4,008 results on '"Somers P"'
Search Results
202. Case Management for Students at Risk of Dropping Out: Implementation and Interim Impact Findings from the Communities in Schools Evaluation
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MDRC, Corrin, William, Parise, Leigh M., Cerna, Oscar, Haider, Zeest, and Somers, Marie-Andrée
- Abstract
Too many students drop out and never earn their high school diploma. For students at risk of dropping out, academic, social, and other supports may help. "Communities In Schools" seeks to organize and provide these supports to at-risk students in the nation's poorest-performing schools, including through "case-managed" services. This report, the first of two from a random assignment evaluation of "Communities In Schools" case management, focuses primarily on the implementation of case management in 28 secondary schools during the 2012-2013 school year. The report also includes interim one-year findings about case management's impact on student outcomes. The report concludes with suggestions for improvement for "Communities In Schools" based mainly on the implementation findings. The next report will present two-year impact findings and more about the implementation of case management in the 2013-2014 school year. Appended to the report are: (1) Statistical Model and Statistical Power; and (2) Sample and Response Analysis. more...
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- 2015
203. Evidence for Binarity and Possible Disk Obscuration in Kepler Observations of the Pulsating RV Tau Variable DF Cygni
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Vega, Laura D., Stassun, Keivan G., Montez Jr., Rodolfo, Boyd, Patricia T., and Somers, Garrett
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kepler light curve of DF Cyg is unparalleled in precision and cadence for any RV Tau star to date spanning a baseline of $\sim$4 years and clearly displaying the signature pulsating behavior of alternating deep and shallow minima as well as the long-term trend indicative of an RVb-type variable. We measured DF Cyg's formal period (the time interval between two successive deep minima) to be $~49.84 \pm 0.02~$days. The trend in the arrival times emulates that of the long-term period. There appears to be precisely 16 deep+shallow minima cycles in one long-term cycle, suggesting a long-term cycle period of $\approx$ $795 \pm 5~$days. We argue that binarity may naturally explain the long-term periodicity in DF Cyg. The spectral energy distribution of DF Cyg features an infrared excess indicative of a disk possibly linked to a binary companion. From a recent Gaia parallax measurement for DF Cyg, we calculated that it has a distance of $990 \pm 372$pc and a physical radius of $R_\star = 10.3 \pm 3.8$ R$_\odot$. From kinematics and geometric arguments, we argue that the most likely interpretation for the decrease in flux from the long-period maximum to the long-period minimum, as well as the reduction of short-term pulsation amplitude, is caused by an occulting body such as a disk surrounding DF Cyg and its binary companion., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, and 2 tables in aastex6 format. Accepted to ApJ. Corrected Figure 6 Caption and other smaller typos. The content/results are unchanged more...
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- 2017
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204. Identification of Young Stellar Variables with KELT for K2 I: Campaign 13 Taurus Dippers and Rotators
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Rodriguez, Joseph E., Ansdell, Megan, Oelkers, Ryan J., Cargile, Phillip A., Gaidos, Eric, Cody, Ann Marie, Stevens, Daniel J., Somers, Garrett, James, David, Beatty, Thomas G., Siverd, Robert J., Lund, Michael B., Kuhn, Rudolf B., Gaudi, B. Scott, Pepper, Joshua, and Stassun, Keivan G. more...
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
One of the most well-studied young stellar associations, Taurus-Auriga, will be observed by the extended Kepler mission, K2, in the spring of 2017. K2 Campaign 13 (C13) will be a unique opportunity to study many stars in this young association at high photometric precision and cadence. Using observations from the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) survey, we identify "dippers", stochastic variables, and periodic variables among K2 C13 target stars. This release of the KELT data (lightcurve data in e-tables) provides the community with long-time baseline observations to assist in the understanding of the more exotic variables in the association. Transient-like phenomena on timescales of months to years are known characteristics in the light curves of young stellar objects, making contextual pre- and post-K2 observations critical to understanding their underlying processes. We are providing a comprehensive set of the KELT light curves for known Taurus-Auriga stars in K2 C13. The combined data sets from K2 and KELT should permit a broad array of investigations related to star formation, stellar variability, and protoplanetary environments., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure, 2 tables, Accepted for publication in ApJ, https://filtergraph.com/kelt_k2 more...
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- 2017
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205. Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV: Mapping the Milky Way, Nearby Galaxies, and the Distant Universe
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Blanton, Michael R., Bershady, Matthew A., Abolfathi, Bela, Albareti, Franco D., Prieto, Carlos Allende, Almeida, Andres, Alonso-García, Javier, Anders, Friedrich, Anderson, Scott F., Andrews, Brett, Aquino-Ortíz, Erik, Aragón-Salamanca, Alfonso, Argudo-Fernández, Maria, Armengaud, Eric, Aubourg, Eric, Avila-Reese, Vladimir, Badenes, Carles, Bailey, Stephen, Barger, Kathleen A., Barrera-Ballesteros, Jorge, Bartosz, Curtis, Bates, Dominic, Baumgarten, Falk, Bautista, Julian, Beaton, Rachael, Beers, Timothy C., Belfiore, Francesco, Bender, Chad F., Berlind, Andreas A., Bernardi, Mariangela, Beutler, Florian, Bird, Jonathan C., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Blanc, Guillermo A., Blomqvist, Michael, Bolton, Adam S., Boquien, Médéric, Borissova, Jura, Bosch, Remco van den, Bovy, Jo, Brandt, William N., Brinkmann, Jonathan, Brownstein, Joel R., Bundy, Kevin, Burgasser, Adam J., Burtin, Etienne, Busca, Nicolás G., Cappellari, Michele, Carigi, Maria Leticia Delgado, Carlberg, Joleen K., Rosell, Aurelio Carnero, Carrera, Ricardo, Cherinka, Brian, Cheung, Edmond, Chew, Yilen Gómez Maqueo, Chiappini, Cristina, Choi, Peter Doohyun, Chojnowski, Drew, Chuang, Chia-Hsun, Chung, Haeun, Cirolini, Rafael Fernando, Clerc, Nicolas, Cohen, Roger E., Comparat, Johan, da Costa, Luiz, Cousinou, Marie-Claude, Covey, Kevin, Crane, Jeffrey D., Croft, Rupert A. C., Cruz-Gonzalez, Irene, Cuadra, Daniel Garrido, Cunha, Katia, Damke, Guillermo J., Darling, Jeremy, Davies, Roger, Dawson, Kyle, de la Macorra, Axel, De Lee, Nathan, Delubac, Timothée, Di Mille, Francesco, Diamond-Stanic, Aleks, Cano-Díaz, Mariana, Donor, John, Downes, Juan José, Drory, Niv, Bourboux, Hélion du Mas des, Duckworth, Christopher J., Dwelly, Tom, Dyer, Jamie, Ebelke, Garrett, Eisenstein, Daniel J., Emsellem, Eric, Eracleous, Mike, Escoffier, Stephanie, Evans, Michael L., Fan, Xiaohui, Fernández-Alvar, Emma, Fernandez-Trincado, J. G., Feuillet, Diane K., Finoguenov, Alexis, Fleming, Scott W., Font-Ribera, Andreu, Fredrickson, Alexander, Freischlad, Gordon, Frinchaboy, Peter M., Galbany, Lluís, Garcia-Dias, R., García-Hernández, D. A., Gaulme, Patrick, Geisler, Doug, Gelfand, Joseph D., Gil-Marín, Héctor, Gillespie, Bruce A., Goddard, Daniel, Gonzalez-Perez, Violeta, Grabowski, Kathleen, Green, Paul J., Grier, Catherine J., Gunn, James E., Guo, Hong, Guy, Julien, Hagen, Alex, Hahn, ChangHoon, Hall, Matthew, Harding, Paul, Hasselquist, Sten, Hawley, Suzanne L., Hearty, Fred, Hernández, Jonay I. Gonzalez, Ho, Shirley, Hogg, David W., Holley-Bockelmann, Kelly, Holtzman, Jon A., Holzer, Parker H., Huehnerhoff, Joseph, Hutchinson, Timothy A., Hwang, Ho Seong, Ibarra-Medel, Héctor J., Ilha, Gabriele da Silva, Ivans, Inese I., Ivory, KeShawn, Jackson, Kelly, Jensen, Trey W., Johnson, Jennifer A., Jones, Amy, Jönsson, Henrik, Jullo, Eric, Kamble, Vikrant, Kinemuchi, Karen, Kirkby, David, Kitaura, Francisco-Shu, Klaene, Mark, Knapp, Gillian R., Kneib, Jean-Paul, Kollmeier, Juna A., Lacerna, Ivan, Lane, Richard R., Lang, Dustin, Law, David R., Lazarz, Daniel, Goff, Jean-Marc Le, Liang, Fu-Heng, Li, Cheng, LI, Hongyu, Lima, Marcos, Lin, Lihwai, Lin, Yen-Ting, de Lis, Sara Bertran, Liu, Chao, Lizaola, Miguel Angel C. de Icaza, Long, Dan, Lucatello, Sara, Lundgren, Britt, MacDonald, Nicholas K., Machado, Alice Deconto, MacLeod, Chelsea L., Mahadevan, Suvrath, Maia, Marcio Antonio Geimba, Maiolino, Roberto, Majewski, Steven R., Malanushenko, Elena, Malanushenko, Viktor, Manchado, Arturo, Mao, Shude, Maraston, Claudia, Marques-Chaves, Rui, Masters, Karen L., McBride, Cameron K., McDermid, Richard M., McGrath, Brianne, McGreer, Ian D., Peña, Nicolás Medina, Melendez, Matthew, Merloni, Andrea, Merrifield, Michael R., Meszaros, Szabolcs, Meza, Andres, Minchev, Ivan, Minniti, Dante, Miyaji, Takamitsu, More, Surhud, Mulchaey, John, Müller-Sánchez, Francisco, Muna, Demitri, Munoz, Ricardo R., Myers, Adam D., Nair, Preethi, Nandra, Kirpal, Nascimento, Janaina Correa do, Negrete, Alenka, Ness, Melissa, Newman, Jeffrey A., Nichol, Robert C., Nidever, David L., Nitschelm, Christian, Ntelis, Pierros, O'Connell, Julia E., Oelkers, Ryan J., Oravetz, Audrey, Oravetz, Daniel, Pace, Zach, Padilla, Nelson, Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie, Palicio, Pedro Alonso, Pan, Kaike, Parikh, Taniya, Pâris, Isabelle, Park, Changbom, Patten, Alim Y., Peirani, Sebastien, Pellejero-Ibanez, Marcos, Penny, Samantha, Percival, Will J., Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Petitjean, Patrick, Pieri, Matthew M., Pinsonneault, Marc, Pisani, Alice, Poleski, Radosław, Prada, Francisco, Prakash, Abhishek, Queiroz, Anna Bárbara de Andrade, Raddick, M. Jordan, Raichoor, Anand, Rembold, Sandro Barboza, Richstein, Hannah, Riffel, Rogemar A., Riffel, Rogério, Rix, Hans-Walter, Robin, Annie C., Rockosi, Constance M., Rodríguez-Torres, Sergio, Roman-Lopes, A., Román-Zúñiga, Carlos, Rosado, Margarita, Ross, Ashley J., Rossi, Graziano, Ruan, John, Ruggeri, Rossana, Rykoff, Eli S., Salazar-Albornoz, Salvador, Salvato, Mara, Sánchez, Ariel G., Aguado, David Sánchez, Sánchez-Gallego, José R., Santana, Felipe A., Santiago, Basílio Xavier, Sayres, Conor, Schiavon, Ricardo P., Schimoia, Jaderson da Silva, Schlafly, Edward F., Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Schultheis, Mathias, Schuster, William J., Schwope, Axel, Seo, Hee-Jong, Shao, Zhengyi, Shen, Shiyin, Shetrone, Matthew, Shull, Michael, Simon, Joshua D., Skinner, Danielle, Skrutskie, M. F., Slosar, Anže, Smith, Verne V., Sobeck, Jennifer S., Sobreira, Flavia, Somers, Garrett, Souto, Diogo, Stark, David V., Stassun, Keivan, Stauffer, Fritz, Steinmetz, Matthias, Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa, Streblyanska, Alina, Stringfellow, Guy S., Suárez, Genaro, Sun, Jing, Suzuki, Nao, Szigeti, Laszlo, Taghizadeh-Popp, Manuchehr, Tang, Baitian, Tao, Charling, Tayar, Jamie, Tembe, Mita, Teske, Johanna, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Thomas, Daniel, Thompson, Benjamin A., Tinker, Jeremy L., Tissera, Patricia, Tojeiro, Rita, Toledo, Hector Hernandez, de la Torre, Sylvain, Tremonti, Christy, Troup, Nicholas W., Valenzuela, Octavio, Valpuesta, Inma Martinez, Vargas-González, Jaime, Vargas-Magaña, Mariana, Vazquez, Jose Alberto, Villanova, Sandro, Vivek, M., Vogt, Nicole, Wake, David, Walterbos, Rene, Wang, Yuting, Weaver, Benjamin Alan, Weijmans, Anne-Marie, Weinberg, David H., Westfall, Kyle B., Whelan, David G., Wild, Vivienne, Wilson, John, Wood-Vasey, W. M., Wylezalek, Dominika, Xiao, Ting, Yan, Renbin, Yang, Meng, Ybarra, Jason E., Yèche, Christophe, Zakamska, Nadia, Zamora, Olga, Zarrouk, Pauline, Zasowski, Gail, Zhang, Kai, Zhao, Gong-Bo, Zheng, Zheng, Zhou, Zhi-Min, Zhu, Guangtun B., Zoccali, Manuela, and Zou, Hu more...
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We describe the Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV (SDSS-IV), a project encompassing three major spectroscopic programs. The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment 2 (APOGEE-2) is observing hundreds of thousands of Milky Way stars at high resolution and high signal-to-noise ratio in the near-infrared. The Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey is obtaining spatially-resolved spectroscopy for thousands of nearby galaxies (median redshift of z = 0.03). The extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS) is mapping the galaxy, quasar, and neutral gas distributions between redshifts z = 0.6 and 3.5 to constrain cosmology using baryon acoustic oscillations, redshift space distortions, and the shape of the power spectrum. Within eBOSS, we are conducting two major subprograms: the SPectroscopic IDentification of eROSITA Sources (SPIDERS), investigating X-ray AGN and galaxies in X-ray clusters, and the Time Domain Spectroscopic Survey (TDSS), obtaining spectra of variable sources. All programs use the 2.5-meter Sloan Foundation Telescope at Apache Point Observatory; observations there began in Summer 2014. APOGEE-2 also operates a second near-infrared spectrograph at the 2.5-meter du Pont Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory, with observations beginning in early 2017. Observations at both facilities are scheduled to continue through 2020. In keeping with previous SDSS policy, SDSS-IV provides regularly scheduled public data releases; the first one, Data Release 13, was made available in July 2016., Comment: Published in Astronomical Journal more...
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- 2017
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206. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. V. Optical Spectroscopic Campaign and Emission-Line Analysis for NGC 5548
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Pei, L., Fausnaugh, M. M., Barth, A. J., Peterson, B. M., Bentz, M. C., De Rosa, G., Denney, K. D., Goad, M. R., Kochanek, C. S., Korista, K. T., Kriss, G. A., Pogge, R. W., Bennert, V. N., Brotherton, M., Clubb, K. I., Bontà, E. Dalla, Filippenko, A. V., Greene, J. E., Grier, C. J., Vestergaard, M., Zheng, W., Adams, Scott M., Beatty, Thomas G., Bigley, A., Brown, Jacob E., Brown, Jonathan S., Canalizo, G., Comerford, J. M., Coker, Carl T., Corsini, E. M., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Deason, A. J., Eracleous, Michael, Fox, O. D., Gates, E. L., Henderson, C. B., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Kelly, P. L., Kim, S., King, A., Lau, M. W., Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mauerhan, J. C., Malkan, M. A., McGurk, R., Morelli, L., Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Sanchez, F. Muller, Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Penny, Matthew T., Pizzella, A., Poleski, Radosław, Runnoe, Jessie, Scott, B., Schimoia, Jaderson S., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Simonian, Gregory V., Siviero, A., Somers, Garrett, Stevens, Daniel J., Strauss, M. A., Tayar, Jamie, Tejos, N., Treu, T., Van Saders, J., Vican, L., Villanueva Jr., S., Yuk, H., Zakamska, N. L., Zhu, W., Anderson, M. D., Arévalo, P., Bazhaw, C., Bisogni, S., Borman, G. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Cackett, E. M., Carini, M. T., Crenshaw, D. M., De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Efimova, N. V., Ely, J., Evans, P. A., Ferland, G. J., Flatland, K., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Grupe, D., Gupta, A., Hall, P. B., Hicks, S., Horenstein, D., Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T., Im, M., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S. C., Klimanov, S. A., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Lira, P., MacInnis, F., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Netzer, H., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Okhmat, D. N., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Saylor, D. A., Schnülle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Siegel, M., Skielboe, A., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Sung, H. -I., Teems, K. G., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., and Zu, Y. more...
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of an optical spectroscopic monitoring program targeting NGC 5548 as part of a larger multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign. The campaign spanned six months and achieved an almost daily cadence with observations from five ground-based telescopes. The H$\beta$ and He II $\lambda$4686 broad emission-line light curves lag that of the 5100 $\AA$ optical continuum by $4.17^{+0.36}_{-0.36}$ days and $0.79^{+0.35}_{-0.34}$ days, respectively. The H$\beta$ lag relative to the 1158 $\AA$ ultraviolet continuum light curve measured by the Hubble Space Telescope is roughly $\sim$50% longer than that measured against the optical continuum, and the lag difference is consistent with the observed lag between the optical and ultraviolet continua. This suggests that the characteristic radius of the broad-line region is $\sim$50% larger than the value inferred from optical data alone. We also measured velocity-resolved emission-line lags for H$\beta$ and found a complex velocity-lag structure with shorter lags in the line wings, indicative of a broad-line region dominated by Keplerian motion. The responses of both the H$\beta$ and He II $\lambda$4686 emission lines to the driving continuum changed significantly halfway through the campaign, a phenomenon also observed for C IV, Ly $\alpha$, He II(+O III]), and Si IV(+O IV]) during the same monitoring period. Finally, given the optical luminosity of NGC 5548 during our campaign, the measured H$\beta$ lag is a factor of five shorter than the expected value implied by the $R_\mathrm{BLR} - L_\mathrm{AGN}$ relation based on the past behavior of NGC 5548., Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, accepted to ApJ more...
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- 2017
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207. Placing the spotted T Tauri star LkCa 4 on an HR diagram
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Gully-Santiago, Michael A., Herczeg, Gregory J., Czekala, Ian, Somers, Garrett, Grankin, Konstantin, Covey, Kevin R., Donati, J. F., Alencar, Silvia H. P., Hussain, Gaitee A. J., Shappee, Benjamin J., Mace, Gregory N., Lee, Jae-Joon, Holoien, T. W. -S., Jose, Jessy, and Liu, Chun-Fan more...
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Ages and masses of young stars are often estimated by comparing their luminosities and effective temperatures to pre-main sequence stellar evolution tracks, but magnetic fields and starspots complicate both the observations and evolution. To understand their influence, we study the heavily-spotted weak-lined T-Tauri star LkCa 4 by searching for spectral signatures of radiation originating from the starspot or starspot groups. We introduce a new methodology for constraining both the starspot filling factor and the spot temperature by fitting two-temperature stellar atmosphere models constructed from Phoenix synthetic spectra to a high-resolution near-IR IGRINS spectrum. Clearly discernable spectral features arise from both a hot photospheric component $T_{\mathrm{hot}} \sim4100$ K and to a cool component $T_{\mathrm{cool}} \sim2700-3000$ K, which covers $\sim80\%$ of the visible surface. This mix of hot and cool emission is supported by analyses of the spectral energy distribution, rotational modulation of colors and of TiO band strengths, and features in low-resolution optical/near-IR spectroscopy. Although the revised effective temperature and luminosity make LkCa 4 appear much younger and lower mass than previous estimates from unspotted stellar evolution models, appropriate estimates will require the production and adoption of spotted evolutionary models. Biases from starspots likely afflict most fully convective young stars and contribute to uncertainties in ages and age spreads of open clusters. In some spectral regions starspots act as a featureless veiling continuum owing to high rotational broadening and heavy line-blanketing in cool star spectra. Some evidence is also found for an anti-correlation between the velocities of the warm and cool components., Comment: Accepted to ApJ, GitHub repository available at https://github.com/BrownDwarf/welter more...
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- 2017
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208. Reverberation Mapping of Optical Emission Lines in Five Active Galaxies
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Fausnaugh, M. M., Grier, C. J., Bentz, M. C., Denney, K. D., De Rosa, G., Peterson, B. M., Kochanek, C. S., Pogge, R. W., Adams, S. M., Barth, A. J., Beatty, Thomas G., Bhattacharjee, A., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brown, Jacob E., Brown, Jonathan S., Brotherton, M. S., Coker, C. T., Crawford, S. M., Croxall, K. V., Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Eracleous, Michael, Joner, M. D., Henderson, C. B., Holoien, T. W. -S., Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T., Kaspi, Shai, Kim, S., King, Anthea L., Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mason, M., Montuori, Carmen, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Nguyen, M. L., Okhmat, D. N., Onken, Christopher A., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Penny, Matthew T., Poleski, Radoslaw, Rafter, Stephen, Romero-Colmenero, E., Runnoe, Jessie, Sand, David J., Schimoia, Jaderson S., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Simonian, Gregory V., Somers, Garrett, Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, Daniel J., Tayar, Jamie, Treu, T., Valenti, Stefano, Van Saders, J., Villanueva Jr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Yaniv, Winkler, H., and Zhu, W. more...
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results from an optical reverberation mapping campaign executed in 2014, targeting the active galactic nuclei (AGN) MCG+08-11-011, NGC 2617, NGC 4051, 3C 382, and Mrk 374. Our targets have diverse and interesting observational properties, including a "changing look" AGN and a broad-line radio galaxy. Based on continuum-H$\beta$ lags, we measure black hole masses for all five targets. We also obtain H$\gamma$ and He{\sc ii}\,$\lambda 4686$ lags for all objects except 3C 382. The He{\sc ii}\,$\lambda 4686$ lags indicate radial stratification of the BLR, and the masses derived from different emission lines are in general agreement. The relative responsivities of these lines are also in qualitative agreement with photoionization models. These spectra have extremely high signal-to-noise ratios (100--300 per pixel) and there are excellent prospects for obtaining velocity-resolved reverberation signatures., Comment: 34 pages, 12 figures, published in ApJ. For a video summarizing the main results, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaC-jPsIY0Q more...
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- 2016
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209. A Measurement of Radius Inflation in the Pleiades and its Relation to Rotation and Lithium Depletion
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Somers, Garrett and Stassun, Keivan G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Precise measurements of eclipsing binary parameters and statistical studies of young clusters have suggested that some magnetically active low-mass dwarfs possess radii inflated by $\sim$5-15% relative to theoretical expectations. If true, this effect should be pronounced in young open clusters, due to the rapid rotation and strong magnetic activity of their most extreme members. We explore this possibility by determining empirical radii for 83 members of the nearby Pleiades open cluster, using spectral energy distribution fitting to establish $\mathcal{F}_{bol}$ with a typical accuracy of $\approx$3\% together with color and spectro-photometric indices to determine $T_{\rm eff}$. We find several Pleiades members with radii inflated above radius-$T_{\rm eff}$ models from state-of-the-art calculations, and apparent dispersions in radii for the K-dwarfs of the cluster. Moreover, we demonstrate that this putative radius inflation correlates strongly with rotation rate, consistent with inflation of young stars by magnetic activity and/or starspots. We argue that this signal is not a consequence of starspot-induced color anomalies, binarity, or depth effects in the cluster, employing Gaia DR1 distances as a check. Finally, we consider the lithium abundances of these stars, demonstrating a triple correlation between rotation rate, radius inflation, and enhanced lithium abundance. Our result---already significant to $\sim$99.99% confidence---provides strong support for a magnetic origin of the inflated radii and lithium dispersion observed in young, low-mass stars., Comment: 33 pages, 25 figures, accepted to AJ more...
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- 2016
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210. The Thirteenth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: First Spectroscopic Data from the SDSS-IV Survey MApping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory
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SDSS Collaboration, Albareti, Franco D., Prieto, Carlos Allende, Almeida, Andres, Anders, Friedrich, Anderson, Scott, Andrews, Brett H., Aragon-Salamanca, Alfonso, Argudo-Fernandez, Maria, Armengaud, Eric, Aubourg, Eric, Avila-Reese, Vladimir, Badenes, Carles, Bailey, Stephen, Barbuy, Beatriz, Barger, Kat, Barrera-Ballesteros, Jorge, Bartosz, Curtis, Basu, Sarbani, Bates, Dominic, Battaglia, Giuseppina, Baumgarten, Falk, Baur, Julien, Bautista, Julian, Beers, Timothy C., Belfiore, Francesco, Bershady, Matthew, de Lis, Sara Bertran, Bird, Jonathan C., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Blanc, Guillermo A., Blanton, Michael, Blomqvist, Michael, Bolton, Adam S., Borissova, J., Bovy, Jo, Brandt, William Nielsen, Brinkmann, Jonathan, Brownstein, Joel R., Bundy, Kevin, Burtin, Etienne, Busca, Nicolas G., Chavez, Hugo Orlando Camacho, Diaz, M. Cano, Cappellari, Michele, Carrera, Ricardo, Chen, Yanping, Cherinka, Brian, Cheung, Edmond, Chiappini, Cristina, Chojnowski, Drew, Chuang, Chia-Hsun, Chung, Haeun, Cirolini, Rafael Fernando, Clerc, Nicolas, Cohen, Roger E., Comerford, Julia M., Comparat, Johan, Cousinou, Marie-Claude, Covey, Kevin, Crane, Jeffrey D., Croft, Rupert, Cunha, Katia, da Costa, Luiz, Ilha, Gabriele da Silva, Darling, Jeremy, Davidson Jr., James W., Dawson, Kyle, De Lee, Nathan, de la Macorra, Axel, de la Torre, Sylvain, Machado, Alice Deconto, Delubac, Timothee, Diamond-Stanic, Aleksandar M., Donor, John, Downes, Juan Jose, Drory, Niv, Bourboux, Helion du Mas des, Du, Cheng, Dwelly, Tom, Ebelke, Garrett, Eigenbrot, Arthur, Eisenstein, Daniel J., Elsworth, Yvonne P., Emsellem, Eric, Eracleous, Michael, Escoffier, Stephanie, Evans, Michael L., Falcon-Barroso, Jesus, Fan, Xiaohui, Favole, Ginevra, Fernandez-Alvar, Emma, Fernandez-Trincado, J. G., Feuillet, Diane, Fleming, Scott W., Font-Ribera, Andreu, Freischlad, Gordon, Frinchaboy, Peter, Fu, Hai, Gao, Yang, Garcia-Hernandez, D. A., Perez, Ana E. Garcia, Garcia, Rafael A., Garcia-Dias, R., Gaulme, Patrick, Ge, Junqiang, Geisler, Douglas, Marin, Hector Gil, Gillespie, Bruce, Girardi, Leo, Goddard, Daniel, Chew, Yilen Gomez Maqueo, Gonzalez-Perez, Violeta, Grabowski, Kathleen, Green, Paul, Grier, Catherine J., Grier, Thomas, Guo, Hong, Guy, Julien, Hagen, Alex, Hall, Matt, Harding, Paul, Harley, R. E., Hasselquist, Sten, Hawley, Suzanne, Hayes, Christian R., Hearty, Fred, Hekker, Saskia, Toledo, Hector Hernandez, Ho, Shirley, Hogg, David W., Holley-Bockelmann, Kelly, Holtzman, Jon A., Holzer, Parker H., Hu, Jian, Huber, Daniel, Hutchinson, Timothy Alan, Hwang, Ho Seong, Ibarra-Medel, Hector J., Ivans, Inese I., Ivory, KeShawn, Jaehnig, Kurt, Jensen, Trey W., Johnson, Jennifer A., Jones, Amy, Jullo, Eric, Kallinger, T., Kinemuchi, Karen, Kirkby, David, Klaene, Mark, Kneib, Jean-Paul, Kollmeier, Juna A., Lacerna, Ivan, Lane, Richard R., Lang, Dustin, Laurent, Pierre, Law, David R., Goff, Jean-Marc Le, Leauthaud, Alexie, Li, Cheng, Li, Ran, Li, Chen, Li, Niu, Liang, Fu-Heng, Liang, Yu, Lima, Marcos, Lin, Lihwai, Lin, Lin, Lin, Yen-Ting, Long, Dan, Lucatello, Sara, MacDonald, Nicholas, MacLeod, Chelsea L., Mackereth, J. Ted, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Maia, Marcio Antonio-Geimba, Maiolino, Roberto, Majewski, Steven R., Malanushenko, Olena, Mallmann, Nicolas Dullius, Manchado, Arturo, Maraston, Claudia, Marques-Chaves, Rui, Valpuesta, Inma Martinez, Masters, Karen L., Mathur, Savita, McGreer, Ian D., Merloni, Andrea, Merrifield, Michael R., Meszaros, Szabolcs, Meza, Andres, Miglio, Andrea, Minchev, Ivan, Molaverdikhani, Karan, Montero-Dorta, Antonio D., Mosser, Benoit, Muna, Demitri, Myers, Adam, Nair, Preethi, Nandra, Kirpal, Ness, Melissa, Newman, Jeffrey A., Nichol, Robert C., Nidever, David L., Nitschelm, Christian, O'Connell, Julia, Oravetz, Audrey, Padilla, Nelson, Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie, Pan, Kaike, Parejko, John, Paris, Isabelle, Peacock, John A., Peirani, Sebastien, Pellejero-Ibanez, Marcos, Penny, Samantha, Percival, Will J., Percival, Jeffrey W., Perez-Fournon, Ismael, Petitjean, Patrick, Pieri, Matthew, Pinsonneault, Marc H., Pisani, Alice, Prada, Francisco, Prakash, Abhishek, Price-Jones, Natalie, Raddick, M. Jordan, Rahman, Mubdi, Raichoor, Anand, Rembold, Sandro Barboza, Reyna, A. M., Rich, James, Richstein, Hannah, Ridl, Jethro, Riffel, Rogerio, Riffel, Rogemar A., Rix, Hans-Walter, Robin, Annie C., Rockosi, Constance M., Rodriguez-Torres, Sergio, Rodrigues, Thaise S., Roe, Natalie, Lopes, A. Roman, Roman-Zuniga, Carlos, Ross, Ashley J., Rossi, Graziano, Ruan, John, Ruggeri, Rossana, Runnoe, Jessie C., Salazar-Albornoz, Salvador, Salvato, Mara, Sanchez, Ariel G., Sanchez, Sebastian F., Sanchez-Gallego, Jose R., Santiago, Basilio Xavier, Schiavon, Ricardo, Schimoia, Jaderson S., Schlafly, Eddie, Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Schoenrich, Ralph, Schultheis, Mathias, Schwope, Axel, Seo, Hee-Jong, Serenelli, Aldo, Sesar, Branimir, Shao, Zhengyi, Shetrone, Matthew, Shull, Michael, Aguirre, Victor Silva, Skrutskie, M. F., Slosar, Anže, Smith, Michael, Smith, Verne V., Sobeck, Jennifer, Somers, Garrett, Souto, Diogo, Stark, David V., Stassun, Keivan G., Steinmetz, Matthias, Stello, Dennis, Bergmann, Thaisa Storchi, Strauss, Michael A., Streblyanska, Alina, Stringfellow, Guy S., Suarez, Genaro, Sun, Jing, Taghizadeh-Popp, Manuchehr, Tang, Baitian, Tao, Charling, Tayar, Jamie, Tembe, Mita, Thomas, Daniel, Tinker, Jeremy, Tojeiro, Rita, Tremonti, Christy, Troup, Nicholas, Trump, Jonathan R., Unda-Sanzana, Eduardo, Valenzuela, O., Bosch, Remco van den, Vargas-Magana, Mariana, Vazquez, Jose Alberto, Villanova, Sandro, Vivek, M., Vogt, Nicole, Wake, David, Walterbos, Rene, Wang, Yuting, Wang, Enci, Weaver, Benjamin Alan, Weijmans, Anne-Marie, Weinberg, David H., Westfall, Kyle B., Whelan, David G., Wilcots, Eric, Wild, Vivienne, Williams, Rob A., Wilson, John, Wood-Vasey, W. M., Wylezalek, Dominika, Xiao, Ting, Yan, Renbin, Yang, Meng, Ybarra, Jason E., Yeche, Christophe, Yuan, Fang-Ting, Zakamska, Nadia, Zamora, Olga, Zasowski, Gail, Zhang, Kai, Zhao, Cheng, Zhao, Gong-Bo, Zheng, Zheng, Zhou, Zhi-Min, Zhu, Guangtun, Zinn, Joel C., and Zou, Hu more...
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The fourth generation of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV) began observations in July 2014. It pursues three core programs: APOGEE-2, MaNGA, and eBOSS. In addition, eBOSS contains two major subprograms: TDSS and SPIDERS. This paper describes the first data release from SDSS-IV, Data Release 13 (DR13), which contains new data, reanalysis of existing data sets and, like all SDSS data releases, is inclusive of previously released data. DR13 makes publicly available 1390 spatially resolved integral field unit observations of nearby galaxies from MaNGA, the first data released from this survey. It includes new observations from eBOSS, completing SEQUELS. In addition to targeting galaxies and quasars, SEQUELS also targeted variability-selected objects from TDSS and X-ray selected objects from SPIDERS. DR13 includes new reductions of the SDSS-III BOSS data, improving the spectrophotometric calibration and redshift classification. DR13 releases new reductions of the APOGEE-1 data from SDSS-III, with abundances of elements not previously included and improved stellar parameters for dwarf stars and cooler stars. For the SDSS imaging data, DR13 provides new, more robust and precise photometric calibrations. Several value-added catalogs are being released in tandem with DR13, in particular target catalogs relevant for eBOSS, TDSS, and SPIDERS, and an updated red-clump catalog for APOGEE. This paper describes the location and format of the data now publicly available, as well as providing references to the important technical papers that describe the targeting, observing, and data reduction. The SDSS website, http://www.sdss.org, provides links to the data, tutorials and examples of data access, and extensive documentation of the reduction and analysis procedures. DR13 is the first of a scheduled set that will contain new data and analyses from the planned ~6-year operations of SDSS-IV., Comment: Full information on DR13 available at http://www.sdss.org. Comments welcome to spokesperson@sdss.org. To be published in ApJS more...
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- 2016
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211. Boron Abundances Across the 'Li-Be Dip' in the Hyades
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Boesgaard, Ann Merchant, Deliyannis, Michael G. Lum. Constantine P., King, Jeremy R., Pinsonneault, Marc H., and Somers, Garrett
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Dramatic deficiencies of Li in the mid-F dwarf stars of the Hyades cluster were discovered by Boesgaard & Tripicco. Boesgaard & King discovered corresponding, but smaller, deficiencies in Be in the same narrow temperature region in the Hyades. With the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope we investigate B abundances in the Hyades F stars to look for a potential B dip using the B I resonance line at 2496.8 A. The light elements, Li, Be, and B, are destroyed inside stars at increasingly hotter temperatures: 2.5, 3.5, and 5x10^6 K respectively. Consequently, these elements survive to increasingly greater depths in a star and their surface abundances indicate the depth and thoroughness of mixing in the star. We have (re)determined Li abundances/upper limits for 79 Hyades dwarfs, Be for 43 stars, and B in five stars. We find evidence for a small drop in the B abundance across the Li-Be dip. The B abundances for the four stars in the temperature range 6100-6730 K fit the B-Be correlation found previously by Boesgaard et al. Models of rotational mixing produce good agreement with the relative depletions of Be and B in the dip region. We have compared our nLTE B abundances for the three high B stars on either side of the Li-Be dip with those found by Duncan et al. for the two Hyades giants. This confirms the factor of ~10 decline in the B abundance in the Hyades giants as predicted by dilution due to the deepening of the surface convection zone., Comment: Accepted by Ap. J. 18 pages text + 5 tables + 15 figures = 43 pages more...
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- 2016
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212. Rotation in the Pleiades with K2: I. Data and First Results
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Rebull, L. M., Stauffer, J. R., Bouvier, J., Cody, A. M., Hillenbrand, L. A., Soderblom, D., Valenti, J., Barrado, D., Bouy, H., Ciardi, D., Pinsonneault, M., Stassun, K., Micela, G., Aigrain, S., Vrba, F., Somers, G., Christiansen, J., Gillen, E., and Cameron, A. Collier more...
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Young (125 Myr), populous ($>$1000 members), and relatively nearby, the Pleiades has provided an anchor for stellar angular momentum models for both younger and older stars. We used K2 to explore the distribution of rotation periods in the Pleiades. With more than 500 new periods for Pleiades members, we are vastly expanding the number of Pleiads with periods, particularly at the low mass end. About 92\% of the members in our sample have at least one measured spot-modulated rotation period. For the $\sim$8\% of the members without periods, non-astrophysical effects often dominate (saturation, etc.), such that periodic signals might have been detectable, all other things being equal. We now have an unusually complete view of the rotation distribution in the Pleiades. The relationship between $P$ and $(V-K_{\rm s})_0$ follows the overall trends found in other Pleiades studies. There is a slowly rotating sequence for $1.1\lesssim(V-K_{\rm s})_0\lesssim 3.7$, and a primarily rapidly rotating population for $(V-K_{\rm s})_0\gtrsim 5.0$. There is a region in which there seems to be a disorganized relationship between $P$ and $(V-K_{\rm s})_0$ for $3.7 \lesssim(V-K_{\rm s})_0\lesssim 5.0$. Paper II continues the discussion, focusing on multi-period structures, and Paper III speculates about the origin and evolution of the period distribution in the Pleiades., Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures; electronic-only tables and figures available upon request to the author. Accepted by AJ more...
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- 2016
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213. Rotation in the Pleiades With K2: III. Speculations on Origins and Evolution
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Stauffer, J. R., Rebull, L. M., Bouvier, J., Hillenbrand, L. A., Cameron, A. Collier, Pinsonneault, M., Aigrain, S., Barrado, D., Bouy, H., Ciardi, D., Cody, A. M., David, T., Micela, G., Soderblom, D., Somers, G., Stassun, K., Valenti, J., and Vrba, F. more...
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We use high quality K2 light curves for hundreds of stars in the Pleiades to understand better the angular momentum evolution and magnetic dynamos of young, low mass stars. The K2 light curves provide not only rotational periods but also detailed information from the shape of the phased light curve not available in previous studies. A slowly rotating sequence begins at $(V-K_{\rm s})_0\sim$1.1 (spectral type F5) and ends at $(V-K_{\rm s})_0\sim$ 3.7 (spectral type K8), with periods rising from $\sim$2 to $\sim$11 days in that interval. Fifty-two percent of the Pleiades members in that color interval have periods within 30\% of a curve defining the slow sequence; the slowly rotating fraction decreases significantly redward of $(V-K_{\rm s})_0$=2.6. Nearly all of the slow-sequence stars show light curves that evolve significantly on timescales less than the K2 campaign duration. The majority of the FGK Pleiades members identified as photometric binaries are relatively rapidly rotating, perhaps because binarity inhibits star-disk angular momentum loss mechanisms during pre-main sequence evolution. The fully convective, late M dwarf Pleiades members (5.0 $<(V-K_{\rm s})_0<$ 6.0) nearly always show stable light curves, with little spot evolution or evidence of differential rotation. During PMS evolution from $\sim$3 Myr (NGC2264 age) to $\sim$125 Myr (Pleiades age), stars of 0.3 $M_{\odot}$ shed about half their angular momentum, with the fractional change in period between 3 and 125 Myr being nearly independent of mass for fully convective stars. Our data also suggest that very low mass binaries form with rotation periods more similar to each other and faster than would be true if drawn at random from the parent population of single stars., Comment: 30 pages, 26 figures, accepted to AJ. Paper I is arXiv:1606.00052 and Paper II is arXiv:1606.00055 more...
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- 2016
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214. Rotation in the Pleiades with K2: II. Multi-Period Stars
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Rebull, L. M., Stauffer, J. R., Bouvier, J., Cody, A. M., Hillenbrand, L. A., Soderblom, D. R., Valenti, J., Barrado, D., Bouy, H., Ciardi, D., Pinsonneault, M., Stassun, K., Micela, G., Aigrain, S., Vrba, F., Somers, G., Gillen, E., and Cameron, A. Collier more...
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We use K2 to continue the exploration of the distribution of rotation periods in Pleiades that we began in Paper I. We have discovered complicated multi-period behavior in Pleiades stars using these K2 data, and we have grouped them into categories, which are the focal part of this paper. About 24% of the sample has multiple, real frequencies in the periodogram, sometimes manifesting as obvious beating in the light curves. Those having complex and/or structured periodogram peaks, unresolved multiple periods, and resolved close multiple periods are likely due to spot/spot group evolution and/or latitudinal differential rotation; these largely compose the slowly rotating sequence in $P$ vs.~$(V-K_{\rm s})_0$ identified in Paper I. The fast sequence in $P$ vs.~$(V-K_{\rm s})_0$ is dominated by single-period stars; these are likely to be rotating as solid bodies. Paper III continues the discussion, speculating about the origin and evolution of the period distribution in the Pleiades., Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures. Accepted by AJ more...
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- 2016
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215. Lithium depletion is a strong test of core-envelope recoupling
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Somers, Garrett and Pinsonneault, Marc H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Rotational mixing is a prime candidate for explaining the gradual depletion of lithium from the photospheres of cool stars during the main sequence. However, previous mixing calculations have relied primarily on treatments of angular momentum transport in stellar interiors incompatible with solar and stellar data, in the sense that they overestimate internal differential rotation. Instead, recent studies suggest that stars are strongly differentially rotating at young ages, but approach solid body rotation during their lifetimes. We modify our rotating stellar evolution code to include an additional source of angular momentum transport, a necessary ingredient for explaining the open cluster rotation pattern, and examine the consequences for mixing. We confirm that core-envelope recoupling with a $\sim$20 Myr timescale is required to explain the evolution of the mean solar-mass rotation pattern along the main sequence, and demonstrate that it also provides a more accurate description of the Li depletion pattern seen in open clusters. Recoupling produces a characteristic pattern of efficient mixing at early ages and little mixing at late ages, thus predicting a flattening of Li depletion at a few Gyr, in agreement with the observed late-time evolution. Using Li abundances, we argue that the timescale for core-envelope recoupling during the main sequence decreases sharply with increasing mass. We discuss implications of this finding for stellar physics, including the viability of gravity waves and magnetic fields as agents of angular momentum transport. We also raise the possibility of intrinsic differences in initial conditions in star clusters, using M67 as an example., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Accepted to ApJ more...
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- 2016
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216. Continuum Reverberation Mapping of the Accretion Disks in Two Seyfert 1 Galaxies
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Fausnaugh, MM, Starkey, DA, Horne, Keith, Kochanek, CS, Peterson, BM, Bentz, MC, Denney, KD, Grier, CJ, Grupe, D, Pogge, RW, De Rosa, G, Adams, SM, Barth, AJ, Beatty, Thomas G, Bhattacharjee, A, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brown, Jacob E, Brown, Jonathan S, Brotherton, MS, Coker, CT, Crawford, SM, Croxall, KV, Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Eracleous, Michael, Joner, MD, Henderson, CB, Holoien, TW-S, Hutchison, T, Kaspi, Shai, Kim, S, King, Anthea L, Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F, Manne-Nicholas, ER, Mason, M, Montuori, Carmen, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Musso, R, Nazarov, SV, Nguyen, ML, Okhmat, DN, Onken, Christopher A, Ou-Yang, B, Pancoast, A, Pei, L, Penny, Matthew T, Poleski, Radosław, Rafter, Stephen, Romero-Colmenero, E, Runnoe, Jessie, Sand, David J, Schimoia, Jaderson S, Sergeev, SG, Shappee, BJ, Simonian, Gregory V, Somers, Garrett, Spencer, M, Stevens, Daniel J, Tayar, Jamie, Treu, T, Valenti, Stefano, Van Saders, J, Villanueva, S, Villforth, C, Weiss, Yaniv, Winkler, H, and Zhu, W more...
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accretion ,accretion disks ,galaxies: individual ,galaxies: Seyfert ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present optical continuum lags for two Seyfert 1 galaxies, MCG+08-11-011 and NGC 2617, using monitoring data from a reverberation mapping campaign carried out in 2014. Our light curves span the ugriz filters over four months, with median cadences of 1.0 and 0.6 days for MCG+08-11-011 and NGC 2617, respectively, combined with roughly daily X-ray and near-UV data from Swift for NGC 2617. We find lags consistent with geometrically thin accretion-disk models that predict a lag-wavelength relation of τ ∝ λ 4/3. However, the observed lags are larger than predictions based on standard thin-disk theory by factors of 3.3 for MCG+08-11-011 and 2.3 for NGC 2617. These differences can be explained if the mass accretion rates are larger than inferred from the optical luminosity by a factor of 4.3 in MCG+08-11-011 and a factor of 1.3 in NGC 2617, although uncertainty in the SMBH masses determines the significance of this result. While the X-ray variability in NGC 2617 precedes the UV/optical variability, the long (2.6 day) lag is problematic for coronal reprocessing models. more...
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- 2018
217. Treatment of post-transplant recurrent FSGS in children using plasmapheresis and augmentation of immunosuppression
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Restrepo, Jaime M., Torres-Canchala, Laura, Londoño, Hernando, Manzi, Eliana, and Somers, Michael J. G.
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- 2022
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218. Oligodendroglia-derived extracellular vesicles activate autophagy via LC3B/BAG3 to protect against oxidative stress with an enhanced effect for HSPB8 enriched vesicles
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Van den Broek, Bram, Wuyts, Charlotte, Sisto, Angela, Pintelon, Isabel, Timmermans, Jean-Pierre, Somers, Veerle, Timmerman, Vincent, Hellings, Niels, and Irobi, Joy
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- 2022
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219. Urban land cover mapping with Sentinel-2: a spectro-spatio-temporal analysis
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Xu, Fei, Heremans, Stien, and Somers, Ben
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- 2022
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220. A cohort study measuring SARS-CoV-2 seroconversion and serial viral testing in university students
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Lee, Christine C., Segaloff, Hannah E., Cole, Devlin, Rosenblum, Hannah G., Morgan, Clint N., Somers, Tarah, Desamu-Thorpe, Rodel, Foster, Monique A., Currie, Dustin, Ruff, Jeanne, Payne, David, Whyte, Thomas J., Abedi, Glen R., Bigouette, John Paul, Kahrs, Juliana, Langolf, Kimberly, Remington, Patrick, Sterkel, Alana, Kelly, Patrick, Westergaard, Ryan P., Bateman, Allen C., Hsu, Christopher H., Tate, Jacqueline E., and Kirking, Hannah L. more...
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- 2022
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221. A critical review of marine biofilms on metallic materials
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Tuck, B., Watkin, E., Somers, A., and Machuca, L. L.
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- 2022
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222. Stopping molecular rotation using coherent ultra-low-energy magnetic manipulations
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Chadwick, Helen, Somers, Mark F., Stewart, Aisling C., Alkoby, Yosef, Carter, Thomas J. D., Butkovicova, Dagmar, and Alexandrowicz, Gil
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- 2022
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223. Linking physical activity to personal values: feasibility and acceptability randomized pilot of a behavioral intervention for older adults with osteoarthritis pain
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Plumb Vilardaga, Jennifer C., Kelleher, Sarah A., Diachina, Allison, Riley, Jennie, and Somers, Tamara J.
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- 2022
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224. Metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease and implications for cardiovascular risk and disease prevention
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Zhou, Xiao-Dong, Cai, Jingjing, Targher, Giovanni, Byrne, Christopher D., Shapiro, Michael D., Sung, Ki-Chul, Somers, Virend K., Chahal, C. Anwar A., George, Jacob, Chen, Li-Li, Zhou, Yong, and Zheng, Ming-Hua more...
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- 2022
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225. Cysteine metabolic engineering and selective disulfide reduction produce superior antibody-drug-conjugates
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Procopio-Melino, Renée, Kotch, Frank W., Prashad, Amar S., Gomes, Jose M., Wang, Wenge, Arve, Bo, Dawdy, Andrew, Chen, Lawrence, Sperry, Justin, Hosselet, Christine, He, Tao, Kriz, Ronald, Lin, Laura, Marquette, Kimberly, Tchistiakova, Lioudmila, Somers, Will, Rouse, Jason C., and Zhong, Xiaotian more...
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- 2022
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226. Studying the clinical, radiological, histological, microbiological, and immunological evolution during the different COVID-19 disease stages using minimal invasive autopsy
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D’Onofrio, Valentino, Keulen, Lotte, Vandendriessche, Annelore, Dubois, Jasperina, Cartuyvels, Reinoud, Vanden Abeele, Marie-Elena, Fraussen, Judith, Vandormael, Patrick, Somers, Veerle, Achten, Ruth, Dendooven, Amélie, Driessen, Ann, Augsburg, Lukasz, Hellings, Niels, Lammens, Martin, Vanrusselt, Jan, and Cox, Janneke more...
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- 2022
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227. PUTTING YOUR BEST FOOT(NOTE) FORWARD.
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SOMERS, JEFF
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SPECULATIVE fiction ,LITERARY form ,AUTHOR-reader relationships ,FLYING automobiles ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
The article from Writer's Digest explores the various ways in which footnotes can be utilized as a powerful narrative device in fiction writing. It discusses how footnotes can be used for technological intrusions, parallel narratives, postmodern fourth-wall breaks, slow-burn genre twists, comic relief, and stealth world-building. By examining examples from classic and contemporary literature, the article highlights the versatility and creative potential of footnotes in enhancing storytelling in novels and short stories. [Extracted from the article] more...
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- 2025
228. Discovery of Potent and Brain-Penetrant Bicyclic NLRP3 Inhibitors with Peripheral and Central In Vivo Activity
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Mammoliti, Oscar, Carbajo, Rodrigo, Perez-Benito, Laura, Yu, Xiaodi, Prieri, Marion L. C., Bontempi, Leonardo, Embrechts, Sofie, Paesmans, Ine, Bassi, Michela, Bhattacharya, Anindya, Cañellas, Santiago, De Hoog, Saskia, Demin, Samuël, Gijsen, Harrie J. M., Hache, Geerwin, Jacobs, Tom, Jerhaoui, Soufyan, Leenaerts, Joseph, Lutter, Ferdinand H., Mahieu, Michel, Matico, Rosalie, Miller, Robyn, Oehlrich, Daniel, Perrier, Mathieu, Ryabchuk, Pavel, Schepens, Wim, Sharma, Sujata, Somers, Marijke, Suarez, Javier, Surkyn, Michel, Van Opdenbosch, Nina, Verhulst, Tinne, and Bottelbergs, Astrid more...
- Abstract
NLRP3 is a danger sensor protein responsible for inflammasome activation. This leads to pro-inflammatory cytokines release, like IL-1β, and pyroptosis, a regulated cell death. Mounting evidence associates excessive NLRP3 activation to neurodegenerative conditions, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. Thus, NLRP3 inhibitors could potentially provide therapeutic benefit for these disorders. We describe here the evolution of inhibitors relying on a pyridazine-based motif for their key interactions with NLRP3. A Cryo-EM structure helped optimizing protein–ligand complementarity. Subsequently, conformational NMR studies pointed the efforts toward 5,6-bicyclic cores that allowed a balance between brain penetration and undesirable properties, such as hERG inhibition. The effort culminated in compound 19, which showed moderate (mouse) to good (rat) brain penetration and was active at low dose in an LPS challenge model. Importantly, an earlier compound was active in a central neuroinflammation model providing a valuable proof of concept for NLRP3 inhibition. more...
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- 2025
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229. Pediatric Bathtub Drownings in Ontario from 2003 to 2022: A Case Series
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Venettacci, Oliver, Pawlowicz, Bernard, Somers, Gino R., Williams, Andrew S., and Maratta, Christina
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- 2025
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230. Seinfeld Was Right: That’s a Story.
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SOMERS, JEFF
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EVERYDAY life - Abstract
The article from Writer's Digest discusses how writers can use mundane moments from everyday life to create impactful stories. It emphasizes that great stories don't necessarily need big ideas or complex events, but can be inspired by simple observations and experiences. The author uses examples from the TV show "Seinfeld" and personal anecdotes to illustrate how everyday moments can lead to compelling narratives. The article also provides techniques, such as introducing unexpected elements or changing perspectives, to transform mundane occurrences into engaging stories. [Extracted from the article] more...
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- 2025
231. Harder-to-reach people living with HIV experiencing high prevalence of all-type mental health disorder diagnosis
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Salters, Kate A, Irick, Marina, Anema, Aranka, Zhang, Wendy, Parashar, Surita, Patterson, Thomas L, Chen, Yalin, Somers, Julian, Montaner, Julio SG, and Hogg, Robert S
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Anxiety Disorders ,British Columbia ,Case Management ,Comorbidity ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Health Services ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Mental Disorders ,Middle Aged ,Mood Disorders ,Odds Ratio ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Prevalence ,Sex Offenses ,Social Stigma ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,psychiatric conditions ,HIV ,AIDS ,depression ,quality of life ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
People living with HIV/AIDS (PHA) often concurrently cope with mental health disorders that may greatly influence HIV and other health-related outcomes. The objective of this study was to examine the prevalence and correlates of self-reported mental health disorder diagnosis among a cohort of harder-to-reach HIV-positive individuals in British Columbia, Canada. Between 2007 and 2010, 1000 PHA who had initiated ART were enrolled in the Longitudinal Investigation into Supportive and Ancillary health services (LISA) study. Socio-demographic, behavioral, health-care utilization and psychosocial information was collected through interviewer-led questionnaires and linked to longitudinal clinical variables through the provincial Drug Treatment Program at the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS. We identified the prevalence of all-type and specific mental health disorders among this population. Of the 916 participants included in this analysis, 494 (54%) reported ever having a mental health disorder diagnosis. Mood (85%) and anxiety (65%) disorders were the two most frequently reported mental health conditions. Self-reported all-type mental health disorder was independently associated with decreased overall functioning (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.90, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.83-0.98) and life satisfaction (AOR = 0.81, 95% CI = 0.74-0.89), and having higher stigma score (AOR = 1.11, 95%CI = 1.02-1.21). Participants reporting any mental health disorder were more likely to report a history of sexual assault (AOR = 2.45, 95% CI = 1.75-3.43) and to have used case management services (AOR = 1.63, 95%CI = 1.17-2.27). Our findings uncovered a high burden of mental health disorders among harder-to-reach PHA and suggest that PHA with at least one mental health disorder diagnosis are disproportionately impacted by sexual violence and stigma. more...
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- 2017
232. Reverberation Mapping of Optical Emission Lines in Five Active Galaxies
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Fausnaugh, MM, Grier, CJ, Bentz, MC, Denney, KD, De Rosa, G, Peterson, BM, Kochanek, CS, Pogge, RW, Adams, SM, Barth, AJ, Beatty, Thomas G, Bhattacharjee, A, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brown, Jacob E, Brown, Jonathan S, Brotherton, MS, Coker, CT, Crawford, SM, Croxall, KV, Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Eracleous, Michael, Joner, MD, Henderson, CB, Holoien, TW-S, Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T, Kaspi, Shai, Kim, S, King, Anthea L, Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F, Manne-Nicholas, ER, Mason, M, Montuori, Carmen, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Musso, R, Nazarov, SV, Nguyen, ML, Okhmat, DN, Onken, Christopher A, Ou-Yang, B, Pancoast, A, Pei, L, Penny, Matthew T, Poleski, Radosław, Rafter, Stephen, Romero-Colmenero, E, Runnoe, Jessie, Sand, David J, Schimoia, Jaderson S, Sergeev, SG, Shappee, BJ, Simonian, Gregory V, Somers, Garrett, Spencer, M, Starkey, DA, Stevens, Daniel J, Tayar, Jamie, Treu, T, Valenti, Stefano, Van Saders, J, Villanueva, S, Villforth, C, Weiss, Yaniv, Winkler, H, and Zhu, W more...
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galaxies: active ,galaxies: individual ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results from an optical reverberation mapping campaign executed in 2014 targeting the active galactic nuclei (AGNs) MCG+08-11-011, NGC 2617, NGC 4051, 3C 382, and Mrk 374. Our targets have diverse and interesting observational properties, including a "changing look" AGN and a broad-line radio galaxy. Based on continuum-Hβ lags, we measure black hole masses for all five targets. We also obtain Hγ and He ii λ4686 lags for all objects except 3C 382. The He ii λ4686 lags indicate radial stratification of the BLR, and the masses derived from different emission lines are in general agreement. The relative responsivities of these lines are also in qualitative agreement with photoionization models. These spectra have extremely high signal-to-noise ratios (100-300 per pixel) and there are excellent prospects for obtaining velocity-resolved reverberation signatures. more...
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- 2017
233. A Genetic Population Isolate in The Netherlands Showing Extensive Haplotype Sharing and Long Regions of Homozygosity.
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Somers, Metten, Olde Loohuis, Loes M, Aukes, Maartje F, Pasaniuc, Bogdan, de Visser, Kees CL, Kahn, René S, Sommer, Iris E, and Ophoff, Roel A
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IBD sharing ,effective population size ,genetic isolate ,linkage disequilibrium ,runs of homozygosity ,Genetics - Abstract
Genetic isolated populations have features that may facilitate genetic analyses and can be leveraged to improve power of mapping genes to complex traits. Our aim was to test the extent to which a population with a former history of geographic isolation and religious endogamy, and currently with one of the highest fertility rates in The Netherlands, shows signs of genetic isolation. For this purpose, genome-wide genotype data was collected of 72 unrelated individuals from this population as well as in a sample of 104 random control subjects from The Netherlands. Additional reference data from different populations and population isolates was available through HapMap and the Human Genome Diversity Project. We performed a number of analyses to compare the genetic structure between these populations: we calculated the pairwise genetic distance between populations, examined the extent of identical-by-descent (IBD) sharing and estimated the effective population size. Genetic analysis of this population showed consistent patterns of a population isolate at all levels tested. We confirmed that this population is most closely related to the Dutch control subjects, and detected high levels of IBD sharing and runs of homozygosity at equal or even higher levels than observed in previously described population isolates. The effective population size of this population was estimated to be several orders of magnitude smaller than that of the Dutch control sample. We conclude that the geographic isolation of this population combined with rapid population growth has resulted in a genetic isolate with great potential value for future genetic studies. more...
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- 2017
234. Trajectories of fatigue in a population-based sample of older adult breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer survivors: an analysis using the SEER-MHOS data resource
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Byrne, Morgan, Leiser, Jaclyn, Mitchell, Sandra A., Kent, Erin E., Siembida, Elizabeth J., Somers, Tamara, and Arem, Hannah
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- 2021
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235. Outcomes of pediatric patients with therapy-related myeloid neoplasms
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Sharma, Akshay, Huang, Sujuan, Li, Ying, Brooke, Russell J., Ahmed, Ibrahim, Allewelt, Heather B., Amrolia, Persis, Bertaina, Alice, Bhatt, Neel S., Bierings, Marc B., Bies, Joshua, Brisset, Claire, Brondon, Jennifer E., Dahlberg, Ann, Dalle, Jean-Hugues, Eissa, Hesham, Fahd, Mony, Gassas, Adam, Gloude, Nicholas J., Goebel, W. Scott, Goeckerman, Erika S., Harris, Katherine, Ho, Richard, Hudspeth, Michelle P., Huo, Jeffrey S., Jacobsohn, David, Kasow, Kimberly A., Katsanis, Emmanuel, Kaviany, Saara, Keating, Amy K., Kernan, Nancy A., Ktena, Yiouli P., Lauhan, Colette R., López-Hernandez, Gerardo, Martin, Paul L., Myers, Kasiani C., Naik, Swati, Olaya-Vargas, Alberto, Onishi, Toshihiro, Radhi, Mohamed, Ramachandran, Shanti, Ramos, Kristie, Rangarajan, Hemalatha G., Roehrs, Philip A., Sampson, Megan E., Shaw, Peter J., Skiles, Jodi L., Somers, Katherine, Symons, Heather J., de Tersant, Marie, Uber, Allison N., Versluys, Birgitta, Cheng, Cheng, and Triplett, Brandon M. more...
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- 2021
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236. Conducting Qualitative Research Online: Challenges and Solutions
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Carter, Stacy M., Shih, Patti, Williams, Jane, Degeling, Chris, and Mooney-Somers, Julie
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- 2021
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237. Extreme Expansion and Reversible Hydrogen Solubility in h.c.p. Titanium Stabilized by Colossal Interstitial Alloying
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Kværndrup, Frederik B., Somers, Marcel A. J., and Christiansen, Thomas L.
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- 2021
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238. Vancomycin dosing and therapeutic drug monitoring practices: guidelines versus real-life
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Van Der Heggen, Tatjana, Buyle, Franky M., Claus, Barbara, Somers, Annemie, Schelstraete, Petra, De Paepe, Peter, Vanhaesebrouck, Sophie, and De Cock, Pieter A. J. G.
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- 2021
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239. DNA methylation regulates the expression of the negative transcriptional regulators ID2 and ID4 during OPC differentiation
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Tiane, Assia, Schepers, Melissa, Riemens, Renzo, Rombaut, Ben, Vandormael, Patrick, Somers, Veerle, Prickaerts, Jos, Hellings, Niels, van den Hove, Daniel, and Vanmierlo, Tim
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- 2021
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240. Kernel Architecture of the Genetic Circuitry of the Arabidopsis Circadian System
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Foo, Mathias, Somers, David E., and Kim, Pan-Jun
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Quantitative Biology - Molecular Networks ,Physics - Biological Physics ,Quantitative Biology - Subcellular Processes - Abstract
A wide range of organisms features molecular machines, circadian clocks, which generate endogenous oscillations with ~24 h periodicity and thereby synchronize biological processes to diurnal environmental fluctuations. Recently, it has become clear that plants harbor more complex gene regulatory circuits within the core circadian clocks than other organisms, inspiring a fundamental question: are all these regulatory interactions between clock genes equally crucial for the establishment and maintenance of circadian rhythms? Our mechanistic simulation for Arabidopsis thaliana demonstrates that at least half of the total regulatory interactions must be present to express the circadian molecular profiles observed in wild-type plants. A set of those essential interactions is called herein a kernel of the circadian system. The kernel structure unbiasedly reveals four interlocked negative feedback loops contributing to circadian rhythms, and three feedback loops among them drive the autonomous oscillation itself. Strikingly, the kernel structure, as well as the whole clock circuitry, is overwhelmingly composed of inhibitory, rather than activating, interactions between genes. We found that this tendency underlies plant circadian molecular profiles which often exhibit sharply-shaped, cuspidate waveforms. Through the generation of these cuspidate profiles, inhibitory interactions may facilitate the global coordination of temporally-distant clock events that are markedly peaked at very specific times of day. Our systematic approach resulting in experimentally-testable predictions provides insights into a design principle of biological clockwork, with implications for synthetic biology., Comment: Supplementary material is available at the journal website more...
- Published
- 2016
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241. An Analysis of the Effects of an Academic Summer Program for Middle School Students
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MDRC, Somers, Marie-Andrée, Welbeck, Rashida, Grossman, Jean B., and Gooden, Susan
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This report examines the implementation and effects of the academic summer program for middle school students offered by Building Educated Leaders for Life (BELL). BELL's middle school program serves rising sixth- through eighth-grade students who are performing one to two years below grade level. The goals of the program are to increase students' literacy and math skills and to enhance their social development. Overall, the findings from this study indicate that BELL mounted a fairly well-run and well-staffed five-week summer program in summer 2012 and that students attended at a high rate even though the program was voluntary. The pattern of impact estimates suggests that, on returning to school in fall 2012, BELL students may have had stronger math skills than they would have had otherwise, equivalent to a little over one month of learning, which is the effect that one would expect from a five-week program during the regular school year. While additional research would be required to confirm these preliminary findings, if true, this suggests that strategies for teaching reading skills to middle school students may need to be different than the approaches used with elementary school students. The following are appended: (1) The Statistical Model and Statistical Power of the Evaluation, (2) Surveys and Testing: Timeline, Survey Scales, and Data Collection Instruments, (3) Characteristics of Students in the Study and Response Analysis, (4) Data Collection During the Site Visits, (5) Sensitivity Analyses, (6) Characteristics of the Study Districts and the Nonstudy Districts. more...
- Published
- 2015
242. The Mother and Infant Home Visiting Program Evaluation: Early Findings on the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program. A Report to Congress. OPRE Report 2015-11
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Administration for Children and Families (DHHS), Office of Planning, Research & Evaluation, MDRC, Michalopoulos, Charles, Lee, Helen, Duggan, Anne, Lundquist, Erika, Tso, Ada, Crowne, Sarah Shea, Burrell, Lori, Somers, Jennifer, Filene, Jill H., and Knox, Virginia more...
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"The Mother and Infant Home Visiting Program Evaluation: Early Findings on the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program--A Report to Congress" presents the first findings from the Mother and Infant Home Visiting Program Evaluation (MIHOPE), the legislatively mandated national evaluation of the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting program (MIECHV or the Home Visiting Program). The report includes an analysis of the states' needs assessments, as well as baseline characteristics of families, staff, local programs, and models participating in the study. The information in this report provides a foundation for understanding the implementation and impacts of MIECHV-funded home visiting programs. Later reports will explore the local and national implementation of those programs, and their effects on families with young children. The study is being overseen by OPRE and conducted by MDRC in partnership with James Bell Associates, Johns Hopkins University, Mathematica Policy Research, the University of Georgia, and Columbia University. The study's design and plans for the content of the Report to Congress reflect advice from the Secretary's Advisory Committee on the Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program Evaluation. The following are appended: (1) Home Visiting Programs in Existence Before MIECHV, as Reported in the 2010 State Needs Assessments; (2) Programs in Use in Only One State Prior to MIECHV, as Reported in the 2010 State Needs Assessments; (3) Indicators of Community Risk in Communities Chosen for MIECHV Funding, Based on the 2010 State Needs Assessments; (4) Fiscal Year 2010 and 2011 State Plans for MIECHV Funding; and (5) Chapter 5 Supplement: Additional Information on the Home Visiting Implementation Policies of National Models and Local Programs. more...
- Published
- 2015
243. Canadian Mountain Assessment : Walking Together to Enhance Understanding of Mountains in Canada
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McDowell, Graham, Stevens, Madison, Marshall, Shawn, Higgs, Eric, Jacob, Aerin, Johnson, Gùdia Mary Jane, Johnson, Linda, Dicker, Megan, Inkpen, Dani, Koppes, Michele, Lightning, Keara, Parlee, Brenda, Pascal, Wanda, Shea, Joseph, Sims, Daniel, Smiles, Niiyokamigaabaw Deondre, Andrew, Leon, Aubry-Wake, Caroline, Borish, David, Churchill, Ashley-Anne, Dahl, Dawn Saunders, Desmarais, Goota, Gagné, Karine, Gavenus, Erika, Gruber, Stephan, Guo, Jiaao, Hanly, Katherine, Hewitt, Nina, Humphries, Murray, Hunter, Rod, Ignace, Lawrence, Jerome, Pnnal Bernard, Joe, Patricia, Johnston, Stephen, Kitching, Knut, Kootenay, Douglas, Kraus, Daniel, Lancaster, Sydney, Langford, Rosemary, MacKinnon, Lachlan, Marsh, Christopher, Mayes, Brandy, Tallow, Hayden Melting, Mitchell, Charlotte, Patterson, Tim, Pheasant, Sophie, Pheasant, Karen, Quesnelle, Melissa, Reimer, Rachel, Rethoret, Lauren, Richardson, Gabriella, Rushton, Brooklyn, Sánchez, María Elisa, Schuster, Richard, Smith, Tonya, Somers, Lauren, Springer, Chris, St. Pierre, Kyra, Sudlow, Karson, Tapp, Yan, Thériault, Julie M., Trant, Andrew, Vionnet, Vincent, Waldron, John, Head, Gabrielle Weasel, Wesche, Sonia, Wilson, Nicole J., Wiseman, Matthew, Wray, Kristine, Chignell, Stephen, McIlwraith, Thomas, Reichwein, PearlAnn, Vamosi, Steven M., McDowell, Graham, Stevens, Madison, Marshall, Shawn, Higgs, Eric, Jacob, Aerin, Johnson, Gùdia Mary Jane, Johnson, Linda, Dicker, Megan, Inkpen, Dani, Koppes, Michele, Lightning, Keara, Parlee, Brenda, Pascal, Wanda, Shea, Joseph, Sims, Daniel, Smiles, Niiyokamigaabaw Deondre, Andrew, Leon, Aubry-Wake, Caroline, Borish, David, Churchill, Ashley-Anne, Dahl, Dawn Saunders, Desmarais, Goota, Gagné, Karine, Gavenus, Erika, Gruber, Stephan, Guo, Jiaao, Hanly, Katherine, Hewitt, Nina, Humphries, Murray, Hunter, Rod, Ignace, Lawrence, Jerome, Pnnal Bernard, Joe, Patricia, Johnston, Stephen, Kitching, Knut, Kootenay, Douglas, Kraus, Daniel, Lancaster, Sydney, Langford, Rosemary, MacKinnon, Lachlan, Marsh, Christopher, Mayes, Brandy, Tallow, Hayden Melting, Mitchell, Charlotte, Patterson, Tim, Pheasant, Sophie, Pheasant, Karen, Quesnelle, Melissa, Reimer, Rachel, Rethoret, Lauren, Richardson, Gabriella, Rushton, Brooklyn, Sánchez, María Elisa, Schuster, Richard, Smith, Tonya, Somers, Lauren, Springer, Chris, St. Pierre, Kyra, Sudlow, Karson, Tapp, Yan, Thériault, Julie M., Trant, Andrew, Vionnet, Vincent, Waldron, John, Head, Gabrielle Weasel, Wesche, Sonia, Wilson, Nicole J., Wiseman, Matthew, Wray, Kristine, Chignell, Stephen, McIlwraith, Thomas, Reichwein, PearlAnn, and Vamosi, Steven M. more...
- Published
- 2023
244. Unconventional tracers show that spring waters on Mount Fuji run deep
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Somers, Lauren
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- 2023
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245. The Impact of Starspots on Mass and Age Estimates During The Pre-Main Sequence
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Somers, Garrett and Pinsonneault, Marc H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the impact of starspots on the evolution of late-type stars during the pre-main sequence (pre-MS). We find that heavy spot coverage increases the radii of stars by 4-10%, consistent with inflation factors in eclipsing binary systems, and suppresses the rate of pre-MS lithium depletion, leading to a dispersion in zero-age MS Li abundance (comparable to observed spreads) if a range of spot properties exist within clusters from 3-10 Myr. This concordance with data implies that spots induce a range of radii at fixed mass during the pre-MS. These spots decrease the luminosity and $T_{\rm eff}$ of stars, leading to a displacement on the HR diagram. This displacement causes isochrone derived masses and ages to be systematically under-estimated, and can lead to the spurious appearance of an age spread in a co-eval population., Comment: To appear in "Young Stars and Planets Near the Sun", Proceedings of IAU Symposium No. 314 (Cambridge University Press), J.H. Kastner, B. Stelzer, S.A. Metchev, eds more...
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- 2015
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246. Older and Colder: The impact of starspots on pre-main sequence stellar evolution
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Somers, Garrett and Pinsonneault, Marc H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We assess the impact of starspots on the evolution of late-type stars during the pre-main sequence (pre-MS) using a modified stellar evolution code. We find that heavily spotted models of mass 0.1-1.2\msun\ are inflated by up to $10$% during the pre-MS, and up to 4% and 9% for fully- and partially-convective stars at the zero-age MS, consistent with measurements from active eclipsing binary systems. Spots similarly decrease stellar luminosity and $T_{\rm eff}$, causing isochrone-derived masses to be under-estimated by up to a factor of $2 \times$, and ages to be under-estimated by a factor of 2-10$\times$, at 3 Myr. Consequently, pre-MS clusters and their active stars are systematically older and more massive than often reported. Cluster ages derived with the lithium depletion boundary technique are erroneously young by $\sim 15$% and $10$% at $30$ and $100$ Myr respectively, if 50% spotted stars are interpreted with un-spotted models. Finally, lithium depletion is suppressed in spotted stars with radiative cores, leading to a fixed-temperature lithium dispersion on the MS if a range of spot properties are present on the pre-MS. Such dispersions are large enough to explain Li abundance spreads seen in young open clusters, and imply a range of radii at fixed mass and age during the pre-MS Li burning epoch. By extension, this implies that mass, composition, and age do not uniquely specify the HR diagram location of pre-MS stars., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, accepted to ApJ. For a brief video discussing the main results, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA7WUeqIFug more...
- Published
- 2015
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247. Rotation of a liquid crystal by the Casimir torque
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Somers, David A. T. and Munday, Jeremy N.
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We present a calculation of the Casimir torque acting on a liquid crystal near a birefringent crystal. In this system, a liquid crystal bulk is uniformly aligned at one surface and is twisted at the other surface by a birefringent crystal, e.g. barium titanate. The liquid crystal is separated from the solid crystal by an isotropic, transparent material such as SiO$_2$. By varying the thickness of the deposited layer, we can observe the effect of retardation on the torque (which differentiates it from the close-range van der Waals torque). We find that a barium titanate slab would cause 5CB (4-cyano-4$'$-pentylbiphenyl) liquid crystal to rotate by 10$^\circ$ through its bulk when separated by 35 nm of SiO$_2$. The optical technique for measuring this twist is also outlined., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures more...
- Published
- 2015
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248. Correspondence between Self-Reported and Actual High School Grades
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Somers, Cheryl L., Townsend, Austin, Baranowski, Ariel, Hillman, Stephen B., and Robtoy, Elizabeth
- Abstract
Aims: Educational research often relies on the self-reports of students to determine their grades/GPA for reasons including ease of administration, time constraints, IRB approval, and assumption of accuracy. The main purpose of this study was to determine the validity of student self-reports on their academic grades, and if the benefits outweigh the potential errors. Methods/Results: Participants (n=415) were students in a suburban school in a large metropolitan city in the Midwest. Two methods of self-reported grades were correlated with students' actual transcript grades. Results showed fair amounts of correspondence (r=0.60-0.89), with actual grades being correlated at higher levels than self-reported grades. Conclusion: Younger students and those with higher grades were more accurate reporters. Those with more diligent academic behaviors also demonstrated greater accuracy, and those with a vaguer sense of future goals demonstrated less accuracy. All results are discussed in the context of how valid are students' self-reported grades for research purposes more...
- Published
- 2020
249. Considering Physical Well-Being, Self-Perceptions, and Support Variables in Understanding Youth Academic Achievement
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Centeio, Erin E., Somers, Cheryl L., Moore, E. Whitney G., Garn, Alex, Kulik, Noel, Martin, Jeffrey, Shen, Bo, and McCaughtry, Nate
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the relation between measures of students' physical well-being and self-perception and their academic achievement. Specifically, we look at students' social support for physical activity, physical activity perceptions, self-concept, self-efficacy, health behaviors, and cardiorespiratory fitness (as measured by the progressive aerobic cardiovascular endurance run [PACER] test). Students (n = 697 fifth graders) were surveyed at the beginning of the school year. A two-group path analysis revealed notable relationships between the predictor variables and proximal and distal outcomes, with some paths moderated by sex. One relationship that was significant for both sexes was cardiorespiratory fitness, as it was the only significant predictor of achievement. This effect was moderate to large for the female students (R[superscript 2 over subscript Math]=36%; R[superscript 2 over subscript Read]=15%) and small to large for the male students (R[superscript 2 over subscript Math]=26%; R[superscript 2 over subscript Math]=10%). These findings can be used to guide future research and educational prevention and intervention efforts. more...
- Published
- 2020
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250. Use of the Monarch Room as an Alternative to Suspension in Addressing School Discipline Issues among Court-Involved Youth
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Baroni, Beverly, Day, Angelique, Somers, Cheryl, Crosby, Shantel, and Pennefather, Megan
- Abstract
Suspension is commonly used in schools, yet these practices can adversely affect students' education well-being and do not improve student behavior. This study assesses the use of the Monarch Room (MR) intervention, a trauma-informed alternative to school discipline suspension policies, among 620 court-involved girls placed in residential care and enrolled in an urban-located public charter school. Teachers readily utilized the intervention as a first response to dealing with problematic behavior, and as a result, MR use significantly decreased reliance on suspension practices. Multiple stays in residential treatment and race were significant predictors of MR use. more...
- Published
- 2020
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