6,354 results on '"CARTER, D"'
Search Results
52. Reduction of beam hardening artifact in photon-counting computed tomography: Using low-energy threshold polyenergetic reconstruction
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McGuire, Aaron M., primary, Smith, Carter D., additional, Chamberlin, Jordan H., additional, Maisuria, Dhruw, additional, Tóth, Adrienn, additional, Schoepf, U. Joseph, additional, O'Doherty, Jim, additional, Munden, Reginald F., additional, Burt, Jeremy, additional, Baruah, Dhiraj, additional, and Kabakus, Ismail M., additional
- Published
- 2023
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53. Non-contrast computed tomography findings for identification of chronically occluded coronary artery bypass grafts
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Chamberlin, Jordan H, primary, Smith, Carter D, additional, Van Swol, Elizabeth, additional, Maisuria, Dhruw, additional, Baruah, Dhiraj, additional, Schoepf, Uwe Joseph, additional, Burt, Jeremy R, additional, and Kabakus, Ismail M, additional
- Published
- 2023
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54. A Golden Standard Type Ia Supernova SN 2005cf: Observations from the Ultraviolet to the Near-Infrared Wavebands
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Wang, Xiaofeng, Li, Weidong, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, R. J., Kirshner, R. P., Modjaz, M., Bloom, J., Brown, P. J., Carter, D., Friedman, A. S., Gal-Yam, A., Ganeshalingam, M., Hicken, M., Krisciunas, K., Milne, P., Suntzeff, N. B., Wood-Vasey, W. M., Cenko, S. B., Challis, P., Fox, D. B., Kirkman, D., Li, J. Z., Li, T. P., Malkan, M. A., Reitzel, D. B., Rich, R. M., Serduke, F., Shang, R. C., Silverman, J. M., Steele, T. N., Swift, B. J., Tao, C., Wong, D. S., and Zhang, S. N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present extensive photometry at ultraviolet (UV), optical, and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths, as well as dense sampling of optical spectra, for the normal type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2005cf. From the well-sampled light curves, we find that SN 2005cf reached a B-band maximum at 13.63+/-0.02 mag, with an observed luminosity decline rate dm_15(B) = 1.05+/-0.03 mag. The correlations between the decline rate and various color indexes, recalibrated on the basis of an expanded SN Ia sample, yielded E(B-V)_host=0.09+/-0.03 mag for SN2005cf. The UV photometry was obtained with the HST and the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope, and the results match each other to within 0.1-0.2 mag. The UV light curves show similar evolution to the broadband U, with an exception in the 2000-2500 Angstrom spectral range (corresponding to the F220W/uvm2 filters), where the light curve appears broader and much fainter than that on either side (likely owing to the intrinsic spectral evolution). Combining the UV data with the ground-based optical and NIR data, we establish the generic UV-optical-NIR bolometric light curve for SN 2005cf and derive the bolometric corrections in the absence of UV and/or NIR data. The overall spectral evolution of SN 2005cf is similar to that of a normal SN Ia, but with variety in the strength and profile of the main feature lines. The spectra at early times displayed strong, detached high-velocity (HV) features in the Ca II H&K doublet and NIR triplet. Similar HV features may exist in the SiII 6355 absorption line which evolved rapidly from a flat-bottomed feature in the earliest phase to a triangular shape one week before maximum, and may be common in other normal SNe Ia. The possible origin of the HV absorption features is briefly discussed (abridged)., Comment: 31 pages, 24 figures, 13 tables, emulateapj; submitted to ApJ
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- 2008
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55. Multiwavelength analysis of the intriguing GRB 061126: the reverse shock scenario and magnetization
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Gomboc, A., Kobayashi, S., Guidorzi, C., Melandri, A., Mangano, V., Sbarufatti, B., Mundell, C. G., Schady, P., Smith, R. J., Updike, A. C., Kann, D. A., Misra, K., Rol, E., Pozanenko, A., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Anupama, G. C., Bersier, D., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Curran, P., Fruchter, A., Graham, J., Hartmann, D. H., Ibrahimov, M., Levan, A., Monfardini, A., Mottram, C. J., O'Brien, P. T., Prema, P., Sahu, D. K., Steele, I. A., Tanvir, N. R., and Wiersema, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the prompt and afterglow emission from Swift GRB 061126 using BAT, XRT, UVOT data and multi-color optical imaging from ten ground-based telescopes. GRB 061126 was a long burst (T_90=191 s) with four overlapping peaks in its gamma-ray light curve. The X-ray afterglow, observed from 26 min to 20 days after the burst, shows a simple power-law decay with alpha_X=1.290 \pm 0.008. Optical observations presented here cover the time range from 258 s (Faulkes Telescope North) to 15 days (Gemini North) after the burst; the decay rate of the optical afterglow shows a steep-to-shallow transition (from alpha_1=1.48 \pm 0.06 to alpha_2=0.88 \pm 0.03) approximately 13 min after the burst. We suggest the early, steep component is due to a reverse shock and show that the magnetic energy density in the ejecta, expressed as a fraction of the equipartion value, is a few ten times larger than in the forward shock in the early afterglow phase. The ejecta might be endowed with primordial magnetic fields at the central engine. The optical light curve implies a late-time break at about 1.5 days after the burst, while there is no evidence of the simultaneous break in the X-ray light curve. We model the broad band emission and show that some afterglow characteristics (the steeper decay in X-ray and the shallow spectral index from optical to X-ray) are difficult to explain in the framework of the standard fireball model. This might imply that the X-ray afterglow is due to an additional emission process, such as late time central engine activity rather than blast-wave shock emission. The possible chromatic break at 1.5 days after the burst would give support to the additional emission scenario., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 1 table; Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2008
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56. The Early-time Optical Properties of Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglows
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Melandri, A., Mundell, C. G., Kobayashi, S., Guidorzi, C., Gomboc, A., Steele, I. A., Smith, R. J., Bersier, D., Mottram, C. J., Carter, D., Bode, M. F., O'Brien, P. T., Tanvir, N. R., Rol, E., and Chapman, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a multiwavelength analysis of 63 Gamma-Ray Bursts observed with the world's three largest robotic optical telescopes, the Liverpool and Faulkes Telescopes (North and South). Optical emission was detected for 24 GRBs with brightnesses ranging from R = 10 to 22 mag in the first 10 minutes after the burst. By comparing optical and X-ray light curves from t = 100 to about 10^6 seconds, we introduce four main classes, defined by the presence or absence of temporal breaks at optical and/or X-ray wavelengths. While 15/24 GRBs can be modelled with the forward-shock model, explanation of the remaining nine is very challenging in the standard framework even with the introduction of energy injection or an ambient density gradient. Early X-ray afterglows, even segments of light curves described by a power-law, may be due to additional emission from the central engine. 39 GRBs in our sample were not detected and have deep upper limits (R < 22 mag) at early time. Of these, only ten were identified by other facilities, primarily at near infrared wavelengths, resulting in a dark burst fraction of about 50%. Additional emission in the early time X-ray afterglow due to late-time central engine activity may also explain some dark bursts by making the bursts brighter than expected in the X-ray band compared to the optical band., Comment: 51 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2008
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57. Validating Behavioural Change: Teachers' Perception and Use of ICT in England and Korea.
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Carter, D. S. G. and Leeh, D. J. K.
- Abstract
This study focused on the test and cross-cultural validation of an organizational and behavioral model of planned change. The aim of the research was to ascertain the nature and direction of different cultural aspects influencing the change process when Information and Communication Technology (ICT) was being implemented in schools. The theoretical basis was the "A-Victory Model" (Foundation for Young Australians and C. Sharp, 2000), which guided and informed data collection in England and South Korea. The focus of the quantitative measures was to assess the intensity and direction of aspects at the school and classroom level concerning the use of ICT processes framed by a national strategy. Questionnaires were sent to 1,000 teachers in England and 1,000 teachers in Korea. Response rates were 31.7% in England and 39.3% in Korea. Eight elements in the model, including ability, value, information, circumstance, yield (in terms of outcomes), resistance, motivation, and timing were used to measure change. Twelve types of background data were collected to illuminate group differences. Data analyses revealed the different propensities for change in the use of ICT between the two countries for age, career, education, equipment, and performance group comparisons, but there was no evidence of differences in sex, subject, area and school size, skill, and training groups between the two countries. Two elements were identified as barriers to change in both countries: ability and yield in Korea and motivation and yield in England. The most important factor in teachers' behavioral and school organizational change was "information" that is necessary for teachers' likelihood of change in the use of ICT for teachers' professional practice. One appendix contains the survey instrument, and the other is the category variable investigation form. (Contains 34 references.) (Author/SLD)
- Published
- 2001
58. North Stradbroke Island; An island ark for Queensland's koala population
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Cristescu, Romane, Ellis, W, deVilliers, D, Lee, K, Woosnam-Merchez, O, Frere, C, Banks, P B, Dique, D, Hodgkinson, S, Carrick,H, Carter, D, Smith, P, Carrick, F, and BHL Australia
- Published
- 2011
59. Evidence for Three Subpopulations of Globular Clusters in the Early-Type Post-Starburst Shell Galaxy AM 0139-655
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Maybhate, A., Goudfrooij, P., Schweizer, F., Puzia, T., and Carter, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep HST ACS images of the post-starburt shell galaxy AM 0139-655. We find evidence for the presence of three distinct globular cluster subpopulations associated with this galaxy: a centrally concentrated young population (~ 0.4 Gyr), an intermediate age population (~ 1 Gyr) and an old, metal-poor population similar to that seen around normal galaxies. The g-I color distribution of the clusters is bimodal with peaks at 0.85 and 1.35. The redder peak at g-I=1.35 is consistent with the predicted color for an old metal-poor population. The clusters associated with the peak at g-I=0.85 are centrally concentrated and interpreted as a younger and more metal-rich population. We suggest that these clusters have an age of ~ 0.4 Gyr and solar metallicity based on a comparison with population synthesis models. The luminosity function of these "blue" clusters is well represented by a power law. Interestingly, the brightest shell associated with the galaxy harbors some of the youngest clusters observed. This seems to indicate that the same merger event was responsible for the formation of both the shells and the young clusters. The red part of the color distribution contains several very bright clusters, which are not expected for an old, metal-poor population. Furthermore, the luminosity function of the "red" GCs cannot be fit well by either a single gaussian or a single power law. A composite (gaussian + power law) fit to the LF of the red clusters yields both a low rms and very plausible properties for an old population plus an intermediate-age population of GCs. Hence, we suggest that the red clusters in AM 0139-655 consist of two distinct GC subpopulations, one being an old, metal-poor population as seen in normal galaxies and one having formed during a recent dissipative galaxy merger., Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in AJ
- Published
- 2007
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60. HST/ACS observations of shell galaxies: inner shells, shell colours and dust
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Sikkema, G., Carter, D., Peletier, R. F., Balcells, M., del Burgo, C., and Valentijn, E. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
AIM:Learn more about the origin of shells and dust in early type galaxies. METHOD: V-I colours of shells and underlying galaxies are derived, using HST Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) data. A galaxy model is made locally in wedges and subtracted to determine shell profiles and colours. We applied Voronoi binning to our data to get smoothed colour maps of the galaxies. Comparison with N-body simulations from the literature gives more insight to the origin of the shell features. Shell positions and dust characteristics are inferred from model galaxy subtracted images. RESULT: The ACS images reveal shells well within the effective radius in some galaxies (at 1.7 kpc in the case of NGC 5982). In some cases, strong nuclear dust patches prevent detection of inner shells. Most shells have colours which are similar to the underlying galaxy. Some inner shells are redder than the galaxy. All six shell galaxies show out of dynamical equilibrium dust features, like lanes or patches, in their central regions. Our detection rate for dust in the shell ellipticals is greater than that found from HST archive data for a sample of normal early-type galaxies, at the 95% confidence level. CONCLUSIONS: The merger model describes better the shell distributions and morphologies than the interaction model. Red shell colours are most likely due to the presence of dust and/or older stellar populations. The high prevalence and out of dynamical equilibrium morphologies of the central dust features point towards external influences being responsible for visible dust features in early type shell galaxies. Inner shells are able to manifest themselves in relatively old shell systems., Comment: accepted by A&A; 36 Figures, 25 pages. A version with full resolution Figures can be found here: http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sikkema/shells.ps
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- 2007
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61. The prompt to late-time multiwavelength analysis of GRB 060210
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Curran, P. A., van der Horst, A. J., Beardmore, A. P., Page, K. L., Rol, E., Melandri, A., Steele, I. A., Mundell, C. G., Gomboc, A., O'Brien, P. T., Bersier, D. F., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Guidorzi, C., Hill, J. E., Hurkett, C. P., Kobayashi, S., Monfardini, A., Mottram, C. J., Smith, R. J., Wijers, R. A. M. J., and Willingale, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present our analysis of the multiwavelength photometric & spectroscopic observations of GRB 060210 and discuss the results in the overall context of current GRB models. All available optical data underwent a simultaneous temporal fit, while X-ray and gamma-ray observations were analysed temporally & spectrally. The results were compared to each other and to possible GRB models. The X-ray afterglow is best described by a smoothly broken power-law with a break at 7.4 hours. The late optical afterglow has a well constrained single power-law index which has a value between the two X-ray indices, though it does agree with a single power-law fit to the X-ray. An evolution of the hardness of the high-energy emission is demonstrated and we imply a minimum host extinction from a comparison of the extrapolated X-ray flux to that measured in the optical. We find that the flaring gamma-ray and X-ray emission is likely due to internal shocks while the flat optical light curve at that time is due to the external shock. The late afterglow is best explained by a cooling break between the optical and X-rays and continued central engine activity up to the time of the break. The required collimation corrected energy of ~ 2x10^52 erg, while at the high end of the known energy distribution, is not unprecedented., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysics after minor changes
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- 2007
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62. Review of counterfactual land change modeling for causal inference in land system science
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Nicholas R. Magliocca, Pratik Dhungana, and Carter D. Sink
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Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Earth-Surface Processes - Published
- 2023
63. A Review of Early-Time Optical Follow-ups with 2-m Robotic Telescopes
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Gomboc, A., Guidorzi, C., Mundell, C. G., Melandri, A., Monfardini, A., Bersier, D., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Kobayashi, S., Mottram, C. J., Smith, R. J., and Steele, I. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We summarise recent deep, rapid GRB follow-up observations using the RoboNet-1.0 network which comprises three fully-robotic 2-m telescopes, the Liverpool Telescope and the Faulkes Telescopes North and South. Observations begin automatically within minutes of receipt of a GRB alert and may continue for hours or days to provide well-sampled multi-colour light curves or deep upper limits. Our light curves show a variety of early afterglow behaviour, from smooth, simple or broken power laws to 'bumpy', for a wide range of optical brightness (from the unprecedented faint detections of GRB 060108 and GRB 060510B to classical bright ones). We discuss GRB 051111 as an example of how the combination of optical and X-ray light curves can provide insight into the circumburst environment, in particular the role played by intrinsic extinction soon after the burst., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of the conference Swift and GRBs: Unveiling the Relativistic Universe - Venice, 5-9 June 2006 - To appear in "Il Nuovo Cimento"
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- 2006
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64. The circumburst environment of a FRED GRB: study of the prompt emission and X-ray/optical afterglow of GRB 051111
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Guidorzi, C., Gomboc, A., Kobayashi, S., Mundell, C. G., Rol, E., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., La Parola, V., Melandri, A., Monfardini, A., Mottram, C. J., O'Brien, P. T., Page, K. L., Sakamoto, T., Smith, R. J., Steele, I. A., and Tanvir, N. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report a multi-wavelength analysis of the prompt emission and early afterglow of GRB051111 and discuss its properties in the context of current fireball models. The detection of GRB051111 by the Burst Alert Telescope on-board Swift triggered early BVRi' observations with the 2-m robotic Faulkes Telescope North in Hawaii, as well as X-ray observations with the Swift X-Ray Telescope. The prompt gamma-ray emission shows a classical FRED profile. The optical afterglow light curves are fitted with a broken power law, with alpha_1=0.35 to alpha_2=1.35 and a break time around 12 minutes after the GRB. Although contemporaneous X-ray observations were not taken, a power law connection between the gamma-ray tail of the FRED temporal profile and the late XRT flux decay is feasible. Alternatively, if the X-ray afterglow tracks the optical decay, this would represent one of the first GRBs for which the canonical steep-shallow-normal decay typical of early X-ray afterglows has been monitored optically. We present a detailed analysis of the intrinsic extinction, elemental abundances and spectral energy distribution. From the absorption measured in the low X-ray band we find possible evidence for an overabundance of some alpha elements such as oxygen, [O/Zn]=0.7+/-0.3, or, alternatively, for a significant presence of molecular gas. The IR-to-X-ray Spectral Energy Distribution measured at 80 minutes after the burst is consistent with the cooling break lying between the optical and X-ray bands. Extensive modelling of the intrinsic extinction suggests dust with big grains or grey extinction profiles. The early optical break is due either to an energy injection episode or, less probably, to a stratified wind environment for the circumburst medium., Comment: accepted to A&A on Nov. 10 (14 pages, 8 figures)
- Published
- 2006
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65. The Remarkable Afterglow of GRB 061007: Implications for Optical Flashes and GRB Fireballs
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Mundell, C. G., Melandri, A., Guidorzi, C., Kobayashi, S., Steele, I. A., Malesani, D., Amati, L., D'Avanzo, P., Bersier, D. F., Gomboc, A., Rol, E., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Mottram, C. J., Monfardini, A., Smith, R. J., Malhotra, S., Wang, J., Bannister, N., O'Brien, P. T., and Tanvir, N. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a multiwavelength analysis of Swift GRB 061007. The 2-m robotic Faulkes Telescope South (FTS) began observing 137 s after the onset of the gamma-ray emission, when the optical counterpart was already decaying from R 10.3 mag, and continued observing for the next 5.5 hours. These observations begin during the final gamma-ray flare and continue through and beyond a long, soft tail of gamma-ray emission whose flux shows an underlying simple power-law decay identical to that seen at optical and X-ray wavelengths, with temporal slope alpha 1.7 This remarkably simple decay in all of these bands is rare for Swift bursts, which often show much more complex light curves. We suggest the afterglow emission begins as early as 30-100 s and is contemporaneous with the on-going variable prompt emission from the central engine, but originates from a physically distinct region dominated by the forward shock. The afterglow continues unabated until at least 10^5 s showing no evidence of a break. The observed multiwavelength evolution of GRB 061007 is explained by an expanding fireball whose optical, X-ray and late-time gamma-ray emission is dominated by emission from a forward shock with typical synchrotron frequency, nu_m, that is already below the optical band as early as t=137 s and a cooling frequency, nu_c, above the X-ray band to at least t=10^5 s. In contrast, the typical frequency of the reverse shock lies in the radio band at early time. We suggest that the unexpected lack of bright optical flashes from the majority of Swift GRBs may be explained with a low nu_m originating from small microphysics parameters, epsilon_e and epsilon_B. (Abridged), Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 23 pages including 3 tables and 3 figures; minor amendements
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- 2006
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66. Anatomy of A Dark Burst - The Afterglow of GRB 060108
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Oates, S. R., Mundell, C. G., Piranomonte, S., Page, K. L., De Pasquale, M., Monfardini, A., Melandri, A., Zane, S., Guidorzi, C., Malesani, D., Gomboc, A., Bannister, N., Blustin, A. J., Capalbi, M., Carter, D., D'Avanzo, P., Kobayashi, S., Krimm, H. A., O'Brien, P. T., Page, M. J., Smith, R. J., Steele, I. A., and Tanvir, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first detection of an optical afterglow of a GRB (060108) that would have been classified as 'dark' in the absence of deep, rapid ground-based optical imaging with the 2-m robotic Faulkes Telesscope (FTN). Our multiwavelength analysis reveals an X-ray light curve typical of many Swift long GRBs (3-segments plus flare). Its optical afterglow, however, was already fainter than the detection limit of the UVOT within 100s of the burst. Optical imaging in BVRi' filters with the FTN began 2.75 minutes after the burst and resulted in the detection of the optical afterglow at 5.3 minutes, with a UKIRT K-band identification at ~45 mins. R and i'-band light curves are consistent with a single power law decay in flux, F(t) prop t^-a where a=0.43+/-0.08, or a 2-segment light curve with a steep decay a_1 <0.88, flattening to a_2 ~ 0.31, with evidence for rebrightening at i' band. Deep VLT R-band imaging at ~12 days reveals a faint, extended object (R ~23.5 mag) at the location of the afterglow. Although the brightness is compatible with the extrapolation of the a_2 slow decay, significant flux is likely due to a host galaxy. This implies that the optical light curve had a break before 12 days, akin to what observed in the X-rays. We derive a maximum photometric redshift z<3.2 for GRB 060108 and a best-fitting optical-to-X-ray SED at 1000 s after the burst consistent with a power law with index beta_OX = 0.54 and a small amount of extinction. The unambiguous detection at B-band and the derived photometric redshift rule out a high redshift as the reason for the optical faintness of GRB 060108. Instead, the hard opt/X-ray spectral index confirms it as one of the optically-darkest bursts detected and with modest host extinction explains the UVOT non-detection (abridged)., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS; replaces incorrect paper version previously posted
- Published
- 2006
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67. First science with SALT: peering at the accreting polar caps of the eclipsing polar SDSS J015543.40+002807.2
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O'Donoghue, D., Buckley, D. A. H., Balona, L. A., Bester, D., Botha, L., Brink, J., Carter, D. B., Charles, P. A., Christians, A., Ebrahim, F., Emmerich, R., Esterhuyse, W., Evans, G. P., Fourie, C., Fourie, P., Gajjar, H., Gordon, M., Gumede, C., de Kock, M., Koeslag, A., Koorts, W. P., Kriel, H., Marang, F., Meiring, J. G., Menzies, J. W., Menzies, P., Metcalfe, D., Meyer, B., Nel, L., O'Connor, J., Osman, F., Plessis, C. du, Rall, H., Riddick, A., Romero-Colmenero, E., Potter, S. B., Sass, C., Schalekamp, H., Sessions, N., Siyengo, S., Sopela, V., Steyn, H., Stoffels, J., Stoltz, J., Swart, G., Swat, A., Swiegers, J., Tiheli, T., Vaisanen, P., Whittaker, W., and van Wyk, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe briefly the properties of the recently completed Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), along with its first light imager SALTICAM. Using this instrument, we present 4.3 hr of high speed unfiltered photometric observations of the eclipsing polar SDSSJ015543.40+002807.2 with time resolution as short as 112 ms, the highest quality observations of this kind of any polar to date. The system was observed during its high luminosity state. Two accreting poles are clearly seen in the eclipse light curve. The binary system parameters have been constrained: the white dwarf mass is at the low end of the range expected for cataclysmic variables. Correlations between the positions of the accretion regions on or near the surface of the white dwarf and the binary system parameters were established. The sizes of the accretion regions and their relative movement from eclipse to eclipse were estimated: they are typically 4-7 deg depending on the mass of the white dwarf. The potential of these observations will only fully be realised when low state data of the same kind are obtained and the contact phases of the eclipse of the white dwarf are measured., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2006
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68. Globular cluster systems of six shell galaxies
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Sikkema, G., Peletier, R. F., Carter, D., Valentijn, E. A., and Balcells, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Shells in Elliptical Galaxies are faint, sharp-edged features, believed to provide evidence of a recent ($\sim 0.5 - 2 \times 10^9$ years ago) merger event. We analyse the Globular Cluster (GC) systems of six shell elliptical galaxies, to examine the effects of mergers upon the GC formation history. We examine the colour distributions, and investigate differences between red and blue globular cluster populations. We present luminosity functions, spatial distributions and specific frequencies ($S_N$) at 50 kpc radius for our sample. We present V and I magnitudes for cluster candidates measured with the HST Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). Galaxy background light is modelled and removed, and magnitudes are measured in 8 pixel (0.4 arcsec) diameter apertures. Background contamination is removed using counts from HDFS. We find that the colour distributions for NGC 3923 and NGC 5982 have a bimodal form typical of bright ellipticals, with peaks near $V-I=0.92 \pm 0.04$ and $V-I=1.18 \pm 0.06$. In NGC 7626, we find in addition a population of abnormally luminous clusters at $M_I=-12.5$. In NGC 2865 we find an unusually blue population, which may also be young. In NGC1344 and NGC474 the red cluster population is marginally detected. The radial surface density profiles are more flattened than the galaxy light in the cores. As already known, in NGC3923, which has a high $S_N$ of 5.6, the radial density distribution is more shallower than the diffuse galaxy light. The clusters in NGC 2865 and NGC 7626 provide evidence for formation of a population associated with a recent merger. In the other galaxies, the properties of the clusters are similar to those observed in other, non-shell, elliptical galaxies., Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted and to be published in A&A
- Published
- 2006
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69. Planetary Nebula Velocities in the Disk and Bulge of M31
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Halliday, C., Carter, D., Bridges, T. J., Jackson, Z. C., Wilkinson, M. I., Quinn, D. P., Evans, N. W., Douglas, N. G., Merrett, H. R., Merrifield, M. R., Romanowsky, A. J., Kuijken, K., and Irwin, M. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present radial velocities for a sample of 723 planetary nebulae (PNe) in the disk and bulge of M31, measured using the WYFFOS fibre spectrograph on the William Herschel telescope. Velocities are determined using the [OIII] 5007 Angstrom emission line. Rotation and velocity dispersion are measured to a radius of 50 arcminutes (11.5 kpc), the first stellar rotation curve and velocity dispersion profile for M31 to such a radius. Our kinematics are consistent with rotational support at radii well beyond the bulge effective radius of 1.4kpc, although our data beyond a radius of 5kpc are limited. We present tentative evidence for kinematic substructure in the bulge of M31 to be studied fully in a later work. This paper is part of an ongoing project to constrain the total mass, mass distribution and velocity anisotropy of the disk, bulge and halo of M31., Comment: 27 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2006
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70. High Quality Early Time Light Curves of GRB 060206: Implications for Gamma Ray Burst Environments and Energetics
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Monfardini, A., Kobayashi, S., Guidorzi, C., Carter, D., Mundell, C. G., Bersier, D. F., Gomboc, A., Melandri, A., Mottram, C. J., Smith, R. J., and Steele, I. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT) reacted promptly to the high-redshift (z=4.048) gamma-ray burst GRB 060206. The afterglow was identified automatically and multicolor r'i'z' imaging was triggered without human intervention. Combining our data with those obtained from later follow-ups provides a well-sampled optical light-curve from 5 minutes to >2d after the gamma event. The light-curve is highly structured with at least three bumps evident in the first 75 minutes, including a major rebrightening (Delta_r'=-1.6 at t=3000s), interpreted as late energy injection. At early time (t=440s), we find evidence for fast (Delta t_(rest)<4s<
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- 2006
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71. A deep kinematic survey of planetary nebulae in the Andromeda Galaxy using the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph
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Merrett, H. R., Merrifield, M. R., Douglas, N. G., Kuijken, K., Romanowsky, A. J., Napolitano, N. R., Arnaboldi, M., Capaccioli, M., Freeman, K. C., Gerhard, O., Coccato, L., Carter, D., Evans, N. W., Wilkinson, M. I., Halliday, C., and Bridges, T. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalogue of positions, magnitudes and velocities for 3300 emission-line objects found by the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph in a survey of the Andromeda Galaxy, M31. Of these objects, 2615 are found likely to be planetary nebulae (PNe) associated with M31. Initial results from this survey include: the likely non-existence of Andromeda VIII; a universal PN luminosity function, with the exception of a small amount of obscuration, and a small offset in normalization between bulge and disk components; very faint kinematically-selected photometry implying no cut-off in the disk to beyond 4 scalelengths and no halo population in excess of the bulge out to 10 effective bulge radii; disk kinematics that show significant dispersion and asymmetric drift out to large radii, consistent with a warm flaring disk; and no sign of any variation in kinematics with PN luminosity, suggesting that PNe arise from a fairly uniform population of old stars., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 23 pages, 37 figures. A full resolution version is available at http://www.astro.rug.nl/~pns/pns_pub.html
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- 2006
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72. The Automatic Real-Time GRB Pipeline of the 2-m Liverpool Telescope
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Guidorzi, C., Monfardini, A., Gomboc, A., Mottram, C. J., Mundell, C. G., Steele, I. A., Carter, D., Bode, M. F., Smith, R. J., Fraser, S. N., Burgdorf, M. J., and Newsam, A. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The 2-m Liverpool Telescope (LT), owned by Liverpool John Moores University, is located in La Palma (Canary Islands) and operates in fully robotic mode. In 2005, the LT began conducting an automatic GRB follow-up program. On receiving an automatic GRB alert from a Gamma-Ray Observatory (Swift, INTEGRAL, HETE-II, IPN) the LT initiates a special override mode that conducts follow-up observations within 2-3 min of the GRB onset. This follow-up procedure begins with an initial sequence of short (10-s) exposures acquired through an r' band filter. These images are reduced, analyzed and interpreted automatically using pipeline software developed by our team called "LT-TRAP" (Liverpool Telescope Transient Rapid Analysis Pipeline); the automatic detection and successful identification of an unknown and potentially fading optical transient triggers a subsequent multi-color imaging sequence. In the case of a candidate brighter than r'=15, either a polarimetric (from 2006) or a spectroscopic observation (from 2007) will be triggered on the LT. If no candidate is identified, the telescope continues to obtain z', r' and i' band imaging with increasingly longer exposure times. Here we present a detailed description of the LT-TRAP and briefly discuss the illustrative case of the afterglow of GRB 050502a, whose automatic identification by the LT just 3 min after the GRB, led to the acquisition of the first early-time (< 1 hr) multi-color light curve of a GRB afterglow., Comment: PASP, accepted (8 pages, 3 figures)
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- 2005
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73. The Early (<1 hr) Multi-Color Afterglow of GRB 050502a: Possible Evidence for a Uniform Medium with Density Clumps
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Guidorzi, C., Monfardini, A., Gomboc, A., Mundell, C. G., Steele, I. A., Carter, D., Bode, M. F., Smith, R. J., Mottram, C. J., Burgdorf, M. J., Tanvir, N. R., Masetti, N., and Pian, E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope reacted promptly to the gamma-ray burst GRB 050502a discovered by INTEGRAL and started observing 3 min after the onset of the GRB. The automatic identification of a bright afterglow of r'~15.8 triggered for the first time an observation sequence in the BVr'i' filters during the first hour after a GRB. Observations continued for ~1 day using the RoboNet-1.0 network of 2-m robotic telescopes. The light curve in all filters can be described by a simple power law with index of 1.2 +/- 0.1. We find evidence for a bump rising at t~0.02 days in all filters. From the spectrum and the light curve we investigate different interpretative scenarios and we find possible evidence for a uniform circumburst medium with clumps in density, as in the case of GRB 021004. Other interpretations of such bumps, such as the effect of energy injection through refreshed shocks or the result of a variable energy profile, are less favored. The optical afterglow of GRB 050502a is likely to be the result of slow electron cooling with the optical bands lying between the synchrotron peak frequency and the cooling frequency., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, ApJL, accepted
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- 2005
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74. The Liverpool Telescope Automatic Pipeline for Real-time GRB Afterglow Detection
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Gomboc, A., Monfardini, A., Guidorzi, C., Mundell, C. G., Mottram, C. J., Fraser, S. N., Smith, R. J., Steele, I. A., Carter, D., Bode, M. F., and Newsam, A. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT) is ideally suited to the rapid follow-up of unpredictable and transient events such as GRBs. Our GRB follow-up strategy is designed to identify optical/IR counterparts in real time; it involves the automatic triggering of initial observations, on receipt of an alert from Gamma Ray Observatories HETE-2, INTEGRAL and Swift, followed by automated data reduction, analysis, OT identification and subsequent observing mode choice. The lack of human intervention in this process requires robustness at all stages of the procedure. Here we describe the telescope, its instrumentation and GRB pipeline., Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Il nuovo cimento (4th Workshop Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Afterglow Era, Rome, 18-22 October 2004)
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- 2005
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75. Early GRB Optical and Infrared Afterglow Observations with the 2-m Robotic Liverpool Telescope
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Gomboc, A., Mundell, C. G., Guidorzi, C., Monfardini, A., Mottram, C. J., Priddey, R., Smith, R. J., Pak, S., Steele, I. A., Tanvir, N., Carter, D., Fraser, S. N., Bode, M. F., Newsam, A. M., and Hughes, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first optical observations of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow using the 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT), which is owned and operated by Liverpool John Moores University and situated on La Palma. We briefly discuss the capabilities of LT and its suitability for rapid follow-up observations of early optical and infrared GRB light curves. In particular, the combination of aperture, site, instrumentation and rapid response (robotic over-ride mode aided by telescope's rapid slew and fully-opening enclosure) makes the LT ideal for investigating the nature of short bursts, optically-dark bursts, and GRB blast-wave physics in general. We briefly describe the LT's key position in the RoboNet-1.0 network of robotic telescopes. We present the LT observations of GRB041006 and use its gamma-ray properties to predict the time of the break in optical light curve, a prediction consistent with the observations., Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Il nuovo cimento (4th Workshop Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Afterglow Era, Rome, 18-22 October 2004)
- Published
- 2005
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76. Rapid GRB Follow-up with the 2-m Robotic Liverpool Telescope
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Gomboc, A., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Guidorzi, C., Monfardini, A., Mundell, C. G., Newsam, A. M., Smith, R. J., Steele, I. A., and Meaburn, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the capabilities of the 2-m robotic Liverpool Telescope (LT), owned and operated by Liverpool John Moores University and situated at ORM, La Palma. Robotic control and scheduling of the LT make it especially powerful for observations in time domain astrophysics including: (i) rapid response to Targets of Opportunity: Gamma Ray Bursts, novae, supernovae, comets; (ii) monitoring of variable objects on timescales from seconds to years, and (iii) observations simultaneous or coordinated with other facilities, both ground-based and from space. Following a GRB alert from the Gamma Ray Observatories HETE-2, INTEGRAL and Swift we implement a special over-ride mode which enables observations to commence in about a minute after the alert, including optical and near infrared imaging and spectroscopy. In particular, the combination of aperture, site, instrumentation and rapid response (aided by its rapid slew and fully-opening enclosure) makes the LT excellently suited to help solving the mystery of the origin of optically dark GRBs, for the investigation of short bursts (which currently do not have any confirmed optical counterparts) and for early optical spectroscopy of the GRB phenomenon in general. We briefly describe the LT's key position in the RoboNet-1.0 network of robotic telescopes., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of Interacting Binaries: Accretion, Evolution and Outcomes, 4-10 July 2004, Cefalu, Sicily, Italy, eds. Antonelli et al
- Published
- 2004
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77. Mapping the Stellar Dynamics of M31
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Merrett, Helen, Merrifield, M., Kuijken, K., Romanowsky, A., Douglas, N., Napolitano, N., Arnaboldi, M., Capaccioli, M., Freeman, K., Gerhard, O., Carter, D., Evans, N. W., Wilkinson, M., Halliday, C., and Bridges, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph, we have observed and measured the velocities for some 2764 PNe in the disk and halo of the Andromeda galaxy. Preliminary analysis using a basic ring model shows a rotation curve in good agreement with that obtained from HI data out to ~20kpc. Some substructure has also been detected within the velocity field, which can be modeled as the continuation of the tidal-remnant known as the Southern Stream, as it passes through Andromeda's disk., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the ESO-Workshop "Planetary Nebulae beyond the Milky Way", May 19 - 21 (2004), ed. J. R. Walsh, L. Stanghellini, Springer-Verlag
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- 2004
78. Newcomers Meet the Intracluster Medium in the Coma Cluster
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Poggianti, B. M., Bridges, T. J., Yagi, M., Komiyama, Y., Carter, D., Mobasher, B., Okamura, S., and Kashikawa, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A main topic at this meeting is how galaxies are affected when they enter for the first time the cluster environment from the outskirts. Most of the times we are forced to infer the environmental effects indirectly, relying on systematic variations of galaxy properties with environment, but there aren't many examples of direct observations able to unveil ongoing transformations taking place, and the corresponding mechanism producing it. We present a case in which it is possible to identify the cluster environment, and in particular the intracluster medium and the recent infall history of galaxies onto the cluster, as the cause for a recent, abrupt change in the evolutionary history of galaxies., Comment: 5 pages, 1 postscript figure -- to appear in "Outskirts of Galaxy Clusters: intense life in the suburbs", IAU Colloquium N. 195, 2004, ed. A Diaferio
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- 2004
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79. The Liverpool Telescope Spectrograph: FRODOSpec
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Morales-Rueda, L., Carter, D., Steele, I. A., Charles, P. A., and Worswick, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe in some detail one of the instruments that will be available in 2004 to the research community. FRODOSpec is an integral field unit spectrograph that will be available for use with the 2 m robotic Liverpool Telescope on the island of La Palma. We anticipate that this instrument will open up major areas of research that cannot be carried out with conventionally operated telescopes. Some of these research areas relate to indirect imaging of astronomical objects like Doppler tomography and eclipse mapping., Comment: Accepted for publication in AN. Proceedings of the Astrotomography Joint Discussion 09 of the IAU General Assembly 2003. Uses anabs.cls
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- 2004
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80. The relation between galactic properties and cluster structure
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Poggianti, Bianca M., Bridges, Terry J., Yagi, M., Komiyama, Y., Carter, D., Mobasher, B., Okamura, S., and Kashikawa, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A satisfactory understanding of the origin of the dependence of galaxy properties on their environment has remained, so far, out of reach. In the light of numerous observational results and substantial theoretical progress obtained for clusters of galaxies in the last years, a primary goal is to understand how the star formation activity depends on cluster substructure, i.e. on the merging/accretion history of a cluster. In this contribution we present a case in which it is possible to identify the cluster environment, and in particular the intracluster medium and the recent infall history of galaxies onto the cluster, as the cause for an abrupt change in the star formation histories of a subset of galaxies in the Coma cluster., Comment: 11 pages, 10 postscript figures - Invited talk at the IAU Symp. 216, to appear in "Maps of the Cosmos", ASP Conf. Series, eds. Matthew Colless and Lister Staveley-Smith
- Published
- 2003
81. Tracing the Star Stream Through M31 Using Planetary Nebula Kinematics
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Merrett, H. R., Kuijken, K., Merrifield, M. R., Romanowsky, A. J., Douglas, N. G., Napolitano, N. R., Arnaboldi, M., Capaccioli, M., Freeman, K. C., Gerhard, O., Evans, N. W., Wilkinson, M. I., Halliday, C., Bridges, T. J., and Carter, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a possible orbit for the Southern Stream of stars in M31, which connects it to the Northern Spur. Support for this model comes from the dynamics of planetary nebulae (PNe) in the disk of M31: analysis of a new sample of 2611 PNe obtained using the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph reveals ~20 objects whose kinematics are inconsistent with the normal components of the galaxy, but which lie at the right positions and velocities to connect the two photometric features via this orbit. The satellite galaxy M32 is coincident with the stream both in position and velocity, adding weight to the hypothesis that the stream comprises its tidal debris., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, MNRAS Letters, accepted; for hi-res version see http://as1.chem.nottingham.ac.uk/~Aaron/m31stream.pdf (pdf) or http://as1.chem.nottingham.ac.uk/~Aaron/m31stream.ps.gz (ps)
- Published
- 2003
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82. The Liverpool Telescope: Rapid follow-up observation of Targets of opportunity with a 2 m robotic telescope
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Gomboc, A., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Mundell, C. G., Newsam, A. M., Smith, R. J., and Steele, I. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Liverpool Telescope, situated at Roque de los Muchachos Observatory, La Palma, Canaries, is the first 2-m, fully instrumented robotic telescope. It recently began observations. Among Liverpool Telescope's primary scientific goals is to monitor variable objects on all timescales from seconds to years. An additional benefit of its robotic operation is rapid reaction to unpredictable phenomena and their systematic follow up, simultaneous or coordinated with other facilities. The Target of Opportunity Programme of the Liverpool Telescope includes the prompt search for and observation of GRB and XRF counterparts. A special over-ride mode implemented for GRB/XRF follow-up enables observations commencing less than a minute after the alert, including optical and near infrared imaging and spectroscopy. In particular, the moderate aperture and rapid automated response make the Liverpool Telescope excellently suited to help solving the mystery of optically dark GRBs and for the investigation of currently unstudied short bursts and XRFs., Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the Proceedings of The Restless High-Energy Universe, 5-8 May 2003, Amsterdam, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, J.J.M. in 't Zand, and R.A.M.J. Wijers (eds.)
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- 2003
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83. GRB optical and IR rapid follow-up with the 2 m Liverpool Robotic Telescope
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Gomboc, A., Bode, M. F., Carter, D., Mundell, C. G., Newsam, A. M., Smith, R. J., and Steele, I. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Liverpool Telescope, owned and operated by Liverpool John Moores University and situated at Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, is the first 2-m, fully instrumented robotic telescope. We plan to use the LT in conjunction with Gamma Ray Observatories (HETE-2, INTEGRAL, Swift) to study GRB physics. A special over-ride mode will enable observations commencing less than a minute after the GRB alert, including optical and near infrared imaging and spectroscopy. These observations, together with systematic monitoring of the burst through the afterglow, will help to unravel the nature of prompt optical flashes, short bursts, optically dark bursts, redshift distribution, GRB - supernova connection and other questions related to the GRB phenomenon. In particular, the combination of aperture, instrumentation and rapid automated response makes the Liverpool Telescope excellently suited to the investigation of optically dark bursts and currently optically unstudied short bursts., Comment: 5 pages including 1 figure. To appear in the Proceedings of the IAU Colloquium 192: SUPERNOVAE, 22-26 April 2003, Valencia, Spain, J.M. Marcaide and K.W. Weiler (eds.)
- Published
- 2003
84. A comparison of the galaxy populations in the Coma and distant clusters: the evolution of k+a galaxies and the role of the intracluster medium
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Poggianti, B. M., Bridges, T. J., Komiyama, Y., Yagi, M., Carter, D., Mobasher, B., Okamura, S., and Kashikawa, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The spectroscopic properties of galaxies in the Coma cluster are compared with those of galaxies in rich clusters at $z \sim 0.5$, to investigate the evolution of the star formation history in clusters. Luminous galaxies with $M_V \leq -20$ and post-starburst/post-starforming (k+a) spectra which constitute a significant fraction of galaxies in distant cluster samples are absent in Coma, where spectacular cases of k+a spectra are found instead at $M_V>-18.5$ and represent a significant proportion of the cluster dwarf galaxy population. A simple inspection of their positions on the sky indicates that this type of galaxy does not show a preferential location within the cluster, but the bluest and strongest-lined group of k+a's lies in projection towards the central 1.4 Mpc of Coma and have radial velocities significantly higher than the cluster mean. We find a striking correlation between the positions of these young and strong post-starburst galaxies and substructure in the hot intracluster medium (ICM) identified from {\it XMM-Newton} data, with these galaxies lying close to the edges of two infalling substructures. This result strongly suggests that the interaction with the dense ICM could be responsible for the quenching of the star formation (thus creating the k+a spectrum), and possibly, for any previous starburst. The evolution with redshift of the luminosity distribution of k+a galaxies can be explained by a ``downsizing effect'', with the maximum luminosity/mass of actively star-forming galaxies infalling onto clusters decreasing at lower redshift. We discuss the possible physical origin of this downsizing effect and the implications of our results for current scenarios of environmental effects on the star formation in galaxies., Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, to appear in ApJ, version after referee's changes
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- 2003
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85. Clinical and multimodal biomarker correlates of ADNI neuropathological findings.
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Weiner, Michael, Toledo, JB, Cairns, NJ, Da, X, Chen, K, Carter, D, Fleisher, A, Householder, E, Ayutyanont, N, Roontiva, A, and Bauer, RJ
- Abstract
Autopsy series commonly report a high percentage of coincident pathologies in demented patients, including patients with a clinical diagnosis of dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT). However many clinical and biomarker studies report cases with a single ne
- Published
- 2013
86. Clinical and physiological risk factors for fecal incontinence in chronically constipated women
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Carter, D., Bardan, E., and Maradey-Romero, C.
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- 2019
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87. The Kinematics and Metallicity of the M31 Globular Cluster System
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Perrett, K. M., Bridges, T. J., Hanes, D. A., Irwin, M. J., Brodie, J. P., Carter, D., Huchra, J. P., and Watson, F. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
With the ultimate aim of distinguishing between various models describing the formation of galaxy halos (e.g. radial or multi-phase collapse, random mergers), we have completed a spectroscopic study of the globular cluster system of M31. We present the results of deep, intermediate-resolution, fibre-optic spectroscopy of several hundred of the M31 globular clusters using the Wide Field Fibre Optic Spectrograph (WYFFOS) at the William Herschel Telescope in La Palma, Canary Islands. These observations have yielded precise radial velocities (+/-12 km/s) and metallicities (+/-0.26 dex) for over 200 members of the M31 globular cluster population out to a radius of 1.5 degrees from the galaxy center. Many of these clusters have no previous published radial velocity or [Fe/H] estimates, and the remainder typically represent significant improvements over earlier determinations. We present analyses of the spatial, kinematic and metal abundance properties of the M31 globular clusters. We find that the abundance distribution of the cluster system is consistent with a bimodal distribution with peaks at [Fe/H] = -1.4 and -0.5. The metal-rich clusters demonstrate a centrally concentrated spatial distribution with a high rotation amplitude, although this population does not appear significantly flattened and is consistent with a bulge population. The metal-poor clusters tend to be less spatially concentrated and are also found to have a strong rotation signature., Comment: 33 pages, 20 figures
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- 2002
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88. Implementing an Instructional Information Management System (IIMS) in a Catholic Secondary School.
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Carter, D. S. G., Kelly, P., and Connors, M.
- Abstract
Planned educational change tends to be imposed from the top down and increases the requirements for local reporting. This paper reports on the effects of a curriculum-planning workshop on teachers' instructional practices. Eight teachers at a Catholic college in rural Western Australia participated in a curriculum-planning workshop to learn how to use the integrated Instructional Information Management System (IIMS). They completed a questionnaire, as did a group of six teachers and two administrators who had not participated in the workshop. The participating group reported greater use of computers than did their nonparticipating counterparts. The workshop attenders continued to use the language of computing and curriculum planning. The paper concludes that focused professional development in the areas of curriculum and assessment is a vital implementation-training component of effective IIMS use. If instructional systems are not well understood, then fundamental change is unlikely to occur. One table is included. Appendices contain essential features of an IIMS and sample questionnaire items. (Contains seven references.) (LMI)
- Published
- 1996
89. Information Processing and the Management of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning.
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Carter, D. S. G.
- Abstract
Well-constructed Information Management Systems (IMSs) are designed specifically to allow for the unobtrusive and automatic acquisition of data describing the key operations associated with the interlocking cycle of relationships between curriculum, instruction, and assessment. This paper argues that IMS software is an essential element to be integrated into the conceptualization, adoption, and maintenance of any curricula and instructional processes that are designed or implemented. Good responsive software design allows for the establishment of relationships among curriculum elements, instructional process, and assessment and evaluation. Moving toward outcomes-based education will help schools monitor their performance more effectively, but realizing this goal requires heavy demands of teachers and administrators, demands that can be alleviated through IMSs. The new information technology available can assist in the transformation of schools for the future. (Contains one figure and eight references.) (SLD)
- Published
- 1995
90. A photometric and spectroscopic study of dwarf and giant galaxies in the Coma cluster - V. Dependence of the spectroscopic properties on location in the cluster
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Carter, D., Mobasher, B., Bridges, T. J., Poggianti, B. M., Komiyama, Y., Kashikawa, N., Doi, M., Iye, M., Okamura, S., Sekiguchi, M., Shimasaku, K., Yagi., M., and Yasuda, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the radial dependence of the spectroscopic properties, in particular the Mg2,
and H beta spectroscopic indices, in a sample of galaxies spanning a wide range of absolute luminosity in the Coma cluster. After allowing for the magnitude dependence of these indices, we find a significant gradient in Mg2, in the sense that galaxies in the core of the cluster have stronger Mg2. We find only weak gradients in and H beta. Using the model grids presented in an earlier paper in this series, we attribute the Mg2 gradient to changes in metal abundance. One possible mechanism to create this abundance gradient is pressure confinement by the intracluster medium of material from Supernova driven winds early in the history of the galaxies., Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap. J. (main journal) - Published
- 2001
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91. Ages of S0 and elliptical galaxies in the Coma cluster
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Poggianti, B. M., Bridges, T., Carter, D., Mobasher, B., Doi, M., Iye, M., Kashikawa, N., Komiyama, Y., Okamura, S., Sekiguchi, M., Shimasaku, K., Yagi, M., and Yasuda, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The ages of stellar populations in 52 elliptical and S0 galaxies in the Coma cluster are investigated using a new spectroscopic sample. More than 40% of the S0s are found to have experienced recent star formation in their central regions during the last ~5 Gyrs, while such activity is absent in the ellipticals. Galaxies in this sample have absolute magnitudes in the range -20.5 < M_B < -17.5, and the fraction of S0 galaxies with recent star formation is higher at fainter luminosities. The observed luminosity range of S0 galaxies with signs of recent star formation activity is consistent with them being the descendants of typical star-forming spirals at intermediate redshift whose star formation has been halted as a consequence of the dense environment., Comment: 18 pages, ApJ in press
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- 2001
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92. A photometric and spectroscopic study of dwarf and giant galaxies in the Coma cluster - II. Spectroscopic observations
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Mobasher, B., Bridges, T. J., Carter, D., Poggianti, B., Komiyama, Y., Kashikawa, N., Doi, M., Iye, M., Okamura, S., Sekiguchi, M., Shimasaku, K., Yagi, M., and Yasuda, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
This is the second paper in a series studying the photometric and spectroscopic properties of galaxies of different luminosities in the Coma cluster. The sample selection, spectroscopic observations and completeness functions are presented here. To study the spectral properties of galaxies as a function of their local environment, two fields were selected for spectroscopic observations to cover both the core (Coma1) and outskirts (ie. south-west of the core and centered on NGC4839)- (Coma3) of the cluster. Medium resolution spectroscopy (6-9 \AA) was carried out for a total of 490 galaxies in both fields (302 in Coma1 and 188 in Coma3), using the WYFFOS multi-fiber spectrograph on the William Herschel Telescope. The galaxies cover a range of $12 < R < 20$, corresponding to -23 < M_R < -15 (H0=65 km/sec/Mpc). The redshifts are measured with an accuracy of 100 km/sec. The spectral line strengths and equivalent widths are also measured for the same galaxies and analysed in Poggianti et al (2001- paper III). A total of 189 (Coma1) and 90 (Coma3) galaxies are identified as members of the Coma cluster. An analysis of the colors show that only two members of the Coma cluster in our sample have B-R > 2. The completeness functions for the spectroscopic sample is presented., Comment: 27 pages, 11 Figures. Accepted for publication in Ap.J Suppl
- Published
- 2001
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93. A photometric and spectroscopic study of dwarf and giant galaxies in the Coma cluster -- III. Spectral ages and metallicities
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Poggianti, B. M., Bridges, T., Mobasher, B., Carter, D., Doi, M., Iye, M., Kashikawa, N., Komiyama, Y., Okamura, S., Sekiguchi, M., Shimasaku, K., Yagi, M., and Yasuda, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
(abr.) We present the analysis of the spectroscopic catalog of galaxies in the Coma cluster from Mobasher et al. This catalog comprises ~300 spectra of cluster members with magnitudes M_B=-20.5 to -14 in two areas of ~1 X 1.5 Mpc towards the center and the SW region of the cluster. In this paper the analysis is restricted to the 257 galaxies with no emission lines in their spectra. The strength of the age-sensitive indices is found to correlate with galaxy magnitude over the whole magnitude range. Similarly, the metallicity-sensitive indices anticorrelate with magnitude. By comparing the observed indices with model grids based on the Padova isochrones, we derive luminosity-weighted ages and metallicities. We present the distributions of ages and metallicities for galaxies in various magnitude bins. The mean metallicity decreases with galaxy magnitude and, at a given luminosity, appears to be generally lower for galaxies in the SW region of Coma as compared to the center of the cluster. A broad range of ages, from younger than 3 Gyr to older than 9 Gyr, is found in galaxies of any magnitude. However, systematic trends of age with luminosity are present among galaxies in the central field. In the central Mpc of Coma, a large fraction of galaxies at any luminosity (50-60% of the giants, >30 % of the dwarfs) show no evidence in their central regions of star formation occurred at redshift z<2, while the proportion of galaxies with significant star formation occurring at intermediate (0.35
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- 2001
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94. Investigation and comparison of mixed matrix membranes composed of polyimide matrimid with ZIF – 8, silicalite, and SAPO – 34
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Carter, D., Tezel, F.H., Kruczek, B., and Kalipcilar, H.
- Published
- 2017
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95. The Policy Context of Recent Curriculum Reforms in Australia.
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Carter, D. S. G.
- Abstract
Australia's economy slowly emerged from recession in the 1990s. Populist government leaders claimed that their economic restructuring policies of the 1980s were responsible for the economic turnaround. But even with greater national economic optimism, Australians have wondered why their country has not fared better economically both internally and in competition with other nations. Public pressure has pushed politicians to attempt to maintain high living standards and improve social conditions with fewer resources. Education also has been redefined in essentialist and instrumental terms to serve labor market needs. This view has clashed with the liberal-humanist tradition of curriculum most educators embrace. The national government's emphasis on economics in education policy can be seen in its national education goals: increased participation in education, skills training, private sector and trade union involvement in skills education, improved school retention, and improved overall quality. National curriculum frameworks also have played an increased role in furthering social and economic policy objectives. Frameworks provide an overall approach and focus for curriculum, but allow schools the freedom to make local changes. Also, inclusive curriculum has attempted to make education more inclusive of students' different gender, race, and culture. (Contains 29 references.) (JPT)
- Published
- 1994
96. Information Processing, Outcomes-Based Education, and the Management of Teaching and Learning.
- Author
-
Carter, D. S. G.
- Abstract
Outcomes-based education (OBE) is growing in stature in Australia and other Westernized nations. In Australia, education systems have adopted OBE within the framework of National Profiles curriculum statements in eight learning areas, including arts, health and physical education, science, English, languages other than English, mathematics, studies of science and environment, and technology. Schools must assess students' progress against more comprehensive outcomes and engage in evaluation and assessment of teaching in a publicly verifiable manner. The scope of these changes has overwhelmed many educators who do not have access to the most advanced information processing technology. Instructional Management Systems (IMS) utilizing computers are designed to manage many aspects of schooling: curriculum development, instruction, evaluation, and assessment. However, computer technology and its benefits to information flow have been slow to enter the classroom and instruction. A new curriculum model must be adopted that keeps up with and effectively manages emerging and rapidly changing information. Well constructed IMSs allow unobtrusive and automatic acquisition of data in areas of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment. The IMSeries software provides the information management tools to meet educators' needs. (Contains 15 references.) (JPT)
- Published
- 1994
97. Genome Variation in Cryptococcus gattii, an Emerging Pathogen of Immunocompetent Hosts
- Author
-
D’Souza, CA, Kronstad, JW, Taylor, G, Warren, R, Yuen, M, Hu, G, Jung, WH, Sham, A, Kidd, SE, Tangen, K, Lee, N, Zeilmaker, T, Sawkins, J, McVicker, G, Shah, S, Gnerre, S, Griggs, A, Zeng, Q, Bartlett, K, Li, W, Wang, X, Heitman, J, Stajich, JE, Fraser, JA, Meyer, W, Carter, D, Schein, J, Krzywinski, M, Kwon-Chung, KJ, Varma, A, Wang, J, Brunham, R, Fyfe, M, Ouellette, BFF, Siddiqui, A, Marra, M, Jones, S, Holt, R, Birren, BW, Galagan, JE, and Cuomo, CA
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Microbiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Infectious Diseases ,Human Genome ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Animals ,Antifungal Agents ,Cryptococcosis ,Cryptococcus gattii ,Disease Outbreaks ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Female ,Genetic Variation ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Genotype ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Humans ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Molecular Sequence Data ,North America ,Phylogeny ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Cryptococcus gattii recently emerged as the causative agent of cryptococcosis in healthy individuals in western North America, despite previous characterization of the fungus as a pathogen in tropical or subtropical regions. As a foundation to study the genetics of virulence in this pathogen, we sequenced the genomes of a strain (WM276) representing the predominant global molecular type (VGI) and a clinical strain (R265) of the major genotype (VGIIa) causing disease in North America. We compared these C. gattii genomes with each other and with the genomes of representative strains of the two varieties of Cryptococcus neoformans that generally cause disease in immunocompromised people. Our comparisons included chromosome alignments, analysis of gene content and gene family evolution, and comparative genome hybridization (CGH). These studies revealed that the genomes of the two representative C. gattii strains (genotypes VGI and VGIIa) are colinear for the majority of chromosomes, with some minor rearrangements. However, multiortholog phylogenetic analysis and an evaluation of gene/sequence conservation support the existence of speciation within the C. gattii complex. More extensive chromosome rearrangements were observed upon comparison of the C. gattii and the C. neoformans genomes. Finally, CGH revealed considerable variation in clinical and environmental isolates as well as changes in chromosome copy numbers in C. gattii isolates displaying fluconazole heteroresistance.
- Published
- 2011
98. Genome variation in Cryptococcus gattii, an emerging pathogen of immunocompetent hosts.
- Author
-
D'Souza, CA, Kronstad, JW, Taylor, G, Warren, R, Yuen, M, Hu, G, Jung, WH, Sham, A, Kidd, SE, Tangen, K, Lee, N, Zeilmaker, T, Sawkins, J, McVicker, G, Shah, S, Gnerre, S, Griggs, A, Zeng, Q, Bartlett, K, Li, W, Wang, X, Heitman, J, Stajich, JE, Fraser, JA, Meyer, W, Carter, D, Schein, J, Krzywinski, M, Kwon-Chung, KJ, Varma, A, Wang, J, Brunham, R, Fyfe, M, Ouellette, BFF, Siddiqui, A, Marra, M, Jones, S, Holt, R, Birren, BW, Galagan, JE, and Cuomo, CA
- Subjects
Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Humans ,Mice ,Cryptococcosis ,Antifungal Agents ,Disease Outbreaks ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Phylogeny ,Genotype ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Molecular Sequence Data ,North America ,Female ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Genetic Variation ,Cryptococcus gattii ,Inbred C57BL ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Microbiology - Abstract
Cryptococcus gattii recently emerged as the causative agent of cryptococcosis in healthy individuals in western North America, despite previous characterization of the fungus as a pathogen in tropical or subtropical regions. As a foundation to study the genetics of virulence in this pathogen, we sequenced the genomes of a strain (WM276) representing the predominant global molecular type (VGI) and a clinical strain (R265) of the major genotype (VGIIa) causing disease in North America. We compared these C. gattii genomes with each other and with the genomes of representative strains of the two varieties of Cryptococcus neoformans that generally cause disease in immunocompromised people. Our comparisons included chromosome alignments, analysis of gene content and gene family evolution, and comparative genome hybridization (CGH). These studies revealed that the genomes of the two representative C. gattii strains (genotypes VGI and VGIIa) are colinear for the majority of chromosomes, with some minor rearrangements. However, multiortholog phylogenetic analysis and an evaluation of gene/sequence conservation support the existence of speciation within the C. gattii complex. More extensive chromosome rearrangements were observed upon comparison of the C. gattii and the C. neoformans genomes. Finally, CGH revealed considerable variation in clinical and environmental isolates as well as changes in chromosome copy numbers in C. gattii isolates displaying fluconazole heteroresistance.
- Published
- 2011
99. Adolescent Understanding of Key Variables Affecting Receptivity to Health Curricula.
- Author
-
Carter, D. S. G. and Carter, S. M.
- Abstract
Adolescents comprise a substantial proportion of the at-risk population for sexually transmissible diseases (STD's) and AIDS. This study examines the link between sexuality education programs and student receptivity in Western Australian secondary schools. The researchers ask the question, "Given the same exposure to similar content and processes in sexuality education curricula in coeducational classrooms, will differences occur in receptivity between male and female high school students?" The question was answered in part by an instrument constructed to measure key constitutive variables of receptivity in the dimensions of "understandings" and "affects." The questionnaire was administered to high school students (N=533) and the results were compared to the empirical data derived from a social survey of 14-15 year old adolescents following similar health/sexuality education curricula. Two main findings emerged from the study: (1) the amount of health education, including sexuality education, that adolescent students received in high school influenced their receptivity towards the practice of responsible sexual behaviors attuned to community standards, thus potentially enhancing personally fulfilling relationships; and (2) girls exhibited higher receptivity to the messages of the sexuality education curriculum than did boys. Included are eight tables which present the statistical data. (RJM)
- Published
- 1993
100. Educating the Reflective Practitioner for Catholic Secondary Schools.
- Author
-
Carey, P. S. and Carter, D. S. G.
- Abstract
This paper reports on the conceptualization and first year of implementation of a model of preservice teacher education and training established at the University of Notre Dame Australia to meet the specific needs of the Catholic education system. In setting up an appropriate model, the notion of the graduate teacher as one who is critically self-aware and sensitive to students' needs within a faith community assumed central importance. The nature of the Catholic school is outlined, with its emphasis on a holistic approach to education and its view of school as community. An essential component of the Diploma in Education program is students' involvement in a regular, well-planned, professionally supervised experience in schools. A curriculum sequence based on developmental and sequential stages was designed to facilitate the development of competence in planning, implementing, and evaluating teaching-learning processes and contexts across different subject areas. Data analysis that used a modified version of the Developmental Research Sequence provided evidence that the first year of the course has helped neophyte teachers move towards an ideal of reflective practice through building self-efficacy. (Contains 16 references.) (JDD)
- Published
- 1993
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