackenzie, Berin D. E., Reid, Chris A. M., Rayment, Julia T., Arriaga-Jiménez, Alfonsina, Hewins, Michael W., Hicks, Andrew, Melbourne, Brett A., Davies, Kendi F., Bitters, Matthew E., Linley, Grant D., Greenville, Aaron C., Webb, Jonathan K., Roberts, Bridget, Letnic, Mike, Price, Owen F., Walker, Zac C., Murray, Brad R., Verhoeven, Elise M., Thomsen, Alexandria M., Keith, David, Lemmon, Jedda S., Ooi, Mark K. J., Allen, Vanessa L., Decker, Orsi T., Green, Peter T., Moussalli, Adnan, Foon, Junn K., Bryant, David B., Walker, Ken L., Bruce, Matthew J., Madani, George, Tscharke, Jeremy L., Wagner, Benjamin, Nitschke, Craig R., Gosper, Carl R., Yates, Colin J., Dillon, Rebecca, Barrett, Sarah, Spencer, Emma E., Wardle, Glenda M., Newsome, Thomas M., Pulsford, Stephanie A., Singh, Anu, Roff, Adam, Marsh, Karen J., Mcdonald, Kye, Howell, Lachlan G., Lane, Murraya R., Cristescu, Romane H., Witt, Ryan R., Cook, Emma J., Grant, Felicity, Law, Bradley S., Seddon, Julian, Berris, Karleah K., Shofner, Ryan M., Barth, Mike, Welz, Torran, Foster, Alison, Hancock, David, Beitzel, Matthew, Tan, Laura X. L., Waddell, Nathan A., Fallow, Pamela M., Schweickle, Laura, Le Breton, Tom D., Dunne, Craig, Green, Mikayla, Gilpin, Amy-Marie, Cook, James M., Power, Sally A., Hogendoorn, Katja, Brawata, Renee, Jolly, Chris J., Tozer, Mark, Reiter, Noushka, and Phillips, Ryan D.
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- 2024
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20. Winds of change: the nuclear and galaxy-scale outflows and the X-ray variability of 2MASS 0918+2117
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Baldini, P., Lanzuisi, G., Brusa, M., Merloni, A., Gkimisi, K., Perna, M., Lopez, I. E., Bertola, E., Igo, Z., Waddell, S., Musiimenta, B., Aydar, C., Arcodia, R., Matzeu, G. A., Luminari, A., Buchner, J., Vignali, C., Dadina, M., Comastri, A., Cresci, G., Marchesi, S., Gilli, R., Tombesi, F., and Serafinelli, R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Powerful outflows from active galactic nuclei (AGN) can significantly impact the gas reservoirs of their host galaxies. However, it is still unclear how these outflows can propagate from the very central regions of galaxies to their outskirts, and whether nuclear winds can be driven by and/or be responsible for drastic spectral transitions. In this work we test feedback propagation models on the case test of 2MASS 0918+2117 (2M0918), a z=0.149 X-ray variable AGN, which showed tentative evidence for nuclear ultra-fast outflows (UFOs) in a 2005 XMM-Newton observation. We also investigate whether UFOs can be related to the observed X-ray variability. We observed 2M0918 with XMM-Newton and NuSTAR in 2020 to confirm the presence and characterize the UFOs. We perform a kinematic analysis of the 2005 SDSS optical spectrum to reveal and measure the properties of galaxy-scale ionized outflows. Furthermore, we construct 20-year-long lightcurves of observed flux, line-of-sight column density, and intrinsic accretion rate from the spectra of the first 4 SRG/eROSITA all-sky surveys and archival observations from Chandra and XMM-Newton.We significantly detect UFOs with v$\sim$0.16c and galaxy-scale ionized outflows with velocities of $\sim$ 700 km/s. We also find that the drastic X-ray variability (factors >10) can be explained both in terms of variable obscuration and variable intrinsic luminosity.Comparing the energetics of the two outflow phases, 2M0918 is consistent with momentum-driven wind propagation. 2M0918 expands the sample of AGN with both UFOs and ionized gas winds from 5 to 6, and brings the sample of AGN hosting multiscale outflows to 19, contributing to a clearer picture of feedback physics. From the variations in accretion rate, column density, and ionization level of the obscurer, we propose a scenario that connects obscurers, an accretion enhancement, and the emergence of UFOs, Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures
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- 2024
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21. The SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey: Hard X-ray selected Active Galactic Nuclei
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Waddell, Sophia G. H., Buchner, J., Nandra, K., Salvato, M., Merloni, A., Gauger, I., Boller, Th., Seppi, R., Wolf, J., Liu, T., Brusa, M., Comparat, J., Dwelly, T., Igo, Z., and Musiimenta, B.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The eROSITA instrument aboard the Spectrum Roentgen Gamma (SRG) satellite has performed its first all-sky survey between December 2019 and June 2020. This paper presents the resulting hard X-ray (2.3-5 keV) sample, the first created from an all-sky imaging survey in the 2-8 keV band, for sources within western galactic sky. The 5466 hard X-ray selected sources detected with eROSITA are presented and discussed. The Bayesian statistics-based code NWAY is used to identify the counterparts for the X-ray sources. These sources are classified based on their multiwavelength properties, and the literature is searched to identify spectroscopic redshifts, which further inform the source classification. A total of 2547 sources are found to have good-quality counterparts, and 111 of these are detected only in the hard band. Comparing with other hard X-ray selected surveys, the eROSITA hard sample covers a larger redshift range and probes dimmer sources, providing a complementary and expanded sample as compared to Swift-BAT. Examining the column density distribution of missed and detected eROSITA sources present in the follow-up catalog of Swift BAT 70 month sources, it is demonstrated that eROSITA can detect obscured sources with column densities $>10^{24}$ cm$^{-2}$, but that the completeness drops rapidly after $10^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$. A sample of hard-only sources, many of which are likely to be heavily obscured AGN, is also presented and discussed. X-ray spectral fitting reveals that these sources have extremely faint soft X-ray emission and their optical images suggest that they are found in more edge-on galaxies with lower b/a. The resulting X-ray catalog is demonstrated to be a powerful tool for understanding AGN, in particular heavily obscured AGN found in the hard-only sample., Comment: 20 pages, 21 figures. Submitted to A&A. Associated with eROSITA data release. Associated catalogs will be released after journal publication
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- 2024
22. The eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS): the hard X-ray selected sample
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Nandra, K., Waddell, S. G. H., Liu, T., Buchner, J., Dwelly, T., Salvato, M., Shen, Y., Wu, Q., Arcodia, R., Boller, Th., Brunner, H., Brusa, M., Collmar, W., Comparat, J., Georgakakis, A., Grau, M., Hämmerich, S., Ibarra-Medel, H., Igo, Z., Krumpe, M., Lamer, G., Merloni, A., Musiimenta, B., Wolf, J., Assef, R. J., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., and Rix, H. -W.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
During its calibration and performance verification phase, the eROSITA instrument aboard the SRG satellite performed a uniform wide--area X-ray survey of approximately 140 deg$^{2}$ in a region of the sky known as the eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS). The primary aim of eFEDS is to demonstrate the scientific performance to be expected at the end of the 8-pass eROSITA all sky survey. This will provide the first focussed image of the whole sky in the hard X-ray ($>2$~keV) bandpass. The expected source population in this energy range is thus of great interest, particularly for AGN studies. We use the 2.3--5 keV selection presented by Brunner et al. (2022) to construct a sample of 246 point-like hard X-ray sources for further study and characterization. These are classified as either extragalactic ($\sim 90$~\%) or Galactic ($\sim 10$~\%), with the former consisting overwhelmingly of AGN and the latter active stars. We concentrate our further analysis on the extragalactic/AGN sample, describing their X-ray and multiwavelength properties and comparing them to the eFEDS main AGN sample selected in the softer 0.2-2.3 keV band. The eROSITA hard band selects a subsample of sources that is a factor $>10$ brighter than the eFEDS main sample. The AGN within the hard population reach up to $z=3.2$ but on the whole are relatively nearby, with median $z$=0.34 compared to $z$=0.94 for the main sample. The hard survey probes typical luminosities in the range $\log L_{\rm X} = 43-46$. X-ray spectral analysis shows significant intrinsic absorption (with $\log N_{\rm H}>21$) in $\sim 20$~\% of the sources, with a hard X-ray power law continuum with mean $<\Gamma>=1.83\pm0.04$, typical of AGN, but slightly harder than the soft-selected eROSITA sample. (abridged), Comment: Submitted to A&A as part of eROSITA Data Release 1
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- 2024
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23. The eROSITA DR1 variability catalogue
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Boller, Th., Freyberg, M., Buchner, J., Haberl, F., Maitra, C., Schwope, A., Robrade, J., Rau, A., Grotova, I., Waddell, S., Ni, Q., Salvato, M., Krumpe, M., Georgakakis, A., Merloni, A., and Nandra, K.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The extended ROentgen Survey with an Imaging Telescope Array (eROSITA) on board the Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) mission with its first All-Sky Survey (eRASS1) has offered an unprecedented, comprehensive view of the variable X-ray sky. With enhanced sensitivity, broader energy coverage, and improved resolution compared to prior surveys, the eRASS1 Data Release 1 (DR1) catalogue underwent a variability analysis, focusing on a substantial subset of 128,669 sources. We performed multiple variability tests, utilizing conventional normalized excess variance, maximum amplitude variability, and Bayesian excess variance methods. Among the 128,669 DR1 sources, our research identified 557 objects exhibiting variability through NEV and AMPLMAX tests. After applying suitable thresholds, 108 sources demonstrated significant variability via NEV, while 73 did so through AMPLMAX. The utilization of the bexvar method extended our detection capabilities to lower count rates, unveiling a total of 1307 sources manifesting variability. Furthermore, our comparative analysis spanning 2.5 years encompassed observations from consecutive eROSITA surveys, eRASS2, eRASS3, eRASS4, and eRASS5. Notably, the Gamma-ray burst afterglow GRB 200120A, which was the most variable DR1 source, was as expected absent in subsequent eROSITA survey scans. Observations of the Low-Mass X-ray Binary GX 339-4 across various eROSITA survey scans unveiled substantial variability. These outbursts involve the movement of the inner radius of the accretion disk, fluctuating inward and outward. Combining eROSITA and MAXI data reveals that the most effective tracer for monitoring the onset of the outbursts is the softest eROSITA band. Magnetically active stars are commonly found among the more variable X-ray sources. We analyzed the AGN sample to identify variability patterns and instances of efficiency limit violations., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures
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- 2024
24. The SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey: First X-ray catalogues and data release of the western Galactic hemisphere
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Merloni, A., Lamer, G., Liu, T., Ramos-Ceja, M. E., Brunner, H., Bulbul, E., Dennerl, K., Doroshenko, V., Freyberg, M. J., Friedrich, S., Gatuzz, E., Georgakakis, A., Haberl, F., Igo, Z., Kreykenbohm, I., Liu, A., Maitra, C., Malyali, A., Mayer, M. G. F., Nandra, K., Predehl, P., Robrade, J., Salvato, M., Sanders, J. S., Stewart, I., Tubín-Arenas, D., Weber, P., Wilms, J., Arcodia, R., Artis, E., Aschersleben, J., Avakyan, A., Aydar, C., Bahar, Y. E., Balzer, F., Becker, W., Berger, K., Boller, T., Bornemann, W., Brüggen, M., Brusa, M., Buchner, J., Burwitz, V., Camilloni, F., Clerc, N., Comparat, J., Coutinho, D., Czesla, S., Dannhauer, S. M., Dauner, L., Dauser, T., Dietl, J., Dolag, K., Dwelly, T., Egg, K., Ehl, E., Freund, S., Friedrich, P., Gaida, R., Garrel, C., Ghirardini, V., Gokus, A., Grünwald, G., Grandis, S., Grotova, I., Gruen, D., Gueguen, A., Hämmerich, S., Hamaus, N., Hasinger, G., Haubner, K., Homan, D., Chitham, J. Ider, Joseph, W. M., Joyce, A., König, O., Kaltenbrunner, D. M., Khokhriakova, A., Kink, W., Kirsch, C., Kluge, M., Knies, J., Krippendorf, S., Krumpe, M., Kurpas, J., Li, P., Liu, Z., Locatelli, N., Lorenz, M., Müller, S., Magaudda, E., Mannes, C., McCall, H., Meidinger, N., Michailidis, M., Migkas, K., Muñoz-Giraldo, D., Musiimenta, B., Nguyen-Dang, N. T., Ni, Q., Olechowska, A., Ota, N., Pacaud, F., Pasini, T., Perinati, E., Pires, A. M., Pommranz, C., Ponti, G., Poppenhaeger, K., Pühlhofer, G., Rau, A., Reh, M., Reiprich, T. H., Roster, W., Saeedi, S., Santangelo, A., Sasaki, M., Schmitt, J., Schneider, P. C., Schrabback, T., Schuster, N., Schwope, A., Seppi, R., Serim, M. M., Shreeram, S., Sokolova-Lapa, E., Starck, H., Stelzer, B., Stierhof, J., Suleimanov, V., Tenzer, C., Traulsen, I., Trümper, J., Tsuge, K., Urrutia, T., Veronica, A., Waddell, S. G. H., Willer, R., Wolf, J., Yeung, M. C. H., Zainab, A., Zangrandi, F., Zhang, X., Zhang, Y., and Zheng, X.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The eROSITA telescope array aboard the Spektrum Roentgen Gamma (SRG) satellite began surveying the sky in December 2019, with the aim of producing all-sky X-ray source lists and sky maps of an unprecedented depth. Here we present catalogues of both point-like and extended sources using the data acquired in the first six months of survey operations (eRASS1; completed June 2020) over the half sky whose proprietary data rights lie with the German eROSITA Consortium. We describe the observation process, the data analysis pipelines, and the characteristics of the X-ray sources. With nearly 930000 entries detected in the most sensitive 0.2-2.3 keV energy range, the eRASS1 main catalogue presented here increases the number of known X-ray sources in the published literature by more than 60%, and provides a comprehensive inventory of all classes of X-ray celestial objects, covering a wide range of physical processes. A smaller catalogue of 5466 sources detected in the less sensitive but harder 2.3-5 keV band is the result of the first true imaging survey of the entire sky above 2 keV. We show that the number counts of X-ray sources in eRASS1 are consistent with those derived over narrower fields by past X-ray surveys of a similar depth, and we explore the number counts variation as a function of the location in the sky. Adopting a uniform all-sky flux limit (at 50% completeness) of F_{0.5-2 keV} > 5 \times 10^{-14}$ erg\,s$^{-1}$\,cm$^{-2}$, we estimate that the eROSITA all-sky survey resolves into individual sources about 20% of the cosmic X-ray background in the 1-2 keV range. The catalogues presented here form part of the first data release (DR1) of the SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey. Beyond the X-ray catalogues, DR1 contains all detected and calibrated event files, source products (light curves and spectra), and all-sky maps. Illustrative examples of these are provided., Comment: 39 pages, 23 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. Accompanying eROSITA-DE Data Release 1
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- 2024
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25. The development of early warning scores or alerting systems for the prediction of adverse events in psychiatric patients: a scoping review
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Velasquez, Valentina Tamayo, Chang, Justine, and Waddell, Andrea
- Published
- 2024
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26. Clinical epidemiology and impact of Haemophilus influenzae airway infections in adults with cystic fibrosis
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Weyant, R. Benson, Waddell, Barbara J., Acosta, Nicole, Izydorczyk, Conrad, Conly, John M., Church, Deirdre L., Surette, Michael G., Rabin, Harvey R., Thornton, Christina S., and Parkins, Michael D.
- Published
- 2024
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27. An evaluation of the preprints produced at the beginning of the 2022 mpox public health emergency
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Sterian, Melanie, Samra, Anmol, Pussegoda, Kusala, Corrin, Tricia, Qamar, Mavra, Baumeister, Austyn, Israr, Izza, and Waddell, Lisa
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- 2024
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28. Performance of somatic structural variant calling in lung cancer using Oxford Nanopore sequencing technology
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Liu, Lingchen, Zhang, Jia, Wood, Scott, Newell, Felicity, Leonard, Conrad, Koufariotis, Lambros T., Nones, Katia, Dalley, Andrew J., Chittoory, Haarika, Bashirzadeh, Farzad, Son, Jung Hwa, Steinfort, Daniel, Williamson, Jonathan P., Bint, Michael, Pahoff, Carl, Nguyen, Phan T., Twaddell, Scott, Arnold, David, Grainge, Christopher, Simpson, Peter T., Fielding, David, Waddell, Nicola, and Pearson, John V.
- Published
- 2024
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29. Nitric oxide induces the distinct invisibility phenotype of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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Gap-Gaupool, Brindha, Glenn, Sarah M., Milburn, Emily, Turapov, Obolbek, Crosatti, Marialuisa, Hincks, Jennifer, Stewart, Bradley, Bacon, Joanna, Kendall, Sharon L., Voskuil, Martin I., Riabova, Olga, Monakhova, Natalia, Green, Jeffrey, Waddell, Simon J., Makarov, Vadim A., and Mukamolova, Galina V.
- Published
- 2024
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30. A living critical interpretive synthesis to yield a framework on the production and dissemination of living evidence syntheses for decision-making
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Mansilla, Cristián, Wang, Qi, Piggott, Thomas, Bragge, Peter, Waddell, Kerry, Guyatt, Gordon, Sweetman, Arthur, and Lavis, John N.
- Published
- 2024
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31. Spatial intra-tumour heterogeneity and treatment-induced genomic evolution in oesophageal adenocarcinoma: implications for prognosis and therapy
- Author
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Brosda, Sandra, Aoude, Lauren G., Bonazzi, Vanessa F., Patel, Kalpana, Lonie, James M., Belle, Clemence J., Newell, Felicity, Koufariotis, Lambros T., Addala, Venkateswar, Naeini, Marjan M., Pearson, John V., Krause, Lutz, Waddell, Nicola, and Barbour, Andrew P.
- Published
- 2024
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32. Phenotypic characterisation of bovine alveolar macrophages reveals two major subsets with differential expression of CD163
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Randall, Emily M., Sopp, Paul, Raper, Anna, Dry, Inga, Burdon, Tom, Hope, Jayne C., and Waddell, Lindsey A.
- Published
- 2024
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33. Enhancing the delivery of comprehensive care for people living with HIV in Canada: insights from citizen panels and a national stakeholder dialogue
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Wilson, Michael G., Mattison, Cristina, Waddell, Kerry, Bacon, Jean, Becker, Marissa, Bibeau, Christine, Lavis, John N., Rosenes, Ron, and Kendall, Claire E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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34. The incidence of early onset colorectal cancer in Aotearoa New Zealand: 2000–2020
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Waddell, Oliver, Pearson, John, McCombie, Andrew, Marshall, Harriet, Purcell, Rachel, Keenan, Jacqueline, Glyn, Tamara, and Frizelle, Frank
- Published
- 2024
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35. Orthotopic transplantation of the bioengineered lung using a mouse-scale perfusion-based bioreactor and human primary endothelial cells
- Author
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Tomiyama, Fumiko, Suzuki, Takaya, Watanabe, Tatsuaki, Miyanaga, Jun, Suzuki, Anna, Ito, Takayasu, Murai, Sho, Suzuki, Yuyo, Niikawa, Hiromichi, Oishi, Hisashi, Notsuda, Hirotsugu, Watanabe, Yui, Hirama, Takashi, Onodera, Ken, Togo, Takeo, Noda, Masafumi, Waddell, Thomas K., Karoubi, Golnaz, and Okada, Yoshinori
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Clinically significant changes in genes and variants associated with epilepsy over time: implications for re-analysis
- Author
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Robertson, Alan J., Tran, Khoa A., Bennett, Carmen, Sullivan, Clair, Stark, Zornitza, Vadlamudi, Lata, and Waddell, Nicola
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
37. Bioengineering of vascularized porcine flaps using perfusion-recellularization
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Xu, Michael S., D’Elia, Andrew, Hadzimustafic, Nina, Adil, Aisha, Karoubi, Golnaz, Waddell, Thomas K., and Haykal, Siba
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A review of the enhanced CJD surveillance feasibility study in the elderly in Scotland, UK
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Kanguru, Lovney, Cudmore, Sarah, Logan, Gemma, Waddell, Briony, Smith, Colin, Molesworth, Anna, and Knight, Richard
- Published
- 2024
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39. Characterization of genetic variation and basis of inflammatory bowel disease in the Toll-like receptor 5 gene of the red wolf and the maned wolf
- Author
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Henson, LH, Songsasen, N, Waddell, W, Wolf, KN, Emmons, L, Gonzalez, S, Freeman, E, and Maldonado, J
- Subjects
Zoology ,QL1-991 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Characterizing Toll-like receptors across taxa can lead to an increasingly accurate documentation of the evolutionary processes acting within this receptor class, as well as a greater understanding of the diseases associated with these receptors. This study examines 2 sequenced portions of the Toll-like receptor 5 (TLRS5) protein coding gene in 2 imperiled canid species: the Near Threatened maned wolf Chrysocyon brachyurus and the Critically Endangered red wolf Canis rufus, to characterize genetic variation and investigate the presence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously associated with canine inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Both maned and red wolves suffer from inflammatory bowel disease, threatening the sustainability of their crucial ex situ populations. Here we report novel polymorphic positions found in maned and red wolf TLR5, differences in variation with regard to nucleotide polymorphisms and resulting amino acid variation among maned wolves, red wolves, gray wolves and domestic dogs. Domestic dog SNPs associated with IBD were not found to be polymorphic in maned wolves and red wolves. Samples of both focal species and gray wolves lack the protective alleles present in many dog breeds, suggesting a potential genetic predisposition for IBD in these 2 wild canid species and a possible development of these protective alleles post domestication. This potential predisposition informs ex situ management practices and treatment for IBD.
- Published
- 2017
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40. Pinellas County
- Author
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Waddell, Lynn
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Duke Energy Corp. -- Training ,Lockheed Martin Corp. -- Training ,Electric utilities -- Training ,Aerospace industry -- Training ,Industrial locations ,Business ,Business, regional - Abstract
Beyond the near perpetual sunshine, azure surf and world-class arts thrives an innovative business culture that spans 24 municipalities and unincorporated areas. Pinellas County on the central west coast of [...]
- Published
- 2024
41. A new discovery space opened by eROSITA: Ionised AGN outflows from X-ray selected samples
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Musiimenta, Blessing, Brusa, Marcella, Liu, Teng, Salvato, Mara, Buchner, Johannes, Igo, Zsofi, Waddell, Sophia G. H., Toba, Yoshiki, Arcodia, Riccardo, Comparat, Johan, Alexander, David M., Shankar, Francesco, Lapi, Andrea, Almeida, Cristina Ramos, Georgakakis, Antonis, Merloni, Andrea, Urrutia, Tanya, Li, Junyao, Terashima, Yuichi, Shen, Yue, Wu, Qiaoya, Dwelly, Tom, Nandra, Kirpal, and Wolf, Julien
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In the context of an evolutionary model, the outflow phase of an Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) occurs at the peak of its activity, once the central SMBH is massive enough to generate sufficient power to counterbalance the potential well of the host galaxy. This phase plays a vital role in galaxy evolution. We aim to apply various selection methods to isolate powerful AGNs in the feedback phase, trace and characterise their outflows, and explore the link between AGN luminosity and outflow properties. We applied a combination of methods to the eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth survey (eFEDS) catalogue and isolated ~1400 candidates at z>0.5 out of ~11750 AGNs (~12\%). We tested the robustness of our selection on the small subsample of 50 sources with available good quality SDSS spectra at 0.5
1\%. We find that the majority of the outflows have momentum flux ratios lower than 20 which rules out an energy-conserving nature. Our present work points to the unequivocal existence of a rather short AGN outflow phase, paving the way towards a new avenue to dissect AGN outflows in large samples within eROSITA and beyond., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics(A&A), 24 pages, 18 figures, 5 tables - Published
- 2023
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42. WALLABY Pre-Pilot Survey: Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies in the Eridanus Supergroup
- Author
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For, B. -Q., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., Bekki, K., Karunakaran, A., Catinella, B., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Madrid, J. P., Murugeshan, C., Rhee, J., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Zaritsky, D., and Donnerstein, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a pilot study of the atomic neutral hydrogen gas (HI) content of ultra-diffuse galaxy (UDG) candidates. In this paper, we use the pre-pilot Eridanus field data from the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) to search for HI in UDG candidates found in the Systematically Measuring Ultra-diffuse Galaxies survey (SMUDGes). We narrow down to 78 SMUDGes UDG candidates within the maximum radial extents of the Eridanus subgroups for this study. Most SMUDGes UDGs candidates in this study have effective radii smaller than 1.5 kpc and thus fail to meet the defining size threshold. We only find one HI detection, which we classify as a low-surface-brightness dwarf. Six putative UDGs are HI-free. We show the overall distribution of SMUDGes UDG candidates on the size-luminosity relation and compare them with low-mass dwarfs on the atomic gas fraction versus stellar mass scaling relation. There is no correlation between gas-richness and colour indicating that colour is not the sole parameter determining their HI content. The evolutionary paths that drive galaxy morphological changes and UDG formation channels are likely the additional factors to affect the HI content of putative UDGs. The actual numbers of UDGs for the Eridanus and NGC 1332 subgroups are consistent with the predicted abundance of UDGs and the halo virial mass relation, except for the NGC 1407 subgroup, which has a smaller number of UDGs than the predicted number. Different group environments suggest that these putative UDGs are likely formed via the satellite accretion scenario., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2023
43. WALLABY Pilot Survey: the Potential Polar Ring Galaxies NGC~4632 and NGC~6156
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Deg, N., Palleske, R., Spekkens, K., Wang, J., Jarrett, T., English, J., Lin, X., Yeung, J., Mould, J. R., Catinella, B., Dénes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. ~-Q., Kamphuis, P., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Oh, S., Rhee, J., Serra, P., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Bekki, K., Bosma, A., Carignan, C., Holwerda, B. W., and Yu, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on the discovery of two potential polar ring galaxies (PRGs) in the WALLABY Pilot Data Release 1 (PDR1). These untargetted detections, cross-matched to NGC 4632 and NGC 6156, are some of the first galaxies where the Hi observations show two distinct components. We used the iDaVIE virtual reality software to separate the anomalous gas from the galactic gas and find that the anomalous gas comprises ~ 50% of the total H i content of both systems. We have generated plausible 3D kinematic models for each galaxy assuming that the rings are circular and inclined at 90 degrees to the galaxy bodies. These models show that the data are consistent with PRGs, but do not definitively prove that the galaxies are PRGs. By projecting these models at different combinations of main disk inclinations, ring orientations, and angular resolutions in mock datacubes, we have further investigated the detectability of similar PRGs in WALLABY. Assuming that these galaxies are indeed PRGs, the detectability fraction, combined with the size distribution of WALLABY PDR1 galaxies, implies an incidence rate of ~ 1% - 3%. If this rate holds true, the WALLABY survey will detect hundreds of new polar ring galaxies., Comment: Accepted to MNRAS -- Corrected Table 1
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- 2023
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44. Behavior, Energy, Autonomy & Mobility Comprehensive Regional Evaluator: Overview, calibration and validation summary of an agent-based integrated regional transportation modeling workflow
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Spurlock, C Anna, Bouzaghrane, Mohamed Amine, Brooker, Aaron, Caicedo, Juan, Gonder, Jeff, Holden, Jake, Jeong, Kyungsoo, Jin, Ling, Laarabi, Haitam, Needell, Zachary, Poliziani, Cristian, Sharda, Shivam, Sun, Bingrong, Waddell, Paul, Wang, Yuhan, Waraich, Rashid, Wenzel, Thomas P, and Xu, Xiaodan
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Transportation Policy ,Integrated Modeling Framework ,BEAM ,Agent-Based Model ,Emerging Mobility Services ,Land Use Planning ,System-of-Systems - Published
- 2024
45. John Buchan’s Amicable Anti-Modernism
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Waddell, Nathan
- Published
- 2012
46. rtables -- A Framework For Creating Complex Structured Reporting Tables Via Multi-Level Faceted Computations
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Becker, Gabriel and Waddell, Adrian
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Statistics - Computation ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
Tables form a central component in both exploratory data analysis and formal reporting procedures across many industries. These tables are often complex in their conceptual structure and in the computations that generate their individual cell values. We introduce both a conceptual framework and a reference implementation for declaring, generating, rendering and modeling such tables. We place tables within the existing grammar of graphics paradigm for general statistical visualizations. Our open source `rtables` software implementation utilizes these connections to facilitate an intuitive way to declare complex table structure and construct those tables from data. In the course of this work, we relax several constraints present in the traditional grammar of graphics framing. Finally, `rtables` models instantiated tables as tree structures, which allows powerful, semantically meaningful and self-describing queries and manipulations of tables after creation. We showcase our framework in practice by creating complex, realistic example tables., Comment: Submitted for publication to the Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics
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- 2023
47. WALLABY Pilot Survey: The diversity of HI structural parameters in nearby galaxies
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Reynolds, T. N., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Deg, N., Denes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kamphuis, P., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Raja, W., Rhee, J., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., van der Hulst, J. M., Wang, J., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Bigiel, F., Bosma, A., Holwerda, B. W., Leahy, D. A., and Meyer, M. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the diversity in the sizes and average surface densities of the neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) gas discs in ~280 nearby galaxies detected by the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY). We combine the uniformly observed, interferometric HI data from pilot observations of the Hydra cluster and NGC 4636 group fields with photometry measured from ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared imaging surveys to investigate the interplay between stellar structure, star formation and HI structural parameters. We quantify the HI structure by the size of the HI relative to the optical disc and the average HI surface density measured using effective and isodensity radii. For galaxies resolved by >1.3 beams, we find that galaxies with higher stellar masses and stellar surface densities tend to have less extended HI discs and lower HI surface densities: the isodensity HI structural parameters show a weak negative dependence on stellar mass and stellar mass surface density. These trends strengthen when we limit our sample to galaxies resolved by >2 beams. We find that galaxies with higher HI surface densities and more extended HI discs tend to be more star forming: the isodensity HI structural parameters have stronger correlations with star formation. Normalising the HI disc size by the optical effective radius (instead of the isophotal radius) produces positive correlations with stellar masses and stellar surface densities and removes the correlations with star formation. This is due to the effective and isodensity HI radii increasing with mass at similar rates while, in the optical, the effective radius increases slower than the isophotal radius. Our results demonstrate that with WALLABY we can begin to bridge the gap between small galaxy samples with high spatial resolution HI data and large, statistical studies using spatially unresolved, single-dish data., Comment: 16 page, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey (eFEDS): Complex absorption and soft excesses in hard X-ray--selected active galactic nuclei
- Author
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Waddell, Sophia G. H., Nandra, Kirpal, Buchner, Johannes, Wu, Qiaoya, Shen, Yue, Arcodia, Riccardo, Merloni, Andrea, Salvato, Mara, Dauser, Thomas, Boller, Thomas, Liu, Teng, Comparat, Johan, Wolf, Julien, Dwelly, Tom, Ricci, Claudio, Brownstein, Joel R., and Brusa, Marcella
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Context. The soft excess, a surplus of X-ray photons above 2 keV with respect to a power law, is a feature of debated physical origin found in the X-ray spectra of many type-1 active galactic nuclei (AGN). The eROSITA instrument aboard the Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) mission will provide an all-sky census of AGN suitable for spectral analysis. Aims. The primary goal of this work is to test a variety of models for the soft X-ray emission of AGN (thermal emission, non-thermal emission, ionised absorption, or neutral partial covering absorption) to help identify the physical origin of the soft X-ray spectral complexity. Differences between these models are examined in the context of this sample to understand the physical properties. Methods. We used Bayesian X-ray analysis to fit a sample of 200 AGN from the eFEDS hard X-ray--selected sample with a variety of phenomenological and physically motivated models. Model selection was performed using the Bayes factor to compare the applicability of each model. Results. We find that 29 sources have evidence for a soft excess at a confidence level >97.5%, all of which are better modelled by an additional soft power law than by thermal blackbody emission. We find 23 of these sources prefer a warm corona model, while six sources prefer relativistic blurred reflection. Additionally many sources show evidence for complex absorption, with 29 preferring a warm absorber and 25 a partial covering absorber. Sources with a soft excess show a significantly higher Eddington ratio than those with warm absorbers. We discuss the implication of these results for the physical processes in the central regions of AGN. Conclusions. Spectral fitting with Bayesian statistics is ideal for the identification of complex absorption and soft excesses in the X-ray spectra of AGN and can allow one to distinguish between different physical interpretations. (Abridged), Comment: 27 pages, 30 figures, plus 2 appendices. Accepted for publication by A&A
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Barriers and Strategies for Utilizing School Outdoor Spaces: Exploring the Experiences of High School Teachers in the Southeastern U.S.
- Author
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Erin Waddell, Andrew J. Bobilya, W. Brad Faircloth, Brad Daniel, and Ashley Hoffman
- Abstract
School outdoor spaces provide many mental and physical benefits for students. Yet, teachers may not have the opportunity to conduct lessons in these outdoor spaces due to personal or systemic barriers. While K-8 teachers' perceptions of barriers have been well explored, there is currently a lack of research investigating high school teachers' perceptions. This study used an online survey to explore the barriers and strategies of 154 high school teachers in using their schools' outdoor spaces. These results showed that there were differences between barriers from previous studies that could affect how high school teachers overcome them. Knowing these barriers and some strategies teachers have used to overcome them can play a major role in increasing the use of school outdoor spaces to meet the needs of today's high school students.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The political power of emotions: Women's political letter-writing in the movement to save Lake Pedder
- Author
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Waddell-Wood, Claire
- Published
- 2023
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