13,784 results on '"Trump"'
Search Results
152. A Survey of Music Generation in the Context of Interaction.
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Ismael Agchar, Ilja Baumann, Franziska Braun, Paula Andrea Pérez-Toro, Korbinian Riedhammer, Sebastian Trump, and Martin Ullrich
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- 2024
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153. Health Systems' Pursuit Of Improved Margins: Defining A Path Forward
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Trump, Chris
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Financial management -- Methods ,Nonprofit organizations -- Finance -- Management -- Forecasts and trends ,Company business management ,Company financing ,Business, international - Abstract
In a post-pandemic era, US-based healthcare systems and their service partners continue searching for their 'new normal' and a return to double-digit margins in most service areas. As a result, [...]
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- 2024
154. WPU's student athlete experience
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Trump, Jacob
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Athletes - Abstract
Byline: Jacob Trump There are a lot of different extracurriculars, clubs, and organizations on WPU's campus. The school's athletic department, however, is one of its most popular aspects of the [...]
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- 2024
155. A dramatic, objective antiandrogen withdrawal response: case report and review of the literature
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Litwin Alan, Chadha Manpreet K, Lau Yiu-Keung, and Trump Donald L
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Antiandrogen withdrawal response is an increasingly recognized entity in patients with metastatic prostate cancer. To our knowledge, there have been no reports describing a durable radiologic improvement along with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) with discontinuation of the antiandrogen agent bicalutamide. We report a case in which a dramatic decline of serum PSA levels associated with a dramatic improvement in radiologic disease was achieved with bicalutamide discontinuation.
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- 2008
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156. Addressing the eco-gender gap in men through power and sustainability self-efficacy
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Newman, Kevin P. and Trump, Rebecca K.
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- 2023
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157. Assessing comprehension of online information in the United States for third-line treatment of overactive bladder
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Werner, Zachary, Trump, Tyler, Zaslau, Stanley, and Shapiro, Robert
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- 2023
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158. Corona-Heated Accretion-disk Reprocessing (CHAR): A Physical Model to Decipher the Melody of AGN UV/optical Twinkling
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Sun, Mouyuan, Xue, Yongquan, Brandt, W. N., Gu, Wei-Min, Trump, Jonathan R., Cai, Zhenyi, He, Zhicheng, Lin, Da-bin, Liu, Tong, and Wang, Junxian
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) have long been observed to "twinkle" (i.e., their brightness varies with time) on timescales from days to years in the UV/optical bands. Such AGN UV/optical variability is essential for probing the physics of supermassive black holes (SMBHs), the accretion disk, and the broad-line region. Here we show that the temperature fluctuations of an AGN accretion disk, which is magnetically coupled with the corona, can account for observed high-quality AGN optical light curves. We calculate the temperature fluctuations by considering the gas physics of the accreted matter near the SMBH. We find that the resulting simulated AGN UV/optical light curves share the same statistical properties as the observed ones as long as the dimensionless viscosity parameter $\alpha$, which is widely believed to be controlled by magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence in the accretion disk, is about $0.01$---$0.2$. Moreover, our model can simultaneously explain the larger-than-expected accretion disk sizes and the dependence of UV/optical variability upon wavelength for NGC 5548. Our model also has the potential to explain some other observational facts of AGN UV/optical variability, including the timescale-dependent bluer-when-brighter color variability and the dependence of UV/optical variability on AGN luminosity and black hole mass. Our results also demonstrate a promising way to infer the black-hole mass, the accretion rate, and the radiative efficiency, thereby facilitating understanding of the gas physics and MHD turbulence near the SMBH and its cosmic mass growth history by fitting the AGN UV/optical light curves in the era of time-domain astronomy., Comment: 25 pages, 25 figures. Accepted to ApJ. The two figsets can be downloaded from https://www.mysun.work/projects/charm/
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- 2020
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159. Low energy magnons in the chiral ferrimagnet $\text{Cu}_2\text{OSeO}_3$: a coarse-grained approach
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Luo, Yi, Marcus, G. G., Trump, B. A., Kindervater, J., Stone, M. B., Rodriguez-Rivera, J. A., Qiu, Yiming, McQueen, T. M., Tchernyshyov, O., and Broholm, C.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We report a comprehensive neutron scattering study of low energy magnetic excitations in the breathing pyrochlore helimagnetic $\text{Cu}_2\text{OSeO}_3$. Fully documenting the four lowest energy magnetic modes that leave the ferrimagnetic configuration of the "strong tetrahedra" intact ($|\hbar\omega|<13$ meV), we find gapless quadratic dispersion at the $\Gamma$ point for energies above 0.2 meV, two doublets separated by 1.6(2) meV at the $R$ point, and a bounded continuum at the $X$ point. Our constrained rigid spin cluster model relates these features to Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya (DM) interactions and the incommensurate helical ground state. Combining conventional spin wave theory with a spin cluster form-factor accurately reproduces the measured equal time structure factor through multiple Brillouin zones. An effective spin Hamiltonian describing the complex anisotropic inter-cluster interactions is obtained., Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables
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- 2020
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160. The complex biology of aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation in cancer and beyond
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Opitz, Christiane A., Holfelder, Pauline, Prentzell, Mirja Tamara, and Trump, Saskia
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- 2023
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161. Genome-wide DNA methylation sequencing identifies epigenetic perturbations in the upper airways under long-term exposure to moderate levels of ambient air pollution
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Messingschlager, Marey, Bartel-Steinbach, Martina, Mackowiak, Sebastian D., Denkena, Johanna, Bieg, Matthias, Klös, Matthias, Seegebarth, Anke, Straff, Wolfgang, Süring, Katrin, Ishaque, Naveed, Eils, Roland, Lehmann, Irina, Lermen, Dominik, and Trump, Saskia
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- 2023
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162. The Need to Reconcile Concepts that Characterize Systems Withstanding Threats
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Galaitsi, Stephanie, Trump, Benjamin D., Keisler, Jeffrey M., and Linkov, Igor
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Physics - Physics and Society ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
Desirable system performance in the face of threats and disruptions has been characterized by various management concepts. Through semi-structured interviews with editors of journals in the fields of emergency response and systems management, a literature review, and professional judgment, we identified nine related and often interchangeably-used system performance concepts: adaptability, agility, reliability, resilience, resistance, robustness, safety, security, and sustainability. We analysed expert responses and reviewed the linguistic definitions and mathematical framing of these concepts to understand their applications. We found a lack of consensus on their usage between interview subjects, but using a mathematical framing enriched the linguistic definitions and enabled formulating comparative visualizations and system-specific definitions for the concepts. We propose a conceptual framing to relate the concepts for management purposes. A better understanding of these concepts will allow system planners to pursue management strategies best suited to their unique system dynamics and specific objectives of 'goodness' that all these concepts bring., Comment: under review in Risk Analysis
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- 2019
163. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: The H$\beta$ Radius-Luminosity Relation
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Alvarez, Gloria Fonseca, Trump, Jonathan R., Homayouni, Yasaman, Grier, C. J., Shen, Yue, Horne, Keith, Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, Brandt, W. N., Ho, Luis C., Peterson, B. M., and Schneider, D. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Results from a few decades of reverberation mapping (RM) studies have revealed a correlation between the radius of the broad-line emitting region (BLR) and the continuum luminosity of active galactic nuclei. This "radius-luminosity" relation enables survey-scale black-hole mass estimates across cosmic time, using relatively inexpensive single-epoch spectroscopy, rather than intensive RM time monitoring. However, recent results from newer reverberation mapping campaigns challenge this widely used paradigm, reporting quasar BLR sizes that differ significantly from the previously established radius-luminosity relation. Using simulations of the radius--luminosity relation with the observational parameters of SDSS-RM, we find that this difference is not likely due to observational biases. Instead, it appears that previous RM samples were biased to a subset of quasar properties, and the broader parameter space occupied by the SDSS-RM quasar sample has a genuinely wider range of BLR sizes. We examine the correlation between the deviations from the radius-luminosity relation and several quasar parameters; the most significant correlations indicate that the deviations depend on UV/optical SED and the relative amount of ionizing radiation. Our results indicate that single-epoch black-hole mass estimates that do not account for the diversity of quasars in the radius-luminosity relation could be overestimated by an average of ~0.3 dex., Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Current version includes revisions after referee report
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- 2019
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164. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Comparison of Lag Measurement Methods with Simulated Observations
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Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, Shen, Yue, Brandt, W. N., Grier, C. J., Hall, P. B., Ho, L. C., Homayouni, Y., Horne, K., Schneider, D. P., Trump, J. R., and Starkey, D. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the performance of different methodologies that measure the time lag between broad-line and continuum variations in reverberation mapping data using simulated light curves that probe a range of cadence, time baseline, and signal-to-noise ratio in the flux measurements. We compare three widely-adopted lag measuring methods: the Interpolated Cross-Correlation Function (ICCF), the z-transformed Discrete Correlation Function (ZDCF) and the MCMC code JAVELIN, for mock data with qualities typical of multi-object spectroscopic reverberation mapping (MOS-RM) surveys that simultaneously monitor hundreds of quasars. We quantify the overall lag detection efficiency, the rate of false detections, and the quality of lag measurements for each of these methods and under different survey designs (e.g., observing cadence and depth) using mock quasar light curves. Overall JAVELIN and ICCF outperform ZDCF in essentially all tests performed. Compared with ICCF, JAVELIN produces higher quality lag measurements, is capable of measuring more lags with timescales shorter than the observing cadence, is less susceptible to seasonal gaps and S/N degradation in the light curves, and produces more accurate lag uncertainties. We measure the Hbeta broad-line region size-luminosity (R-L) relation with each method using the simulated light curves to assess the impact of selection effects of the design of MOS-RM surveys. The slope of the R-L relation measured by JAVELIN is the least biased among the three methods, and is consistent across different survey designs. These results demonstrate a clear preference for JAVELIN over the other two non-parametric methods for MOS-RM programs, particularly in the regime of limited light curve quality as expected from most MOS-RM programs., Comment: 22 pages, 34 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2019
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165. The CANDELS/SHARDS multi-wavelength catalog in GOODS-N: Photometry, Photometric Redshifts, Stellar Masses, Emission line fluxes and Star Formation Rates
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Barro, Guillermo, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Cava, Antonio, Brammer, Gabriel, Pandya, Viraj, Moral, Carmen Eliche, Esquej, Pilar, Dominguez-Sanchez, Helena, Pampliega, Belen Alcalde, Guo, Yicheng, Koekemoer, Anton M., Trump, Jonathan R., Ashby, Matthew L. N., Cardiel, Nicolas, Castellano, Marco, Conselice, Christopher J., Dickinson, Mark E., Dolch, Timothy, Donley, Jennifer L., Briones, Nestor Espino, Faber, Sandra M., Fazio, Giovanni G., Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steve, Fontana, Adriano, Galametz, Audrey, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish P., Hemmati, Shoubaneh, Hernan-Caballero, Antonio, Kocevski, Dale, Koo, David C., Kodra, Dritan, Lee, Kyoung-Soo, Lin, Lihwai, Lucas, Ray A., Mobasher, Bahram, McGrath, Elizabeth J., Nandra, Kirpal, Nayyeri, Hooshang, Newman, Jeffrey A., Pforr, Janine, Peth, Michael, Rafelski, Marc, Rodriguez-Munoz, Lucia, Salvato, Mara, Stefanon, Mauro, van der Wel, Arjen, Willner, Steven P., Wiklind, Tommy, and Wuyts, Stijn
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a WFC3 F160W ($H$-band) selected catalog in the CANDELS/GOODS-N field containing photometry from the ultraviolet (UV) to the far-infrared (IR), photometric redshifts and stellar parameters derived from the analysis of the multi-wavelength data. The catalog contains 35,445 sources over the 171 arcmin$^{2}$ of the CANDELS F160W mosaic. The 5$\sigma$ detection limits (within an aperture of radius 0\farcs17) of the mosaic range between $H=27.8$, 28.2 and 28.7 in the wide, intermediate and deep regions, that span approximately 50\%, 15\% and 35\% of the total area. The multi-wavelength photometry includes broad-band data from UV (U band from KPNO and LBC), optical (HST/ACS F435W, F606W, F775W, F814W, and F850LP), near-to-mid IR (HST/WFC3 F105W, F125W, F140W and F160W, Subaru/MOIRCS Ks, CFHT/Megacam K, and \spitzer/IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8.0 $\mu$m) and far IR (\spitzer/MIPS 24$\mu$m, HERSCHEL/PACS 100 and 160$\mu$m, SPIRE 250, 350 and 500$\mu$m) observations. In addition, the catalog also includes optical medium-band data (R$\sim50$) in 25 consecutive bands, $\lambda=500$ to 950~nm, from the SHARDS survey and WFC3 IR spectroscopic observations with the G102 and G141 grisms (R$\sim210$ and 130). The use of higher spectral resolution data to estimate photometric redshifts provides very high, and nearly uniform, precision from $z=0-2.5$. The comparison to 1,485 good quality spectroscopic redshifts up to $z\sim3$ yields $\Delta z$/(1+$z_{\rm spec}$)$=$0.0032 and an outlier fraction of $\eta=$4.3\%. In addition to the multi-band photometry, we release added-value catalogs with emission line fluxes, stellar masses, dust attenuations, UV- and IR- based star formation rates and rest-frame colors., Comment: The catalogs, images and spectra are available in Rainbow-slicer (https://bit.ly/2OxKKx1 ), navigator (https://bit.ly/2GDS180 ) and MAST (https://bit.ly/2YtoBQ4 ). In addition to the photometry and other added-value catalogs we release UV+IR star formation rates based on Spitzer (MIPS) and Herschel (PACS and SPIRE) in the 5 CANDELS fields
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- 2019
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166. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Improving Lag Detection with an Extended Multi-Year Baseline
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Shen, Yue, Grier, C. J., Horne, Keith, Brandt, W. N., Trump, J. R., Hall, P. B., Kinemuchi, K., Starkey, David, Schneider, D. P., Ho, Luis C., Homayouni, Y., Li, Jennifer, McGreer, Ian D., Peterson, B. M., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Chen, Yuguang, Dawson, K. S., Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Green, P. J., Guo, Yucheng, Jia, Siyao, Jiang, Linhua, Kneib, Jean-Paul, Li, Feng, Li, Zefeng, Nie, Jundan, Oravetz, Audrey, Oravetz, Daniel, Pan, Kaike, Petitjean, Patrick, Ponder, Kara, Rogerson, Jesse, Vivek, M., Zhang, Tianmen, and Zou, Hu
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the effects of extended multi-year light curves (9-year photometry and 5-year spectroscopy) on the detection of time lags between the continuum variability and broad-line response of quasars at z>~1.5, and compare with the results using 4-year photometry+spectroscopy presented in a companion paper. We demonstrate the benefits of the extended light curves in three cases: (1) lags that are too long to be detected by the shorter-duration data but can be detected with the extended data; (2) lags that are recovered by the extended light curves but missed in the shorter-duration data due to insufficient light curve quality; and (3) lags for different broad line species in the same object. These examples demonstrate the importance of long-term monitoring for reverberation mapping to detect lags for luminous quasars at high-redshift, and the expected performance of the final dataset from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping project that will have 11-year photometric and 7-year spectroscopic baselines., Comment: submitted to AAS journals; 9 pages
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- 2019
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167. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Accretion and Broad Emission Line Physics from a Hypervariable Quasar
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Dexter, Jason, Xin, Shuo, Shen, Yue, Grier, C. J., Liu, Teng, Gezari, Suvi, McGreer, Ian D., Brandt, W. N., Hall, P. B., Horne, Keith, Simm, Torben, Merloni, Andrea, Green, Paul J., Vivek, M., Trump, Jonathan R., Homayouni, Yasaman, Peterson, B. M., Schneider, Donald P., Kinemuchi, K., Pan, Kaike, and Bizyaev, Dmitry
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We analyze extensive spectroscopic and photometric data of the hypervariable quasar SDSS J131424+530527 (RMID 017) at z=0.456, an optical "changing look" quasar from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping project that increased in optical luminosity by a factor of 10 between 2014 and 2017. The observed broad emission lines all respond in luminosity and width to the changing optical continuum, as expected for photoionization in a stratified, virialized broad emission line region. The luminosity changes therefore result from intrinsic changes in accretion power rather than variable obscuration. The variability is continuous and apparently stochastic, disfavoring an origin as a discrete event such as a tidal disruption flare or microlensing event. It is coordinated on day timescales with blue leading red, consistent with reprocessing powering the entire optical SED. We show that this process cannot work in a standard thin disk geometry on energetic grounds, and would instead require a large covering factor reprocessor. Disk instability models could potentially also explain the data, provided that the instability sets in near the inner radius of a geometrically thick accretion disk., Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, submitted to AAS journals
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- 2019
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168. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Initial CIV Lag Results from Four Years of Data
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Grier, C. J., Shen, Yue, Horne, Keith, Brandt, W. N., Trump, J. R., Hall, P. B., Kinemuchi, K., Starkey, David, Schneider, D. P., Ho, L. C., Homayouni, Y., Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, McGreer, Ian D., Peterson, B. M., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Chen, Yuguang, Dawson, K. S., Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Guo, Yucheng, Jia, Siyao, Jiang, Linhua, Kneib, Jean-Paul, Li, Feng, Li, Zefeng, Nie, Jundan, Oravetz, Audrey, Oravetz, Daniel, Pan, Kaike, Petitjean, Patrick, Ponder, Kara A., Rogerson, Jesse, Vivek, M., Zhang, Tianmen, and Zou, Hu
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present reverberation-mapping lags and black-hole mass measurements using the CIV 1549 broad emission line from a sample of 349 quasars monitored as a part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project. Our data span four years of spectroscopic and photometric monitoring for a total baseline of 1300 days. We report significant time delays between the continuum and the CIV 1549 emission line in 52 quasars, with an estimated false-positive detection rate of 10%. Our analysis of marginal lag measurements indicates that there are on the order of 100 additional lags that should be recoverable by adding more years of data from the program. We use our measurements to calculate black-hole masses and fit an updated CIV radius-luminosity relationship. Our results significantly increase the sample of quasars with CIV RM results, with the quasars spanning two orders of magnitude in luminosity toward the high-luminosity end of the CIV radius-luminosity relation. In addition, these quasars are located at among the highest redshifts (z~1.4-2.8) of quasars with black hole masses measured with reverberation mapping. This work constitutes the first large sample of CIV reverberation-mapping measurements in more than a dozen quasars, demonstrating the utility of multi-object reverberation mapping campaigns., Comment: 42 pages (incl. 21 pages of tables): 12 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to AAS journals. Figures 8 and 12 are sets that will be provided in the online published version of the article, and the tables will also be provided fully online
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- 2019
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169. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Low-Ionization Broad-Line Widths and Implications for Virial Black Hole Mass Estimation
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Wang, Shu, Shen, Yue, Jiang, Linhua, Horne, Keith, Brandt, W. N., Grier, C. J., Ho, Luis C., Homayouni, Yasaman, Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, Schneider, Donald P., and Trump, Jonathan R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The width of the broad emission lines in quasars is commonly characterized either by the full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) or the square root of the second moment of the line profile ($\sigma_{\rm line}$), and used as an indicator of the virial velocity of the broad-line region (BLR) in the estimation of black hole (BH) mass. We measure FWHM and $\sigma_{\rm line}$ for H$\alpha$, H$\beta$ and Mg II broad lines in both the mean and root-mean-square (rms) spectra of a large sample of quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project. We introduce a new quantitative recipe to measure $\sigma_{\rm line}$ that is reproducible, less susceptible to noise and blending in the wings, and scales with the intrinsic width of the line. We compare the four definitions of line width (FWHM and $\sigma_{\rm line}$ in mean and rms spectra, respectively) for each of the three broad lines and among different lines. There are strong correlations among different width definitions for each line, providing justification for using the line width measured in single-epoch spectroscopy as a virial velocity indicator. There are also strong correlations among different lines, suggesting alternative lines to H$\beta$ can be used to estimate virial BH masses. We further investigate the correlations between virial BH masses using different line width definitions and the stellar velocity dispersion of the host galaxies, and the dependence of line shape (characterized by the ratio FWHM/$\sigma_{\rm line}$) on physical properties of the quasar. Our results provide further evidence that FWHM is more sensitive to the orientation of a flattened BLR geometry than $\sigma_{\rm line}$, but the overall comparison between the virial BH mass and host stellar velocity dispersion does not provide conclusive evidence that one particular width definition is significantly better than the others., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Accepted by ApJ
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- 2019
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170. Deep ugrizY Imaging and DEEP2/3 Spectroscopy: A Photometric Redshift Testbed for LSST and Public Release of Data from the DEEP3 Galaxy Redshift Survey
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Zhou, Rongpu, Cooper, Michael C., Newman, Jeffrey A., Ashby, Matthew L. N., Aird, James, Conselice, Christopher J., Davis, Marc, Dutton, Aaron A., Faber, S. M., Fang, Jerome J., Fazio, G. G., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Kocevski, Dale, Koo, David C., Nandra, Kirpal, Phillips, Andrew C., Rosario, David J., Schlafly, Edward F., Trump, Jonathan R., Weiner, Benjamin, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Renbin
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present catalogs of calibrated photometry and spectroscopic redshifts in the Extended Groth Strip, intended for studies of photometric redshifts (photo-z's). The data includes ugriz photometry from CFHTLS and Y-band photometry from the Subaru Suprime camera, as well as spectroscopic redshifts from the DEEP2, DEEP3 and 3D-HST surveys. These catalogs incorporate corrections to produce effectively matched-aperture photometry across all bands, based upon object size information available in the catalog and Moffat profile point spread function fits. We test this catalog with a simple machine learning-based photometric redshift algorithm based upon Random Forest regression, and find that the corrected aperture photometry leads to significant improvement in photo-z accuracy compared to the original SExtractor catalogs from CFHTLS and Subaru. The deep ugrizY photometry and spectroscopic redshifts are well-suited for empirical tests of photometric redshift algorithms for LSST. The resulting catalogs are publicly available. We include a basic summary of the strategy of the DEEP3 Galaxy Redshift Survey to accompany the recent public release of DEEP3 data., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures; published in MNRAS; for associated catalogs, see http://d-scholarship.pitt.edu/36064/
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- 2019
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171. Self-adjusting binding pockets enhance H 2 and CH 4 adsorption in a uranium-based metal–organic framework
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Halter, Dominik P, Klein, Ryan A, Boreen, Michael A, Trump, Benjamin A, Brown, Craig M, and Long, Jeffrey R
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Chemical Sciences ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
A new, air-stable, permanently porous uranium(iv) metal-organic framework U(bdc)2 (1, bdc2- = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) was synthesized and its H2 and CH4 adsorption properties were investigated. Low temperature adsorption isotherms confirm strong adsorption of both gases in the framework at low pressures. In situ gas-dosed neutron diffraction experiments with different D2 loadings revealed a rare example of cooperative framework contraction (ΔV = -7.8%), triggered by D2 adsorption at low pressures. This deformation creates two optimized binding pockets for hydrogen (Q st = -8.6 kJ mol-1) per pore, in agreement with H2 adsorption data. Analogous experiments with CD4 (Q st = -24.8 kJ mol-1) and N,N-dimethylformamide as guests revealed that the binding pockets in 1 adjust by selective framework contractions that are unique for each adsorbent, augmenting individual host-guest interactions. Our results suggest that the strategic combination of binding pockets and structural flexibility in metal-organic frameworks holds great potential for the development of new adsorbents with an enhanced substrate affinity.
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- 2020
172. Self-adjusting binding pockets enhance H2 and CH4 adsorption in a uranium-based metal-organic framework.
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Halter, Dominik P, Klein, Ryan A, Boreen, Michael A, Trump, Benjamin A, Brown, Craig M, and Long, Jeffrey R
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Chemical Sciences - Abstract
A new, air-stable, permanently porous uranium(iv) metal-organic framework U(bdc)2 (1, bdc2- = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) was synthesized and its H2 and CH4 adsorption properties were investigated. Low temperature adsorption isotherms confirm strong adsorption of both gases in the framework at low pressures. In situ gas-dosed neutron diffraction experiments with different D2 loadings revealed a rare example of cooperative framework contraction (ΔV = -7.8%), triggered by D2 adsorption at low pressures. This deformation creates two optimized binding pockets for hydrogen (Q st = -8.6 kJ mol-1) per pore, in agreement with H2 adsorption data. Analogous experiments with CD4 (Q st = -24.8 kJ mol-1) and N,N-dimethylformamide as guests revealed that the binding pockets in 1 adjust by selective framework contractions that are unique for each adsorbent, augmenting individual host-guest interactions. Our results suggest that the strategic combination of binding pockets and structural flexibility in metal-organic frameworks holds great potential for the development of new adsorbents with an enhanced substrate affinity.
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- 2020
173. Negative cooperativity upon hydrogen bond-stabilized O2 adsorption in a redox-active metal-organic framework.
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Oktawiec, Julia, Jiang, Henry ZH, Vitillo, Jenny G, Reed, Douglas A, Darago, Lucy E, Trump, Benjamin A, Bernales, Varinia, Li, Harriet, Colwell, Kristen A, Furukawa, Hiroyasu, Brown, Craig M, Gagliardi, Laura, and Long, Jeffrey R
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The design of stable adsorbents capable of selectively capturing dioxygen with a high reversible capacity is a crucial goal in functional materials development. Drawing inspiration from biological O2 carriers, we demonstrate that coupling metal-based electron transfer with secondary coordination sphere effects in the metal-organic framework Co2(OH)2(bbta) (H2bbta = 1H,5H-benzo(1,2-d:4,5-d')bistriazole) leads to strong and reversible adsorption of O2. In particular, moderate-strength hydrogen bonding stabilizes a cobalt(III)-superoxo species formed upon O2 adsorption. Notably, O2-binding in this material weakens as a function of loading, as a result of negative cooperativity arising from electronic effects within the extended framework lattice. This unprecedented behavior extends the tunable properties that can be used to design metal-organic frameworks for adsorption-based applications.
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- 2020
174. Mouse models of neutropenia reveal progenitor-stage-specific defects.
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Muench, David, Olsson, Andre, Ferchen, Kyle, Pham, Giang, Serafin, Rachel, Chutipongtanate, Somchai, Dwivedi, Pankaj, Song, Baobao, Hay, Stuart, Chetal, Kashish, Trump-Durbin, Lisa, Mookerjee-Basu, Jayati, Zhang, Kejian, Yu, Jennifer, Lutzko, Carolyn, Myers, Kasiani, Nazor, Kristopher, Greis, Kenneth, Kappes, Dietmar, Way, Sing, Salomonis, Nathan, and Grimes, H
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Animals ,Candida albicans ,Cell Lineage ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Female ,Granulocyte Precursor Cells ,Humans ,Immunity ,Innate ,Male ,Mice ,Mice ,Transgenic ,Mutation ,Neutropenia ,Neutrophils ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Advances in genetics and sequencing have identified a plethora of disease-associated and disease-causing genetic alterations. To determine causality between genetics and disease, accurate models for molecular dissection are required; however, the rapid expansion of transcriptional populations identified through single-cell analyses presents a major challenge for accurate comparisons between mutant and wild-type cells. Here we generate mouse models of human severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) using patient-derived mutations in the GFI1 transcription factor. To determine the effects of SCN mutations, we generated single-cell references for granulopoietic genomic states with linked epitopes1, aligned mutant cells to their wild-type equivalents and identified differentially expressed genes and epigenetic loci. We find that GFI1-target genes are altered sequentially, as cells go through successive states of differentiation. These insights facilitated the genetic rescue of granulocytic specification but not post-commitment defects in innate immune effector function, and underscore the importance of evaluating the effects of mutations and therapy within each relevant cell state.
- Published
- 2020
175. Awake prone positioning for COVID-19 acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure: a randomised, controlled, multinational, open-label meta-trial
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Li, Jie, Mirza, Sara, Vines, David, Elshafei, Ahmad A, Scott, Brady J, Weiss, Tyler, Kaur, Ramandeep, Harnois, Lauren J, Miller, Amanda, Cerda, Flor, Klein, Andrew, Burd, Jacob R, Posa-Kearney, Kathleen, Trump, Matthew, Jackson, Julie, Oetting, Trevor, Greenwood, Mark, Hazel, Lindsay, Kingery, Lisa, Mogri, Idrees, Morris, Lindsey, Moon, Joon Yong, Garnett, Julianne, Jia, Shijing, Nelson, Kristine, McNicholas, Bairbre, Cosgrave, David, Giacomini, Camilla, Laffey, John, Brennan, Aoife, Judge, Conor, Kernan, Maeve, Kelly, Claire, Ranjan, Ritika, Casey, Siobhan, O'Connell, Kevin, Newell, Evelyn, Gallagher, David, Nichol, Alistair, Curley, Ger, Estrada, Miguel Ibarra, García-Salcido, Roxana, Vargas-Obieta, Alexandra, Aguirre-Avalos, Guadalupe, Aguirre-Díaz, Sara A, Alcántar-Vallín, Luz, Alvarado-Padilla, Montserrat, Chávez-Peña, Quetzalcóatl, López-Pulgarín, José A, Mijangos-Méndez, Julio C, Marín-Rosales, Miguel, García-Alvarado, Jorge E, Baltazar-González, Oscar G, González-Guerrero, Maura C, Gutiérrez Ramírez, Paola G, Pavlov, Ivan, Gilman, Sean, Plamondon, Patrice, Roy, Rachel, Jayaraman, Dev, Shahin, Jason, Ragoshai, Raham, Kaur, Aasmine, Campisi, Josie, Dahine, Joseph, Perron, Stefanie, Achouri, Slimane, Racette, Ronald, Kulenkamp, Anne, Roca, Oriol, Pacheco, Andrés, García-de-Acilu, Marina, Masclans, Joan R, Dot, Irene, Perez, Yonatan, Bodet-Contentin, Laetitia, Garot, Denis, Ehrmann, Stephan, Mercier, Emmanuelle, Salmon Gandonnière, Charlotte, Morisseau, Marlène, Jouan, Youenn, Darwiche, Walid, Legras, Annick, Guillon, Antoine, Tavernier, Elsa, Dequin, Pierre-François, Tellier, Anne-Charlotte, Reignier, Jean, Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste, Seguin, Amélie, Desmedt, Luc, Canet, Emmanuel, Guitton, Christophe, Marnai, Rémy, Callahan, Jean-Christophe, Landais, Mickaël, Chudeau, Nicolas, Darreau, Cédric, Tirot, Patrice, Saint Martin, Marjorie, Le Moal, Charlene, Nay, Mai-Anh, Muller, Grégoire, Jacquier, Sophie, Prat, Gwenaël, Bailly, Pierre, Ferrière, Nicola, Thille, Arnaud W, Frat, Jean-Pierre, Dellamonica, Jean, Saccheri, Clément, Buscot, Matthieu, Plantefève, Gaëtan, Contou, Damien, Roux, Damien, Ricard, Jean-Damien, Federici, Laura, Zucman, Noémie, Freita Ramos, Santiago, Amouretti, Marc, Besset, Sébastien, Gernez, Coralie, Delbove, Agathe, Voiriot, Guillaume, Elabbadi, Alexandre, Fartoukh, Muriel, Nseir, Saad, Préau, Sébastien, Favory, Raphaël, Pierre, Alexandre, Sement, Arnaud, Terzi, Nicolas, Sigaud, Florian, Candille, Clara, Turbil, Emanuele, Maizel, Julien, Brault, Clément, Zerbib, Yoan, Joret, Aurélie, Daubin, Cédric, Lefebvre, Laurent, Giraud, Alais, Auvet, Adrien, Vinsonneau, Christophe, Marzouk, Mehdi, Quenot, Jean-Pierre, Andreu, Pascal, Labruyère, Marie, Roudaut, Jean-Baptiste, Aptel, François, Boyer, Alexandre, Boyer, Philippe, Lacherade, Jean-Claude, Hille, Hugo, Bouteloup, Marie, Jeannot, Matthieu, Feller, Marc, Grillet, Guillaume, Levy, Bruno, Kimmoun, Antoine, Ibarra-Estrada, Miguel, Garcia-Salcido, Roxana, Trump, Matthew W, and Laffey, John G
- Published
- 2021
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176. Clinical features and overall survival of osteosarcoma of the mandible
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Brown, J.M., Steffensen, A., and Trump, B.
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- 2023
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177. Complications Associated With Transesophageal Echocardiography in Transcatheter Structural Cardiac Interventions
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Hasnie, Ammar A., Parcha, Vibhu, Hawi, Riem, Trump, Michael, Shetty, Naman S., Ahmed, Mustafa I., Booker, Oscar J., Arora, Pankaj, and Arora, Garima
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- 2023
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178. Spin phases of the helimagnetic insulator Cu$_2$OSeO$_3$ probed by magnon heat conduction
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Prasai, N., Akopyan, A., Trump, B. A., Marcus, G. G., Huang, S. X., McQueen, T. M., and Cohn, J. L.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We report studies of thermal conductivity as functions of magnetic field and temperature in the helimagnetic insulator Cu$_2$OSeO$_3$ that reveal novel features of the spin-phase transitions as probed by magnon heat conduction. The tilted conical spiral and low-temperature skyrmion phases, recently identified in small-angle neutron scattering studies, are clearly identified by sharp signatures in the magnon thermal conductivity. Magnon scattering associated with the presence of domain boundaries in the tilted conical phase and regions of skyrmion and conical-phase coexistence are identified., Comment: 5 pp., 3 figures + Supplemental Material (2 pp.) Accepted, PRB Rapid Communications
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- 2019
179. Disjunctures of Practice and the Problems of Collapse
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Jackson, Rowan, Hartman, Steven, Trump, Benjamin, Crumley, Carole, McGovern, Thomas, Linkov, Igor, Ogilvie, AEJ, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Izdebski, Adam, editor, Haldon, John, editor, and Filipkowski, Piotr, editor
- Published
- 2022
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180. Alignment and authority: Federalism, social policy, and COVID-19 response
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Greer, Scott L., Dubin, Kenneth A., Falkenbach, Michelle, Jarman, Holly, and Trump, Benjamin D.
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- 2023
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181. Assessment of the COVID-19 infection risk at a workplace through stochastic microexposure modeling
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Vecherin, Sergey, Chang, Derek, Wells, Emily, Trump, Benjamin, Meyer, Aaron, Desmond, Jacob, Dunn, Kyle, Kitsak, Maxim, and Linkov, Igor
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- 2022
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182. Defining and analyzing health system resilience in rural jurisdictions
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Barnard, Mason, Mark, Sienna, Greer, Scott L., Trump, Benjamin D., Linkov, Igor, and Jarman, Holly
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- 2022
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183. Active Galaxy Science in the LSST Deep-Drilling Fields: Footprints, Cadence Requirements, and Total-Depth Requirements
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Brandt, W. N., Ni, Q., Yang, G., Anderson, S. F., Assef, R. J., Barth, A. J., Bauer, F. E., Bongiorno, A., Chen, C. -T., De Cicco, D., Gezari, S., Grier, C. J., Hall, P. B., Hoenig, S. F., Lacy, M., Li, J., Luo, B., Paolillo, M., Peterson, B. M., Popović, L. C., Richards, G. T., Shemmer, O., Shen, Y., Sun, M., Timlin, J. D., Trump, J. R., Vito, F., and Yu, Z.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
This white paper specifies the footprints, cadence requirements, and total-depth requirements needed to allow the most-successful AGN studies in the four currently selected LSST Deep-Drilling Fields (DDFs): ELAIS-S1, XMM-LSS, CDF-S, and COSMOS. The information provided on cadence and total-depth requirements will also likely be applicable to enabling effective AGN science in any additional DDFs that are chosen., Comment: 22 pages, white paper on LSST cadence optimization, comments welcome
- Published
- 2018
184. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Systematic Investigations of Short-Timescale CIV Broad Absorption Line Variability
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Hemler, Z. S., Grier, C. J., Brandt, W. N., Hall, P. B., Horne, Keith, Shen, Yue, Trump, J. R., Schneider, D. P., Vivek, M., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Oravetz, Audrey, Oravetz, Daniel, and Pan, Kaike
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We systematically investigate short-timescale ($<$10-day rest-frame) CIV broad absorption-line (BAL) variability to constrain quasar-wind properties and provide insights into BAL-variability mechanisms in quasars. We employ data taken by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project, as the rapid cadence of these observations provides a novel opportunity to probe BAL variability on shorter rest-frame timescales than have previously been explored. In a sample of 27 quasars with a median of 58 spectral epochs per quasar, we have identified 15 quasars ($55^{+18}_{-14}$%), 19 of 37 CIV BAL troughs ($51^{+15}_{-12}$%), and 54 of 1460 epoch pairs ($3.7 \pm 0.5$%) that exhibit significant CIV BAL equivalent-width variability on timescales of less than 10 days in the quasar rest frame. These frequencies indicate that such variability is common among quasars and BALs, though somewhat rare among epoch pairs. Thus, models describing BALs and their behavior must account for variability on timescales down to less than a day in the quasar rest frame. We also examine a variety of spectral characteristics and find that in some cases, BAL variability is best described by ionization-state changes, while other cases are more consistent with changes in covering fraction or column density. We adopt a simple model to constrain the density and radial distance of two outflows appearing to vary by ionization-state changes, yielding outflow density lower limits consistent with previous work., Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2018
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185. CLEAR I: Ages and Metallicities of Quiescent Galaxies at $\mathbf{1.0 < z < 1.8}$ Derived from Deep Hubble Space Telescope Grism Data
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Estrada-Carpenter, Vicente, Papovich, Casey, Momcheva, Ivelina, Brammer, Gabriel, Long, James, Quadri, Ryan F., Bridge, Joanna, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry, Finkelstein, Steven, Giavalisco, Mauro, Gosmeyer, Catherine M., Lotz, Jennifer, Salmon, Brett, Skelton, Rosalind E., Trump, Jonathan R., and Weiner, Benjamin
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use deep \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} spectroscopy to constrain the metallicities and (\editone{light-weighted}) ages of massive ($\log M_\ast/M_\odot\gtrsim10$) galaxies selected to have quiescent stellar populations at $1.0
68$\% of their stellar mass by a redshift of $z>2$}. The posteriors give metallicities of \editone{$Z_{z\sim1.1}=1.16 \pm 0.29$~$Z_\odot$, $Z_{z\sim1.2}=1.05 \pm 0.34$~$Z_\odot$, $Z_{z\sim1.3}=1.00 \pm 0.31$~$Z_\odot$, and $Z_{z\sim1.6}=0.95 \pm 0.39$~$Z_\odot$}. This is evidence that massive galaxies had enriched rapidly to approximately Solar metallicities as early as $z\sim3$., Comment: 32 pages, 23 figures, Resubmited to ApJ after revisions in response to referee report - Published
- 2018
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186. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Sample Characterization
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Shen, Yue, Hall, Patrick B., Horne, Keith, Zhu, Guangtun, McGreer, Ian, Simm, Torben, Trump, Jonathan R., Kinemuchi, Karen, Brandt, W. N., Green, Paul J., Grier, C. J., Guo, Hengxiao, Ho, Luis C., Homayouni, Yasaman, Jiang, Linhua, Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, Morganson, Eric, Petitjean, Patrick, Richards, Gordon T., Schneider, Donald P., Starkey, D. A., Wang, Shu, Chambers, Ken, Kaiser, Nick, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Magnier, Eugene, and Waters, Christopher
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed characterization of the 849 broad-line quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project. Our quasar sample covers a redshift range of 0.1
- Published
- 2018
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187. Does black-hole growth depend on the cosmic environment?
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Yang, Guang, Brandt, W. N., Darvish, B., Chen, C. -T. J., Vito, F., Alexander, D. M., Bauer, F. E., and Trump, J. R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
It is well known that environment affects galaxy evolution, which is broadly related to supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth. We investigate whether SMBH evolution also depends on host-galaxy local (sub-Mpc) and global ($\approx 1-10$ Mpc) environment. We construct the surface-density field (local environment) and cosmic web (global environment) in the COSMOS field at $z=0.3-3.0$. The environments in COSMOS range from the field to clusters ($M_\mathrm{halo} \lesssim 10^{14}\ M_\odot$), covering the environments where ${\approx 99\%}$ of galaxies in the Universe reside. We measure sample-averaged SMBH accretion rate ($\overline{\mathrm{BHAR}}$) from X-ray observations, and study its dependence on overdensity and cosmic-web environment at different redshifts while controlling for galaxy stellar mass ($M_\star$). Our results show that $\overline{\mathrm{BHAR}}$ does not significantly depend on overdensity or cosmic-web environment once $M_\star$ is controlled, indicating that environment-related physical mechanisms (e.g. tidal interaction and ram-pressure stripping) might not significantly affect SMBH growth. We find that $\overline{\mathrm{BHAR}}$ is strongly related to host-galaxy $M_\star$, regardless of environment., Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, 7 tables. Accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 2018
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188. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Quasar Host Galaxies at $z < 0.8$ from Image Decomposition
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Yue, Minghao, Jiang, Linhua, Shen, Yue, Hall, Patrick B., Yu, Zhefu, Schneider, Donald P., Ho, Luis C., Horne, Keith, Petitjean, Patrick, and Trump, Jonathan R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the rest-frame UV and optical photometry and morphology of low-redshift broad-line quasar host galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping project. Our sample consists of 103 quasars at $z<0.8$, spanning a luminosity range of $-25\le M_g\le -17$ mag. We stack the multi-epoch images in the $g$ and $i$ bands taken by the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. The combined $g$-band ($i$-band) images reach a $5\sigma$ depth of 26.2 (25.2) mag, with a typical PSF size of $0.7"$ ($0.6"$). Each quasar is decomposed into a PSF and a S\'ersic profile, representing the central AGN and the host galaxy components, respectively. The systematic errors of the measured host galaxy flux in the two bands are 0.23 and 0.18 mag. The relative errors of the measured galaxy half-light radii ($R_e$) are about 13%. We estimate the rest-frame $u$- and $g$-band flux of the host galaxies, and find that the AGN-to-galaxy flux ratios in the $g$ band are between 0.9 to 4.4 (68.3% confidence). These galaxies have high stellar masses $M_\ast = 10^{10}\sim10^{11}\, M_\odot$. They have similar color with star-forming galaxies at similar redshifts, in consistent with AGN positive feedback in these quasars. We find that the $M_*-M_\text{BH}$ relation in our sample is shallower than the local $M_\text{Bulge}-M_\text{BH}$ relation. The S\'ersic indices and the $M_*-R_e$ relation indicate that the majority of the host galaxies are disk-like., Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures, accepted by ApJ
- Published
- 2018
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189. Winds Can 'Blow Up' AGN Accretion Disk Sizes
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Sun, Mouyuan, Xue, Yongquan, Trump, Jonathan R., and Gu, Wei-Min
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Recent multi-band variability studies have revealed that active galactic nucleus (AGN) accretion disc sizes are generally larger than the predictions of the classical thin disc by a factor of $2\sim 3$. This hints at some missing key ingredient in the classical thin disc theory: here, we propose an accretion disc wind. For a given bolometric luminosity, in the outer part of an accretion disc, the effective temperature in the wind case is higher than that in the no-wind one; meanwhile, the radial temperature profile of the wind case is shallower than the no-wind one. In presence of winds, for a given band, blackbody emission from large radii can contribute more to the observed luminosity than the no-wind case. Therefore, the disc sizes of the wind case can be larger than those of the no-wind case. We demonstrate that a model with the accretion rate scaling as $\dot{M}_0 (R/R_{\mathrm{S}})^{\beta}$ (i.e., the accretion rate declines with decreasing radius due to winds) can match both the inter-band time lags and the spectral energy distribution of NGC 5548. Our model can also explain the inter-band time lags of other sources. Therefore, our model can help decipher current and future continuum reverberation mapping observations., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS in press
- Published
- 2018
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190. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Accretion-Disk Sizes from Continuum Lags
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Homayouni, Y., Trump, Jonathan R., Grier, C. J., Shen, Yue, Starkey, D. A., Brandt, W. N., Alvarez, G. Fonseca, Hall, P. B., Horne, Keith, Kinemuchi, Karen, Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, McGreer, Ian, Sun, Mouyuan, Ho, L. C., and Schneider, D. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present accretion-disk structure measurements from continuum lags in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project. Lags are measured using the \texttt{JAVELIN} software from the first-year SDSS-RM $g$ and $i$ photometry, resulting in well-defined lags for 95 quasars, 33 of which have lag SNR $>$ 2$\sigma$. We also estimate lags using the \texttt{ICCF} software and find consistent results, though with larger uncertainties. Accretion-disk structure is fit using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo approach, parameterizing the measured continuum lags as a function of disk size normalization, wavelength, black hole mass, and luminosity. In contrast with previous observations, our best-fit disk sizes and color profiles are consistent (within 1.5~$\sigma$) with the \citet{SS73} analytic solution. We also find that more massive quasars have larger accretion disks, similarly consistent with the analytic accretion-disk model. The data are inconclusive on a correlation between disk size and continuum luminosity, with results that are consistent with both no correlation and with the \citet{SS73} expectation. The continuum lag fits have a large excess dispersion, indicating that our measured lag errors are underestimated and/or our best-fit model may be missing the effects of orientation, spin, and/or radiative efficiency. We demonstrate that fitting disk parameters using only the highest-SNR lag measurements biases best-fit disk sizes to be larger than the disk sizes recovered using a Bayesian approach on the full sample of well-defined lags., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 20 pages and 15 figures. Complete version of table 1 and full figure set (similar to figure 4) are provided through http://www.phys.uconn.edu/~jtrump/sdssrmdisk_table1.txt http://www.phys.uconn.edu/~jtrump/sdssrmdisk_figset.zip
- Published
- 2018
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191. The XMM-SERVS survey: new XMM-Newton point-source catalog for the XMM-LSS field
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Chen, C. -T. J., Brandt, W. N., Luo, B., Ranalli, P., Yang, G., Alexander, D. M., Bauer, F. E., Kelson, D. D., Lacy, M., Nyland, K., Tozzi, P., Vito, F., Cirasuolo, M., Gilli, R., Jarvis, M. J., Lehmer, B. D., Paolillo, M., Schneider, D. P., Shemmer, O., Smail, I., Sun, M., Tanaka, M., Vaccari, M., Vignali, C., Xue, Y. Q., Banerji, M., Chow, K. E., Häußler, B., Norris, R. P., Silverman, J. D., and Trump, J. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an X-ray point-source catalog from the XMM-Large Scale Structure survey region (XMM-LSS), one of the XMM-Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey (XMM-SERVS) fields. We target the XMM-LSS region with $1.3$ Ms of new XMM-Newton AO-15 observations, transforming the archival X-ray coverage in this region into a 5.3 deg$^2$ contiguous field with uniform X-ray coverage totaling $2.7$ Ms of flare-filtered exposure, with a $46$ ks median PN exposure time. We provide an X-ray catalog of 5242 sources detected in the soft (0.5-2 keV), hard (2-10 keV), and/or full (0.5-10 keV) bands with a 1% expected spurious fraction determined from simulations. A total of 2381 new X-ray sources are detected compared to previous source catalogs in the same area. Our survey has flux limits of $1.7\times10^{-15}$, $1.3\times10^{-14}$, and $6.5\times10^{-15}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ over 90% of its area in the soft, hard, and full bands, respectively, which is comparable to those of the XMM-COSMOS survey. We identify multiwavelength counterpart candidates for 99.9% of the X-ray sources, of which 93% are considered as reliable based on their matching likelihood ratios. The reliabilities of these high-likelihood-ratio counterparts are further confirmed to be $\approx 97$% reliable based on deep Chandra coverage over $\approx 5$% of the XMM-LSS region. Results of multiwavelength identifications are also included in the source catalog, along with basic optical-to-infrared photometry and spectroscopic redshifts from publicly available surveys. We compute photometric redshifts for X-ray sources in 4.5 deg$^2$ of our field where forced-aperture multi-band photometry is available; $>70$% of the X-ray sources in this subfield have either spectroscopic or high-quality photometric redshifts., Comment: MNRAS, accepted. 34 pages, 25 figures, and 8 tables. The data products are available at this http url: http://personal.psu.edu/wnb3/xmmservs/xmmservs.html
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- 2018
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192. C IV BAL disappearance in a large SDSS QSO sample
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De Cicco, D., Brandt, W. N., Grier, C. J., Paolillo, M., Ak, N. Filiz, Schneider, D. P., and Trump, J. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Broad absorption lines (BALs) in the spectra of quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) originate from outflowing winds along our line of sight; winds are thought to originate from the inner regions of the QSO accretion disk, close to the central supermassive black hole (SMBH). Winds likely play a role in galaxy evolution and aid the accretion mechanism onto the SMBH. BAL equivalent widths can change on typical timescales from months to years; such variability is generally attributed to changes in the covering factor and/or in the ionization level of the gas. We investigate BAL variability, focusing on BAL disappearance. We analyze multi-epoch spectra of more than 1500 QSOs -the largest sample ever used for such a study- observed by different programs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-I/II/III (SDSS), and search for disappearing C IV BALs. The spectra rest-frame time baseline ranges from 0.28 to 4.9 yr; the source redshifts range from 1.68 to 4.27. We detect 73 disappearing BALs in the spectra of 67 sources. This corresponds to 3.9% of disappearing BALs, and 5.1% of our BAL QSOs exhibit at least one disappearing BAL. We estimate the average lifetime of a BAL along our line of sight (~ 80-100 yr), which appears consistent with the accretion disk orbital time at distances where winds are thought to originate. We inspect properties of the disappearing BALs and compare them to the properties of our main sample. We also investigate the existence of a correlation in the variability of multiple troughs in the same spectrum, and find it persistent at large velocity offsets between BAL pairs, suggesting that a mechanism extending on a global scale is necessary to explain the phenomenon. We select a more reliable sample of disappearing BALs following Filiz Ak et al. (2012), where a subset of our sample was analyzed, and compare the findings from the two works, obtaining generally consistent results., Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2018
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193. The Cases of Novgorod and Muscovy
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Pollock, Miriam, primary, Trump, Benjamin D., additional, and Linkov, Igor, additional
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- 2023
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194. Emerging Biotechnology and Information Hazards
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Nieuwenweg, Anna Cornelia, Trump, Benjamin D., Klasa, Katarzyna, Bleijs, Diederik A., Oye, Kenneth A., Trump, Benjamin D., editor, Florin, Marie-Valentine, editor, Perkins, Edward, editor, and Linkov, Igor, editor
- Published
- 2021
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195. Biosecurity for Synthetic Biology and Emerging Biotechnologies: Critical Challenges for Governance
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Trump, Benjamin D., Florin, Marie-Valentine, Perkins, Edward, Linkov, Igor, Trump, Benjamin D., editor, Florin, Marie-Valentine, editor, Perkins, Edward, editor, and Linkov, Igor, editor
- Published
- 2021
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196. Promoting Effective Biosecurity Governance: Using Tripwires to Anticipate and Ameliorate Potentially Harmful Development Trends
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Trump, Benjamin D., Galaitsi, Stephanie, Pollock, Miriam, Volk, Kaitlin M., Linkov, Igor, Trump, Benjamin D., editor, Florin, Marie-Valentine, editor, Perkins, Edward, editor, and Linkov, Igor, editor
- Published
- 2021
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197. Value-Based Optimization of Healthcare Resource Allocation for COVID-19 Hot Spots
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Collier, Zachary A., Keisler, Jeffrey M., Trump, Benjamin D., Cegan, Jeffrey C., Wolberg, Sarah, Linkov, Igor, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Keenan, Jesse M., editor, and Trump, Benjamin D., editor
- Published
- 2021
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198. Complexity, Interconnectedness and Resilience: Why a Paradigm Shift in Economics is Needed to Deal with Covid 19 and Future Shocks
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Hynes, William, Trump, Benjamin D., Kirman, Alan, Latini, Clara, Linkov, Igor, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Keenan, Jesse M., editor, and Trump, Benjamin D., editor
- Published
- 2021
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199. Real-time Anticipatory Response to COVID-19: A Novel Methodological Approach
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Wells, Emily M., Cummings, Christopher L., Klasa, Kasia, Trump, Benjamin D., Cegan, Jeffrey C., Linkov, Igor, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Keenan, Jesse M., editor, and Trump, Benjamin D., editor
- Published
- 2021
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200. The Vaccine Supply Chain: A Call for Resilience Analytics to Support COVID-19 Vaccine Production and Distribution
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Golan, Maureen S., Trump, Benjamin D., Cegan, Jeffrey C., Linkov, Igor, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Keenan, Jesse M., editor, and Trump, Benjamin D., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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