2,226 results on '"Madsen K"'
Search Results
352. Prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology in persons without dementia: A meta-analysis
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Jansen, WJ, Ossenkoppele, R, Knol, DL, Tijms, BM, Scheltens, P, Verhey, FRJ, Visser, PJ, Aalten, P, Aarsland, D, Alcolea, D, Alexander, M, Almdahl, IS, Arnold, SE, Baldeiras, I, Barthel, H, Van Berckel, BNM, Bibeau, K, Blennow, K, Brooks, DJ, Van Buchem, MA, Camus, V, Cavedo, E, Chen, K, Chetelat, G, Cohen, AD, Drzezga, A, Engelborghs, S, Fagan, AM, Fladby, T, Fleisher, AS, Van Der Flier, WM, Ford, L, Forster, S, Fortea, J, Foskett, N, Frederiksen, KS, Freund-Levi, Y, Frisoni, GB, Froelich, L, Gabryelewicz, T, Gill, KD, Gkatzima, O, Gomez-Tortosa, E, Gordon, MF, Grimmer, T, Hampel, H, Hausner, L, Hellwig, S, Herukka, SK, Hildebrandt, H, Ishihara, L, Ivanoiu, A, Jagust, WJ, Johannsen, P, Kandimalla, R, Kapaki, E, Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A, Klunk, WE, Kohler, S, Koglin, N, Kornhuber, J, Kramberger, MG, Van Laere, K, Landau, SM, Lee, DY, De Leon, M, Lisetti, V, Lleo, A, Madsen, K, Maier, W, Marcusson, J, Mattsson, N, De Mendonca, A, Meulenbroek, O, Meyer, PT, Mintun, MA, Mok, V, Molinuevo, JL, Mollergard, HM, Morris, JC, Mroczko, B, Van Der Mussele, S, Na, DL, Newberg, A, Nordberg, A, Nordlund, A, Novak, GP, Paraskevas, GP, and Parnetti, L
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mental disorders - Abstract
Copyright 2015 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. IMPORTANCE: Cerebral amyloid-β aggregation is an early pathological event in Alzheimer disease (AD), starting decades before dementia onset. Estimates of the prevalence of amyloid pathology in persons without dementia are needed to understand the development of AD and to design prevention studies. OBJECTIVE To use individual participant data meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of amyloid pathology as measured with biomarkers in participants with normal cognition, subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DATA SOURCES: Relevant biomarker studies identified by searching studies published before April 2015 using the MEDLINE andWeb of Science databases and through personal communication with investigators. STUDY SELECTION: Studies were included if they provided individual participant data for participants without dementia and used an a priori defined cutoff for amyloid positivity. DATA EXTRACTION: AND SYNTHESIS: Individual recordswere provided for 2914 participants with normal cognition, 697 with SCI, and 3972 with MCI aged 18 to 100 years from 55 studies. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Prevalence of amyloid pathology on positron emission tomography or in cerebrospinal fluid according to AD risk factors (age, apolipoprotein E [APOE] genotype, sex, and education) estimated by generalized estimating equations. RESULTS The prevalence of amyloid pathology increased from age 50 to 90 years from 10% (95%CI, 8%-13%) to 44%(95%CI, 37%-51%) among participants with normal cognition; from 12%(95%CI, 8%-18%) to 43%(95%CI, 32%-55%) among patients with SCI; and from 27%(95%CI, 23%-32%) to 71%(95%CI, 66%-76%) among patients with MCI. APOE-ϵ4 carriers had 2 to 3 times higher prevalence estimates than noncarriers. The age at which 15% of the participants with normal cognition were amyloid positive was approximately 40 years for APOE ϵ4ϵ4 carriers, 50 years for ϵ2ϵ4 carriers, 55 years for ϵ3ϵ4 carriers, 65 years for ϵ3ϵ3 carriers, and 95 years for ϵ2ϵ3 carriers. Amyloid positivity was more common in highly educated participants but not associated with sex or biomarker modality. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Among persons without dementia, the prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology as determined by positron emission tomography or cerebrospinal fluid findings was associated with age, APOE genotype, and presence of cognitive impairment. These findings suggest a 20- to 30-year interval between first development of amyloid positivity and onset of dementia.
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- 2015
353. ^(44)Ti gamma-ray emission lines from SN1987A reveal an asymmetric explosion
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Boggs, S. E., Harrison, F. A., Miyasaka, H., Grefenstette, B. W., Forster, K., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., and Rana, V.
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Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
In core-collapse supernovae, titanium-44 (^(44)Ti) is produced in the innermost ejecta, in the layer of material directly on top of the newly formed compact object. As such, it provides a direct probe of the supernova engine. Observations of supernova 1987A (SN1987A) have resolved the 67.87- and 78.32–kilo–electron volt emission lines from decay of ^(44)Ti produced in the supernova explosion. These lines are narrow and redshifted with a Doppler velocity of ~700 kilometers per second, direct evidence of large-scale asymmetry in the explosion.
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- 2015
354. The activity of satellite cells and myonuclei following 8 weeks of strength training in young men with suppressed testosterone levels
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Kvorning, T, Kadi, F, Schjerling, P, Andersen, M, Brixen, K, Suetta, C, Madsen, K, and Madsen, Klavs
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Satellite Cells, Skeletal Muscle ,myonuclei ,Physiology ,Strength training ,Biopsy ,Endogeny ,Quadriceps Muscle ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,GnRH analogue ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,RNA, Messenger ,satellite cells ,training ,biology ,business.industry ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Age Factors ,Testosterone (patch) ,Resistance Training ,musculoskeletal system ,biology.organism_classification ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch ,testosterone ,Goserelin ,Satellite (biology) ,business ,microarray - Abstract
AIM: To investigate how suppression of endogenous testosterone during an 8-week strength training period influences the activity of satellite cells and myonuclei.METHODS: Twenty-two moderately trained young men participated in this randomized, placebo-controlled, and double-blinded intervention study. The participants were randomized to treatment with a GnRH analogue, goserelin (n = 12), which suppresses testosterone or placebo (n = 10) for 12 weeks. The strength training period of 8 weeks started after 4 weeks of treatment and included exercises for all major muscles. Biopsies were obtained from the mid-portion of the vastus lateralis muscle.RESULTS: Testosterone resting level in goserelin was 10-20 times lower compared with placebo, and the training-induced increase in the level of testosterone was abolished in goserelin. Training increased satellite cells number in type II fibres by 20% in placebo and by 52% in goserelin (P < 0.01), whereas the myonuclear number significantly increased by 12% in type II fibres in placebo and remained unchanged in goserelin (P < 0.05). No changes in satellite cells and myonuclei were seen in type I fibres in either group. Data from the microarray analysis indicated that low testosterone affects the bone morphogenetic proteins signalling, which might regulate proliferation vs. differentiation of satellite cells.CONCLUSION: Eight weeks of strength training enhances the myonuclear number in type II fibres, and this is largely blocked by the suppression of testosterone. The data indicate that low testosterone levels could reduce the differentiation of satellite cells to myonuclei via the bone morphogenetic proteins signalling pathway, resulting in reduced increases in lean leg mass.
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- 2015
355. The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: First Direct Measurements of the >10 keV X-Ray Luminosity Function for Active Galactic Nuclei at z>0.1
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Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Ballantyne, D. R., Civano, F., Del-Moro, A., Hickox, R. C., Lansbury, G. B., Mullaney, J. R., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Comastri, A., Fabian, A. C., Gandhi, P., Harrison, F. A., Luo, B., Stern, D., Treister, E., Zappacosta, L., Ajello, M., Assef, R., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Balokovic, M., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Koss, M., LaMassa, S. M., Madsen, K. K., Puccetti, S., Saez, C., Urry, C. M., Wik, D. R., and Zhang, W.
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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first direct measurements of the rest-frame 10-40 keV X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) based on a sample of 94 sources at 0.1 < z, 14 pages, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2015
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356. The NuSTAR Extragalactic Survey: First Direct Measurements of the Greater Than Or Similar To 10 Kev X-Ray Luminosity Function For Active Galactic Nuclei At z > 0.1
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Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Ballantyne, D. R., Civano, F., Del-Moro, A., Hickox, R. C., Lansbury, G. B., Mullaney, J. R., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Comastri, A., Fabian, A. C., Gandhi, P., Harrison, F. A., Luo, Birong, Stern, D., Treister, E., Zappacosta, L., Ajello, M., Assef, R., Balokovic, M., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Koss, M., LaMassa, S. M., Madsen, K. K., Puccetti, S., Saez, C., Urry, C. M., Wik, D. R., and Zhang, W.
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active [Galaxies] ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,evolution [Galaxies] ,galaxies [X-rays] - Abstract
We present the first direct measurements of the rest-frame 10-40 keV X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) based on a sample of 94 sources at 0.1 Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) extragalactic survey program. Our results are consistent with the strong evolution of the AGN population seen in prior, lower-energy studies of the XLF. However, different models of the intrinsic distribution of absorption, which are used to correct for selection biases, give significantly different predictions for the total number of sources in our sample, leading to small, systematic differences in our binned estimates of the XLF. Adopting a model with a lower intrinsic fraction of Compton-thick sources and a larger population of sources with column densities NH ∼1023-24 cm-2 or a model with stronger Compton reflection component (with a relative normalization of R ∼ 2 at all luminosities) can bring extrapolations of the XLF from 2-10 keV into agreement with our NuSTAR sample. Ultimately, X-ray spectral analysis of the NuSTAR sources is required to break this degeneracy between the distribution of absorbing column densities and the strength of the Compton reflection component and thus refine our measurements of the XLF. Furthermore, the models that successfully describe the high-redshift population seen by NuSTAR tend to over-predict previous, high-energy measurements of the local XLF, indicating that there is evolution of the AGN population that is not fully captured by the current models.
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- 2015
357. Prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology in persons without dementia: A meta-analysis
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Jansen, W.J. Ossenkoppele, R. Knol, D.L. Tijms, B.M. Scheltens, P. Verhey, F.R.J. Visser, P.J. Aalten, P. Aarsland, D. Alcolea, D. Alexander, M. Almdahl, I.S. Arnold, S.E. Baldeiras, I. Barthel, H. Van Berckel, B.N.M. Bibeau, K. Blennow, K. Brooks, D.J. Van Buchem, M.A. Camus, V. Cavedo, E. Chen, K. Chetelat, G. Cohen, A.D. Drzezga, A. Engelborghs, S. Fagan, A.M. Fladby, T. Fleisher, A.S. Van Der Flier, W.M. Ford, L. Forster, S. Fortea, J. Foskett, N. Frederiksen, K.S. Freund-Levi, Y. Frisoni, G.B. Froelich, L. Gabryelewicz, T. Gill, K.D. Gkatzima, O. Gomez-Tortosa, E. Gordon, M.F. Grimmer, T. Hampel, H. Hausner, L. Hellwig, S. Herukka, S.-K. Hildebrandt, H. Ishihara, L. Ivanoiu, A. Jagust, W.J. Johannsen, P. Kandimalla, R. Kapaki, E. Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A. Klunk, W.E. Kohler, S. Koglin, N. Kornhuber, J. Kramberger, M.G. Van Laere, K. Landau, S.M. Lee, D.Y. De Leon, M. Lisetti, V. Lleo, A. Madsen, K. Maier, W. Marcusson, J. Mattsson, N. De Mendonca, A. Meulenbroek, O. Meyer, P.T. Mintun, M.A. Mok, V. Molinuevo, J.L. Mollergard, H.M. Morris, J.C. Mroczko, B. Van Der Mussele, S. Na, D.L. Newberg, A. Nordberg, A. Nordlund, A. Novak, G.P. Paraskevas, G.P. Parnetti, L. Perera, G. Peters, O. Popp, J. Prabhakar, S. Rabinovici, G.D. Ramakers, I.H.G.B. Rami, L. De Oliveira, C.R. Rinne, J.O. Rodrigue, K.M. Rodriguez-Rodriguez, E. Roe, C.M. Rot, U. Rowe, C.C. Ruther, E. Sabri, O. Sanchez-Juan, P. Santana, I. Sarazin, M. Schroder, J. Schutte, C. Seo, S.W. Soetewey, F. Soininen, H. Spiru, L. Struyfs, H. Teunissen, C.E. Tsolaki, M. Vandenberghe, R. Verbeek, M.M. Villemagne, V.L. Vos, S.J.B. Van Waalwijk Van Doorn, L.J.C. Waldemar, G. Wallin, A. Wallin, A.K. Wiltfang, J. Wolk, D.A. Zboch, M. Zetterberg, H. the Amyloid Biomarker Study Group
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mental disorders - Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Cerebral amyloid-β aggregation is an early pathological event in Alzheimer disease (AD), starting decades before dementia onset. Estimates of the prevalence of amyloid pathology in persons without dementia are needed to understand the development of AD and to design prevention studies. OBJECTIVE To use individual participant data meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of amyloid pathology as measured with biomarkers in participants with normal cognition, subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DATA SOURCES: Relevant biomarker studies identified by searching studies published before April 2015 using the MEDLINE andWeb of Science databases and through personal communication with investigators. STUDY SELECTION: Studies were included if they provided individual participant data for participants without dementia and used an a priori defined cutoff for amyloid positivity. DATA EXTRACTION: AND SYNTHESIS: Individual recordswere provided for 2914 participants with normal cognition, 697 with SCI, and 3972 with MCI aged 18 to 100 years from 55 studies. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Prevalence of amyloid pathology on positron emission tomography or in cerebrospinal fluid according to AD risk factors (age, apolipoprotein E [APOE] genotype, sex, and education) estimated by generalized estimating equations. RESULTS The prevalence of amyloid pathology increased from age 50 to 90 years from 10% (95%CI, 8%-13%) to 44%(95%CI, 37%-51%) among participants with normal cognition; from 12%(95%CI, 8%-18%) to 43%(95%CI, 32%-55%) among patients with SCI; and from 27%(95%CI, 23%-32%) to 71%(95%CI, 66%-76%) among patients with MCI. APOE-ϵ4 carriers had 2 to 3 times higher prevalence estimates than noncarriers. The age at which 15% of the participants with normal cognition were amyloid positive was approximately 40 years for APOE ϵ4ϵ4 carriers, 50 years for ϵ2ϵ4 carriers, 55 years for ϵ3ϵ4 carriers, 65 years for ϵ3ϵ3 carriers, and 95 years for ϵ2ϵ3 carriers. Amyloid positivity was more common in highly educated participants but not associated with sex or biomarker modality. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Among persons without dementia, the prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology as determined by positron emission tomography or cerebrospinal fluid findings was associated with age, APOE genotype, and presence of cognitive impairment. These findings suggest a 20- to 30-year interval between first development of amyloid positivity and onset of dementia. Copyright 2015 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2015
358. Trends in social inequality in loneliness among adolescents 1991–2014.
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Madsen, K R, Holstein, B E, Damsgaard, M T, Rayce, S B, Jespersen, L N, and Due, P
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CHI-squared test ,STATISTICAL correlation ,LONELINESS ,PARENTS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOLS ,SOCIAL classes ,SURVEYS ,TIME ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,CLUSTER sampling ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background Loneliness and social inequality in health are important public health concerns. We examined (i) trends in loneliness among adolescents from 1991 to 2014 in Denmark and (ii) trends in social inequality in loneliness. Methods Study population: 11–15-year olds in random samples of schools in 1991, 1994, 1998, 2006 and 2014, n = 19 096. Loneliness was measured by a single item and social background by parents' occupational social class (OSC). We calculated absolute (%) differences in loneliness between high and low OSC and relative differences by odds ratio for loneliness. Results Across all surveys, 6.3% reported feeling lonely. The prevalence increased from 4.4% in 1991 to 7.2% in 2014. The prevalence of loneliness in high, middle and low OSC was 5.8, 5.9 and 8.0%. The increase in loneliness was more pronounced in higher than lower OSC, resulting in a decreasing absolute social inequality in loneliness. The statistical interaction between OSC and survey year was significant, P = 0.0176, i.e. the relative social inequality in loneliness also decreased from 1991 to 2014. Conclusion The prevalence of loneliness increased from 1991 to 2014. The social inequality in loneliness decreased in both absolute and relative terms because of a rising prevalence of loneliness among children from high OSC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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359. NuSTAR and XMM-Newton Observations of the Hard X-Ray Spectrum of Centaurus A
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Fürst, F., Müller, C., Madsen, K. K., Lanz, L., Rivers, E., Brightman, M., Arevalo, P., Baloković, M., Beuchert, T., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Dauser, T., Farrah, D., Graefe, C., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kadler, M., King, A., Krauss, F., Madejski, G., Matt, G., Marinucci, A., Markowitz, A., Ogle, P., Ojha, R., Rothschild, R., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., Zhang, W. W., Fürst, F., Müller, C., Madsen, K. K., Lanz, L., Rivers, E., Brightman, M., Arevalo, P., Baloković, M., Beuchert, T., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Dauser, T., Farrah, D., Graefe, C., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kadler, M., King, A., Krauss, F., Madejski, G., Matt, G., Marinucci, A., Markowitz, A., Ogle, P., Ojha, R., Rothschild, R., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W. W.
- Abstract
We present simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations spanning 3–78 keV of the nearest radiogalaxy, Centaurus A (Cen A), performed during a very high flux state. The accretion geometry around thecentral engine in Cen A is still debated, and we investigate possible configurations using detailed X-ray spectralmodeling. NuSTAR imaged the central region of Cen A with subarcminute resolution at X-ray energies above10 keV for the first time, but finds no evidence for an extended source or other off-nuclear point-sources.The XMM-Newton and NuSTAR spectra agree well and can be described with an absorbed power-law witha photon index Γ = 1.815 ± 0.005 and a fluorescent Fe Kα line in good agreement with literature values.The spectrum does not require a high-energy exponential rollover, with a constraint of Efold > 1 MeV. Athermal Comptonization continuum describes the data well, with parameters that agree with values measuredby INTEGRAL, in particular an electron temperature of kTe ≈ 220 keV, assuming a 10 eV seed photon inputtemperature. We do not find evidence for reflection or a broad iron line and put stringent upper limits ofR <0.01 on the reflection fraction and accretion disk illumination. We use archival Chandra data to estimatethe contribution from diffuse emission, extra-nuclear point-sources, and the X-ray jet to the observed NuSTAR and XMM-Newton X-ray spectra and find the contribution to be negligible. We discuss different scenarios forthe physical origin of the observed X-ray spectrum, and conclude that the inner disk is replaced by an advection-dominatedaccretion flow or that the hard X-rays are dominated by synchrotron self-Compton emission fromthe inner regions of the radio jet or a combination thereof.
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- 2016
360. First Nustar Observations of the Bl Lac-Type Blazar Pks 2155-304: Constraints on the Jet Content and Distribution of Radiating Particles
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Madejski, G. M., Nalewajko, K., Madsen, K. K., Chiang, J., Baloković, M., Paneque, D., Furniss, A. K., Hayashida, M., Urry, C. M., Sikora, M., Ajello, M., Blandford, R. D., Harrison, F. A., Sanchez, D., Giebels, B., Stern, D., Alexander, D. M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C., Hornstrup, Allan, Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Westergaard, Niels Jørgen Stenfeldt, Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., Madejski, G. M., Nalewajko, K., Madsen, K. K., Chiang, J., Baloković, M., Paneque, D., Furniss, A. K., Hayashida, M., Urry, C. M., Sikora, M., Ajello, M., Blandford, R. D., Harrison, F. A., Sanchez, D., Giebels, B., Stern, D., Alexander, D. M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C., Hornstrup, Allan, Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Westergaard, Niels Jørgen Stenfeldt, Zhang, W. W., and Zoglauer, A.
- Abstract
We report the first hard X-ray observations with NuSTAR of the BL Lac-type blazar PKS 2155-304, augmented with soft X-ray data from XMM-Newton and γ-ray data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope, obtained in 2013 April when the source was in a very low flux state. A joint NuSTAR and XMM spectrum, covering the energy range 0.5–60 keV, is best described by a model consisting of a log-parabola component with curvature β = 0.3 -0.1+0.2 and a (local) photon index 3.04 ± 0.15 at photon energy of 2 keV, and a hard power-law tail with photon index 2.2 ± 0.4. The hard X-ray tail can be smoothly joined to the quasi-simultaneous γ-ray spectrum by a synchrotron self-Compton component produced by an electron distribution with index p = 2.2. Assuming that the power-law electron distribution extends down to γ min = 1 and that there is one proton per electron, an unrealistically high total jet power of Lp ~ 10^47 erg s^−1 is inferred. This can be reduced by two orders of magnitude either by considering a significant presence of electron–positron pairs with lepton-to-proton ratio ne + e-/np ~ 30, or by introducing an additional, low-energy break in the electron energy distribution at the electron Lorentz factor γbr1 ~ 100. In either case, the jet composition is expected to be strongly matter-dominated.
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- 2016
361. Discovery of coherent pulsations from the Ultraluminous X-ray Source NGC 7793 P13
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Fuerst, F., Walton, D. J., Harrison, F. A., Stern, D., Barret, D., Brightman, M., Fabian, A. C., Grefenstette, B., Madsen, K. K., Middleton, M. J., Miller, J. M., Pottschmidt, K., Ptak, A., Rana, V., Webb, N., Fuerst, F., Walton, D. J., Harrison, F. A., Stern, D., Barret, D., Brightman, M., Fabian, A. C., Grefenstette, B., Madsen, K. K., Middleton, M. J., Miller, J. M., Pottschmidt, K., Ptak, A., Rana, V., and Webb, N.
- Abstract
We report the detection of coherent pulsations from the ultraluminous X-ray source NGC 7793 P13. The ~0.42s nearly sinusoidal pulsations were initially discovered in broadband X-ray observations using XMM-Newton and NuSTAR taken in 2016. We subsequently also found pulsations in archival XMM-Newton data taken in 2013 and 2014. The significant (>>5 sigma) detection of coherent pulsations demonstrates that the compact object in P13 is a neutron star with an observed peak luminosity of ~1e40 erg/s (assuming isotropy), well above the Eddington limit for a 1.4 M_sun accretor. This makes P13 the second ultraluminous X-ray source known to be powered by an accreting neutron star. The pulse period varies between epochs, with a slow but persistent spin up over the 2013-2016 period. This spin-up indicates a magnetic field of B ~ 1.5e12 G, typical of many accreting pulsars. The most likely explanation for the extreme luminosity is a high degree of beaming, however this is difficult to reconcile with the sinusoidal pulse profile., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2016
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362. Living on a Flare: Relativistic Reflection in V404 Cyg Observed by NuSTAR During its Summer 2015 Outburst
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Walton, D. J., Mooley, K., King, A. L., Tomsick, J. A., Miller, J. M., Dauser, T., Garcia, J., Bachetti, M., Brightman, M., Fabian, A. C., Forster, K., Fuerst, F., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Meier, D. L., Middleton, M. J., Natalucci, L., Rahoui, F., Rana, V., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Mooley, K., King, A. L., Tomsick, J. A., Miller, J. M., Dauser, T., Garcia, J., Bachetti, M., Brightman, M., Fabian, A. C., Forster, K., Fuerst, F., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Meier, D. L., Middleton, M. J., Natalucci, L., Rahoui, F., Rana, V., and Stern, D.
- Abstract
We present first results from a series of $NuSTAR$ observations of the black hole X-ray binary V404 Cyg obtained during its summer 2015 outburst, primarily focusing on observations during the height of this outburst activity. The $NuSTAR$ data show extreme variability in both the flux and spectral properties of the source. This is partly driven by strong and variable line-of-sight absorption, similar to previous outbursts. The latter stages of this observation are dominated by strong flares, reaching luminosities close to Eddington. During these flares, the central source appears to be relatively unobscured and the data show clear evidence for a strong contribution from relativistic reflection, providing a means to probe the geometry of the innermost accretion flow. Based on the flare properties, analogy with other Galactic black hole binaries, and also the simultaneous onset of radio activity, we argue that this intense X-ray flaring is related to transient jet activity during which the ejected plasma is the primary source of illumination for the accretion disk. If this is the case, then our reflection modelling implies that these jets are launched in close proximity to the black hole (as close as a few gravitational radii), consistent with expectations for jet launching models that tap either the spin of the central black hole, or the very innermost accretion disk. Our analysis also allows us to place the first constraints on the black hole spin for this source, which we find to be $a^* > 0.92$ (99% statistical uncertainty, based on an idealized lamppost geometry)., Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2016
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363. Spectro-timing study of GX 339-4 in a hard intermediate state
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Fuerst, F., Grinberg, V., Tomsick, J. A., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Parker, M. L., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., Zhang, W. W., Fuerst, F., Grinberg, V., Tomsick, J. A., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Parker, M. L., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W. W.
- Abstract
We present an analysis of NuSTAR observations of a hard intermediate state of the transient black hole GX 339-4 taken in January 2015. As the source softened significantly over the course of the 1.3 d-long observation we split the data into 21 sub-sets and find that the spectrum of all of them can be well described by a power-law continuum with an additional relativistically blurred reflection component. The photon index increases from ~1.69 to ~1.77 over the course of the observation. The accretion disk is truncated at around 9 gravitational radii in all spectra. We also perform timing analysis on the same 21 individual data sets, and find a strong type-C quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO), which increase in frequency from ~0.68 to ~1.05 Hz with time. The frequency change is well correlated with the softening of the spectrum. We discuss possible scenarios for the production of the QPO and calculate predicted inner radii in the relativistic precession model as well as the global disk mode oscillations model. We find discrepancies with respect to the observed values in both models unless we allow for a black hole mass of ~100 M_sun , which is highly unlikely. We discuss possible systematic uncertainties, in particular with the measurement of the inner accretion disk radius in the relativistic reflection model. We conclude that the combination of observed QPO frequencies and inner accretion disk radii, as obtained from spectral fitting, is difficult to reconcile with current models., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
364. The Soft State of Cygnus X-1 Observed with NuSTAR: A Variable Corona and a Stable Inner Disk
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Walton, D. J., Tomsick, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Grinberg, V., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Clavel, M., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Miller, J. M., Parker, M. L., Rahoui, F., Stern, D., Tao, L., Wilms, J., Zhang, W., Walton, D. J., Tomsick, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Grinberg, V., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Clavel, M., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Miller, J. M., Parker, M. L., Rahoui, F., Stern, D., Tao, L., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W.
- Abstract
We present a multi-epoch hard X-ray analysis of Cygnus X-1 in its soft state based on four observations with NuSTAR. Despite the basic similarity of the observed spectra, there is clear spectral variability between epochs. To investigate this variability, we construct a model incorporating both the standard disk-corona continuum and relativistic reflection from the accretion disk, based on prior NuSTAR work on Cygnus X-1, and apply this model to each epoch independently. We find excellent consistency for the black hole spin, and the iron abundance of the accretion disk, which are expected to remain constant on observational timescales. In particular, we confirm that Cygnus X-1 hosts a rapidly rotating black hole, 0.93
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
365. The first X-ray imaging spectroscopy of quiescent solar active regions with NuSTAR
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Hannah, I. G., Grefenstette, B. W., Smith, D. M., Glesener, L., Krucker, S., Hudson, H. S., Madsen, K. K., Marsh, A., White, S. M., Caspi, A., Shih, A. Y., Harrison, F. A., Stern, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Hailey, C. J., Zhang, W. W., Hannah, I. G., Grefenstette, B. W., Smith, D. M., Glesener, L., Krucker, S., Hudson, H. S., Madsen, K. K., Marsh, A., White, S. M., Caspi, A., Shih, A. Y., Harrison, F. A., Stern, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Hailey, C. J., and Zhang, W. W.
- Abstract
We present the first observations of quiescent active regions (ARs) using NuSTAR, a focusing hard X-ray telescope capable of studying faint solar emission from high temperature and non-thermal sources. We analyze the first directly imaged and spectrally resolved X-rays above 2~keV from non-flaring ARs, observed near the west limb on 2014 November 1. The NuSTAR X-ray images match bright features seen in extreme ultraviolet and soft X-rays. The NuSTAR imaging spectroscopy is consistent with isothermal emission of temperatures $3.1-4.4$~MK and emission measures $1-8\times 10^{46}$~cm$^{-3}$. We do not observe emission above 5~MK but our short effective exposure times restrict the spectral dynamic range. With few counts above 6~keV, we can place constraints on the presence of an additional hotter component between 5 and 12~MK of $\sim 10^{46}$cm$^{-3}$ and $\sim 10^{43}$ cm$^{-3}$, respectively, at least an order of magnitude stricter than previous limits. With longer duration observations and a weakening solar cycle (resulting in an increased livetime), future NuSTAR observations will have sensitivity to a wider range of temperatures as well as possible non-thermal emission., Comment: 7 page, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2016
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366. Arcus: the x-ray grating spectrometer explorer
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den Herder, Jan-Willem A., Takahashi, Tadayuki, Bautz, Marshall, Smith, R. K., Madsen, K. K., den Herder, Jan-Willem A., Takahashi, Tadayuki, Bautz, Marshall, Smith, R. K., and Madsen, K. K.
- Abstract
Arcus will be proposed to the NASA Explorer program as a free-flying satellite mission that will enable high-resolution soft X-ray spectroscopy (8-50) with unprecedented sensitivity – effective areas of >500 sq cm and spectral resolution >2500. The Arcus key science goals are (1) to determine how baryons cycle in and out of galaxies by measuring the effects of structure formation imprinted upon the hot gas that is predicted to lie in extended halos around galaxies, groups, and clusters, (2) to determine how black holes influence their surroundings by tracing the propagation of out-flowing mass, energy and momentum from the vicinity of the black hole out to large scales and (3) to understand how accretion forms and evolves stars and circumstellar disks by observing hot infalling and outflowing gas in these systems. Arcus relies upon grazing-incidence silicon pore X-ray optics with the same 12m focal length (achieved using an extendable optical bench) that will be used for the ESA Athena mission. The focused X-rays from these optics will then be diffracted by high-efficiency off-plane reflection gratings that have already been demonstrated on sub-orbital rocket flights, imaging the results with flight-proven CCD detectors and electronics. The power and telemetry requirements on the spacecraft are modest. The majority of mission operations will not be complex, as most observations will be long (~100 ksec), uninterrupted, and pre-planned, although there will be limited capabilities to observe targets of opportunity, such as tidal disruption events or supernovae with a 3-5 day turnaround. After the end of prime science, we plan to allow guest observations to maximize the science return of Arcus to the community.
- Published
- 2016
367. Unaffected twins discordant for affective disorders show changes in anterior callosal white matter microstructure
- Author
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Macoveanu, J, Vinberg, M, Madsen, K., Kessing, L V, Siebner, H R, Baaré, W, Macoveanu, J, Vinberg, M, Madsen, K., Kessing, L V, Siebner, H R, and Baaré, W
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The neurobiological mechanisms mediating an increased risk to develop affective disorders remain poorly understood. In a group of individuals with a family history of major depressive (MDD) or bipolar disorder (BD), we investigated the microstructural properties of white matter fiber tracts, that is, cingulum bundle, uncinate fasciculus, anterior limb of the internal capsule, and corpus callosum, that facilitate the communication between brain regions implicated in affective disorders.METHOD: Eighty-nine healthy mono- or dizygotic twins with a co-twin diagnosed with MDD or BD (high-risk) and 57 healthy twins with a co-twin with no familial history of affective disorders (low-risk) were included in a diffusion tensor imaging study.RESULT: The high-risk group showed decreased fractional anisotropy (FA), a measure of water diffusion directionality, and increased radial diffusivity in the anterior region of corpus callosum compared to the low-risk group. This abnormality was not associated with zygosity or type of depressive disorder of co-twin.CONCLUSION: The observed decreased anterior callosal fiber FA in the high-risk group may be indicative of a compromised interhemispheric communication between left and right frontal regions critically involved in mood regulation. Reduced anterior callosal FA may act as a vulnerability marker for affective disorders in individuals at familial risk.
- Published
- 2016
368. Role of multilevel states on quantum-dot emission in photonic-crystal cavities
- Author
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Madsen, K. H., Lehmann, T. B., Lodahl, P., Madsen, K. H., Lehmann, T. B., and Lodahl, P.
- Published
- 2016
369. THE SOFT STATE OF CYGNUS X-1 OBSERVED WITH NuSTAR: A VARIABLE CORONA AND A STABLE INNER DISK
- Author
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MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, Grinberg, Victoria, Walton, D. J., Tomsick, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Clavel, M., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Miller, J. M., Parker, M. L., Rahoui, F., Stern, D., Tao, L., Wilms, J., Zhang, W., MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, Grinberg, Victoria, Walton, D. J., Tomsick, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Clavel, M., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Miller, J. M., Parker, M. L., Rahoui, F., Stern, D., Tao, L., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W.
- Abstract
We present a multi-epoch hard X-ray analysis of Cygnus X-1 in its soft state based on four observations with the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). Despite the basic similarity of the observed spectra, there is clear spectral variability between epochs. To investigate this variability, we construct a model incorporating both the standard disk-corona continuum and relativistic reflection from the accretion disk, based on prior work on Cygnus X-1, and apply this model to each epoch independently. We find excellent consistency for the black hole spin and the iron abundance of the accretion disk, which are expected to remain constant on observational timescales. In particular, we confirm that Cygnus X-1 hosts a rapidly rotating black hole, 0.93 ≲ a* ≲ 0.96, in broad agreement with the majority of prior studies of the relativistic disk reflection and constraints on the spin obtained through studies of the thermal accretion disk continuum. Our work also confirms the apparent misalignment between the inner disk and the orbital plane of the binary system reported previously, finding the magnitude of this warp to be ~10°–15°. This level of misalignment does not significantly change (and may even improve) the agreement between our reflection results and the thermal continuum results regarding the black hole spin. The spectral variability observed by NuSTAR is dominated by the primary continuum, implying variability in the temperature of the scattering electron plasma. Finally, we consistently observe absorption from ionized iron at ~6.7 keV, which varies in strength as a function of orbital phase in a manner consistent with the absorbing material being an ionized phase of the focused stellar wind from the supergiant companion star., United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. Contract SV3-73016)
- Published
- 2016
370. Spectro-Timing Study of GX 339-4 in a Hard Intermediate State
- Author
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Fürst, F., Grinberg, V., Tomsick, J. A., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Parker, M. L., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., Zhang, W. W., Fürst, F., Grinberg, V., Tomsick, J. A., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, Finn Erland, Craig, W. W., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Parker, M. L., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W. W.
- Abstract
We present an analysis of Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array observations of a hard intermediate state of the transient black hole GX 339-4 taken in 2015 January. With the source softening significantly over the course of the 1.3 day long observation we split the data into 21 sub-sets and find that the spectrum of all of them can be well described by a power-law continuum with an additional relativistically blurred reflection component. The photon index increases from ∼1.69 to ∼1.77 over the course of the observation. The accretion disk is truncated at around nine gravitational radii in all spectra. We also perform timing analysis on the same 21 individual data sets, and find a strong type-C quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO), which increases in frequency from ∼0.68 to ∼1.05 Hz with time. The frequency change is well correlated with the softening of the spectrum. We discuss possible scenarios for the production of the QPO and calculate predicted inner radii in the relativistic precession model as well as the global disk mode oscillations model. We find discrepancies with respect to the observed values in both models unless we allow for a black hole mass of ~100, which is highly unlikely. We discuss possible systematic uncertainties, in particular with the measurement of the inner accretion disk radius in the relativistic reflection model. We conclude that the combination of observed QPO frequencies and inner accretion disk radii, as obtained from spectral fitting, is difficult to reconcile with current models.
- Published
- 2016
371. SIOG2023-1-OA-100 - Effect of geriatric intervention on physical function in patients operated for colorectal cancer.
- Author
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Dolin, T.G., Madsen, K., Mikkelsen, M., Jakobsen, H., Nordentoft, T., Pedersen, T., Vinther, A., Zerahn, B., Vistisen, K., Suetta, C., Nielsen, D., Johansen, J., and Lund, C.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
372. The 2-79 keV X-Ray Spectrum of the Circinus Galaxy with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, and Chandra: A Fully Compton-thick Active Galactic Nucleus
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Arèvalo, P., Walton, D. J., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Harrison, F. A., and Madsen, K. K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The Circinus galaxy is one of the closest obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs), making it an ideal target for detailed study. Combining archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data with new NuSTAR observations, we model the 2-79 keV spectrum to constrain the primary AGN continuum and to derive physical parameters for the obscuring material. Chandra's high angular resolution allows a separation of nuclear and off-nuclear galactic emission. In the off-nuclear diffuse emission, we find signatures of strong cold reflection, including high equivalent-width neutral Fe lines. This Compton-scattered off-nuclear emission amounts to 18% of the nuclear flux in the Fe line region, but becomes comparable to the nuclear emission above 30 keV. The new analysis no longer supports a prominent transmitted AGN component in the observed band. We find that the nuclear spectrum is consistent with Compton scattering by an optically thick torus, where the intrinsic spectrum is a power law of photon index Γ = 2.2-2.4, the torus has an equatorial column density of N_H = (6-10) × 10^(24) cm^(–2), and the intrinsic AGN 2-10 keV luminosity is (2.3-5.1) × 10^(42) erg s^(–1). These values place Circinus along the same relations as unobscured AGNs in accretion rate versus Γ and L_X versus L_(IR) phase space. NuSTAR's high sensitivity and low background allow us to study the short timescale variability of Circinus at X-ray energies above 10 keV for the first time. The lack of detected variability favors a Compton-thick absorber, in line with the spectral fitting results.
- Published
- 2014
373. NuSTAR and XMM-NEWTON Observations of NGC 1365: Extreme Absorption Variability and a Constant Inner Accretion Disk
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Walton, D. J., Harrison, F. A., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Madsen, K. K., and Rivers, E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a spectral analysis of four coordinated NuSTAR+XMM-Newton observations of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1365. These exhibit an extreme level of spectral variability, which is primarily due to variable line-of-sight absorption, revealing relatively unobscured states in this source for the first time. Despite the diverse range of absorption states, each of the observations displays the same characteristic signatures of relativistic reflection from the inner accretion disk. Through time-resolved spectroscopy, we find that the strength of the relativistic iron line and the Compton reflection hump relative to the intrinsic continuum are well correlated, which is expected if they are two aspects of the same broadband reflection spectrum. We apply self-consistent disk reflection models to these time-resolved spectra in order to constrain the inner disk parameters, allowing for variable, partially covering absorption to account for the vastly different absorption states that were observed. Each of the four observations is treated independently to test the consistency of the results obtained for the black hole spin and the disk inclination, which should not vary on observable timescales. We find both the spin and the inclination determined from the reflection spectrum to be consistent, confirming that NGC 1365 hosts a rapidly rotating black hole; in all cases the dimensionless spin parameter is constrained to be a* > 0.97 (at 90% statistical confidence or better.
- Published
- 2014
374. NuSTAR results and future plans for magnetar and rotation-powered pulsar observations
- Author
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An, H., Bhalerao, V., Bellm, E. C., Forster, K., Grefenstette, B. W., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., Rana, V. R., and Tendulkar, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) is the first focusing hard X-ray mission in orbit and operates in the 3–79 keV range. NuSTAR's sensitivity is roughly two orders of magnitude better than previous missions in this energy band thanks to its superb angular resolution. Since its launch in 2012 June, NuSTAR has performed excellently and observed many interesting sources including four magnetars, two rotation-powered pulsars and the cataclysmic variable AE Aquarii. NuSTAR also discovered 3.76-s pulsations from the transient source SGR J1745–29 recently found by Swift very close to the Galactic center, clearly identifying the source as a transient magnetar. For magnetar 1E 1841–045, we show that the spectrum is well fit by an absorbed blackbody plus broken power-law model with a hard power-law photon index of ∼ 1.3. This is consistent with previous results by INTEGRAL and RXTE. We also find an interesting double-peaked pulse profile in the 25–35 keV band. For AE Aquarii, we show that the spectrum can be described by a multi-temperature thermal model or a thermal plus non-thermal model; a multi-temperature thermal model without a non-thermal component cannot be ruled out. Furthermore, we do not see a spiky pulse profile in the hard X-ray band, as previously reported based on Suzaku observations. For other magnetars and rotation-powered pulsars observed with NuSTAR, data analysis results will be soon available.
- Published
- 2014
375. The 2-79 keV X-ray Spectrum of the Circinus Galaxy with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton and Chandra: a Fully Compton-Thick AGN
- Author
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Arévalo, P., Bauer, F. E., Puccetti, S., Walton, D. J., Koss, M., Boggs, S. E., Brandt, W. N., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Comastri, A., Craig, W. W., Fuerst, F., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Luo, B., Madejski, G., Madsen, K. K., Marinucci, A., Matt, G., Saez, C., Stern, D., Stuhlinger, M., Treister, E., Urry, C. M., and Zhang, W. W.
- Subjects
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The Circinus galaxy is one of the nearest obscured AGN, making it an ideal target for detailed study. Combining archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data with new NuSTAR observations, we model the 2-79 keV spectrum to constrain the primary AGN continuum and to derive physical parameters for the obscuring material. Chandra's high angular resolution allows a separation of nuclear and off-nuclear galactic emission. In the off-nuclear diffuse emission we find signatures of strong cold reflection, including high equivalent-width neutral Fe lines. This Compton-scattered off-nuclear emission amounts to 18% of the nuclear flux in the Fe line region, but becomes comparable to the nuclear emission above 30 keV. The new analysis no longer supports a prominent transmitted AGN component in the observed band. We find that the nuclear spectrum is consistent with Compton-scattering by an optically-thick torus, where the intrinsic spectrum is a powerlaw of photon index $\Gamma = 2.2-2.4$, the torus has an equatorial column density of $N_{\rm H} = (6-10)\times10^{24}$cm$^{-2}$ and the intrinsic AGN $2-10$ keV luminosity is $(2.3-5.1)\times 10^{42}$ erg/s. These values place Circinus along the same relations as unobscured AGN in accretion rate-vs-$\Gamma$ and $L_X$-vs-$L_{IR}$ phase space. NuSTAR's high sensitivity and low background allow us to study the short time-scale variability of Circinus at X-ray energies above 10 keV for the first time. The lack of detected variability favors a Compton-thick absorber, in line with the the spectral fitting results., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
376. First Results from NuSTAR Observations of Mkn 421
- Author
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Baloković, M., Forster, K., Fürst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Harrison, F. A., Madsen, K. K., and Ogle, P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Mkn 421 is a nearby active galactic nucleus dominated at all wavelengths by a very broad nonthermal continuum thought to arise from a relativistic jet seen at a small angle to the line of sight. Its spectral energy distribution peaks in the X-ray and TeV γ-ray bands, where the energy output is dominated by cooling of high-energy electrons in the jet. In order to study the electron distribution and its evolution, we carried out a dedicated multi-wavelength campaign, including extensive observations by the recently launched highly sensitive hard X-ray telescope NuSTAR, between December 2012 and May 2013. Here we present some initial results based on NuSTAR data from January through March 2013, as well as calibration observations conducted in 2012. Although the observations cover some of the faintest hard X-ray flux states ever observed for Mkn 421, the sensitivity is high enough to resolve intra-day spectral variability. We find that in this low state the dominant flux variations are smooth on timescales of hours, with typical intra-hour variations of ≲ 5%. We do not find evidence for either a cutoff in the hard X-ray spectrum, or a rise towards a high-energy component, but rather that at low flux the spectrum assumes a power law shape with a photon index of approximately 3. The spectrum is found to harden with increasing brightness.
- Published
- 2013
377. Sustained attention is associated with right superior longitudinal fasciculus and superior parietal white matter microstructure in children
- Author
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Klarborg, B, Skak Madsen, K, Vestergaard, M, Skimminge, A, Jernigan, TL, and Baaré, WFC
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Image Processing ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Functional Laterality ,Nerve Fibers ,Child Development ,Computer-Assisted ,brain maturation ,Parietal Lobe ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Attention ,Child ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Experimental Psychology ,diffusion tensor imaging ,Signal Detection ,sustained attention ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Myelinated ,Anisotropy ,Psychological ,Female ,Cognitive Sciences ,Nerve Net ,Photic Stimulation ,fractional anisotropy ,Follow-Up Studies ,cognitive development - Abstract
Sustained attention develops during childhood and has been linked to the right fronto-parietal cortices in functional imaging studies; however, less is known about its relation to white matter (WM) characteristics. Here we investigated whether the microstructure of the WM underlying and connecting the right fronto-parietal cortices was associated with sustained attention performance in a group of 76 typically developing children aged 7-13 years. Sustained attention was assessed using a rapid visual information processing paradigm. The two behavioral measures of interest were the sensitivity index d′ and the coefficient of variation in reaction times (RTCV). Diffusion-weighted imaging was performed. Mean fractional anisotropy (FA) was extracted from the WM underlying right dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPFC) and parietal cortex (PC), and the right superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF), as well as equivalent anatomical regions-of-interest (ROIs) in the left hemisphere and mean global WM FA. When analyzed collectively, right hemisphere ROIs FA was significantly associated with d′ independently of age. Follow-up analyses revealed that only FA of right SLF and the superior part of the right PC contributed significantly to this association. RTCVwas significantly associated with right superior PC FA, but not with right SLF FA. Observed associations remained significant after controlling for FA of equivalent left hemisphere ROIs or global mean FA. In conclusion, better sustained attention performance was associated with higher FA of WM in regions connecting right frontal and parietal cortices. Further studies are needed to clarify to which extent these associations are driven by maturational processes, stable characteristics and/or experience.© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2013
378. THENuSTAREXTRAGALACTIC SURVEYS: THE NUMBER COUNTS OF ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI AND THE RESOLVED FRACTION OF THE COSMIC X-RAY BACKGROUND
- Author
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Harrison, F. A., primary, Aird, J., additional, Civano, F., additional, Lansbury, G., additional, Mullaney, J. R., additional, Ballantyne, D. R., additional, Alexander, D. M., additional, Stern, D., additional, Ajello, M., additional, Barret, D., additional, Bauer, F. E., additional, Baloković, M., additional, Brandt, W. N., additional, Brightman, M., additional, Boggs, S. E., additional, Christensen, F. E., additional, Comastri, A., additional, Craig, W. W., additional, Moro, A. Del, additional, Forster, K., additional, Gandhi, P., additional, Giommi, P., additional, Grefenstette, B. W., additional, Hailey, C. J., additional, Hickox, R. C., additional, Hornstrup, A., additional, Kitaguchi, T., additional, Koglin, J., additional, Luo, B., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Mao, P. H., additional, Miyasaka, H., additional, Mori, K., additional, Perri, M., additional, Pivovaroff, M., additional, Puccetti, S., additional, Rana, V., additional, Treister, E., additional, Walton, D., additional, Westergaard, N. J., additional, Wik, D., additional, Zappacosta, L., additional, Zhang, W. W., additional, and Zoglauer, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
379. DISCOVERY OF COHERENT PULSATIONS FROM THE ULTRALUMINOUS X-RAY SOURCE NGC 7793 P13
- Author
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Fürst, F., primary, Walton, D. J., additional, Harrison, F. A., additional, Stern, D., additional, Barret, D., additional, Brightman, M., additional, Fabian, A. C., additional, Grefenstette, B., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Middleton, M. J., additional, Miller, J. M., additional, Pottschmidt, K., additional, Ptak, A., additional, Rana, V., additional, and Webb, N., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
380. FIRSTNuSTAROBSERVATIONS OF THE BL LAC-TYPE BLAZAR PKS 2155-304: CONSTRAINTS ON THE JET CONTENT AND DISTRIBUTION OF RADIATING PARTICLES
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Madejski, G. M., primary, Nalewajko, K., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Chiang, J., additional, Baloković, M., additional, Paneque, D., additional, Furniss, A. K., additional, Hayashida, M., additional, Urry, C. M., additional, Sikora, M., additional, Ajello, M., additional, Blandford, R. D., additional, Harrison, F. A., additional, Sanchez, D., additional, Giebels, B., additional, Stern, D., additional, Alexander, D. M., additional, Barret, D., additional, Boggs, S. E., additional, Christensen, F. E., additional, Craig, W. W., additional, Forster, K., additional, Giommi, P., additional, Grefenstette, B., additional, Hailey, C., additional, Hornstrup, A., additional, Kitaguchi, T., additional, Koglin, J. E., additional, Mao, P. H., additional, Miyasaka, H., additional, Mori, K., additional, Perri, M., additional, Pivovaroff, M. J., additional, Puccetti, S., additional, Rana, V., additional, Westergaard, N. J., additional, Zhang, W. W., additional, and Zoglauer, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
381. Arcus: the x-ray grating spectrometer explorer
- Author
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Smith, Randall K., primary, Abraham, M. H., additional, Allured, Ryan, additional, Bautz, Marshall W., additional, Bookbinder, Jay A., additional, Bregman, Joel, additional, Brenneman, L., additional, Brickhouse, Nancy S., additional, Burrows, David N., additional, Burwitz, Vadim, additional, Carvalho, R., additional, Cheimets, Peter N., additional, Costantini, Elisa, additional, Dawson, S., additional, DeRoo, Casey T., additional, Falcone, A., additional, Foster, Adam R., additional, Grant, Catherine E., additional, Heilmann, Ralf K., additional, Hertz, Edward, additional, Hine, B., additional, Huenemoerder, David P., additional, Kaastra, Jelle S., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, McEntaffer, Randall L., additional, Miller, Eric D., additional, Miller, Jon M., additional, Morse, E., additional, Mushotzky, Richard, additional, Nandra, Kirpal, additional, Nowak, Michael A., additional, Paerels, F., additional, Petre, Robert, additional, Plice, L., additional, Poppenhaeger, Katja, additional, Ptak, Andrew F., additional, Reid, P., additional, Sanders, Jeremy, additional, Schattenburg, Mark L., additional, Schulz, Norbert S., additional, Smale, Alan, additional, Temi, P., additional, Valencic, Lynne A., additional, Walker, S., additional, Willingale, Richard, additional, Wilms, Jörn, additional, and Wolk, Scott J., additional
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- 2016
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382. Unaffected twins discordant for affective disorders show changes in anterior callosal white matter microstructure
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Macoveanu, J., primary, Vinberg, M., additional, Madsen, K., additional, Kessing, L. V., additional, Siebner, H. R., additional, and Baaré, W., additional
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- 2016
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383. SPECTRO-TIMING STUDY OF GX 339-4 IN A HARD INTERMEDIATE STATE
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Fürst, F., primary, Grinberg, V., additional, Tomsick, J. A., additional, Bachetti, M., additional, Boggs, S. E., additional, Brightman, M., additional, Christensen, F. E., additional, Craig, W. W., additional, Gandhi, P., additional, Grefenstette, B., additional, Hailey, C. J., additional, Harrison, F. A., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Parker, M. L., additional, Pottschmidt, K., additional, Stern, D., additional, Walton, D. J., additional, Wilms, J., additional, and Zhang, W. W., additional
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- 2016
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384. THE SOFT STATE OF CYGNUS X-1 OBSERVED WITHNuSTAR: A VARIABLE CORONA AND A STABLE INNER DISK
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Walton, D. J., primary, Tomsick, J. A., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Grinberg, V., additional, Barret, D., additional, Boggs, S. E., additional, Christensen, F. E., additional, Clavel, M., additional, Craig, W. W., additional, Fabian, A. C., additional, Fuerst, F., additional, Hailey, C. J., additional, Harrison, F. A., additional, Miller, J. M., additional, Parker, M. L., additional, Rahoui, F., additional, Stern, D., additional, Tao, L., additional, Wilms, J., additional, and Zhang, W., additional
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- 2016
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385. Can a biomechanically-designed yoga exercise program yield superior clinical improvements than traditional exercise in women with knee osteoarthritis?
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Kuntz, A.B., primary, Karampatos, S., additional, Brenneman, E., additional, Chopp-Hurley, J.N., additional, Wiebenga, E., additional, Adachi, J., additional, Madsen, K., additional, and Maly, M.R., additional
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- 2016
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386. NuSTARANDXMM-NEWTONOBSERVATIONS OF THE HARD X-RAY SPECTRUM OF CENTAURUS A
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Fürst, F., primary, Müller, C., additional, Madsen, K. K., additional, Lanz, L., additional, Rivers, E., additional, Brightman, M., additional, Arevalo, P., additional, Baloković, M., additional, Beuchert, T., additional, Boggs, S. E., additional, Christensen, F. E., additional, Craig, W. W., additional, Dauser, T., additional, Farrah, D., additional, Graefe, C., additional, Hailey, C. J., additional, Harrison, F. A., additional, Kadler, M., additional, King, A., additional, Krauß, F., additional, Madejski, G., additional, Matt, G., additional, Marinucci, A., additional, Markowitz, A., additional, Ogle, P., additional, Ojha, R., additional, Rothschild, R., additional, Stern, D., additional, Walton, D. J., additional, Wilms, J., additional, and Zhang, W., additional
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- 2016
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387. NuSTAR detection of a cyclotron line in the supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR J17544-2619
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Bhalerao, V, Bhalerao, V, Romano, P, Tomsick, J, Natalucci, L, Smith, DM, Bellm, E, Boggs, SE, Chakrabarty, D, Christensen, FE, Craig, WW, Fuerst, F, Hailey, CJ, Harrison, FA, Krivonos, RA, Lu, TN, Madsen, K, Stern, D, Younes, G, Zhang, W, Bhalerao, V, Bhalerao, V, Romano, P, Tomsick, J, Natalucci, L, Smith, DM, Bellm, E, Boggs, SE, Chakrabarty, D, Christensen, FE, Craig, WW, Fuerst, F, Hailey, CJ, Harrison, FA, Krivonos, RA, Lu, TN, Madsen, K, Stern, D, Younes, G, and Zhang, W
- Abstract
We present NuSTAR spectral and timing studies of the supergiant fast X-ray transient (SFXT) IGR J17544-2619. The spectrum is well described by an ~1 keV blackbody and a hard continuum component, as expected from an accreting X-ray pulsar. We detect a cyclotron line at 17 keV, confirming that the compact object in IGR J17544-2619 is indeed a neutron star. This is the first measurement of the magnetic field in an SFXT. The inferred magnetic field strength, B = (1.45 ± 0.03) × 1012G (1 + z) is typical of neutron stars in X-ray binaries, and rules out a magnetar nature for the compact object. We do not find any significant pulsations in the source on time-scales of 1-2000 s.
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- 2015
388. Prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology in persons without dementia: a meta-analysis
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Jansen, W.J., Ossenkoppele, R., Knol, D.L., Tijms, B.M., Scheltens, P.J., Verhey, F.R.J., Visser, P.J., Aalten, P., Aarsland, D., Alcolea, D., Alexander, M., Almdahl, I.S., Arnold, S.E., Baldeiras, I., Barthel, H., Berckel, B.N. van, Bibeau, K., Blennow, K., Brooks, D.J., Buchem, M.A. van, Camus, V., Cavedo, E., Chen, K., Chetelat, G., Cohen, A.D., Drzezga, A., Engelborghs, S., Fagan, A.M., Fladby, T., Fleisher, A.S., Flier, W.M. van der, Ford, L., Forster, S., Fortea, J., Foskett, N., Frederiksen, K.S., Freund-Levi, Y., Frisoni, G.B., Froelich, L., Gabryelewicz, T., Gill, K.D., Gkatzima, O., Gomez-Tortosa, E., Gordon, M.F., Grimmer, T., Hampel, H., Hausner, L., Hellwig, S., Herukka, S.K., Hildebrandt, H., Ishihara, L., Ivanoiu, A., Jagust, W.J., Johannsen, P., Kandimalla, R., Kapaki, E., Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A., Klunk, W.E., Kohler, S., Koglin, N., Kornhuber, J., Kramberger, M.G., Laere, K. Van, Landau, S.M., Lee, D.Y., Leon, M., Lisetti, V., Lleo, A., Madsen, K., Maier, W., Marcusson, J., Mattsson, N., Mendonca, A. de, Meulenbroek, O.V., Meyer, P.T., Mintun, M.A., Mok, V., Molinuevo, J.L., Mollergard, H.M., Morris, J.C., Mroczko, B., Mussele, S. Van der, Na, D.L., Newberg, A., Nordberg, A., Nordlund, A., Novak, G.P., Paraskevas, G.P., Parnetti, L., Perera, G., Peters, O., Popp, J., Prabhakar, S., Rabinovici, G.D., Ramakers, I.H., Rami, L., Oliveira, C.R., Rinne, J.O., Rodrigue, K.M., Rodriguez-Rodriguez, E., Verbeek, M.M., et al., Jansen, W.J., Ossenkoppele, R., Knol, D.L., Tijms, B.M., Scheltens, P.J., Verhey, F.R.J., Visser, P.J., Aalten, P., Aarsland, D., Alcolea, D., Alexander, M., Almdahl, I.S., Arnold, S.E., Baldeiras, I., Barthel, H., Berckel, B.N. van, Bibeau, K., Blennow, K., Brooks, D.J., Buchem, M.A. van, Camus, V., Cavedo, E., Chen, K., Chetelat, G., Cohen, A.D., Drzezga, A., Engelborghs, S., Fagan, A.M., Fladby, T., Fleisher, A.S., Flier, W.M. van der, Ford, L., Forster, S., Fortea, J., Foskett, N., Frederiksen, K.S., Freund-Levi, Y., Frisoni, G.B., Froelich, L., Gabryelewicz, T., Gill, K.D., Gkatzima, O., Gomez-Tortosa, E., Gordon, M.F., Grimmer, T., Hampel, H., Hausner, L., Hellwig, S., Herukka, S.K., Hildebrandt, H., Ishihara, L., Ivanoiu, A., Jagust, W.J., Johannsen, P., Kandimalla, R., Kapaki, E., Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A., Klunk, W.E., Kohler, S., Koglin, N., Kornhuber, J., Kramberger, M.G., Laere, K. Van, Landau, S.M., Lee, D.Y., Leon, M., Lisetti, V., Lleo, A., Madsen, K., Maier, W., Marcusson, J., Mattsson, N., Mendonca, A. de, Meulenbroek, O.V., Meyer, P.T., Mintun, M.A., Mok, V., Molinuevo, J.L., Mollergard, H.M., Morris, J.C., Mroczko, B., Mussele, S. Van der, Na, D.L., Newberg, A., Nordberg, A., Nordlund, A., Novak, G.P., Paraskevas, G.P., Parnetti, L., Perera, G., Peters, O., Popp, J., Prabhakar, S., Rabinovici, G.D., Ramakers, I.H., Rami, L., Oliveira, C.R., Rinne, J.O., Rodrigue, K.M., Rodriguez-Rodriguez, E., Verbeek, M.M., and et al.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, IMPORTANCE: Cerebral amyloid-beta aggregation is an early pathological event in Alzheimer disease (AD), starting decades before dementia onset. Estimates of the prevalence of amyloid pathology in persons without dementia are needed to understand the development of AD and to design prevention studies. OBJECTIVE: To use individual participant data meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of amyloid pathology as measured with biomarkers in participants with normal cognition, subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DATA SOURCES: Relevant biomarker studies identified by searching studies published before April 2015 using the MEDLINE and Web of Science databases and through personal communication with investigators. STUDY SELECTION: Studies were included if they provided individual participant data for participants without dementia and used an a priori defined cutoff for amyloid positivity. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Individual records were provided for 2914 participants with normal cognition, 697 with SCI, and 3972 with MCI aged 18 to 100 years from 55 studies. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Prevalence of amyloid pathology on positron emission tomography or in cerebrospinal fluid according to AD risk factors (age, apolipoprotein E [APOE] genotype, sex, and education) estimated by generalized estimating equations. RESULTS: The prevalence of amyloid pathology increased from age 50 to 90 years from 10% (95% CI, 8%-13%) to 44% (95% CI, 37%-51%) among participants with normal cognition; from 12% (95% CI, 8%-18%) to 43% (95% CI, 32%-55%) among patients with SCI; and from 27% (95% CI, 23%-32%) to 71% (95% CI, 66%-76%) among patients with MCI. APOE-epsilon4 carriers had 2 to 3 times higher prevalence estimates than noncarriers. The age at which 15% of the participants with normal cognition were amyloid positive was approximately 40 years for APOE epsilon4epsilon4 carriers, 50 years for epsilon2epsilon4 carriers, 55 years for epsilon3epsilon4 c
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- 2015
389. Multiwavelength Study of Quiescent States of Mrk 421 with Unprecedented Hard X-Ray Coverage Provided by NuSTAR in 2013
- Author
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Baloković, M., Paneque, D., Madejski, G., Furniss, A., Chiang, J., team, the NuSTAR, Ajello, M., Alexander, D. M., Barret, D., Blandford, R., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Stern, D., Tagliaferri, G., Urry, C. M., Westergaard, N. J., Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., collaboration, the VERITAS, Archambault, S., Archer, A. A., Barnacka, A., Benbow, W., Bird, R., Buckley, J., Bugaev, V., Cerruti, M., Chen, X., Ciupik, L., Connolly, M. P., Cui, W., Dickinson, H. J., Dumm, J., Eisch, J. D., Falcone, A., Feng, Q., Finley, J. P., Fleischhack, H., Fortson, L., Griffin, S., Griffiths, S. T., Grube, J., Gyuk, G., Huetten, M., Haakansson, N., Holder, J., Humensky, T. B., Johnson, C. A., Kaaret, P., Kertzman, M., Khassen, Y., Kieda, D., Krause, M., Krennrich, F., Lang, M. J., Maier, G., McArthur, S., Meagher, K., Moriarty, P., Nelson, T., Nieto, D., Ong, R. A., Park, N., Pohl, M., Popkow, A., Pueschel, E., Reynolds, P. T., Richards, G. T., Roache, E., Santander, M., Sembroski, G. H., Shahinyan, K., Smith, A. W., Staszak, D., Telezhinsky, I., Todd, N. W., Tucci, J. V., Tyler, J., Vincent, S., Weinstein, A., Wilhelm, A., Williams, D. A., Zitzer, B., collaboration, the MAGIC, Ahnen, M. L., Ansoldi, S., Antonelli, L. A., Antoranz, P., Babic, A., Banerjee, B., Bangale, P., de Almeida, U. Barres, Barrio, J., González, J. Becerra, Bednarek, W., Bernardini, E., Biasuzzi, B., Biland, A., Blanch, O., Bonnefoy, S., Bonnoli, G., Borracci, F., Bretz, T., Carmona, E., Carosi, A., Chatterjee, A., Clavero, R., Colin, P., Colombo, E., Contreras, J. L., Cortina, J., Covino, S., Da Vela, P., Dazzi, F., de Angelis, A., De Lotto, B., Wilhelmi, E. D. de Oña, Mendez, C. Delgado, Di Pierro, F., Prester, D. Dominis, Dorner, D., Doro, M., Einecke, S., Elsaesser, D., Fernández-Barral, A., Fidalgo, D., Fonseca, M. V., Font, L., Frantzen, K., Fruck, C., Galindo, D., López, R. J. García, Garczarczyk, M., Terrats, D. Garrido, Gaug, M., Giammaria, P., Eisenacher, D., Godinović, N., Muñoz, A. González, Guberman, D., Hahn, A., Hanabata, Y., Hayashida, M., Herrera, J., Hose, J., Hrupec, D., Hughes, G., Idec, W., Kodani, K., Konno, Y., Kubo, H., Kushida, J., La Barbera, A., Lelas, D., Lindfors, E., Lombardi, S., Longo, F., López, M., López-Coto, R., López-Oramas, A., Lorenz, E., Majumdar, P., Makariev, M., Mallot, K., Maneva, G., Manganaro, M., Mannheim, K., Maraschi, L., Marcote, B., Mariotti, M., Martínez, M., Mazin, D., Menzel, U., Miranda, J. M., Mirzoyan, R., Moralejo, A., Moretti, E., Nakajima, D., Neustroev, V., Niedzwiecki, A., Nievas-Rosillo, M., Nilsson, K., Nishijima, K., Noda, K., Orito, R., Overkemping, A., Paiano, S., Palacio, S., Palatiello, M., Paoletti, R., Paredes, J. M., Paredes-Fortuny, X., Persic, M., Poutanen, J., Moroni, P. G. Prada, Prandini, E., Puljak, I., Rhode, W., Ribó, M., Rico, J., Garcia, J. Rodriguez, Saito, T., Satalecka, K., Scapin, V., Schultz, C., Schweizer, T., Shore, S. N., Sillanpää, A., Sitarek, J., Snidaric, I., Sobczynska, D., Stamerra, A., Steinbring, T., Strzys, M., Takalo, L. O., Takami, H., Tavecchio, F., Temnikov, P., Terzić, T., Tescaro, D., Teshima, M., Thaele, J., Torres, D. F., Toyama, T., Treves, A., Verguilov, V., Vovk, I., Ward, J. E., Will, M., Wu, M. H., Zanin, R., collaborators, external, Perkins, J., Verrecchia, F., Leto, C., Böttcher, M., Villata, M., Raiteri, C. M., Acosta-Pulido, J. A., Bachev, R., Berdyugin, A., Blinov, D. A., Carnerero, M. I., Chen, W. P., Chinchilla, P., Damljanovic, G., Eswaraiah, C., Grishina, T. S., Ibryamov, S., Jordan, B., Jorstad, S. G., Joshi, M., Kopatskaya, E. N., Kurtanidze, O. M., Kurtanidze, S. O., Larionova, E. G., Larionova, L. V., Larionov, V. M., Latev, G., Lin, H. C., Marscher, A. P., Mokrushina, A. A., Morozova, D. A., Nikolashvili, M. G., Semkov, E., Strigachev, A., Troitskaya, Yu. V., Troitsky, I. S., Vince, O., Barnes, J., Güver, T., Moody, J. W., Sadun, A. C., Sun, S., Hovatta, T., Richards, J. L., Max-Moerbeck, W., Readhead, A. C., Lähteenmäki, A., Tornikoski, M., Tammi, J., Ramakrishnan, V., Reinthal, R., Angelakis, E., Fuhrmann, L., Myserlis, I., Karamanavis, V., Sievers, A., Ungerechts, H., Zensus, J. A., Baloković, M., Paneque, D., Madejski, G., Furniss, A., Chiang, J., team, the NuSTAR, Ajello, M., Alexander, D. M., Barret, D., Blandford, R., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Stern, D., Tagliaferri, G., Urry, C. M., Westergaard, N. J., Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., collaboration, the VERITAS, Archambault, S., Archer, A. A., Barnacka, A., Benbow, W., Bird, R., Buckley, J., Bugaev, V., Cerruti, M., Chen, X., Ciupik, L., Connolly, M. P., Cui, W., Dickinson, H. J., Dumm, J., Eisch, J. D., Falcone, A., Feng, Q., Finley, J. P., Fleischhack, H., Fortson, L., Griffin, S., Griffiths, S. T., Grube, J., Gyuk, G., Huetten, M., Haakansson, N., Holder, J., Humensky, T. B., Johnson, C. A., Kaaret, P., Kertzman, M., Khassen, Y., Kieda, D., Krause, M., Krennrich, F., Lang, M. J., Maier, G., McArthur, S., Meagher, K., Moriarty, P., Nelson, T., Nieto, D., Ong, R. A., Park, N., Pohl, M., Popkow, A., Pueschel, E., Reynolds, P. T., Richards, G. T., Roache, E., Santander, M., Sembroski, G. H., Shahinyan, K., Smith, A. W., Staszak, D., Telezhinsky, I., Todd, N. W., Tucci, J. V., Tyler, J., Vincent, S., Weinstein, A., Wilhelm, A., Williams, D. A., Zitzer, B., collaboration, the MAGIC, Ahnen, M. L., Ansoldi, S., Antonelli, L. A., Antoranz, P., Babic, A., Banerjee, B., Bangale, P., de Almeida, U. Barres, Barrio, J., González, J. Becerra, Bednarek, W., Bernardini, E., Biasuzzi, B., Biland, A., Blanch, O., Bonnefoy, S., Bonnoli, G., Borracci, F., Bretz, T., Carmona, E., Carosi, A., Chatterjee, A., Clavero, R., Colin, P., Colombo, E., Contreras, J. L., Cortina, J., Covino, S., Da Vela, P., Dazzi, F., de Angelis, A., De Lotto, B., Wilhelmi, E. D. de Oña, Mendez, C. Delgado, Di Pierro, F., Prester, D. Dominis, Dorner, D., Doro, M., Einecke, S., Elsaesser, D., Fernández-Barral, A., Fidalgo, D., Fonseca, M. V., Font, L., Frantzen, K., Fruck, C., Galindo, D., López, R. J. García, Garczarczyk, M., Terrats, D. Garrido, Gaug, M., Giammaria, P., Eisenacher, D., Godinović, N., Muñoz, A. González, Guberman, D., Hahn, A., Hanabata, Y., Hayashida, M., Herrera, J., Hose, J., Hrupec, D., Hughes, G., Idec, W., Kodani, K., Konno, Y., Kubo, H., Kushida, J., La Barbera, A., Lelas, D., Lindfors, E., Lombardi, S., Longo, F., López, M., López-Coto, R., López-Oramas, A., Lorenz, E., Majumdar, P., Makariev, M., Mallot, K., Maneva, G., Manganaro, M., Mannheim, K., Maraschi, L., Marcote, B., Mariotti, M., Martínez, M., Mazin, D., Menzel, U., Miranda, J. M., Mirzoyan, R., Moralejo, A., Moretti, E., Nakajima, D., Neustroev, V., Niedzwiecki, A., Nievas-Rosillo, M., Nilsson, K., Nishijima, K., Noda, K., Orito, R., Overkemping, A., Paiano, S., Palacio, S., Palatiello, M., Paoletti, R., Paredes, J. M., Paredes-Fortuny, X., Persic, M., Poutanen, J., Moroni, P. G. Prada, Prandini, E., Puljak, I., Rhode, W., Ribó, M., Rico, J., Garcia, J. Rodriguez, Saito, T., Satalecka, K., Scapin, V., Schultz, C., Schweizer, T., Shore, S. N., Sillanpää, A., Sitarek, J., Snidaric, I., Sobczynska, D., Stamerra, A., Steinbring, T., Strzys, M., Takalo, L. O., Takami, H., Tavecchio, F., Temnikov, P., Terzić, T., Tescaro, D., Teshima, M., Thaele, J., Torres, D. F., Toyama, T., Treves, A., Verguilov, V., Vovk, I., Ward, J. E., Will, M., Wu, M. H., Zanin, R., collaborators, external, Perkins, J., Verrecchia, F., Leto, C., Böttcher, M., Villata, M., Raiteri, C. M., Acosta-Pulido, J. A., Bachev, R., Berdyugin, A., Blinov, D. A., Carnerero, M. I., Chen, W. P., Chinchilla, P., Damljanovic, G., Eswaraiah, C., Grishina, T. S., Ibryamov, S., Jordan, B., Jorstad, S. G., Joshi, M., Kopatskaya, E. N., Kurtanidze, O. M., Kurtanidze, S. O., Larionova, E. G., Larionova, L. V., Larionov, V. M., Latev, G., Lin, H. C., Marscher, A. P., Mokrushina, A. A., Morozova, D. A., Nikolashvili, M. G., Semkov, E., Strigachev, A., Troitskaya, Yu. V., Troitsky, I. S., Vince, O., Barnes, J., Güver, T., Moody, J. W., Sadun, A. C., Sun, S., Hovatta, T., Richards, J. L., Max-Moerbeck, W., Readhead, A. C., Lähteenmäki, A., Tornikoski, M., Tammi, J., Ramakrishnan, V., Reinthal, R., Angelakis, E., Fuhrmann, L., Myserlis, I., Karamanavis, V., Sievers, A., Ungerechts, H., and Zensus, J. A.
- Abstract
We present coordinated multiwavelength observations of the bright, nearby BL Lac object Mrk 421 taken in 2013 January-March, involving GASP-WEBT, Swift, NuSTAR, Fermi-LAT, MAGIC, VERITAS, and other collaborations and instruments, providing data from radio to very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray bands. NuSTAR yielded previously unattainable sensitivity in the 3-79 keV range, revealing that the spectrum softens when the source is dimmer until the X-ray spectral shape saturates into a steep power law with a photon index of approximately 3, with no evidence for an exponential cutoff or additional hard components up to about 80 keV. For the first time, we observed both the synchrotron and the inverse-Compton peaks of the spectral energy distribution (SED) simultaneously shifted to frequencies below the typical quiescent state by an order of magnitude. The fractional variability as a function of photon energy shows a double-bump structure which relates to the two bumps of the broadband SED. In each bump, the variability increases with energy which, in the framework of the synchrotron self-Compton model, implies that the electrons with higher energies are more variable. The measured multi-band variability, the significant X-ray-to-VHE correlation down to some of the lowest fluxes ever observed in both bands, the lack of correlation between optical/UV and X-ray flux, the low degree of polarization and its significant (random) variations, the short estimated electron cooling time, and the significantly longer variability timescale observed in the NuSTAR light curves point toward in-situ electron acceleration, and suggest that there are multiple compact regions contributing to the broadband emission of Mrk 421 during low-activity states., Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
390. The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: Initial Results and Catalog from the Extended Chandra Deep Field South
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Mullaney, J. R., Del-Moro, A., Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Civano, F. M., Hickox, R. C., Lansbury, G. B., Ajello, M., Assef, R., Ballantyne, D. R., Balokovic, M., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Comastri, A., Craig, W. W., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Koss, M., LaMassa, S. M., Luo, B., Madsen, K. K., Puccetti, S., Saez, C., Stern, D., Treister, E., Urry, C. M., Wik, D. R., Zappacosta, L., Zhang, W., Mullaney, J. R., Del-Moro, A., Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Civano, F. M., Hickox, R. C., Lansbury, G. B., Ajello, M., Assef, R., Ballantyne, D. R., Balokovic, M., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Boggs, S. E., Brightman, M., Christensen, F. E., Comastri, A., Craig, W. W., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Koss, M., LaMassa, S. M., Luo, B., Madsen, K. K., Puccetti, S., Saez, C., Stern, D., Treister, E., Urry, C. M., Wik, D. R., Zappacosta, L., and Zhang, W.
- Abstract
We present initial results and the source catalog from the NuSTAR survey of the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (hereafter, ECDFS) - currently the deepest contiguous component of the NuSTAR extragalactic survey program. The survey covers the full ~30 arcmin x 30 arcmin area of this field to a maximum depth of ~360 ks (~220 ks when corrected for vignetting at 3-24 keV), reaching sensitivity limits of ~1.3 x 10^-14 erg/cm2/s (3-8 keV), ~3.4 x 10^-14 erg/cm2/s (8-24 keV) and ~3.0 x 10^-14 erg/cm2/s (3-24 keV). Fifty four (54) sources are detected over the full field, although five of these are found to lie below our significance threshold once contaminating flux from neighboring (i.e., blended) sources is taken into account. Of the remaining 49 that are significant, 19 are detected in the 8-24 keV band. The 8-24 keV to 3-8 keV band ratios of the twelve sources that are detected in both bands span the range 0.39-1.7, corresponding to a photon index range of Gamma ~ 0.5-2.3, with a median photon index of 1.70 +/- 0.52. The redshifts of the 49 sources in our main sample span the range z = 0.21-2.7, and their rest-frame 10-40 keV luminosities (derived from the observed 8-24 keV fluxes) span the range L(10-40 keV) ~ (0.7-300) x 10^43 erg/s, sampling below the "knee" of the X-ray luminosity function out to z ~ 0.8-1. Finally, we identify one NuSTAR source that has neither a Chandra nor an XMM-Newton counterpart, but that shows evidence of nuclear activity at infrared wavelengths, and thus may represent a genuine, new X-ray source detected by NuSTAR in the ECDFS., Comment: 20 pages, published in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2015
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391. The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: The Number Counts of Active Galactic Nuclei and the Resolved Fraction of the Cosmic X-ray Background
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Harrison, F. A., Aird, J., Civano, F., Lansbury, G., Mullaney, J. R., Ballantyne, D. R., Alexander, D. M., Stern, D., Ajello, M., Barret, D., Bauer, F. E., Balokovic, M., Brandt, W. N., Brightman, M., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Comastri, A., Craig, W. W., Del Moro, A., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Hickox, R. C., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J., Luo, B., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Treister, E., Walton, D., Westergaard, N. J., Wik, D., Zappacosta, L., Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., Harrison, F. A., Aird, J., Civano, F., Lansbury, G., Mullaney, J. R., Ballantyne, D. R., Alexander, D. M., Stern, D., Ajello, M., Barret, D., Bauer, F. E., Balokovic, M., Brandt, W. N., Brightman, M., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Comastri, A., Craig, W. W., Del Moro, A., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Hickox, R. C., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J., Luo, B., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Treister, E., Walton, D., Westergaard, N. J., Wik, D., Zappacosta, L., Zhang, W. W., and Zoglauer, A.
- Abstract
We present the 3-8 keV and 8-24 keV number counts of active galactic nuclei (AGN) identified in the NuSTAR extragalactic surveys. NuSTAR has now resolved 33-39% of the X-ray background in the 8-24 keV band, directly identifying AGN with obscuring columns up to approximately 1e25 /cm2. In the softer 3-8 keV band the number counts are in general agreement with those measured by XMM-Newton and Chandra over the flux range 5e-15 < S(3 - 8 keV)/(erg/cm2/s) < 1e-12 probed by NuSTAR. In the hard 8-24 keV band NuSTAR probes fluxes over the range 2e-14 < S(8-24 keV)/(erg/cm2/s) < 1e-12, a factor of approximately 100 fainter than previous measurements. The 8-24 keV number counts match predictions from AGN population synthesis models, directly confirming the existence of a population of obscured and/or hard X-ray sources inferred from the shape of the integrated cosmic X-ray background. The measured NuSTAR counts lie significantly above simple extrapolation with a Euclidian slope to low flux of the Swift/BAT 15-55 keV number counts measured at higher fluxes S(15-55 keV) > 1e-11 erg/cm2/s, reflecting the evolution of the AGN population between the Swift/BAT local (z<0.1) sample and NuSTAR's z~1 sample. CXB synthesis models, which account for AGN evolution, lie above the Swift/BAT measurements, suggesting that they do not fully capture the evolution of obscured AGN at low redshifts., Comment: 8 pages; accepted by the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2015
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392. The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: Overview and Catalog from the COSMOS Field
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Civano, F., Hickox, R. C., Puccetti, S., Comastri, A., Mullaney, J. R., Zappacosta, L., LaMassa, S. M., Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Ballantyne, D. R., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Del-Moro, A., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Lansbury, G. B., Luo, B., Madsen, K., Saez, C., Stern, D., Treister, E., Urry, M. C., Wik, D. R., Zhang, W., Civano, F., Hickox, R. C., Puccetti, S., Comastri, A., Mullaney, J. R., Zappacosta, L., LaMassa, S. M., Aird, J., Alexander, D. M., Ballantyne, D. R., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Del-Moro, A., Elvis, M., Forster, K., Gandhi, P., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Lansbury, G. B., Luo, B., Madsen, K., Saez, C., Stern, D., Treister, E., Urry, M. C., Wik, D. R., and Zhang, W.
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To provide the census of the sources contributing to the X-ray background peak above 10 keV, NuSTAR is performing extragalactic surveys using a three-tier "wedding cake" approach. We present the NuSTAR survey of the COSMOS field, the medium sensitivity and medium area tier, covering 1.7 deg2 and overlapping with both Chandra and XMM-Newton data. This survey consists of 121 observations for a total exposure of ~3 Ms. To fully exploit these data, we developed a new detection strategy, carefully tested through extensive simulations. The survey sensitivity at 20% completeness is 5.9, 2.9 and 6.4 x 10^-14 erg/cm2/s in the 3-24 keV, 3-8 keV and 8-24 keV bands, respectively. By combining detections in 3 bands, we have a sample of 91 NuSTAR sources with 10^42 -10^45.5 erg/s luminosities and redshift z=0.04-2.5. Thirty two sources are detected in the 8-24 keV band with fluxes ~100 times fainter than sources detected by Swift-BAT. Of the 91 detections, all but four are associated with a Chandra and/or XMM-Newton point-like counterpart. One source is associated with an extended lower energy X-ray source. We present the X-ray (hardness ratio and luminosity) and optical-to-X-ray properties. The observed fraction of candidate Compton-thick AGN measured from the hardness ratio is between 13-20%. We discuss the spectral properties of NuSTAR J100259+0220.6 (ID 330) at z=0.044, with the highest hardness ratio in the entire sample. The measured column density exceeds 10^24 /cm2, implying the source is Compton-thick. This source was not previously recognized as such without the >10 keV data., Comment: 20 pages, published in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2015
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393. NuSTAR catches the unveiling nucleus of NGC 1068
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Marinucci, A., Bianchi, S., Matt, G., Alexander, D. M., Balokovic, M., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Gandhi, P., Guainazzi, M., Harrison, F. A., Iwasawa, K., Koss, M., Madsen, K. K., Nicastro, F., Puccetti, S., Ricci, C., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Marinucci, A., Bianchi, S., Matt, G., Alexander, D. M., Balokovic, M., Bauer, F. E., Brandt, W. N., Gandhi, P., Guainazzi, M., Harrison, F. A., Iwasawa, K., Koss, M., Madsen, K. K., Nicastro, F., Puccetti, S., Ricci, C., Stern, D., and Walton, D. J.
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We present a NuSTAR and XMM-Newton monitoring campaign in 2014/2015 of the Compton-thick Seyfert 2 galaxy, NGC 1068. During the August 2014 observation, we detect with NuSTAR a flux excess above 20 keV ($32\pm6 \%$) with respect to the December 2012 observation and to a later observation performed in February 2015. We do not detect any spectral variation below 10 keV in the XMM-Newton data. The transient excess can be explained by a temporary decrease of the column density of the obscuring material along the line of sight (from N$_{\rm H}\simeq10^{25}$ cm$^{-2}$ to N$_{\rm H}=6.7\pm1.0\times10^{24}$ cm$^{-2}$), which allows us for the first time to unveil the direct nuclear radiation of the buried AGN in NGC 1068 and to infer an intrinsic 2-10 keV luminosity L$_{\rm X}=7^{+7}_{-4} \times 10^{43}$ erg s$^{-1}$., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication on MNRAS letters
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- 2015
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394. NuSTAR and XMM-Newton Observations of the Hard X-Ray Spectrum of Centaurus A
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Fuerst, F., Mueller, C., Madsen, K. K., Lanz, L., Rivers, E., Brightman, M., Arevalo, P., Balokovic, M., Beuchert, T., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Dauser, T., Farrah, D., Graefe, C., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kadler, M., King, A., Krauss, F., Madejski, G., Matt, G., Marinucci, A., Markowitz, A., Ogle, P., Ojha, R., Rothschild, R., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., Zhang, W., Fuerst, F., Mueller, C., Madsen, K. K., Lanz, L., Rivers, E., Brightman, M., Arevalo, P., Balokovic, M., Beuchert, T., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Dauser, T., Farrah, D., Graefe, C., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kadler, M., King, A., Krauss, F., Madejski, G., Matt, G., Marinucci, A., Markowitz, A., Ogle, P., Ojha, R., Rothschild, R., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W.
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We present simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations spanning 3-78 keV of the nearest radio galaxy, Centaurus A (Cen A). The accretion geometry around the central engine in Cen A is still debated, and we investigate possible configurations using detailed X-ray spectral modeling. NuSTAR imaged the central region of Cen A with sub-arcminute resolution at X-ray energies above 10 keV for the first time, but finds no evidence for an extended source or other off-nuclear point-sources. The XMM-Newton and NuSTAR spectra agree well and can be described with an absorbed power-law with a photon index {\Gamma} = 1.815 +/- 0.005 and a fluorescent Fe K{\alpha} line in good agreement with literature values. The spectrum does not require a high-energy exponential rollover, with a constraint of E_fold > 1 MeV. A thermal Comptonization continuum describes the data well, with parameters that agree with values measured by INTEGRAL, in particular an electron temperature kTe between ~100-300 keV, seed photon input temperatures between 5-50 eV. We do not find evidence for reflection or a broad iron line and put stringent upper limits of R < 0.01 on the reflection fraction and accretion disk illumination. We use archival Chandra data to estimate the contribution from diffuse emission, extra-nuclear point-sources, and the outer X-ray jet to the observed NuSTAR and XMM-Newton X-ray spectra and find the contribution to be negligible. We discuss different scenarios for the physical origin of the observed hard X-ray spectrum, and conclude that the inner disk is replaced by an advection-dominated accretion flow or that the X-rays are dominated by synchrotron self-Compton emission from the inner regions of the radio jet or a combination thereof., Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2015
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395. The complex accretion geometry of GX 339-4 as seen by NuSTAR and Swift
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Fuerst, F., Nowak, M. A., Tomsick, J. A., Miller, J. M., Corbel, S., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Gandhi, P., Grinberg, V., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kara, E., Kennea, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., Zhang, W. W., Fuerst, F., Nowak, M. A., Tomsick, J. A., Miller, J. M., Corbel, S., Bachetti, M., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Gandhi, P., Grinberg, V., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F. A., Kara, E., Kennea, J. A., Madsen, K. K., Pottschmidt, K., Stern, D., Walton, D. J., Wilms, J., and Zhang, W. W.
- Abstract
We present spectral analysis of five NuSTAR and Swift observations of GX 339-4 taken during a failed outburst in summer 2013. These observations cover Eddington luminosity fractions in the range ~0.9-6%. Throughout this outburst, GX 339-4 stayed in the hard state, and all five observations show similar X-ray spectra with a hard power-law with a photon index near 1.6 and significant contribution from reflection. Using simple reflection models we find unrealistically high iron abundances. Allowing for different photon indices for the continuum incident on the reflector relative to the underlying observed continuum results in a statistically better fit and reduced iron abundances. With a photon index around 1.3, the input power-law on the reflector is significantly harder than that which is directly observed. We study the influence of different emissivity profiles and geometries and consistently find an improvement when using separate photon indices. The inferred inner accretion disk radius is strongly model dependent, but we do not find evidence for a truncation radius larger than 100 r_g in any model. The data do not allow independent spin constraints but the results are consistent with the literature (i.e., a>0). Our best-fit models indicate an inclination angle in the range 40-60 degrees, consistent with limits on the orbital inclination but higher than reported in the literature using standard reflection models. The iron line around 6.4 keV is clearly broadened, and we detect a superimposed narrow core as well. This core originates from a fluorescence region outside the influence of the strong gravity of the black hole and we discuss possible geometries., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables, plus 9 tables in the appendix. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2015
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396. Rapid Variability of Blazar 3C 279 during Flaring States in 2013-2014 with Joint Fermi-LAT, NuSTAR, Swift, and Ground-Based Multi-wavelength Observations
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Hayashida, M., Nalewajko, K., Madejski, G. M., Sikora, M., Itoh, R., Ajello, M., Blandford, R. D., Buson, S., Chiang, J., Fukazawa, Y., Furniss, A. K., Urry, C. M., Hasan, I., Harrison, F. A., Alexander, D. M., Baloković, M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Stern, D., Tagliaferri, G., Westergaard, N. J., Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., Gurwell, M. A., Uemura, M., Akitaya, H., Kawabata, K. S., Kawaguch, K., Kanda, Y., Moritani, Y., Takaki, K., Ui, T., Yoshida, M., Agarwal, A., Gupta, A. C., Hayashida, M., Nalewajko, K., Madejski, G. M., Sikora, M., Itoh, R., Ajello, M., Blandford, R. D., Buson, S., Chiang, J., Fukazawa, Y., Furniss, A. K., Urry, C. M., Hasan, I., Harrison, F. A., Alexander, D. M., Baloković, M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Forster, K., Giommi, P., Grefenstette, B., Hailey, C., Hornstrup, A., Kitaguchi, T., Koglin, J. E., Madsen, K. K., Mao, P. H., Miyasaka, H., Mori, K., Perri, M., Pivovaroff, M. J., Puccetti, S., Rana, V., Stern, D., Tagliaferri, G., Westergaard, N. J., Zhang, W. W., Zoglauer, A., Gurwell, M. A., Uemura, M., Akitaya, H., Kawabata, K. S., Kawaguch, K., Kanda, Y., Moritani, Y., Takaki, K., Ui, T., Yoshida, M., Agarwal, A., and Gupta, A. C.
- Abstract
We report the results of a multi-band observing campaign on the famous blazar 3C 279 conducted during a phase of increased activity from 2013 December to 2014 April, including first observations of it with NuSTAR. The $\gamma$-ray emission of the source measured by Fermi-LAT showed multiple distinct flares reaching the highest flux level measured in this object since the beginning of the Fermi mission, with $F(E > 100\,{\rm MeV})$ of $10^{-5}$ photons cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$, and with a flux doubling time scale as short as 2 hours. The $\gamma$-ray spectrum during one of the flares was very hard, with an index of $\Gamma_\gamma = 1.7 \pm 0.1$, which is rarely seen in flat spectrum radio quasars. The lack of concurrent optical variability implies a very high Compton dominance parameter $L_\gamma/L_{\rm syn} > 300$. Two 1-day NuSTAR observations with accompanying Swift pointings were separated by 2 weeks, probing different levels of source activity. While the 0.5$-$70 keV X-ray spectrum obtained during the first pointing, and fitted jointly with Swift-XRT is well-described by a simple power law, the second joint observation showed an unusual spectral structure: the spectrum softens by $\Delta\Gamma_{\rm X} \simeq 0.4$ at $\sim$4 keV. Modeling the broad-band SED during this flare with the standard synchrotron plus inverse Compton model requires: (1) the location of the $\gamma$-ray emitting region is comparable with the broad line region radius, (2) a very hard electron energy distribution index $p \simeq 1$, (3) total jet power significantly exceeding the accretion disk luminosity $L_{\rm j}/L_{\rm d} \gtrsim 10$, and (4) extremely low jet magnetization with $L_{\rm B}/L_{\rm j} \lesssim 10^{-4}$. We also find that single-zone models that match the observed $\gamma$-ray and optical spectra cannot satisfactorily explain the production of X-ray emission., Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2015
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397. NuSTAR, XMM-Newton and Suzaku Observations of the Ultraluminous X-ray Source Holmberg II X-1
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Walton, D. J., Middleton, M. J., Rana, V., Miller, J. M., Harrison, F. A., Fabian, A. C., Bachetti, M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Madsen, K. K., Stern, D., Zhang, W., Walton, D. J., Middleton, M. J., Rana, V., Miller, J. M., Harrison, F. A., Fabian, A. C., Bachetti, M., Barret, D., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Madsen, K. K., Stern, D., and Zhang, W.
- Abstract
We present the first broadband 0.3-25.0 kev X-ray observations of the bright ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) Holmberg II X-1, performed by NuSTAR, XMM-Newton and Suzaku in September 2013. The NuSTAR data provide the first observations of Holmberg II X-1 above 10 keV, and reveal a very steep high-energy spectrum, similar to other ULXs observed by NuSTAR to date. These observations further demonstrate that ULXs exhibit spectral states that are not typically seen in Galactic black hole binaries. Comparison with other sources implies that Holmberg II X-1 accretes at a high fraction of its Eddington accretion rate, and possibly exceeds it. The soft X-ray spectrum (E<10 keV) appears to be dominated by two blackbody-like emission components, the hotter of which may be associated with an accretion disk. However, all simple disk models under-predict the NuSTAR data above ~10 keV and require an additional emission component at the highest energies probed, implying the NuSTAR data does not fall away with a Wien spectrum. We investigate physical origins for such an additional high-energy emission component, and favor a scenario in which the excess arises from Compton scattering in a hot corona of electrons with some properties similar to the very-high state seen in Galactic binaries. The observed broadband 0.3-25.0 keV luminosity inferred from these epochs is Lx = (8.1+/-0.1)e39 erg/s, typical for Holmberg II X-1, with the majority of the flux (~90%) emitted below 10 keV., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2015
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398. A Hard X-Ray Study of Ultraluminous X-ray Source NGC 5204 X-1 with NuSTAR and XMM-Newton
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Mukherjee, E. S., Walton, D. J., Bachetti, M., Harrison, F. A., Barret, D., Bellm, E., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Madsen, K. K., Middleton, M. J., Miller, J. M., Rana, V., Stern, D., Zhang, W., Mukherjee, E. S., Walton, D. J., Bachetti, M., Harrison, F. A., Barret, D., Bellm, E., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Craig, W. W., Fabian, A. C., Fuerst, F., Grefenstette, B. W., Hailey, C. J., Madsen, K. K., Middleton, M. J., Miller, J. M., Rana, V., Stern, D., and Zhang, W.
- Abstract
We present the results from coordinated X-ray observations of the ultraluminous X-ray source NGC 5204 X-1 performed by NuSTAR and XMM-Newton in early 2013. These observations provide the first detection of NGC 5204 X-1 above 10 keV, extending the broadband coverage to 0.3-20 keV. The observations were carried out in two epochs separated by approximately 10 days, and showed little spectral variation, with an observed luminosity of Lx = (4.95+/-0.11)e39 erg/s. The broadband spectrum confirms the presence of a clear spectral downturn above 10 keV seen in some previous observations. This cutoff is inconsistent with the standard low/hard state seen in Galactic black hole binaries, as would be expected from an intermediate mass black hole accreting at significantly sub-Eddington rates given the observed luminosity. The continuum is apparently dominated by two optically thick thermal-like components, potentially accompanied by a faint high energy tail. The broadband spectrum is likely associated with an accretion disk that differs from a standard Shakura & Sunyaev thin disk., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2015
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399. Prevalence of cerebral amyloid pathology in persons without dementia: a meta-analysis.
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Amyloid Biomarker Study Group, Jansen, W.J., Ossenkoppele, R., Knol, D.L., Tijms, B.M., Scheltens, P., Verhey, F.R., Visser, P.J., Aalten, P., Aarsland, D., Alcolea, D., Alexander, M., Almdahl, I.S., Arnold, S.E., Baldeiras, I., Barthel, H., van Berckel, B.N., Bibeau, K., Blennow, K., Brooks, D.J., van Buchem, M.A., Camus, V., Cavedo, E., Chen, K., Chetelat, G., Cohen, A.D., Drzezga, A., Engelborghs, S., Fagan, A.M., Fladby, T., Fleisher, A.S., van der Flier, W.M., Ford, L., Förster, S., Fortea, J., Foskett, N., Frederiksen, K.S., Freund-Levi, Y., Frisoni, G.B., Froelich, L., Gabryelewicz, T., Gill, K.D., Gkatzima, O., Gómez-Tortosa, E., Gordon, M.F., Grimmer, T., Hampel, H., Hausner, L., Hellwig, S., Herukka, S.K., Hildebrandt, H., Ishihara, L., Ivanoiu, A., Jagust, W.J., Johannsen, P., Kandimalla, R., Kapaki, E., Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A., Klunk, W.E., Köhler, S., Koglin, N., Kornhuber, J., Kramberger, M.G., Van Laere, K., Landau, S.M., Lee, D.Y., de Leon, M., Lisetti, V., Lleó, A., Madsen, K., Maier, W., Marcusson, J., Mattsson, N., de Mendonça, A., Meulenbroek, O., Meyer, P.T., Mintun, M.A., Mok, V., Molinuevo, J.L., Møllergård, H.M., Morris, J.C., Mroczko, B., Van der Mussele, S., Na, D.L., Newberg, A., Nordberg, A., Nordlund, A., Novak, G.P., Paraskevas, G.P., Parnetti, L., Perera, G., Peters, O., Popp, J., Prabhakar, S., Rabinovici, G.D., Ramakers, I.H., Rami, L., Resende de Oliveira, C., Rinne, J.O., Rodrigue, K.M., Rodríguez-Rodríguez, E., Roe, C.M., Rot, U., Rowe, C.C., Rüther, E., Sabri, O., Sanchez-Juan, P., Santana, I., Sarazin, M., Schröder, J., Schütte, C., Seo, S.W., Soetewey, F., Soininen, H., Spiru, L., Struyfs, H., Teunissen, C.E., Tsolaki, M., Vandenberghe, R., Verbeek, M.M., Villemagne, V.L., Vos, S.J., van Waalwijk van Doorn, L.J., Waldemar, G., Wallin, A., Wallin, Å.K., Wiltfang, J., Wolk, D.A., Zboch, M., Zetterberg, H., Amyloid Biomarker Study Group, Jansen, W.J., Ossenkoppele, R., Knol, D.L., Tijms, B.M., Scheltens, P., Verhey, F.R., Visser, P.J., Aalten, P., Aarsland, D., Alcolea, D., Alexander, M., Almdahl, I.S., Arnold, S.E., Baldeiras, I., Barthel, H., van Berckel, B.N., Bibeau, K., Blennow, K., Brooks, D.J., van Buchem, M.A., Camus, V., Cavedo, E., Chen, K., Chetelat, G., Cohen, A.D., Drzezga, A., Engelborghs, S., Fagan, A.M., Fladby, T., Fleisher, A.S., van der Flier, W.M., Ford, L., Förster, S., Fortea, J., Foskett, N., Frederiksen, K.S., Freund-Levi, Y., Frisoni, G.B., Froelich, L., Gabryelewicz, T., Gill, K.D., Gkatzima, O., Gómez-Tortosa, E., Gordon, M.F., Grimmer, T., Hampel, H., Hausner, L., Hellwig, S., Herukka, S.K., Hildebrandt, H., Ishihara, L., Ivanoiu, A., Jagust, W.J., Johannsen, P., Kandimalla, R., Kapaki, E., Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, A., Klunk, W.E., Köhler, S., Koglin, N., Kornhuber, J., Kramberger, M.G., Van Laere, K., Landau, S.M., Lee, D.Y., de Leon, M., Lisetti, V., Lleó, A., Madsen, K., Maier, W., Marcusson, J., Mattsson, N., de Mendonça, A., Meulenbroek, O., Meyer, P.T., Mintun, M.A., Mok, V., Molinuevo, J.L., Møllergård, H.M., Morris, J.C., Mroczko, B., Van der Mussele, S., Na, D.L., Newberg, A., Nordberg, A., Nordlund, A., Novak, G.P., Paraskevas, G.P., Parnetti, L., Perera, G., Peters, O., Popp, J., Prabhakar, S., Rabinovici, G.D., Ramakers, I.H., Rami, L., Resende de Oliveira, C., Rinne, J.O., Rodrigue, K.M., Rodríguez-Rodríguez, E., Roe, C.M., Rot, U., Rowe, C.C., Rüther, E., Sabri, O., Sanchez-Juan, P., Santana, I., Sarazin, M., Schröder, J., Schütte, C., Seo, S.W., Soetewey, F., Soininen, H., Spiru, L., Struyfs, H., Teunissen, C.E., Tsolaki, M., Vandenberghe, R., Verbeek, M.M., Villemagne, V.L., Vos, S.J., van Waalwijk van Doorn, L.J., Waldemar, G., Wallin, A., Wallin, Å.K., Wiltfang, J., Wolk, D.A., Zboch, M., and Zetterberg, H.
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Cerebral amyloid-β aggregation is an early pathological event in Alzheimer disease (AD), starting decades before dementia onset. Estimates of the prevalence of amyloid pathology in persons without dementia are needed to understand the development of AD and to design prevention studies. OBJECTIVE: To use individual participant data meta-analysis to estimate the prevalence of amyloid pathology as measured with biomarkers in participants with normal cognition, subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DATA SOURCES: Relevant biomarker studies identified by searching studies published before April 2015 using the MEDLINE and Web of Science databases and through personal communication with investigators. STUDY SELECTION: Studies were included if they provided individual participant data for participants without dementia and used an a priori defined cutoff for amyloid positivity. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Individual records were provided for 2914 participants with normal cognition, 697 with SCI, and 3972 with MCI aged 18 to 100 years from 55 studies. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Prevalence of amyloid pathology on positron emission tomography or in cerebrospinal fluid according to AD risk factors (age, apolipoprotein E [APOE] genotype, sex, and education) estimated by generalized estimating equations. RESULTS: The prevalence of amyloid pathology increased from age 50 to 90 years from 10% (95% CI, 8%-13%) to 44% (95% CI, 37%-51%) among participants with normal cognition; from 12% (95% CI, 8%-18%) to 43% (95% CI, 32%-55%) among patients with SCI; and from 27% (95% CI, 23%-32%) to 71% (95% CI, 66%-76%) among patients with MCI. APOE-ε4 carriers had 2 to 3 times higher prevalence estimates than noncarriers. The age at which 15% of the participants with normal cognition were amyloid positive was approximately 40 years for APOE ε4ε4 carriers, 50 years for ε2ε4 carriers, 55 years for ε3ε4 carriers, 65 years for ε3ε3 carriers, and 95 y
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- 2015
400. Role of emotional processing in depressive responses to sex-hormone manipulation:a pharmacological fMRI study
- Author
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Henningsson, S, Madsen, K H, Pinborg, A, Heede, M, Knudsen, G M, Siebner, H R, Frokjaer, V. G., Henningsson, S, Madsen, K H, Pinborg, A, Heede, M, Knudsen, G M, Siebner, H R, and Frokjaer, V. G.
- Abstract
Sex-hormone fluctuations may increase risk for developing depressive symptoms and alter emotional processing as supported by observations in menopausal and pre- to postpartum transition. In this double-blinded, placebo-controlled study, we used blood-oxygen level dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate if sex-steroid hormone manipulation with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa) influences emotional processing. Fifty-six healthy women were investigated twice: at baseline (follicular phase of menstrual cycle) and 16 ± 3 days post intervention. At both sessions, fMRI-scans during exposure to faces expressing fear, anger, happiness or no emotion, depressive symptom scores and estradiol levels were acquired. The fMRI analyses focused on regions of interest for emotional processing. As expected, GnRHa initially increased and subsequently reduced estradiol to menopausal levels, which was accompanied by an increase in subclinical depressive symptoms relative to placebo. Women who displayed larger GnRHa-induced increase in depressive symptoms had a larger increase in both negative and positive emotion-elicited activity in the anterior insula. When considering the post-GnRHa scan only, depressive responses were associated with emotion-elicited activity in the anterior insula and amygdala. The effect on regional activity in anterior insula was not associated with the estradiol net decline, only by the GnRHa-induced changes in mood. Our data implicate enhanced insula recruitment during emotional processing in the emergence of depressive symptoms following sex-hormone fluctuations. This may correspond to the emotional hypersensitivity frequently experienced by women postpartum.
- Published
- 2015
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