269 results on '"Caruana J"'
Search Results
2. EPOCHS VI: The Size and Shape Evolution of Galaxies since z ~ 8 with JWST Observations
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Ormerod, K., Conselice, C. J., Adams, N. J., Harvey, T., Austin, D., Trussler, J., Ferreira, L., Caruana, J., Lucatelli, G., Li, Q., and Roper, W. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of a size and structural analysis of 1395 galaxies at $0.5 \leq z \lesssim 8$ with stellar masses $\log \left(M_* / M_{\odot}\right)$ $>$ 9.5 within the JWST Public CEERS field that overlaps with the HST CANDELS EGS observations. We use GALFIT to fit single S\'ersic models to the rest-frame optical profile of our galaxies, which is a mass-selected sample complete to our redshift and mass limit. Our primary result is that at fixed rest-frame wavelength and stellar mass, galaxies get progressively smaller, evolving as $\sim (1+z)^{-0.71\pm0.19}$ up to $z \sim 8$. We discover that the vast majority of massive galaxies at high redshifts have low S\'ersic indices, thus do not contain steep, concentrated light profiles. Additionally, we explore the evolution of the size-stellar mass relationship, finding a correlation such that more massive systems are larger up to $z \sim 3$. This relationship breaks down at $z > 3$, where we find that galaxies are of similar sizes, regardless of their star formation rates and S\'ersic index, varying little with mass. We show that galaxies are more compact at redder wavelengths, independent of sSFR or stellar mass up to $z \sim 3$. We demonstrate the size evolution of galaxies continues up to $z \sim 8$, showing that the process or causes for this evolution is active at early times. We discuss these results in terms of ideas behind galaxy formation and evolution at early epochs, such as their importance in tracing processes driving size evolution, including minor mergers and AGN activity., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2023
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3. Discovery and properties of ultra-high redshift galaxies ($9<z<12$) in the JWST ERO SMACS 0723 Field
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Adams, N. J., Conselice, C. J., Ferreira, L., Austin, D., Trussler, J., Juodžbalis, I., Wilkins, S. M., Caruana, J., Dayal, P., Verma, A., and Vijayan, A. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a reduction and analysis of the \textit{James Webb Space Telescope} (JWST) SMACS~0723 field using new post-launch calibrations to conduct a search for ultra-high-redshift galaxies ($z > 9$) present within the Epoch of Reionisation. We conduct this search by modelling photometric redshifts in several ways for all sources and by applying conservative magnitude cuts ($m_{\rm F200W} < 28$) to identify strong Lyman breaks greater than 1 magnitude. We find four $z > 9$ candidate galaxies which have not previously been identified, with one object at $z = 11.5$, and another which is possibly a close pair of galaxies. We measure redshifts for candidate galaxies from other studies and find the recovery rate to be only 23 per cent, with many being assigned lower redshift, dusty solutions in our work. Most of our $z > 9$ sample show evidence for Balmer-breaks, or extreme emission lines from H$\beta$ and [OIII], demonstrating that the stellar populations could be advanced in age or very young depending on the cause of the F444W excess. We discuss the resolved structures of these early galaxies and find that the S\'{e}rsic indices reveal a mixture of light concentration levels, but that the sizes of all our systems are exceptionally small ($< 0.5$~kpc). These systems have stellar masses M$_{*} \sim 10^{9.0}$ M$_{\odot}$, with our $z \sim 11.5$ candidate a dwarf galaxy with a stellar mass M$_{*} \sim 10^{7.8}$ -- $10^{8.2}$ M$_{\odot}$. These candidate ultra high-redshift galaxies are excellent targets for future NIRSpec observations aimed to better understand their physical nature., Comment: Updated to accepted mnras manuscript, 12 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables, added section 3.3 and Table 5
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- 2022
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4. Synergies of THESEUS with the large facilities of the 2030s and guest observer opportunities
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Rosati, P., Basa, S., Blain, A. W., Bozzo, E., Branchesi, M., Christensen, L., Ferrara, A., Gomboc, A., O'Brien, P. T., Osborne, J. P., Rossi, A., Schüssler, F., Spurio, M., Stergioulas, N., Stratta, G., Amati, L., Casewell, S., Ciolfi, R., Ghirlanda, G., Grimm, S., Guetta, D., Harms, J., Floc'h, E. Le, Longo, F., Maggiore, M., Mereghetti, S., Oganesyan, G., Salvaterra, R., Tanvir, N. R., Turriziani, S., Vergani, S. D., Balman, S., Caruana, J., Erkut, M. H., Guidorzi, G., Frontera, F., Martin-Carrillo, A., Paltani, S., Porquet, D., and Sergijenko, O.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The proposed THESEUS mission will vastly expand the capabilities to monitor the high-energy sky, and will exploit large samples of gamma-ray bursts to probe the early Universe back to the first generation of stars, and to advance multi-messenger astrophysics by detecting and localizing the counterparts of gravitational waves and cosmic neutrino sources. The combination and coordination of these activities with multi-wavelength, multi-messenger facilities expected to be operating in the thirties will open new avenues of exploration in many areas of astrophysics, cosmology and fundamental physics, thus adding considerable strength to the overall scientific impact of THESEUS and these facilities. We discuss here a number of these powerful synergies., Comment: Revised version after submission to Experimental Astronomy
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- 2021
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5. Exploration of the high-redshift universe enabled by THESEUS
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Tanvir, N. R., Floc'h, E. Le, Christensen, L., Caruana, J., Salvaterra, R., Ghirlanda, G., Ciardi, B., Maio, U., D'Odorico, V., Piedipalumbo, E., Campana, S., Noterdaeme, P., Graziani, L., Amati, L., Bagoly, Z., Balázs, L. G., Basa, S., Behar, E., Bozzo, E., De Cia, A., Della Valle, M., De Pasquale, M., Frontera, F., Gomboc, A., Götz, D., Horvath, I., Hudec, R., Mereghetti, S., O'Brien, P. T., Osborne, J. P., Paltani, S., Rosati, P., Sergijenko, O., Stanway, E. R., Szécsi, D., Toth, L. V., Urata, Y., Vergani, S., and Zane, S.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
At peak, long-duration gamma-ray bursts are the most luminous sources of electromagnetic radiation known. Since their progenitors are massive stars, they provide a tracer of star formation and star-forming galaxies over the whole of cosmic history. Their bright power-law afterglows provide ideal backlights for absorption studies of the interstellar and intergalactic medium back to the reionization era. The proposed THESEUS mission is designed to detect large samples of GRBs at $z>6$ in the 2030s, at a time when supporting observations with major next generation facilities will be possible, thus enabling a range of transformative science. THESEUS will allow us to explore the faint end of the luminosity function of galaxies and the star formation rate density to high redshifts; constrain the progress of re-ionisation beyond $z\gtrsim6$; study in detail early chemical enrichment from stellar explosions, including signatures of Population III stars; and potentially characterize the dark energy equation of state at the highest redshifts., Comment: Submitted to Experimental Astronomy
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- 2021
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6. The MUSE-Wide Survey: Survey Description and First Data Release
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Urrutia, T., Wisotzki, L., Kerutt, J., Schmidt, K. B., Herenz, E. C., Klar, J., Saust, R., Werhahn, M., Diener, C., Caruana, J., Krajnović, D., Bacon, R., Boogaard, L., Brinchman, J., Enke, H., Maseda, M., Nanayakkara, T., Richard, J., Steinmetz, M., and Weilbacher, P. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the MUSE-Wide survey, a blind, 3D spectroscopic survey in the CANDELS/GOODS-S and CANDELS/COSMOS regions. Each MUSE-Wide pointing has a depth of 1 hour and hence targets more extreme and more luminous objects over 10 times the area of the MUSE-Deep fields (Bacon et al. 2017). The legacy value of MUSE-Wide lies in providing "spectroscopy of everything" without photometric pre-selection. We describe the data reduction, post-processing and PSF characterization of the first 44 CANDELS/GOODS-S MUSE-Wide pointings released with this publication. Using a 3D matched filtering approach we detected 1,602 emission line sources, including 479 Lyman-$\alpha$ (Lya) emitting galaxies with redshifts $2.9 \lesssim z \lesssim 6.3$. We cross-match the emission line sources to existing photometric catalogs, finding almost complete agreement in redshifts and stellar masses for our low redshift (z < 1.5) emitters. At high redshift, we only find ~55% matches to photometric catalogs. We encounter a higher outlier rate and a systematic offset of $\Delta$z$\simeq$0.2 when comparing our MUSE redshifts with photometric redshifts. Cross-matching the emission line sources with X-ray catalogs from the Chandra Deep Field South, we find 127 matches, including 10 objects with no prior spectroscopic identification. Stacking X-ray images centered on our Lya emitters yielded no signal; the Lya population is not dominated by even low luminosity AGN. A total of 9,205 photometrically selected objects from the CANDELS survey lie in the MUSE-Wide footprint, which we provide optimally extracted 1D spectra of. We are able to determine the spectroscopic redshift of 98% of 772 photometrically selected galaxies brighter than 24th F775W magnitude. All the data in the first data release - datacubes, catalogs, extracted spectra, maps - are available on the website https://musewide.aip.de. [abridged], Comment: 25 pages 15+1 figures. Accepted, A&A. Comments welcome
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- 2018
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7. Recovering the systemic redshift of galaxies from their Lyman-alpha line profile
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Verhamme, A., Garel, T., Ventou, E., Contini, T., Bouché, N., Herenz, E. C., Richard, J., Bacon, R., Schmidt, K. B., Maseda, M., Marino, R. A., Brinchmann, J., Cantalupo, S., Caruana, J., Clément, B., Diener, C., Drake, A. B., Hashimoto, T., Inami, H., Kerutt, J., Kollatschny, W., Leclercq, F., Patrício, V., Schaye, J., Wisotzki, L., and Zabl, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Lyman alpha (lya) line of Hydrogen is a prominent feature in the spectra of star-forming galaxies, usually redshifted by a few hundreds of km/s compared to the systemic redshift. This large offset hampers follow-up surveys, galaxy pair statistics and correlations with quasar absorption lines when only lya is available. We propose diagnostics that can be used to recover the systemic redshift directly from the properties of the lya line profile. We use spectroscopic observations of Lyman-Alpha Emitters (LAEs) for which a precise measurement of the systemic redshift is available. Our sample contains 13 sources detected between z~3 and z~6 as part of various Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) Guaranteed Time Observations (GTO). We also include a compilation of spectroscopic lya data from the literature spanning a wide redshift range (z~0-8). First, restricting our analysis to double-peaked lya spectra, we find a tight correlation between the velocity offset of the red peak with respect to the systemic redshift, Vpeak, and the separation of the peaks. Secondly, we find a correlation between Vpeak and the full width at half maximum of the lya line. Fitting formulas, to estimate systemic redshifts of galaxies with an accuracy of +-100 km/s when only the lya emission line is available, are given for the two methods., Comment: letter, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2018
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8. Kinematics, Turbulence and Star Formation of z ~1 Strongly Lensed Galaxies seen with MUSE
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Patricio, V., Richard, J., Carton, D., Contini, T., Epinat, B., Brinchmann, J., Schmidt, K. B., Krajnovic, D., Bouche, N., Weilbacher, P. M., Pello, R., Caruana, J., Maseda, M., Finley, H., Bauer, F. E., Martinez, J., Mahler, G., Lagattuta, D., Clement, B., Soucail, G., and Wisotzki, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyse a sample of 8 highly magnified galaxies at redshift 0.6
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- 2018
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9. THESEUS: a key space mission concept for Multi-Messenger Astrophysics
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Stratta, G., Ciolfi, R., Amati, L., Ghirlanda, G., Tanvir, N., Bozzo, E., Gotz, D., O'Brien, P., Frontera, F., Osborne, J. P., Rezzolla, L., Rossi, A., Maiorano, E., Vinciguerra, S., Guidorzi, C., Drago, A., Nicastro, L., Palazzi, E., Branchesi, M., Boer, M., Brocato, E., Bulgarelli, A., Covino, S., D'Elia, V., Dainotti, M. G., De Pasquale, M., Gendre, B., Jonker, P., Longo, F., Mereghetti, S., Mignani, R., Mundell, C. G., Piranomonte, S., Razzano, M., Szécsi, D., van Putten, M., Zhang, B., Hudec, R., Vergani, S., Malesani, D., D'Avanzo, P., Colafrancesco, S., Stamerra, A., Caruana, J., Starling, R., Willingale, R., Salvaterra, R., Maio, U., Greiner, J., Rosati, P., Labanti, C., Fuschino, F., Campana, R., Grado, A., Colpi, M., Rodic, T., Patricelli, B., and Bernardini, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The recent discovery of the electromagnetic counterpart of the gravitational wave source GW170817, has demonstrated the huge informative power of multi-messenger observations. During the next decade the nascent field of multi-messenger astronomy will mature significantly. Around 2030, third generation gravitational wave detectors will be roughly ten times more sensitive than the current ones. At the same time, neutrino detectors currently upgrading to multi km^3 telescopes, will include a 10 km^3 facility in the Southern hemisphere that is expected to be operational around 2030. In this review, we describe the most promising high frequency gravitational wave and neutrino sources that will be detected in the next two decades. In this context, we show the important role of the Transient High Energy Sky and Early Universe Surveyor (THESEUS), a mission concept proposed to ESA by a large international collaboration in response to the call for the Cosmic Vision Programme M5 missions. THESEUS aims at providing a substantial advancement in early Universe science as well as playing a fundamental role in multi-messenger and time-domain astrophysics, operating in strong synergy with future gravitational wave and neutrino detectors as well as major ground- and space-based telescopes. This review is an extension of the THESEUS white paper (Amati et al. 2017), also in light of the discovery of GW170817/GRB170817A that was announced on October 16th, 2017., Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, accepted to Advances in Space Research with minor revisions. Details on the THESEUS instrumentation, science case and expected performances can also be found in Amati et al. 2017 (arXiv:1710.04638) and in the presentations of the THESEUS Workshop 2017 (http://www.isdc.unige.ch/theseus/workshop2017-programme.html). v2 few typos corrected
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- 2017
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10. Assessing the capacity and flow of ecosystem services in multifunctional landscapes: evidence of a rural-urban gradient in a Mediterranean small island state
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Balzan, M V, Caruana, J, and Zammit, A
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Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution - Abstract
Distinguishing between the capacity of ecosystems to generate ecosystem services (ES) and the actual use of these service (ES flow) in ES assessment and mapping is important to develop an understanding of the sustainability of ES use. This study assesses the spatial variation in ES capacity and flow in the Mediterranean small island state of Malta. The services included in this study were crop provisioning, beekeeping and honey production, fodder and livestock production, crop pollination, air quality regulation, and aesthetic ES. This assessment develops different spatial models, which make use of available datasets, causal relationships between datasets, including a generated land use land cover (LULC) map, and statistical models and indicators based on direct measurements. Individual ES indicators were mapped to visualise and compare their spatial patterns across the case study area. Subsequently, an analysis of ES associations and bundles was carried out using Pearson parametric correlation test, for both ES capacity and flow indicators generated from this study, and through Principal Component Analysis. Results demonstrate several significant synergistic interactions between ES capacity and flow in rural landscapes characterised with agricultural and semi-natural LULC categories, indicating high landscape multifunctionality. In contrast, predominantly urban areas tend to be characterised with a low ecosystem capacity and ES flow, suggesting that ES delivery in the landscapes of the study area is determined by land use intensity. These findings support the notion that multifunctional rural landscapes provide multiple ES, making an important contribution to human well-being, and that land use planning that develops green infrastructure in urban areas can significantly contribute to support biodiversity and ES delivery.
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- 2017
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11. The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey VI: The Faint-End of the Lya Luminosity Function at 2.91 < z < 6.64 and Implications for Reionisation
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Drake, A. B., Garel, T., Wisotzki, L., Leclercq, F., Hashimoto, T., Richard, J., Bacon, R., Blaizot, J., Caruana, J., Conseil, S., Contini, T., Guiderdoni, B., Herenz, E. C., Inami, H., Lewis, J., Mahler, G., Marino, R. A., Pello, R., Schaye, J., Verhamme, A., Ventou, E., and Weilbacher, P. M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the deepest study to date of the Lya luminosity function (LF) in a blank field using blind integral field spectroscopy from MUSE. We constructed a sample of 604 Lya emitters (LAEs) across the redshift range 2.91 < z < 6.64 using automatic detection software in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. We calculate accurate total Lya fluxes capturing low surface brightness extended Lya emission now known to be a generic property of high-redshift star-forming galaxies. We simulated realistic extended LAEs to characterise the selection function of our samples, and performed flux-recovery experiments to test and correct for bias in our determination of total Lya fluxes. We find an accurate completeness correction accounting for extended emission reveals a very steep faint-end slope of the LF, alpha, down to luminosities of log10 L erg s^-1< 41.5, applying both the 1/Vmax and maximum likelihood estimators. Splitting the sample into three broad redshift bins, we see the faint-end slope increasing from -2.03+1.42-inf at z ~ 3.44 to -2.86+0.76-inf at z ~ 5.48, however no strong evolution is seen between the 68% confidence regions in L*-alpha parameter space. Using the Lya line flux as a proxy for star formation activity, and integrating the observed LFs, we find that LAEs' contribution to the cosmic SFRD rises with redshift until it is comparable to that from continuum-selected samples by z ~ 6. This implies that LAEs may contribute more to the star-formation activity of the early Universe than previously thought - any additional interglactic medium correction would act to further boost the Lya luminosities. Finally, assuming fiducial values for the escape of Lya and LyC radiation, and the clumpiness of the IGM, we integrated the maximum likelihood LF at 5.00 < z < 6.64 and find we require only a small extrapolation beyond the data (< 1 dex in L) for LAEs alone to maintain an ionised IGM at z ~ 6., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A special issue: "The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey" (MUSE UDF Series Paper VI)
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- 2017
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12. The THESEUS space mission concept: science case, design and expected performances
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Amati, L., O'Brien, P., Goetz, D., Bozzo, E., Tenzer, C., Frontera, F., Ghirlanda, G., Labanti, C., Osborne, J. P., Stratta, G., Tanvir, N., Willingale, R., Attina, P., Campana, R., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Contini, C., Fuschino, F., Gomboc, A., Hudec, R., Orleanski, P., Renotte, E., Rodic, T., Bagoly, Z., Blain, A., Callanan, P., Covino, S., Ferrara, A., Floch, E. Le, Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Rosati, P., Vacchi, A., D'Avanzo, P., Giommi, P., Piranomonte, S., Piro, L., Reglero, V., Rossi, A., Santangelo, A., Salvaterra, R., Tagliaferri, G., Vergani, S., Vinciguerra, S., Briggs, M., Campolongo, E., Ciolfi, R., Connaughton, V., Cordier, B., Morelli, B., Orlandini, M., Adami, C., Argan, A., Atteia, J. -L., Auricchio, N., Balazs, L., Baldazzi, G., Basa, S., Basak, R., Bellutti, P., Bernardini, M. G., Bertuccio, G., Braga, J., Branchesi, M., Brandt, S., Brocato, E., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Bulgarelli, A., Burderi, L., Camp, J., Capozziello, S., Caruana, J., Casella, P., Cenko, B., Chardonnet, P., Ciardi, B., Colafrancesco, S., Dainotti, M. G., D'Elia, V., De Martino, D., De Pasquale, M., Del Monte, E., Della Valle, M., Drago, A., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Finelli, F., Fiorini, M., Fynbo, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gendre, B., Ghisellini, G., Grado, A., Guidorzi, C., Hafizi, M., Hanlon, L., Hjorth, J., Izzo, L., Kiss, L., Kumar, P., Kuvvetli, I., Lavagna, M., Li, T., Longo, F., Lyutikov, M., Maio, U., Maiorano, E., Malcovati, P., Malesani, D., Margutti, R., Martin-Carrillo, A., Masetti, N., McBreen, S., Mignani, R., Morgante, G., Mundell, C., Nargaard-Nielsen, H. U., Nicastro, L., Palazzi, E., Paltani, S., Panessa, F., Pareschi, G., Pe'er, A., Penacchioni, A. V., Pian, E., Piedipalumbo, E., Piran, T., Rauw, G., Razzano, M., Read, A., Rezzolla, L., Romano, P., Ruffini, R., Savaglio, S., Sguera, V., Schady, P., Skidmore, W., Song, L., Stanway, E., Starling, R., Topinka, M., Troja, E., van Putten, M., Vanzella, E., Vercellone, S., Wilson-Hodge, C., Yonetoku, D., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zhang, B., Zhang, B. B., Zhang, S., Zhang, S. -N., Antonelli, A., Bianco, F., Boci, S., Boer, M., Botticella, M. T., Boulade, O., Butler, C., Campana, S., Capitanio, F., Celotti, A., Chen, Y., Colpi, M., Comastri, A., Cuby, J. -G., Dadina, M., De Luca, A., Dong, Y. -W., Ettori, S., Gandhi, P., Geza, E., Greiner, J., Guiriec, S., Harms, J., Hernanz, M., Hornstrup, A., Hutchinson, I., Israel, G., Jonker, P., Kaneko, Y., Kawai, N., Wiersema, K., Korpela, S., Lebrun, V., Lu, F., MacFadyen, A., Malaguti, G., Maraschi, L., Melandri, A., Modjaz, M., Morris, D., Omodei, N., Paizis, A., Pata, P., Petrosian, V., Rachevski, A., Rhoads, J., Ryde, F., Sabau-Graziati, L., Shigehiro, N., Sims, M., Soomin, J., Szecsi, D., Urata, Y., Uslenghi, M., Valenziano, L., Vianello, G., Vojtech, S., Watson, D., and Zicha, J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
THESEUS is a space mission concept aimed at exploiting Gamma-Ray Bursts for investigating the early Universe and at providing a substantial advancement of multi-messenger and time-domain astrophysics. These goals will be achieved through a unique combination of instruments allowing GRB and X-ray transient detection over a broad field of view (more than 1sr) with 0.5-1 arcmin localization, an energy band extending from several MeV down to 0.3 keV and high sensitivity to transient sources in the soft X-ray domain, as well as on-board prompt (few minutes) follow-up with a 0.7 m class IR telescope with both imaging and spectroscopic capabilities. THESEUS will be perfectly suited for addressing the main open issues in cosmology such as, e.g., star formation rate and metallicity evolution of the inter-stellar and intra-galactic medium up to redshift $\sim$10, signatures of Pop III stars, sources and physics of re-ionization, and the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function. In addition, it will provide unprecedented capability to monitor the X-ray variable sky, thus detecting, localizing, and identifying the electromagnetic counterparts to sources of gravitational radiation, which may be routinely detected in the late '20s / early '30s by next generation facilities like aLIGO/ aVirgo, eLISA, KAGRA, and Einstein Telescope. THESEUS will also provide powerful synergies with the next generation of multi-wavelength observatories (e.g., LSST, ELT, SKA, CTA, ATHENA)., Comment: Accepted for publication in Advances in Space Research. Partly based on the proposal submitted on October 2016 in response to the ESA Call for next M5 mission, with expanded and updated science sections
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- 2017
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13. The MUSE-Wide Survey: A first catalogue of 831 emission line galaxies
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Herenz, E. C., Urrutia, T., Wisotzki, L., Kerutt, J., Saust, R., Werhahn, M., Schmidt, K. B., Caruana, J., Diener, C., Bacon, R., Brinchmann, J., Schaye, J., Maseda, M., and Weilbacher, P. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a first instalment of the MUSE-Wide survey, covering an area of 22.2 arcmin$^2$ (corresponding to $\sim$20% of the final survey) in the CANDELS/Deep area of the Chandra Deep Field South. We use the MUSE integral field spectrograph at the ESO VLT to conduct a full-area spectroscopic mapping at a depth of 1h exposure time per 1 arcmin$^2$ pointing. We searched for compact emission line objects using our newly developed LSDCat software based on a 3-D matched filtering approach, followed by interactive classification and redshift measurement of the sources. Our catalogue contains 831 distinct emission line galaxies with redshifts ranging from 0.04 to 6. Roughly one third (237) of the emission line sources are Lyman $\alpha$ emitting galaxies with $3 < z < 6$, only four of which had previously measured spectroscopic redshifts. At lower redshifts 351 galaxies are detected primarily by their [OII] emission line ($0.3 \lesssim z \lesssim 1.5$), 189 by their [OIII] line ($0.21 \lesssim z \lesssim 0.85$), and 46 by their H$\alpha$ line ($0.04 \lesssim z \lesssim 0.42$). Comparing our spectroscopic redshifts to photometric redshift estimates from the literature, we find excellent agreement for $z<1.5$ with a median $\Delta z$ of only $\sim 4 \times 10^{-4}$ and an outlier rate of 6%, however a significant systematic offset of $\Delta z = 0.26$ and an outlier rate of 23% for Ly$\alpha$ emitters at $z>3$. Together with the catalogue we also release 1D PSF-weighted extracted spectra and small 3D datacubes centred on each of the 831 sources., Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, data products are available for download from http://muse-vlt.eu/science/muse-wide-survey/ and later via the CDS
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- 2017
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14. Emission-line galaxies at z ∼ 1 from near-IR HST slitless spectroscopy: metallicities, star formation rates, and redshift confirmations from VLT/FORS2 spectroscopy.
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Boyett, K, Bunker, A J, Chevallard, J, Battisti, A, Henry, A L, Wilkins, S, Malkan, M A, Caruana, J, Atek, H, Baronchelli, I, Colbert, J, Dai, Y S, Gardner, Jonathan P, Rafelski, M, Scarlata, C, Teplitz, H I, and Wang, X
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EMISSION-line galaxies ,GALACTIC evolution ,OPTICAL spectroscopy ,STAR formation ,GALAXY formation - Abstract
We follow up emission line galaxies identified through the near-infrared slitless HST /WFC3 WISP survey with VLT/FORS2 optical spectroscopy. Over 4 WISP fields, we targeted 85 of 138 line emission objects at |$0.4\lt z\lt 2$| identified in WFC3 spectroscopy. Half the galaxies are fainter than |$H_{AB}=24$| mag, and would not have been included in many well-known surveys based on broad-band magnitude selection. We confirm 95 per cent of the initial WFC3 grism redshifts in the 38 cases where we detect lines in FORS2 spectroscopy. However, for targets which exhibited a single emission line in WFC3, up to 65 per cent at |$z\lt 1.28$| did not have expected emission lines detected in FORS2 and hence may be spurious (although this false-detection rate improves to 33 per cent using the latest public WISP emission line catalogue). From the Balmer decrement, the extinction of the WISP galaxies is consistent with |$A($| H |$\alpha)=1$| mag. From SED fits to multiband photometry including Spitzer |$3.6\, \mu$| m, we find a median stellar mass of |$\log _{10}(M_\star /{\rm M}_{\odot })=8.94$|. Our emission-line-selected galaxies tend to lie above the star-forming main sequence (i.e. higher specific star formation rates). Using [O iii ], [O ii ], and H β lines to derive gas-phase metallicities, we find typically sub-solar metallicities, decreasing with redshift. Our WISP galaxies lie below the |$z=0$| mass–metallicity relation, and galaxies with higher star formation rates tend to have lower metallicity. Finally, we find a strong increase with redshift of the H α rest-frame equivalent width in this emission-line selected sample, with higher |$EW_0$| galaxies having larger [O iii ]/H β and O32 ratios on average, suggesting lower metallicity or higher ionization parameter in these extreme emission line galaxies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. The Lyman-Continuum Photon Production Efficiency xi_{ion} of z~4-5 Galaxies from IRAC-based Halpha Measurements: Implications for the Escape Fraction and Cosmic Reionization
- Author
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Bouwens, R. J., Smit, R., Labbe, I., Franx, M., Caruana, J., Oesch, P., Stefanon, M., and Rasappu, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxies represent one of the preferred candidate sources to drive the reionization of the universe. Even as gains are made in mapping the galaxy UV luminosity density to z>6, significant uncertainties remain regarding the conversion to the implied ionizing emissivity. The relevant unknowns are the Lyman-continuum (LyC) photon production efficiency xi_{ion} and the escape fraction f_{esc}. As we show here, the first of these unknowns is directly measureable in z=4-5 galaxies, based on the impact the Halpha line has on the observed IRAC fluxes. By computing a LyC photon production rate from the implied Halpha luminosities for a broad selection of z=4-5 galaxies and comparing this against the dust-corrected UV-continuum luminosities, we provide the first-ever direct estimates of the LyC photon production efficiency xi_{ion} for the z>~4 galaxy population. We find log_{10} xi_{ion}/[Hz/ergs] to have a mean value of 25.27_{-0.03}^{+0.03} and 25.34_{-0.02}^{+0.02} for sub-L* z=4-5 galaxies adopting Calzetti and SMC dust laws, respectively. Reassuringly, both values are consistent with standardly assumed xi_{ion}'s in reionization models, with a slight preference for higher xi_{ion}'s (by ~0.1 dex) adopting the SMC dust law. A modest ~0.03-dex increase in these estimates would result if the escape fraction for ionizing photons is non-zero and galaxies dominate the ionizing emissivity at z~4.4. High values of xi_{ion} (~25.5-25.8 dex) are derived for the bluest galaxies (beta<-2.3) in our samples, independent of dust law and consistent with results for a z=7.045 galaxy. Such elevated values of xi_{ion} would have important consequences, indicating that f_{esc} cannot be in excess of 13% unless the galaxy UV luminosity function does not extend down to -13 mag or the clumping factor is greater than 3. A low escape fraction would fit well with the low rate of LyC leakage observed at z~3., Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, updated to match the version in press, both statistical and systematic errors given for xi_{ion}
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- 2015
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16. Extended Lyman alpha haloes around individual high-redshift galaxies revealed by MUSE
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Wisotzki, L., Bacon, R., Blaizot, J., Brinchmann, J., Herenz, E. C., Schaye, J., Bouché, N., Cantalupo, S., Contini, T., Carollo, C. M., Caruana, J., Courbot, J. -B., Emsellem, E., Kamann, S., Kerutt, J., Leclercq, F., Lilly, S. J., Patrício, V., Sandin, C., Steinmetz, M., Straka, L. A., Urrutia, T., Verhamme, A., Weilbacher, P. M., and Wendt, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the detection of extended Ly alpha emission around individual star-forming galaxies at redshifts z = 3-6 in an ultradeep exposure of the Hubble Deep Field South obtained with MUSE on the ESO-VLT. The data reach a limiting surface brightness (1sigma) of ~1 x 10^-19 erg s^-1 cm^-2 arcsec^-2 in azimuthally averaged radial profiles, an order of magnitude improvement over previous narrowband imaging. Our sample consists of 26 spectroscopically confirmed Ly alpha-emitting, but mostly continuum-faint (m_AB >~ 27) galaxies. In most objects the Ly alpha emission is considerably more extended than the UV continuum light. While 5 of the faintest galaxies in the sample show no significantly detected Ly alpha haloes, the derived upper limits suggest that this is just due to insufficient S/N. Ly alpha haloes therefore appear to be (nearly) ubiquitous even for low-mass (~10^8-10^9 M_sun) star-forming galaxies at z>3. We decompose the Ly alpha emission of each object into a compact `continuum-like' and an extended halo component, and infer sizes and luminosities of the haloes. The extended Ly alpha emission approximately follows an exponential surface brightness distribution with a scale length of a few kpc. While these haloes are thus quite modest in terms of their absolute sizes, they are larger by a factor of 5-15 than the corresponding rest-frame UV continuum sources as seen by HST. They are also much more extended, by a factor ~5, than Ly alpha haloes around low-redshift star-forming galaxies. Between ~40% and >90% of the observed Ly alpha flux comes from the extended halo component, with no obvious correlation of this fraction with either the absolute or the relative size of the Ly alpha halo. Our observations provide direct insights into the spatial distribution of at least partly neutral gas residing in the circumgalactic medium of low to intermediate mass galaxies at z > 3., Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2015
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17. Reionization after Planck: The Derived Growth of the Cosmic Ionizing Emissivity now matches the Growth of the Galaxy UV Luminosity Density
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Bouwens, R. J., Illingworth, G. D., Oesch, P. A., Caruana, J., Holwerda, B., Smit, R., and Wilkins, S.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Thomson optical depth tau measurements from Planck provide new insights into the reionization of the universe. In pursuit of model-independent constraints on the properties of the ionising sources, we determine the empirical evolution of the cosmic ionizing emissivity. We use a simple two-parameter model to map out the evolution in the emissivity at z>~6 from the new Planck optical depth tau measurements, from the constraints provided by quasar absorption spectra and from the prevalence of Ly-alpha emission in z~7-8 galaxies. We find the redshift evolution in the emissivity dot{N}_{ion}(z) required by the observations to be d(log Nion)/dz=-0.15(-0.11)(+0.08), largely independent of the assumed clumping factor C_{HII} and entirely independent of the nature of the ionising sources. The trend in dot{N}_{ion}(z) is well-matched by the evolution of the galaxy UV-luminosity density (dlog_{10} rho_UV/dz=-0.11+/-0.04) to a magnitude limit >~-13 mag, suggesting that galaxies are the sources that drive the reionization of the universe. The role of galaxies is further strengthened by the conversion from the UV luminosity density rho_UV to dot(N)_{ion}(z) being possible for physically-plausible values of the escape fraction f_{esc}, the Lyman-continuum photon production efficiency xi_{ion}, and faint-end cut-off $M_{lim}$ to the luminosity function. Quasars/AGN appear to match neither the redshift evolution nor normalization of the ionizing emissivity. Based on the inferred evolution in the ionizing emissivity, we estimate that the z~10 UV-luminosity density is 8(-4)(+15)x lower than at $z~6, consistent with the observations. The present approach of contrasting the inferred evolution of the ionizing emissivity with that of the galaxy UV luminosity density adds to the growing observational evidence that faint, star-forming galaxies drive the reionization of the universe., Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables, Astrophysical Journal, updated to match version in press, Figure 6 shows the main result of the paper
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- 2015
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18. The MUSE 3D view of the Hubble Deep Field South
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Bacon, R., Brinchmann, J., Richard, J., Contini, T., Drake, A., Franx, M., Tacchella, S., Vernet, J., Wisotzki, L., Blaizot, J., Bouché, N., Bouwens, R., Cantalupo, S., Carollo, C. M., Carton, D., Caruana, J., Clément, B., Dreizler, S., Epinat, B., Guiderdoni, B., Herenz, C., Husser, T. -O., Kamann, S., Kerutt, J., Kollatschny, W., Krajnovic, D., Lilly, S., Martinsson, T., Michel-Dansac, L., Patricio, V., Schaye, J., Shirazi, M., Soto, K., Soucail, G., Steinmetz, M., Urrutia, T., Weilbacher, P., and de Zeeuw, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We observed the Hubble Deep Field South with the new panoramic integral field spectrograph MUSE that we built and just commissioned at the VLT. The data cube resulting from 27 hours of integration covers one arcmin^2 field of view at an unprecedented depth with a 1 sigma emission line surface brightness limit of 1x$10^{-19}$ erg/s/cm$^2$/arcsec$^2$ and contains ~90,000 spectra. We present the combined and calibrated data cube, and we perform a first-pass analysis of the sources detected in the HDF-S imaging. We measured the redshifts of 189 sources up to a magnitude F814W = 29.5, increasing by more than an order of magnitude the number of known spectroscopic redshifts in this field. We also discovered 26 Lya emitting galaxies which are not detected in the HST WFPC2 deep broad band images. The intermediate spectral resolution of 2.3{\AA} allows us to separate resolved asymmetric Lya emitters, [O II] emitters, and C III] emitters and the large instantaneous wavelength range of 4500{\AA} helps to identify single emission lines. We also show how the three dimensional information of MUSE helps to resolve sources which are confused at ground-based image quality. Overall, secure identifications are provided for 83% of the 227 emission line sources detected in the MUSE data cube and for 32% of the 586 sources identified in the HST catalog of Casertano et al 2000. The overall redshift distribution is fairly flat to z=6.3, with a reduction between z=1.5 to 2.9, in the well-known redshift desert. The field of view of MUSE also allowed us to detect 17 groups within the field. We checked that the number counts of [O II] and Ly-a emitters are roughly consistent with predictions from the literature. Using two examples we demonstrate that MUSE is able to provide exquisite spatially resolved spectroscopic information on intermediate redshift galaxies present in the field., Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures. Note that the catalogues, data cube and associated spectra will be released upon acceptance of the paper
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- 2014
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19. EPOCHS VI: The Size and Shape Evolution of Galaxies since z ∼ 8 with JWST Observations
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Ormerod, K, primary, Conselice, C J, additional, Adams, N J, additional, Harvey, T, additional, Austin, D, additional, Trussler, J, additional, Ferreira, L, additional, Caruana, J, additional, Lucatelli, G, additional, Li, Q, additional, and Roper, W J, additional
- Published
- 2023
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20. THESEUS: A key space mission concept for Multi-Messenger Astrophysics
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Stratta, G., Ciolfi, R., Amati, L., Bozzo, E., Ghirlanda, G., Maiorano, E., Nicastro, L., Rossi, A., Vinciguerra, S., Frontera, F., Götz, D., Guidorzi, C., O’Brien, P., Osborne, J.P., Tanvir, N., Branchesi, M., Brocato, E., Dainotti, M.G., De Pasquale, M., Grado, A., Greiner, J., Longo, F., Maio, U., Mereghetti, D., Mignani, R., Piranomonte, S., Rezzolla, L., Salvaterra, R., Starling, R., Willingale, R., Böer, M., Bulgarelli, A., Caruana, J., Colafrancesco, S., Colpi, M., Covino, S., D’Avanzo, P., D’Elia, V., Drago, A., Fuschino, F., Gendre, B., Hudec, R., Jonker, P., Labanti, C., Malesani, D., Mundell, C.G., Palazzi, E., Patricelli, B., Razzano, M., Campana, R., Rosati, P., Rodic, T., Szécsi, D., Stamerra, A., van Putten, M., Vergani, S., Zhang, B., and Bernardini, M.
- Published
- 2018
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21. The THESEUS space mission concept: science case, design and expected performances
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Amati, L., O’Brien, P., Götz, D., Bozzo, E., Tenzer, C., Frontera, F., Ghirlanda, G., Labanti, C., Osborne, J.P., Stratta, G., Tanvir, N., Willingale, R., Attina, P., Campana, R., Castro-Tirado, A.J., Contini, C., Fuschino, F., Gomboc, A., Hudec, R., Orleanski, P., Renotte, E., Rodic, T., Bagoly, Z., Blain, A., Callanan, P., Covino, S., Ferrara, A., Le Floch, E., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Rosati, P., Vacchi, A., D’Avanzo, P., Giommi, P., Piranomonte, S., Piro, L., Reglero, V., Rossi, A., Santangelo, A., Salvaterra, R., Tagliaferri, G., Vergani, S., Vinciguerra, S., Briggs, M., Campolongo, E., Ciolfi, R., Connaughton, V., Cordier, B., Morelli, B., Orlandini, M., Adami, C., Argan, A., Atteia, J.-L., Auricchio, N., Balazs, L., Baldazzi, G., Basa, S., Basak, R., Bellutti, P., Bernardini, M.G., Bertuccio, G., Braga, J., Branchesi, M., Brandt, S., Brocato, E., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Bulgarelli, A., Burderi, L., Camp, J., Capozziello, S., Caruana, J., Casella, P., Cenko, B., Chardonnet, P., Ciardi, B., Colafrancesco, S., Dainotti, M.G., D’Elia, V., De Martino, D., De Pasquale, M., Del Monte, E., Della Valle, M., Drago, A., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Finelli, F., Fiorini, M., Fynbo, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gendre, B., Ghisellini, G., Grado, A., Guidorzi, C., Hafizi, M., Hanlon, L., Hjorth, J., Izzo, L., Kiss, L., Kumar, P., Kuvvetli, I., Lavagna, M., Li, T., Longo, F., Lyutikov, M., Maio, U., Maiorano, E., Malcovati, P., Malesani, D., Margutti, R., Martin-Carrillo, A., Masetti, N., McBreen, S., Mignani, R., Morgante, G., Mundell, C., Nargaard-Nielsen, H.U., Nicastro, L., Palazzi, E., Paltani, S., Panessa, F., Pareschi, G., Pe’er, A., Penacchioni, A.V., Pian, E., Piedipalumbo, E., Piran, T., Rauw, G., Razzano, M., Read, A., Rezzolla, L., Romano, P., Ruffini, R., Savaglio, S., Sguera, V., Schady, P., Skidmore, W., Song, L., Stanway, E., Starling, R., Topinka, M., Troja, E., van Putten, M., Vanzella, E., Vercellone, S., Wilson-Hodge, C., Yonetoku, D., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zhang, B., Zhang, B.B., Zhang, S., Zhang, S.-N., Antonelli, A., Bianco, F., Boci, S., Boer, M., Botticella, M.T., Boulade, O., Butler, C., Campana, S., Capitanio, F., Celotti, A., Chen, Y., Colpi, M., Comastri, A., Cuby, J.-G., Dadina, M., De Luca, A., Dong, Y.-W., Ettori, S., Gandhi, P., Geza, E., Greiner, J., Guiriec, S., Harms, J., Hernanz, M., Hornstrup, A., Hutchinson, I., Israel, G., Jonker, P., Kaneko, Y., Kawai, N., Wiersema, K., Korpela, S., Lebrun, V., Lu, F., MacFadyen, A., Malaguti, G., Maraschi, L., Melandri, A., Modjaz, M., Morris, D., Omodei, N., Paizis, A., Páta, P., Petrosian, V., Rachevski, A., Rhoads, J., Ryde, F., Sabau-Graziati, L., Shigehiro, N., Sims, M., Soomin, J., Szécsi, D., Urata, Y., Uslenghi, M., Valenziano, L., Vianello, G., Vojtech, S., Watson, D., and Zicha, J.
- Published
- 2018
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22. A Microstrip Patch Antenna Immersed in Water – A Preliminary Investigation
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Farrugia, J., primary, Farhat, I., additional, Caruana, J., additional, and Sammut, C.V., additional
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
23. EPOCHS VI: the size and shape evolution of galaxies since z ∼ 8 with JWST Observations.
- Author
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Ormerod, K, Conselice, C J, Adams, N J, Harvey, T, Austin, D, Trussler, J, Ferreira, L, Caruana, J, Lucatelli, G, Li, Q, and Roper, W J
- Subjects
GALACTIC evolution ,STELLAR mass ,ACTIVE galactic nuclei ,GALAXY formation ,PUBLIC spaces ,SPACE telescopes - Abstract
We present the results of a size and structural analysis of 1395 galaxies at 0.5 ≤ z ≲ 8 with stellar masses log (M
* /M⊙ )> 9.5 within the James Webb Space Telescope Public CEERS field that overlaps with the Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey EGS observations. We use GALFIT to fit single Sérsic models to the rest-frame optical profile of our galaxies, which is a mass-selected sample complete to our redshift and mass limit. Our primary result is that at fixed rest-frame wavelength and stellar mass, galaxies get progressively smaller, evolving as ∼(1 + z)−0.71 ± 0.19 up to z ∼ 8. We discover that the vast majority of massive galaxies at high redshifts have low Sérsic indices, thus do not contain steep, concentrated light profiles. Additionally, we explore the evolution of the size–stellar mass relationship, finding a correlation such that more massive systems are larger up to z ∼ 3. This relationship breaks down at z > 3, where we find that galaxies are of similar sizes, regardless of their star formation rates and Sérsic index, varying little with mass. We show that galaxies are more compact at redder wavelengths, independent of sSFR or stellar mass up to z ∼ 3. We demonstrate the size evolution of galaxies continues up to z ∼ 8, showing that the process or causes for this evolution is active at early times. We discuss these results in terms of ideas behind galaxy formation and evolution at early epochs, such as their importance in tracing processes driving size evolution, including minor mergers and active galactic nuclei activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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24. Discovery and properties of ultra-high redshift galaxies (9 < z < 12) in the JWST ERO SMACS 0723 Field
- Author
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Adams, N J, Conselice, C J, Ferreira, L, Austin, D, Trussler, J A A, Juodžbalis, I, Wilkins, S M, Caruana, J, Dayal, P, Verma, A, Vijayan, A P, Adams, N J, Conselice, C J, Ferreira, L, Austin, D, Trussler, J A A, Juodžbalis, I, Wilkins, S M, Caruana, J, Dayal, P, Verma, A, and Vijayan, A P
- Published
- 2023
25. The Australian Reproductive Genetic Carrier Screening Project (Mackenzie's Mission): Design and Implementation
- Author
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Archibald, AD, McClaren, BJ, Caruana, J, Tutty, E, King, EA, Halliday, JL, Best, S, Kanga-Parabia, A, Bennetts, BH, Cliffe, CC, Madelli, EO, Ho, G, Liebelt, J, Long, JC, Braithwaite, J, Kennedy, J, Massie, J, Emery, JD, McGaughran, J, Marum, JE, Boggs, K, Barlow-Stewart, K, Burnett, L, Dive, L, Freeman, L, Davis, MR, Downes, MJ, Wallis, M, Ferrie, MM, Pachter, N, Scuffham, PA, Casella, R, Allcock, RJN, Ong, R, Edwards, S, Righetti, S, Lunke, S, Lewis, S, Walker, SP, Boughtwood, TF, Hardy, T, Newson, AJ, Kirk, EP, Laing, NG, and Delatycki, MB
- Abstract
Reproductive genetic carrier screening (RGCS) provides people with information about their chance of having children with autosomal recessive or X-linked genetic conditions, enabling informed reproductive decision-making. RGCS is recommended to be offered to all couples during preconception or in early pregnancy. However, cost and a lack of awareness may prevent access. To address this, the Australian Government funded Mackenzie’s Mission—the Australian Reproductive Genetic Carrier Screening Project. Mackenzie’s Mission aims to assess the acceptability and feasibility of an easily accessible RGCS program, provided free of charge to the participant. In study Phase 1, implementation needs were mapped, and key study elements were developed. In Phase 2, RGCS is being offered by healthcare providers educated by the study team. Reproductive couples who provide consent are screened for over 1200 genes associated with >750 serious, childhood-onset genetic conditions. Those with an increased chance result are provided comprehensive genetic counseling support. Reproductive couples, recruiting healthcare providers, and study team members are also invited to complete surveys and/or interviews. In Phase 3, a mixed-methods analysis will be undertaken to assess the program outcomes, psychosocial implications and implementation considerations alongside an ongoing bioethical analysis and a health economic evaluation. Findings will inform the implementation of an ethically robust RGCS program.
- Published
- 2022
26. Discovery and properties of ultra-high redshift galaxies (9 < z < 12) in the JWST ERO SMACS 0723 Field
- Author
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Adams, N J, primary, Conselice, C J, additional, Ferreira, L, additional, Austin, D, additional, Trussler, J A A, additional, Juodžbalis, I, additional, Wilkins, S M, additional, Caruana, J, additional, Dayal, P, additional, Verma, A, additional, and Vijayan, A P, additional
- Published
- 2022
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27. Asthma in Obesity and Diabetes
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Dandona, P., primary, Ghanim, H., additional, Monte, S., additional, and Caruana, J., additional
- Published
- 2017
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28. Integrated Geophysical And Geomatics Study At Xrobb L-Ghagin Archaeological Site: Preliminary Results
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Colica, E., primary, D’Amico, S., additional, Luciano, G., additional, Cardona, D., additional, Caruana, J., additional, Straud, K., additional, Leucci, G., additional, Farrugia, D., additional, and Galea, P., additional
- Published
- 2022
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29. Editorial: After PFM reforms’ implementation—the divergence between announcements and realizations
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Caperchione, E., Bisogno, M., Caruana, J., Cohen, S., and Manes-Rossi, F.
- Published
- 2022
30. Discovery and properties of ultra-high redshift galaxies ($9
- Author
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Adams, N. J., Conselice, C. J., Ferreira, L., Austin, D., Trussler, J., Juodžbalis, I., Wilkins, S. M., Caruana, J., Dayal, P., Verma, A., and Vijayan, A. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences - Abstract
We present a reduction and analysis of the \textit{James Webb Space Telescope} (JWST) SMACS~0723 field using new post-launch calibrations to conduct a search for ultra-high-redshift galaxies ($z > 9$) present within the Epoch of Reionisation. We conduct this search by modelling photometric redshifts in several ways for all sources and by applying conservative magnitude cuts ($m_{\rm F200W} < 28$) to identify strong Lyman breaks greater than 1 magnitude. We find four $z > 9$ candidate galaxies which have not previously been identified, with one object at $z = 11.5$, and another which is possibly a close pair of galaxies. We measure redshifts for candidate galaxies from other studies and find the recovery rate to be only 23 per cent, with many being assigned lower redshift, dusty solutions in our work. Most of our $z > 9$ sample show evidence for Balmer-breaks, or extreme emission lines from H$β$ and [OIII], demonstrating that the stellar populations could be advanced in age or very young depending on the cause of the F444W excess. We discuss the resolved structures of these early galaxies and find that the Sérsic indices reveal a mixture of light concentration levels, but that the sizes of all our systems are exceptionally small ($< 0.5$~kpc). These systems have stellar masses M$_{*} \sim 10^{9.0}$ M$_{\odot}$, with our $z \sim 11.5$ candidate a dwarf galaxy with a stellar mass M$_{*} \sim 10^{7.8}$ -- $10^{8.2}$ M$_{\odot}$. These candidate ultra high-redshift galaxies are excellent targets for future NIRSpec observations aimed to better understand their physical nature., Updated to accepted mnras manuscript, 12 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables, added section 3.3 and Table 5
- Published
- 2022
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31. INTEGRATED GEOPHYSICAL AND GEOMATICS STUDY AT XROBB L-GHAGIN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE: PRELIMINARY RESULTS
- Author
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Colica, Emanuele, D’Amico, Sebastiano, Galone, Luciano, Cardona, David, Caruana, J., Straud, K., Leucci, Giovanni, Farrugia, Daniela, and Galea, Pauline
- Subjects
Neolithic period -- Malta ,History ,Malta ,Geophysics -- Research ,Architecture -- Conservation and restoration ,Megalithic monuments -- Malta ,Antiquities, Prehistoric -- Malta ,Lost architecture -- Malta -- Marsaxlokk ,GEOMATICS ,Computer Science Applications ,Education ,Xrobb l-Għaġin Temple (Marsaxlokk, Malta) ,GEOPHYSICS ,XROBB L-GHAGIN - Abstract
This study reports the results obtained by combining geophysical methods and geomatis techniques to study the Xrobb l-Ghagin archaeological site. We use unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with different sensors in order to reconstruct the 3D digital model of the area with the main goal of obtaining quantitative information. In particular, we used optical and Lidar sensors mounted on our drone and we perform also ground-based topographic survey in order to properly georeferenced the obtained 3D digital model. Geophysics data (e.g. ambient noise vibration, electrical resistivity tomography and ground penetrating radar) have been collected to study potential buried features present at the site. The 3D model and geophysical investigations helped in identifying potential buried archeological structures as well as the mapping of shallow geological features as fractures, faults and caves., peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2022
32. ON DECK
- Author
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JURENS, WILLIAM J., Caruana, J., Hownam-Meek, R.S.S., Dorfman, Merlin, Azuero, Ivan M., Helfrich, Jeffray T., Vandenbusch, Joanne, Kornoelje, Richard, Alden, John, Jantzen, Ulrich G., Sileo, Tom, Nauck, Hans E., Melman, Stan, Van der Weele, C., Streich, Juergen, Smith, J. G., Hudson, G. M., Stevenson, Jay, and Jurens, Bill
- Published
- 2001
33. Exploration of the high-redshift universe enabled by THESEUS
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Tanvir, N. R., primary, Le Floc’h, E., additional, Christensen, L., additional, Caruana, J., additional, Salvaterra, R., additional, Ghirlanda, G., additional, Ciardi, B., additional, Maio, U., additional, D’Odorico, V., additional, Piedipalumbo, E., additional, Campana, S., additional, Noterdaeme, P., additional, Graziani, L., additional, Amati, L., additional, Bagoly, Z., additional, Balázs, L. G., additional, Basa, S., additional, Behar, E., additional, De Cia, A., additional, Valle, M. Della, additional, De Pasquale, M., additional, Frontera, F., additional, Gomboc, A., additional, Götz, D., additional, Horvath, I., additional, Hudec, R., additional, Mereghetti, S., additional, O’Brien, P. T., additional, Osborne, J. P., additional, Paltani, S., additional, Rosati, P., additional, Sergijenko, O., additional, Stanway, E. R., additional, Szécsi, D., additional, Tot́h, L. V., additional, Urata, Y., additional, Vergani, S., additional, and Zane, S., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Synergies of THESEUS with the large facilities of the 2030s and guest observer opportunities
- Author
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Rosati, P., primary, Basa, S., additional, Blain, A. W., additional, Bozzo, E., additional, Branchesi, M., additional, Christensen, L., additional, Ferrara, A., additional, Gomboc, A., additional, O’Brien, P. T., additional, Osborne, J. P., additional, Rossi, A., additional, Schüssler, F., additional, Spurio, M., additional, Stergioulas, N., additional, Stratta, G., additional, Amati, L., additional, Casewell, S., additional, Ciolfi, R., additional, Ghirlanda, G., additional, Grimm, S., additional, Guetta, D., additional, Harms, J., additional, Le Floc’h, E., additional, Longo, F., additional, Maggiore, M., additional, Mereghetti, S., additional, Oganesyan, G., additional, Salvaterra, R., additional, Tanvir, N. R., additional, Turriziani, S., additional, Vergani, S. D., additional, Balman, S., additional, Caruana, J., additional, Erkut, M. H., additional, Guidorzi, G., additional, Frontera, F., additional, Martin-Carrillo, A., additional, Paltani, S., additional, Porquet, D., additional, and Sergijenko, O., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. THESEUS: A key space mission concept for Multi-Messenger Astrophysics
- Author
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Stratta, G, Ciolfi, R, Amati, L, Bozzo, E, Ghirlanda, G, Maiorano, E, Nicastro, L, Rossi, A, Vinciguerra, S, Frontera, F, Götz, D, Guidorzi, C, O'Brien, P, Osborne, J, Tanvir, N, Branchesi, M, Brocato, E, Dainotti, M, De Pasquale, M, Grado, A, Greiner, J, Longo, F, Maio, U, Mereghetti, D, Mignani, R, Piranomonte, S, Rezzolla, L, Salvaterra, R, Starling, R, Willingale, R, Böer, M, Bulgarelli, A, Caruana, J, Colafrancesco, S, Colpi, M, Covino, S, D'Avanzo, P, D'Elia, V, Drago, A, Fuschino, F, Gendre, B, Hudec, R, Jonker, P, Labanti, C, Malesani, D, Mundell, C, Palazzi, E, Patricelli, B, Razzano, M, Campana, R, Rosati, P, Rodic, T, Szécsi, D, Stamerra, A, van Putten, M, Vergani, S, Zhang, B, Bernardini, M, Stratta, G., Ciolfi, R., Amati, L., Bozzo, E., Ghirlanda, G., Maiorano, E., Nicastro, L., Rossi, A., Vinciguerra, S., Frontera, F., Götz, D., Guidorzi, C., O'Brien, P., Osborne, J. P., Tanvir, N., Branchesi, M., Brocato, E., Dainotti, M. G., De Pasquale, M., Grado, A., Greiner, J., Longo, F., Maio, U., Mereghetti, D., Mignani, R., Piranomonte, S., Rezzolla, L., Salvaterra, R., Starling, R., Willingale, R., Böer, M., BULGARELLI, ALICE, Caruana, J., Colafrancesco, S., Colpi, M., Covino, S., D'Avanzo, P., D'Elia, V., Drago, A., Fuschino, F., Gendre, B., Hudec, R., Jonker, P., Labanti, C., Malesani, D., Mundell, C. G., Palazzi, E., Patricelli, B., Razzano, M., Campana, R., Rosati, P., Rodic, T., Szécsi, D., Stamerra, A., van Putten, M., Vergani, S., Zhang, B., Bernardini, M., Stratta, G, Ciolfi, R, Amati, L, Bozzo, E, Ghirlanda, G, Maiorano, E, Nicastro, L, Rossi, A, Vinciguerra, S, Frontera, F, Götz, D, Guidorzi, C, O'Brien, P, Osborne, J, Tanvir, N, Branchesi, M, Brocato, E, Dainotti, M, De Pasquale, M, Grado, A, Greiner, J, Longo, F, Maio, U, Mereghetti, D, Mignani, R, Piranomonte, S, Rezzolla, L, Salvaterra, R, Starling, R, Willingale, R, Böer, M, Bulgarelli, A, Caruana, J, Colafrancesco, S, Colpi, M, Covino, S, D'Avanzo, P, D'Elia, V, Drago, A, Fuschino, F, Gendre, B, Hudec, R, Jonker, P, Labanti, C, Malesani, D, Mundell, C, Palazzi, E, Patricelli, B, Razzano, M, Campana, R, Rosati, P, Rodic, T, Szécsi, D, Stamerra, A, van Putten, M, Vergani, S, Zhang, B, Bernardini, M, Stratta, G., Ciolfi, R., Amati, L., Bozzo, E., Ghirlanda, G., Maiorano, E., Nicastro, L., Rossi, A., Vinciguerra, S., Frontera, F., Götz, D., Guidorzi, C., O'Brien, P., Osborne, J. P., Tanvir, N., Branchesi, M., Brocato, E., Dainotti, M. G., De Pasquale, M., Grado, A., Greiner, J., Longo, F., Maio, U., Mereghetti, D., Mignani, R., Piranomonte, S., Rezzolla, L., Salvaterra, R., Starling, R., Willingale, R., Böer, M., BULGARELLI, ALICE, Caruana, J., Colafrancesco, S., Colpi, M., Covino, S., D'Avanzo, P., D'Elia, V., Drago, A., Fuschino, F., Gendre, B., Hudec, R., Jonker, P., Labanti, C., Malesani, D., Mundell, C. G., Palazzi, E., Patricelli, B., Razzano, M., Campana, R., Rosati, P., Rodic, T., Szécsi, D., Stamerra, A., van Putten, M., Vergani, S., Zhang, B., and Bernardini, M.
- Abstract
The recent discovery of the electromagnetic counterpart of the gravitational wave source GW170817, has demonstrated the huge informative power of multi-messenger observations. During the next decade the nascent field of multi-messenger astronomy will mature significantly. Around 2030 and beyond, third generation ground-based gravitational wave detectors will be roughly ten times more sensitive than the current ones. At the same time, neutrino detectors currently upgrading to multi km3 telescopes, will include a 10 km3 facility in the Southern hemisphere. In this review, we describe the most promising sources of high frequency gravitational waves and neutrinos that will be detected in the next two decades. In this context, we show the important role of the Transient High Energy Sky and Early Universe Surveyor (THESEUS), a mission concept accepted by ESA for phase A study and proposed by a large international collaboration in response to the call for the Cosmic Vision Programme M5 missions. THESEUS aims at providing a substantial advancement in early Universe science as well as in multi–messenger and time–domain astrophysics, operating in strong synergy with future gravitational wave and neutrino detectors as well as major ground- and space-based telescopes. This review is an extension of the THESEUS white paper (Amati et al., 2017), also in light of the discovery of GW170817/GRB170817A that was announced on October 16th, 2017.
- Published
- 2018
36. The THESEUS space mission concept: science case, design and expected performances
- Author
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Amati, L, O'Brien, P, Götz, D, Bozzo, E, Tenzer, C, Frontera, F, Ghirlanda, G, Labanti, C, Osborne, J, Stratta, G, Tanvir, N, Willingale, R, Attina, P, Campana, R, Castro-Tirado, A, Contini, C, Fuschino, F, Gomboc, A, Hudec, R, Orleanski, P, Renotte, E, Rodic, T, Bagoly, Z, Blain, A, Callanan, P, Covino, S, Ferrara, A, Le Floch, E, Marisaldi, M, Mereghetti, S, Rosati, P, Vacchi, A, D'Avanzo, P, Giommi, P, Piranomonte, S, Piro, L, Reglero, V, Rossi, A, Santangelo, A, Salvaterra, R, Tagliaferri, G, Vergani, S, Vinciguerra, S, Briggs, M, Campolongo, E, Ciolfi, R, Connaughton, V, Cordier, B, Morelli, B, Orlandini, M, Adami, C, Argan, A, Atteia, J, Auricchio, N, Balazs, L, Baldazzi, G, Basa, S, Basak, R, Bellutti, P, Bernardini, M, Bertuccio, G, Braga, J, Branchesi, M, Brandt, S, Brocato, E, Budtz-Jorgensen, C, Bulgarelli, A, Burderi, L, Camp, J, Capozziello, S, Caruana, J, Casella, P, Cenko, B, Chardonnet, P, Ciardi, B, Colafrancesco, S, Dainotti, M, D'Elia, V, De Martino, D, De Pasquale, M, Del Monte, E, Della Valle, M, Drago, A, Evangelista, Y, Feroci, M, Finelli, F, Fiorini, M, Fynbo, J, Gal-Yam, A, Gendre, B, Ghisellini, G, Grado, A, Guidorzi, C, Hafizi, M, Hanlon, L, Hjorth, J, Izzo, L, Kiss, L, Kumar, P, Kuvvetli, I, Lavagna, M, Li, T, Longo, F, Lyutikov, M, Maio, U, Maiorano, E, Malcovati, P, Malesani, D, Margutti, R, Martin-Carrillo, A, Masetti, N, Mcbreen, S, Mignani, R, Morgante, G, Mundell, C, Nargaard-Nielsen, H, Nicastro, L, Palazzi, E, Paltani, S, Panessa, F, Pareschi, G, Pe'Er, A, Penacchioni, A, Pian, E, Piedipalumbo, E, Piran, T, Rauw, G, Razzano, M, Read, A, Rezzolla, L, Romano, P, Ruffini, R, Savaglio, S, Sguera, V, Schady, P, Skidmore, W, Song, L, Stanway, E, Starling, R, Topinka, M, Troja, E, van Putten, M, Vanzella, E, Vercellone, S, Wilson-Hodge, C, Yonetoku, D, Zampa, G, Zampa, N, Zhang, B, Zhang, S, Antonelli, A, Bianco, F, Boci, S, Boer, M, Botticella, M, Boulade, O, Butler, C, Campana, S, Capitanio, F, Celotti, A, Chen, Y, Colpi, M, Comastri, A, Cuby, J, Dadina, M, De Luca, A, Dong, Y, Ettori, S, Gandhi, P, Geza, E, Greiner, J, Guiriec, S, Harms, J, Hernanz, M, Hornstrup, A, Hutchinson, I, Israel, G, Jonker, P, Kaneko, Y, Kawai, N, Wiersema, K, Korpela, S, Lebrun, V, Lu, F, Macfadyen, A, Malaguti, G, Maraschi, L, Melandri, A, Modjaz, M, Morris, D, Omodei, N, Paizis, A, Páta, P, Petrosian, V, Rachevski, A, Rhoads, J, Ryde, F, Sabau-Graziati, L, Shigehiro, N, Sims, M, Soomin, J, Szécsi, D, Urata, Y, Uslenghi, M, Valenziano, L, Vianello, G, Vojtech, S, Watson, D, Zicha, J, Amati, L., O'Brien, P., Götz, D., Bozzo, E., Tenzer, C., Frontera, F., Ghirlanda, G., Labanti, C., Osborne, J. P., Stratta, G., Tanvir, N., Willingale, R., Attina, P., Campana, R., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Contini, C., Fuschino, F., Gomboc, A., Hudec, R., Orleanski, P., Renotte, E., Rodic, T., Bagoly, Z., Blain, A., Callanan, P., Covino, S., Ferrara, A., Le Floch, E., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Rosati, P., Vacchi, A., D'Avanzo, P., Giommi, P., Piranomonte, S., Piro, L., Reglero, V., Rossi, A., Santangelo, A., Salvaterra, R., Tagliaferri, G., Vergani, S., Vinciguerra, S., Briggs, M., Campolongo, E., Ciolfi, R., Connaughton, V., Cordier, B., Morelli, B., Orlandini, M., Adami, C., Argan, A., Atteia, J. -L., Auricchio, N., Balazs, L., Baldazzi, G., Basa, S., Basak, R., Bellutti, P., Bernardini, M. G., Bertuccio, G., Braga, J., Branchesi, M., Brandt, S., Brocato, E., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Bulgarelli, A., Burderi, L., Camp, J., Capozziello, S., Caruana, J., Casella, P., Cenko, B., Chardonnet, P., Ciardi, B., Colafrancesco, S., Dainotti, M. G., D'Elia, V., De Martino, D., De Pasquale, M., Del Monte, E., Della Valle, M., Drago, A., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Finelli, F., Fiorini, M., Fynbo, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gendre, B., Ghisellini, G., Grado, A., Guidorzi, C., Hafizi, M., Hanlon, L., Hjorth, J., Izzo, L., Kiss, L., Kumar, P., Kuvvetli, I., Lavagna, M., Li, T., Longo, F., Lyutikov, M., Maio, U., Maiorano, E., Malcovati, P., Malesani, D., Margutti, R., Martin-Carrillo, A., Masetti, N., McBreen, S., Mignani, R., Morgante, G., Mundell, C., Nargaard-Nielsen, H. U., Nicastro, L., Palazzi, E., Paltani, S., Panessa, F., Pareschi, G., Pe'er, A., Penacchioni, A. V., Pian, E., Piedipalumbo, E., Piran, T., Rauw, G., Razzano, M., Read, A., Rezzolla, L., Romano, P., Ruffini, R., Savaglio, S., Sguera, V., Schady, P., Skidmore, W., Song, L., Stanway, E., Starling, R., Topinka, M., Troja, E., van Putten, M., Vanzella, E., Vercellone, S., Wilson-Hodge, C., Yonetoku, D., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zhang, B., Zhang, B. B., Zhang, S., Zhang, S. -N., Antonelli, A., Bianco, F., Boci, S., Boer, M., Botticella, M. T., Boulade, O., Butler, C., Campana, S., Capitanio, F., Celotti, A., Chen, Y., Colpi, M., Comastri, A., Cuby, J. -G., Dadina, M., De Luca, A., Dong, Y. -W., Ettori, S., Gandhi, P., Geza, E., Greiner, J., Guiriec, S., Harms, J., Hernanz, M., Hornstrup, A., Hutchinson, I., Israel, G., Jonker, P., Kaneko, Y., Kawai, N., Wiersema, K., Korpela, S., Lebrun, V., Lu, F., MacFadyen, A., Malaguti, G., Maraschi, L., Melandri, A., Modjaz, M., Morris, D., Omodei, N., Paizis, A., Páta, P., Petrosian, V., Rachevski, A., Rhoads, J., Ryde, F., Sabau-Graziati, L., Shigehiro, N., Sims, M., Soomin, J., Szécsi, D., Urata, Y., Uslenghi, M., Valenziano, L., Vianello, G., Vojtech, S., Watson, D., Zicha, J., Amati, L, O'Brien, P, Götz, D, Bozzo, E, Tenzer, C, Frontera, F, Ghirlanda, G, Labanti, C, Osborne, J, Stratta, G, Tanvir, N, Willingale, R, Attina, P, Campana, R, Castro-Tirado, A, Contini, C, Fuschino, F, Gomboc, A, Hudec, R, Orleanski, P, Renotte, E, Rodic, T, Bagoly, Z, Blain, A, Callanan, P, Covino, S, Ferrara, A, Le Floch, E, Marisaldi, M, Mereghetti, S, Rosati, P, Vacchi, A, D'Avanzo, P, Giommi, P, Piranomonte, S, Piro, L, Reglero, V, Rossi, A, Santangelo, A, Salvaterra, R, Tagliaferri, G, Vergani, S, Vinciguerra, S, Briggs, M, Campolongo, E, Ciolfi, R, Connaughton, V, Cordier, B, Morelli, B, Orlandini, M, Adami, C, Argan, A, Atteia, J, Auricchio, N, Balazs, L, Baldazzi, G, Basa, S, Basak, R, Bellutti, P, Bernardini, M, Bertuccio, G, Braga, J, Branchesi, M, Brandt, S, Brocato, E, Budtz-Jorgensen, C, Bulgarelli, A, Burderi, L, Camp, J, Capozziello, S, Caruana, J, Casella, P, Cenko, B, Chardonnet, P, Ciardi, B, Colafrancesco, S, Dainotti, M, D'Elia, V, De Martino, D, De Pasquale, M, Del Monte, E, Della Valle, M, Drago, A, Evangelista, Y, Feroci, M, Finelli, F, Fiorini, M, Fynbo, J, Gal-Yam, A, Gendre, B, Ghisellini, G, Grado, A, Guidorzi, C, Hafizi, M, Hanlon, L, Hjorth, J, Izzo, L, Kiss, L, Kumar, P, Kuvvetli, I, Lavagna, M, Li, T, Longo, F, Lyutikov, M, Maio, U, Maiorano, E, Malcovati, P, Malesani, D, Margutti, R, Martin-Carrillo, A, Masetti, N, Mcbreen, S, Mignani, R, Morgante, G, Mundell, C, Nargaard-Nielsen, H, Nicastro, L, Palazzi, E, Paltani, S, Panessa, F, Pareschi, G, Pe'Er, A, Penacchioni, A, Pian, E, Piedipalumbo, E, Piran, T, Rauw, G, Razzano, M, Read, A, Rezzolla, L, Romano, P, Ruffini, R, Savaglio, S, Sguera, V, Schady, P, Skidmore, W, Song, L, Stanway, E, Starling, R, Topinka, M, Troja, E, van Putten, M, Vanzella, E, Vercellone, S, Wilson-Hodge, C, Yonetoku, D, Zampa, G, Zampa, N, Zhang, B, Zhang, S, Antonelli, A, Bianco, F, Boci, S, Boer, M, Botticella, M, Boulade, O, Butler, C, Campana, S, Capitanio, F, Celotti, A, Chen, Y, Colpi, M, Comastri, A, Cuby, J, Dadina, M, De Luca, A, Dong, Y, Ettori, S, Gandhi, P, Geza, E, Greiner, J, Guiriec, S, Harms, J, Hernanz, M, Hornstrup, A, Hutchinson, I, Israel, G, Jonker, P, Kaneko, Y, Kawai, N, Wiersema, K, Korpela, S, Lebrun, V, Lu, F, Macfadyen, A, Malaguti, G, Maraschi, L, Melandri, A, Modjaz, M, Morris, D, Omodei, N, Paizis, A, Páta, P, Petrosian, V, Rachevski, A, Rhoads, J, Ryde, F, Sabau-Graziati, L, Shigehiro, N, Sims, M, Soomin, J, Szécsi, D, Urata, Y, Uslenghi, M, Valenziano, L, Vianello, G, Vojtech, S, Watson, D, Zicha, J, Amati, L., O'Brien, P., Götz, D., Bozzo, E., Tenzer, C., Frontera, F., Ghirlanda, G., Labanti, C., Osborne, J. P., Stratta, G., Tanvir, N., Willingale, R., Attina, P., Campana, R., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Contini, C., Fuschino, F., Gomboc, A., Hudec, R., Orleanski, P., Renotte, E., Rodic, T., Bagoly, Z., Blain, A., Callanan, P., Covino, S., Ferrara, A., Le Floch, E., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Rosati, P., Vacchi, A., D'Avanzo, P., Giommi, P., Piranomonte, S., Piro, L., Reglero, V., Rossi, A., Santangelo, A., Salvaterra, R., Tagliaferri, G., Vergani, S., Vinciguerra, S., Briggs, M., Campolongo, E., Ciolfi, R., Connaughton, V., Cordier, B., Morelli, B., Orlandini, M., Adami, C., Argan, A., Atteia, J. -L., Auricchio, N., Balazs, L., Baldazzi, G., Basa, S., Basak, R., Bellutti, P., Bernardini, M. G., Bertuccio, G., Braga, J., Branchesi, M., Brandt, S., Brocato, E., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Bulgarelli, A., Burderi, L., Camp, J., Capozziello, S., Caruana, J., Casella, P., Cenko, B., Chardonnet, P., Ciardi, B., Colafrancesco, S., Dainotti, M. G., D'Elia, V., De Martino, D., De Pasquale, M., Del Monte, E., Della Valle, M., Drago, A., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Finelli, F., Fiorini, M., Fynbo, J., Gal-Yam, A., Gendre, B., Ghisellini, G., Grado, A., Guidorzi, C., Hafizi, M., Hanlon, L., Hjorth, J., Izzo, L., Kiss, L., Kumar, P., Kuvvetli, I., Lavagna, M., Li, T., Longo, F., Lyutikov, M., Maio, U., Maiorano, E., Malcovati, P., Malesani, D., Margutti, R., Martin-Carrillo, A., Masetti, N., McBreen, S., Mignani, R., Morgante, G., Mundell, C., Nargaard-Nielsen, H. U., Nicastro, L., Palazzi, E., Paltani, S., Panessa, F., Pareschi, G., Pe'er, A., Penacchioni, A. V., Pian, E., Piedipalumbo, E., Piran, T., Rauw, G., Razzano, M., Read, A., Rezzolla, L., Romano, P., Ruffini, R., Savaglio, S., Sguera, V., Schady, P., Skidmore, W., Song, L., Stanway, E., Starling, R., Topinka, M., Troja, E., van Putten, M., Vanzella, E., Vercellone, S., Wilson-Hodge, C., Yonetoku, D., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zhang, B., Zhang, B. B., Zhang, S., Zhang, S. -N., Antonelli, A., Bianco, F., Boci, S., Boer, M., Botticella, M. T., Boulade, O., Butler, C., Campana, S., Capitanio, F., Celotti, A., Chen, Y., Colpi, M., Comastri, A., Cuby, J. -G., Dadina, M., De Luca, A., Dong, Y. -W., Ettori, S., Gandhi, P., Geza, E., Greiner, J., Guiriec, S., Harms, J., Hernanz, M., Hornstrup, A., Hutchinson, I., Israel, G., Jonker, P., Kaneko, Y., Kawai, N., Wiersema, K., Korpela, S., Lebrun, V., Lu, F., MacFadyen, A., Malaguti, G., Maraschi, L., Melandri, A., Modjaz, M., Morris, D., Omodei, N., Paizis, A., Páta, P., Petrosian, V., Rachevski, A., Rhoads, J., Ryde, F., Sabau-Graziati, L., Shigehiro, N., Sims, M., Soomin, J., Szécsi, D., Urata, Y., Uslenghi, M., Valenziano, L., Vianello, G., Vojtech, S., Watson, D., and Zicha, J.
- Abstract
THESEUS is a space mission concept aimed at exploiting Gamma-Ray Bursts for investigating the early Universe and at providing a substantial advancement of multi-messenger and time-domain astrophysics. These goals will be achieved through a unique combination of instruments allowing GRB and X-ray transient detection over a broad field of view (more than 1sr) with 0.5–1 arcmin localization, an energy band extending from several MeV down to 0.3 keV and high sensitivity to transient sources in the soft X-ray domain, as well as on-board prompt (few minutes) follow-up with a 0.7 m class IR telescope with both imaging and spectroscopic capabilities. THESEUS will be perfectly suited for addressing the main open issues in cosmology such as, e.g., star formation rate and metallicity evolution of the inter-stellar and intra-galactic medium up to redshift ∼10, signatures of Pop III stars, sources and physics of re-ionization, and the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function. In addition, it will provide unprecedented capability to monitor the X-ray variable sky, thus detecting, localizing, and identifying the electromagnetic counterparts to sources of gravitational radiation, which may be routinely detected in the late ’20s/early ’30s by next generation facilities like aLIGO/ aVirgo, eLISA, KAGRA, and Einstein Telescope. THESEUS will also provide powerful synergies with the next generation of multi-wavelength observatories (e.g., LSST, ELT, SKA, CTA, ATHENA).
- Published
- 2018
37. Attachment and child behaviour and emotional problems in autism spectrum disorder with intellectual disability
- Author
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Teague SJ, Newman LK, Tonge BJ, Gray KM, Aery A, Andersson E, Arciuli J, Arora S, Bezzina L, Blackmore R, Borland R, Caruana J, Cawood D, Clarke K, Day J, Dossetor D, Einfeld S, Emerson E, Evans H, Fernandez A, Goodall S, Haas K, Henderson K, Henry T, Hinton S, Hoath F, Hodges J, Horstead S, Howlin P, Hu N, Keating C, Kelly E, Knott R, Kotselas P, Louie E, McAuliffe Z, O’Hagan G, Panahi B, Phillis K, Rice L, Rose O, Rotolone C, Salvador-Carulla L, Sanders M, Schoch M, Shortt F, Silove N, Sofronoff K, Stace L, Taffe J, Thompson DM, Viney R, Wallman E, Teague SJ, Newman LK, Tonge BJ, Gray KM, Aery A, Andersson E, Arciuli J, Arora S, Bezzina L, Blackmore R, Borland R, Caruana J, Cawood D, Clarke K, Day J, Dossetor D, Einfeld S, Emerson E, Evans H, Fernandez A, Goodall S, Haas K, Henderson K, Henry T, Hinton S, Hoath F, Hodges J, Horstead S, Howlin P, Hu N, Keating C, Kelly E, Knott R, Kotselas P, Louie E, McAuliffe Z, O’Hagan G, Panahi B, Phillis K, Rice L, Rose O, Rotolone C, Salvador-Carulla L, Sanders M, Schoch M, Shortt F, Silove N, Sofronoff K, Stace L, Taffe J, Thompson DM, Viney R, and Wallman E
- Abstract
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Background: Behaviour and emotional problems are highly prevalent in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In typically developing children, attachment quality acts as a risk/protective factor for behavioural outcomes and adjustment, warranting investigation in children with ASD. Method: We investigated the relationship between attachment and child behaviour and emotional problems in children with ASD and comorbid intellectual disability. Data were collected from parent–child dyads where children were diagnosed with ASD and ID (n = 28) or other developmental disabilities (n = 20). Results: Children with ASD had higher levels of behaviour and emotional problems and more attachment difficulties than children with other developmental disabilities. Poorer attachment quality contributed uniquely to the variance in child behaviour and emotional problems. Conclusions: Interventions targeting behaviour and emotional problems in children with ASD may benefit from an attachment model which addresses the child's difficulty in using caregivers as a coregulatory agent of emotions.
- Published
- 2020
38. Sheltering megalithic Temples in Malta – evaluating the process through data collection and modelling
- Author
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Valantinavicius, M, primary, Micallef, D, additional, Cassar, J, additional, Caruana, J, additional, and Ciantelli, C, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A special school based initiative for improving mental health outcomes of children and adolescents with ID
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Dossetor, D., Caruana, J. A., Saleh, H., and Goltzoff, H.
- Published
- 2010
40. DOES CEMENT MANTLE THICKNESS REALLY MATTER AROUND SMOOTH, COLLARED STEMS?
- Author
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Caruana, J, Janssen, D, Verdonschot, N, Hua, J, and Blunn, G W
- Published
- 2009
41. Attachment and child behaviour and emotional problems in autism spectrum disorder with intellectual disability
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Teague SJ, Newman LK, Tonge BJ, Gray KM, Aery A, Andersson E, Arciuli J, Arora S, Bezzina L, Blackmore R, Borland R, Caruana J, Cawood D, Clarke K, Day J, Dossetor D, Einfeld S, Emerson E, Evans H, Fernandez A, Goodall S, Haas K, Henderson K, Henry T, Hinton S, Hoath F, Hodges J, Horstead S, Howlin P, Hu N, Keating C, Kelly E, Knott R, Kotselas P, Louie E, McAuliffe Z, O’Hagan G, Panahi B, Phillis K, Rice L, Rose O, Rotolone C, Salvador-Carulla L, Sanders M, Schoch M, Shortt F, Silove N, Sofronoff K, Stace L, Taffe J, Thompson DM, Viney R, and Wallman E
- Subjects
Male ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Developmental Disabilities ,Rehabilitation ,Child Behavior ,Comorbidity ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Object Attachment ,Child, Preschool ,Intellectual Disability ,mental disorders ,Humans ,1607 Social Work, 1701 Psychology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences ,Female ,Affective Symptoms ,Child - Abstract
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Background: Behaviour and emotional problems are highly prevalent in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In typically developing children, attachment quality acts as a risk/protective factor for behavioural outcomes and adjustment, warranting investigation in children with ASD. Method: We investigated the relationship between attachment and child behaviour and emotional problems in children with ASD and comorbid intellectual disability. Data were collected from parent–child dyads where children were diagnosed with ASD and ID (n = 28) or other developmental disabilities (n = 20). Results: Children with ASD had higher levels of behaviour and emotional problems and more attachment difficulties than children with other developmental disabilities. Poorer attachment quality contributed uniquely to the variance in child behaviour and emotional problems. Conclusions: Interventions targeting behaviour and emotional problems in children with ASD may benefit from an attachment model which addresses the child's difficulty in using caregivers as a coregulatory agent of emotions.
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- 2019
42. Anterior or posterior: does the surgical approach to the hip influence the quality of the femoral cement mantle?
- Author
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SANGHRAJKA, A. P., WHITTINGHAM-JONES, P. M., HIGGS, D., CARUANA, J., BLUNN, G., and BRIGGS, T. W.R.
- Published
- 2006
43. The MUSE-Wide Survey : survey description and first data release
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Urrutia, T., Wisotzki, L., Kerutt, J., Schmidt, K. B., Herenz, Edmund Christian, Klar, J., Saust, R., Werhahn, M., Diener, C., Caruana, J., Krajnovic, D., Bacon, R., Boogaard, L., Brinchmann, J., Enke, H., Maseda, M., Nanayakkara, T., Richard, J., Steinmetz, M., Weilbacher, P. M., Urrutia, T., Wisotzki, L., Kerutt, J., Schmidt, K. B., Herenz, Edmund Christian, Klar, J., Saust, R., Werhahn, M., Diener, C., Caruana, J., Krajnovic, D., Bacon, R., Boogaard, L., Brinchmann, J., Enke, H., Maseda, M., Nanayakkara, T., Richard, J., Steinmetz, M., and Weilbacher, P. M.
- Abstract
We present the MUSE-Wide survey, a blind, 3D spectroscopic survey in the CANDELS/GOODS-S and CANDELS/COSMOS regions. The final survey will cover 100 x 1 arcmin(2) MUSE fields. Each MUSE-Wide pointing has a depth of one hour and hence targets more extreme and more luminous objects over ten times the area of the MUSE-Deep fields. The legacy value of MUSE-Wide lies in providing spectroscopy of everything without photometric pre-selection. We describe the data reduction, post-processing and PSF characterization of the first 44 CANDELS /GOODS-S MUSE-Wide pointings released with this publication. Using a 3D matched filtering approach we detect 1602 emission line sources, including 479 Lyman-alpha (Ly alpha) emitting galaxies with redshifts 2.9 less than or similar to z less than or similar to 6.3. We cross-matched the emission line sources to existing photometric catalogs, finding almost complete agreement in redshifts (photometric and spectroscopic) and stellar masses for our low redshift (z < 1.5) emitters. At high redshift, we only find similar to 55% matches to photometric catalogs. We encounter a higher outlier rate and a systematic offset of Delta z similar or equal to 0.2 when comparing our MUSE redshifts with photometric redshifts from the literature. Cross-matching the emission line sources with X-ray catalogs from the Chandra Deep Field South, we find 127 matches, mostly in agreement with the literature redshifts, including ten objects with no prior spectroscopic identification. Stacking X-ray images centered on our Ly alpha emitters yields no signal; the Ly alpha population is not dominated by even low luminosity AGN. Other cross-matches of our emission-line catalog to radio and submillimeter data, yielded far lower numbers of matches, most of which already were covered by the X-ray catalog. A total of 9205 photometrically selected objects from the CANDELS survey lie in the MUSE-Wide footprint, of which we provide optimally extracted 1D spectra. We are able
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Role of Budgetary Rules in Multi-Level Governments
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Caruana, J, Brusca, I, Caperchione, E, Cohen, S, Manes Rossi, F, Guarini, E, Pattaro, A, Pattaro, AF, Caruana, J, Brusca, I, Caperchione, E, Cohen, S, Manes Rossi, F, Guarini, E, Pattaro, A, and Pattaro, AF
- Abstract
In the last decade, especially after the fiscal crisis, policymakers at the supranational and national levels have increased their concern regarding the financial sustainability of public finances and have tightened the control of government deficits by setting permanent financial constraints on government budgets—that is, budgetary rules. The use of budgetary rules in government has been mainly investigated through the lens of public finance and economic theory, while the accounting perspective seems to have been quite neglected. Accounting rules and procedures are critical for the effective functioning of budgetary rules, as they define what has to be measured and lay out a framework for assessing progress and achievement. This chapter aims to start filling this gap by shedding light on the role of budgetary rules in ensuring the financial sustainability of public entities in the context of a multi-level government system.
- Published
- 2019
45. The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey: X. Ly α equivalent widths at 2.9 < z < 6.6
- Author
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Hashimoto T., Garel T., Guiderdoni B., Drake A. B., Bacon R., Blaizot J., Richard J., Leclercq F., Inami H., Verhamme A., Bouwens R., Brinchmann J., Cantalupo S., Carollo M., Caruana J., Herenz E. C., Kerutt J., Marino R. A., Mitchell P., Schaye J., Hashimoto, T, Garel, T, Guiderdoni, B, Drake, A, Bacon, R, Blaizot, J, Richard, J, Leclercq, F, Inami, H, Verhamme, A, Bouwens, R, Brinchmann, J, Cantalupo, S, Carollo, M, Caruana, J, Herenz, E, Kerutt, J, Marino, R, Mitchell, P, and Schaye, J
- Subjects
Galaxy: formation ,Galaxies: high-redshift ,Galaxies: evolution ,Early Universe - Abstract
We present rest-frame Lyα equivalent widths (EW0) of 417 Lyα emitters (LAEs) detected with Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) at 2.9 < 6.6 in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. Based on the deep MUSE spectroscopy and ancillary Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry data, we carefully measured EW0 values taking into account extended Lyα emission and UV continuum slopes (β). Our LAEs reach unprecedented depths, both in Lyα luminosities and UV absolute magnitudes, from log (LLyα/erg s-1) 41.0 to 43.0 and from MUV -16 to -21 (0.01-1.0 L∗z=3). The EW0 values span the range of 5 to 240 Å or larger, and their distribution can be well fitted by an exponential law N = N0 exp(-EW0/w0). Owing to the high dynamic range in MUV, we find that the scale factor, w0, depends on MUV in the sense that including fainter MUV objects increases w0, i.e., the Ando effect. The results indicate that selection functions affect the EW0 scale factor. Taking these effects into account, we find that our w0 values are consistent with those in the literature within 1σ uncertainties at 2.9 < z < 6.6 at a given threshold of MUV and LLyα. Interestingly, we find 12 objects with EW0> 200 Å above 1σ uncertainties. Two of these 12 LAEs show signatures of merger or AGN activity: the weak Civλ1549 emission line. For the remaining 10 very large EW0 LAEs, we find that the EW0 values can be reproduced by young stellar ages (< 100 Myr) and low metallicities (0.02 Z). Otherwise, at least part of the Lyα emission in these LAEs needs to arise from anisotropic radiative transfer effects, fluorescence by hidden AGN or quasi-stellar object activity, or gravitational cooling.
- Published
- 2017
46. Caregiver Mental Health, Parenting Practices, and Perceptions of Child Attachment in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
- Author
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Teague, SJ, Newman, LK, Tonge, BJ, Gray, KM, Aery, A, Andersson, E, Arciuli, J, Arora, S, Bezzina, L, Blackmore, R, Borland, R, Caruana, J, Cawood, D, Clarke, K, Day, J, Dossetor, D, Einfeld, S, Emerson, E, Evans, H, Fernandez, A, Goodall, S, Haas, K, Henderson, K, Henry, T, Hinton, S, Hoath, F, Hodges, J, Horstead, S, Howlin, P, Hu, N, Keating, C, Kelly, E, Knott, R, Kotselas, P, Louie, E, McAuliffe, Z, O’Hagan, G, Panahi, B, Phillis, K, Rose, O, Rotolone, C, Salvador-Carulla, L, Sanders, M, Schoch, M, Shortt, F, Silove, N, Sofronoff, K, Stace, L, Taffe, J, Thompson, DM, Wallman, E, and Viney, R
- Subjects
Parents ,Male ,Parenting ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Developmental Disabilities ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Anxiety ,Object Attachment ,Caregivers ,Child, Preschool ,Intellectual Disability ,Humans ,Perception ,Female ,Child - Abstract
© 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. This paper investigates the role of caregiver mental health and parenting practices as predictors of attachment in children with intellectual disability/developmental delay, comparing between children with ASD (n = 29) and children with other developmental disabilities (n = 20). Parents reported that children with ASD had high levels of anxiety and stress, and attachment insecurity in children (less closeness and more conflict in attachment relationships, and more inhibited attachment behaviours) compared with children with other developmental disabilities. Children’s attachment quality was associated with parenting practices and the presence of an ASD diagnosis. These results highlight the bidirectional nature of the quality of caregiving environments and attachment in children with ASD, and also provide a strong rationale for targeting children’s attachment quality in early interventions.
- Published
- 2018
47. The MUSE-Wide Survey: survey description and first data release
- Author
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Urrutia, T., primary, Wisotzki, L., additional, Kerutt, J., additional, Schmidt, K. B., additional, Herenz, E. C., additional, Klar, J., additional, Saust, R., additional, Werhahn, M., additional, Diener, C., additional, Caruana, J., additional, Krajnović, D., additional, Bacon, R., additional, Boogaard, L., additional, Brinchmann, J., additional, Enke, H., additional, Maseda, M., additional, Nanayakkara, T., additional, Richard, J., additional, Steinmetz, M., additional, and Weilbacher, P. M., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Delivering engine demonstrators for competitive evolutions of the european launchers
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Caruana, J.-N., primary, De Rosa, M., additional, Kachler, T., additional, Schoroth, W., additional, and Underhill, K., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Chapter 4 - Asthma in Obesity and Diabetes: Novel Mechanisms and Effects of Bariatric Surgery
- Author
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Dandona, P., Ghanim, H., Monte, S., and Caruana, J.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Caregiver Mental Health, Parenting Practices, and Perceptions of Child Attachment in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
- Author
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Shortt F., Sofronoff K., Stace L., Taffe J., Thompson D.-M., Wallman E., Viney R., Knott R., Kotselas P., Louie E., McAuliffe Z., O'Hagan G., Panahi B., Phillis K., Rice L., Rotolone C., Salvador-Carulla L., Sanders M., Schoch M., Silove N., Teague S., Newman L.K., Tonge B., Gray K., Aery A., Andersson E., Arciuli J., Arora S., Bezzina L., Blackmore R., Borland R., Caruana J., Cawood D., Clarke K., Day J., Dossetor D., Einfeld S., Emerson E., Evans H., Fernandez A., Goodall S., Haas K., Henderson K., Henry T., Hinton S., Hoath F., Hodges J., Horstead S., Howlin P., Hu N., Keating C., Kelly E., Shortt F., Sofronoff K., Stace L., Taffe J., Thompson D.-M., Wallman E., Viney R., Knott R., Kotselas P., Louie E., McAuliffe Z., O'Hagan G., Panahi B., Phillis K., Rice L., Rotolone C., Salvador-Carulla L., Sanders M., Schoch M., Silove N., Teague S., Newman L.K., Tonge B., Gray K., Aery A., Andersson E., Arciuli J., Arora S., Bezzina L., Blackmore R., Borland R., Caruana J., Cawood D., Clarke K., Day J., Dossetor D., Einfeld S., Emerson E., Evans H., Fernandez A., Goodall S., Haas K., Henderson K., Henry T., Hinton S., Hoath F., Hodges J., Horstead S., Howlin P., Hu N., Keating C., and Kelly E.
- Abstract
This paper investigates the role of caregiver mental health and parenting practices as predictors of attachment in children with intellectual disability/developmental delay, comparing between children with ASD (n = 29) and children with other developmental disabilities (n = 20). Parents reported that children with ASD had high levels of anxiety and stress, and attachment insecurity in children (less closeness and more conflict in attachment relationships, and more inhibited attachment behaviours) compared with children with other developmental disabilities. Children's attachment quality was associated with parenting practices and the presence of an ASD diagnosis. These results highlight the bidirectional nature of the quality of caregiving environments and attachment in children with ASD, and also provide a strong rationale for targeting children's attachment quality in early interventions.Copyright © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
- Published
- 2018
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