45 results on '"Dalla Vecchia C"'
Search Results
2. Cosmic gas highways in C-EAGLE simulations
- Author
-
Vurm, I., primary, Nevalainen, J., additional, Hong, S. E., additional, Bahé, Y. M., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, and Heinämäki, P., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The eagle simulations of galaxy formation: Public release of halo and galaxy catalogues
- Author
-
McAlpine, S., Helly, J.C., Schaller, M., Trayford, J.W., Qu, Y., Furlong, M., Bower, R.G., Crain, R.A., Schaye, J., Theuns, T., Dalla Vecchia, C., Frenk, C.S., McCarthy, I.G., Jenkins, A., Rosas-Guevara, Y., White, S.D.M., Baes, M., Camps, P., and Lemson, G.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Psychological distress and trauma during the COVID-19 pandemic: survey of doctors practising anaesthesia, intensive care medicine, and emergency medicine in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland
- Author
-
Kane, L., Mackenzie, L., Sharma Hajela, S., Phizacklea, J., Malik, K., Mathai, N., Sattout, A., Messahel, S., Fadden, E., McQuillan, R., O'Hare, B., Lewis, S., Bewick, D., Taylor, R., Hancock, I., Manthalapo Ramesh Babu, D., Hartshorn, S., Williams, M., Charlton, A., Somerset, L., Munday, C., Turner, A., Sainsbury, R., Williams, E., Patil, S., Stewart, R., Winstanley, M., Tambe, N., Magee, C., Raffo, D., Mawhinney, D., Taylor, B., Hussan, T., Pells, G., Barham, F., Wood, F., Szekeres, C., Greenhalgh, R., Marimuthu, S., Macfarlane, R., Alex, M., Shrestha, B., Stanley, L., Gumley, J., Thomas, K., Anderson, M., Weegenaar, C., Lockwood, J., Mohamed, T., Ramraj, S., Mackenzie, M., Robertson, A., Niven, W., Patel, M., Subramaniam, S., Holmes, C., Bongale, S., Bait, U., Nagendran, S., Rao, S., Mendes, F., Singh, P., Baron, T., Ponmani, C., Depante, M., Sneep, R., Brookes, A., Williams, S., Rainey, A., Brown, J., Marriage, N., Manou, S., Hart, S., Elsheikh, M., Cocker, L., Elwan, M.H., Vincent, K.L., Nunn, C., Sarja, N., Viegas, M., Wooffinden, E., Reynard, C., Cherian, N., Da-Costa, A., Duckitt, S., Bailey, J., How, L., Hine, T., Ihsan, F., Abdullah, H., Bader, K., Pradhan, S., Manoharan, M., Kehler, L., Muswell, R., Bonsano, M., Evans, J., Christmas, E., Knight, K., O'Rourke, L., Adeboye, K., Iftikhar, K., Evans, R., Darke, R., Freeman, R., Grocholski, E., Kaur, K., Cooper, H., Mohammad, M., Harwood, L., Lines, K., Thomas, C., Ranasinghe, D., Hall, S., Wright, J., Ali, N., Hunt, J., Ahmad, H., Ward, C., Khan, M., Holzman, K., Ritchie, J., Hormis, A., Hannah, R., Corfield, A., Maney, J., Metcalfe, D., Timmis, S., Williams, C., Newport, R., Bawden, D., Tabner, A., Malik, H., Roe, C., McConnell, D., Taylor, F., Ellis, R., Morgan, S., Barnicott, L., Foster, S., Browning, J., McCrae, L., Godden, E., Saunders, A., Lawrence-Ball, A., House, R., Muller, J., Skene, I., Lim, M., Millar, H., Rai, A., Challen, K., Currie, S., Elkanzi, M., Perry, T., Kan, W., Brown, L., Cheema, M., Clarey, A., Gulati, A., Webster, K., Howson, A., Doonan, R., Trimble, A., O’Connell, C., Wright, R., Colley, E., Rimmer, C., Pintus, S., Jarman, H., Worsnop, V., Collins, S., Colmar, M., Masood, N., McLatchie, R., Peasley, A., Rahman, S., Mullen, N., Armstrong, L., Hay, A., Mills, R., Lowe, J., Raybould, H., Ali, A., Cuthbert, P., Taylor, S., Talwar, V., Al-Janabi, Z., Leech, C., Turner, J., McKechnie, L., Mallon, B., McLaren, J., Moulds, Y., Dunlop, L., Burton, F.M., Keers, S., Robertson, L., Craver, D., Moultrie, N., Williams, O., Purvis, S., Clark, M., Davies, C., Foreman, S., Ngua, C., Morgan, J., Hoskins, N., Fryer, J., Frost, L., Ellis, P., Mackay, A., Gray, K., Jacobs, M., Musliam Veettil Asif, I., Amiri, P., Shrivastava, S., Raza, F., Wilson, S., Riyat, M., Knott, H., Ramazany, M., Langston, S., Abela, N., Robinson, L., Maasdorp, D., Murphy, H., Edmundson, H., Das, R., Orjioke, C., Worley, D., Collier, W., Everson, J., Maleki, N., Stafford, A., Gokani, S., Charalambos, M., Olajide, A., Bi, C., Ng, J., Naeem, S., Hill, A., Boulind, C., O'Sullivan, R., Gilmartin, S., Uí Bhroin, S., Fitzpatrick, P., Patton, A., Jee Poh Hock, M., Graham, S., Kukaswadia, S., Prendergast, C., Ahmed, A., Dalla Vecchia, C., Lynch, J., Grummell, M., Grossi, I., MacManus, B., Turton, P., Battle, C., Samuel, K., Boyle, A., Waite, A., George, D., Johnston, B., Anandarajah, J., Vinagre, J., Roberts, Tom, Hirst, Robert, Sammut-Powell, Camilla, Reynard, Charles, Daniels, Jo, Horner, Daniel, Lyttle, Mark D., Samuel, Katie, Graham, Blair, Barrett, Michael J., Foley, James, Cronin, John, Umana, Etimbuk, Vinagre, Joao, and Carlton, Edward
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Psychological distress and trauma during the COVID-19 pandemic: survey of doctors practising anaesthesia, intensive care medicine, and emergency medicine in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland
- Author
-
Roberts, Tom, primary, Hirst, Robert, additional, Sammut-Powell, Camilla, additional, Reynard, Charles, additional, Daniels, Jo, additional, Horner, Daniel, additional, Lyttle, Mark D., additional, Samuel, Katie, additional, Graham, Blair, additional, Barrett, Michael J., additional, Foley, James, additional, Cronin, John, additional, Umana, Etimbuk, additional, Vinagre, Joao, additional, Carlton, Edward, additional, Kane, L., additional, Mackenzie, L., additional, Sharma Hajela, S., additional, Phizacklea, J., additional, Malik, K., additional, Mathai, N., additional, Sattout, A., additional, Messahel, S., additional, Fadden, E., additional, McQuillan, R., additional, O'Hare, B., additional, Lewis, S., additional, Bewick, D., additional, Taylor, R., additional, Hancock, I., additional, Manthalapo Ramesh Babu, D., additional, Hartshorn, S., additional, Williams, M., additional, Charlton, A., additional, Somerset, L., additional, Munday, C., additional, Turner, A., additional, Sainsbury, R., additional, Williams, E., additional, Patil, S., additional, Stewart, R., additional, Winstanley, M., additional, Tambe, N., additional, Magee, C., additional, Raffo, D., additional, Mawhinney, D., additional, Taylor, B., additional, Hussan, T., additional, Pells, G., additional, Barham, F., additional, Wood, F., additional, Szekeres, C., additional, Greenhalgh, R., additional, Marimuthu, S., additional, Macfarlane, R., additional, Alex, M., additional, Shrestha, B., additional, Stanley, L., additional, Gumley, J., additional, Thomas, K., additional, Anderson, M., additional, Weegenaar, C., additional, Lockwood, J., additional, Mohamed, T., additional, Ramraj, S., additional, Mackenzie, M., additional, Robertson, A., additional, Niven, W., additional, Patel, M., additional, Subramaniam, S., additional, Holmes, C., additional, Bongale, S., additional, Bait, U., additional, Nagendran, S., additional, Rao, S., additional, Mendes, F., additional, Singh, P., additional, Baron, T., additional, Ponmani, C., additional, Depante, M., additional, Sneep, R., additional, Brookes, A., additional, Williams, S., additional, Rainey, A., additional, Brown, J., additional, Marriage, N., additional, Manou, S., additional, Hart, S., additional, Elsheikh, M., additional, Cocker, L., additional, Elwan, M.H., additional, Vincent, K.L., additional, Nunn, C., additional, Sarja, N., additional, Viegas, M., additional, Wooffinden, E., additional, Reynard, C., additional, Cherian, N., additional, Da-Costa, A., additional, Duckitt, S., additional, Bailey, J., additional, How, L., additional, Hine, T., additional, Ihsan, F., additional, Abdullah, H., additional, Bader, K., additional, Pradhan, S., additional, Manoharan, M., additional, Kehler, L., additional, Muswell, R., additional, Bonsano, M., additional, Evans, J., additional, Christmas, E., additional, Knight, K., additional, O'Rourke, L., additional, Adeboye, K., additional, Iftikhar, K., additional, Evans, R., additional, Darke, R., additional, Freeman, R., additional, Grocholski, E., additional, Kaur, K., additional, Cooper, H., additional, Mohammad, M., additional, Harwood, L., additional, Lines, K., additional, Thomas, C., additional, Ranasinghe, D., additional, Hall, S., additional, Wright, J., additional, Ali, N., additional, Hunt, J., additional, Ahmad, H., additional, Ward, C., additional, Khan, M., additional, Holzman, K., additional, Ritchie, J., additional, Hormis, A., additional, Hannah, R., additional, Corfield, A., additional, Maney, J., additional, Metcalfe, D., additional, Timmis, S., additional, Williams, C., additional, Newport, R., additional, Bawden, D., additional, Tabner, A., additional, Malik, H., additional, Roe, C., additional, McConnell, D., additional, Taylor, F., additional, Ellis, R., additional, Morgan, S., additional, Barnicott, L., additional, Foster, S., additional, Browning, J., additional, McCrae, L., additional, Godden, E., additional, Saunders, A., additional, Lawrence-Ball, A., additional, House, R., additional, Muller, J., additional, Skene, I., additional, Lim, M., additional, Millar, H., additional, Rai, A., additional, Challen, K., additional, Currie, S., additional, Elkanzi, M., additional, Perry, T., additional, Kan, W., additional, Brown, L., additional, Cheema, M., additional, Clarey, A., additional, Gulati, A., additional, Webster, K., additional, Howson, A., additional, Doonan, R., additional, Trimble, A., additional, O’Connell, C., additional, Wright, R., additional, Colley, E., additional, Rimmer, C., additional, Pintus, S., additional, Jarman, H., additional, Worsnop, V., additional, Collins, S., additional, Colmar, M., additional, Masood, N., additional, McLatchie, R., additional, Peasley, A., additional, Rahman, S., additional, Mullen, N., additional, Armstrong, L., additional, Hay, A., additional, Mills, R., additional, Lowe, J., additional, Raybould, H., additional, Ali, A., additional, Cuthbert, P., additional, Taylor, S., additional, Talwar, V., additional, Al-Janabi, Z., additional, Leech, C., additional, Turner, J., additional, McKechnie, L., additional, Mallon, B., additional, McLaren, J., additional, Moulds, Y., additional, Dunlop, L., additional, Burton, F.M., additional, Keers, S., additional, Robertson, L., additional, Craver, D., additional, Moultrie, N., additional, Williams, O., additional, Purvis, S., additional, Clark, M., additional, Davies, C., additional, Foreman, S., additional, Ngua, C., additional, Morgan, J., additional, Hoskins, N., additional, Fryer, J., additional, Frost, L., additional, Ellis, P., additional, Mackay, A., additional, Gray, K., additional, Jacobs, M., additional, Musliam Veettil Asif, I., additional, Amiri, P., additional, Shrivastava, S., additional, Raza, F., additional, Wilson, S., additional, Riyat, M., additional, Knott, H., additional, Ramazany, M., additional, Langston, S., additional, Abela, N., additional, Robinson, L., additional, Maasdorp, D., additional, Murphy, H., additional, Edmundson, H., additional, Das, R., additional, Orjioke, C., additional, Worley, D., additional, Collier, W., additional, Everson, J., additional, Maleki, N., additional, Stafford, A., additional, Gokani, S., additional, Charalambos, M., additional, Olajide, A., additional, Bi, C., additional, Ng, J., additional, Naeem, S., additional, Hill, A., additional, Boulind, C., additional, O'Sullivan, R., additional, Gilmartin, S., additional, Uí Bhroin, S., additional, Fitzpatrick, P., additional, Patton, A., additional, Jee Poh Hock, M., additional, Graham, S., additional, Kukaswadia, S., additional, Prendergast, C., additional, Ahmed, A., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, Lynch, J., additional, Grummell, M., additional, Grossi, I., additional, MacManus, B., additional, Turton, P., additional, Battle, C., additional, Samuel, K., additional, Boyle, A., additional, Waite, A., additional, George, D., additional, Johnston, B., additional, Anandarajah, J., additional, and Vinagre, J., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Merging Spectral and Phylogenetic Diversity to Assess Macrophyte Traits and Functions Along Ecological Gradients
- Author
-
Paolo Villa a, Andrea Coppi b, Rossano Bolpagni c, Maria Beatrice Castellani b, Alice Dalla Vecchia c, and Lorenzo Lastrucci d
- Subjects
remote sensing ,aquatic ecology ,phylogenetic diversity ,functional traits ,macrophytes ,biodiversity - Abstract
As littoral and riparian environments are in decline and survival of many aquatic plants is threatened by anthropic activities all over the globe, the conservation of macrophyte diversity should be considered a priority, because of their key role in freshwater ecosystems. High-throughput techniques, such as remote sensing spectroscopy, genetics and phylogenetics, have been explored in the last decade to support and enhance operational diversity monitoring. These techniques have opened new ways of measuring biodiversity, especially in forest and grassland systems, but a sound link between spectral and phylogenetic features with plant functional characteristics has yet to be established. The idea behind macroDIVERSITY, a new national project, funded by the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (2020-2023), is that phylogenetic and spectral diversity measures can be integrated into a multidimensional data-driven framework for mapping plant traits and functions across scales and gradients. To this objective, we will collect data on macrophyte traits, diversity, and spectral reflectance from plots sampled over selected lakes and wetlands in Italy, according to robust experimental design. A fully resolved supertree, obtained from DNA markers analysis integrating available data and new sequencing, will be used for assessing the evolutionary diversity of the species assemblage, highlighting the phylogenetic signal in the context of the community traits information. Hyperspectral imaging data acquired from proximal platforms and airborne drones at centimetre scale will be used for modelling bio-chemical and functional macrophyte traits (e.g. canopy morphology, productivity, pigments and nutrients content). Environmental parameters collected and diversity metrics derived will be eventually merged into a machine-learning framework for mapping macrophyte functional diversity (richness and divergence). The project outcomes are expected to impact on applied ecology studies focusing on delineating plant diversity using remote sensing data, and investigating the role played by species interactions and community complexity in regulating aquatic ecosystem quality.
- Published
- 2020
7. An evolutionary approach for the study of spatial diversity of freshwater macrophytes in Central and Northern Italy
- Author
-
Maria Beatrice Castellani b, Rossano Bolpagni c, Andrea Coppi b, Alice Dalla Vecchia c, Lorenzo Lastrucci d, and Paolo Villa a
- Subjects
Macrophytes ,Wetlands ,Phylogenetic diversity - Abstract
Over the past decades, several studies elucidated the effect of the loss of aquatic plant diversity in freshwater ecosystems. Several strategies and approaches for macrophytes diversity conservation have considered taxonomical or functional features, and only in the last years the evolutive dimension of plant communities was also considered [1]. Phylogenetic diversity (PD) dimension, reflecting the accumulation of genetic, phenotypic and phenological differences between evolutionary lineages, may have an important role in the biodiversity conservation. It reflects. Consequently, preserving sites with the greatest amount of phylogenetic variability will, in turn, preserve the greatest variation.in organismal features and, in some cases, functions [2]. Developing from 2020 and 2023, macroDIVERSITY project (PRIN 2017) aims at integrate spectral (SD) and phylogenetic (PD) diversity to map the functional diversity of freshwater macrophyte communities at different spatial scales and trophic gradients. Within the framework of macroDIVERSITY, , we will collect data on macrophyte diversity from plots sampled over selected lakes in Central and Northern Ital, based on robust experimental design. The PD of each plot will be quantified using the Faith's metric. The Net Relatedness index (NRI) and the Nearest Taxon Index (NTI) will also be used to quantify the degree of the community phylogenetic clustering/overdispersion among species within each plot [3]. Using the described approach, we aim to 1) delineate the evolutionary relationships within the wetland communities; 2) obtain PD metrics of each macrophyte community/ecosystem; 3) achieve a feedback on wetlands genetic sustainability of Central and Northern Italy.
- Published
- 2020
8. The discovery of the most UV-Ly alpha luminous star-forming galaxy:a young, dust- and metal-poor starburst with QSO-like luminosities
- Author
-
Marques-Chaves, R., Alvarez-Marquez, J., Colina, L., Perez-Fournon, I., Schaerer, D., Dalla Vecchia, C., Hashimoto, T., Jimenez-Angel, C., Shu, Y., Marques-Chaves, R., Alvarez-Marquez, J., Colina, L., Perez-Fournon, I., Schaerer, D., Dalla Vecchia, C., Hashimoto, T., Jimenez-Angel, C., and Shu, Y.
- Abstract
We report the discovery of BOSS-EUVLG1 at z = 2.469, by far the most luminous, almost un-obscured star-forming galaxy known at any redshift. First classified as a QSO within the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, follow-up observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias reveal that its large luminosity, M-UV similar or equal to -24.40 and log(L-Ly alpha/erg s(-1)) similar or equal to 44.0, is due to an intense burst of star formation, and not to an active galactic nucleus or gravitational lensing. BOSS-EUVLG1 is a compact (r(eff) similar or equal to 1.2 kpc), young (4-5 Myr) starburst with a stellar mass log(M-*/M-circle dot) = 10.0 +/- 0.1 and a prodigious star formation rate of similar or equal to 1000 M-circle dot yr(-1). However, it is metal- and dust-poor [12+ log(O/H) = 8.13 +/- 0.19, E(B - V) similar or equal to 0.07, log(L-IR/L-UV) <-1.2], indicating that we are witnessing the very early phase of an intense starburst that has had no time to enrich the ISM. BOSS-EUVLG1 might represent a short-lived (
- Published
- 2020
9. Evaluating hydrodynamical simulations with green valley galaxies
- Author
-
Angthopo, J, primary, Negri, A, additional, Ferreras, I, additional, de la Rosa, I G, additional, Dalla Vecchia, C, additional, and Pillepich, A, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The discovery of the most UV–Ly α luminous star-forming galaxy: a young, dust- and metal-poor starburst with QSO-like luminosities
- Author
-
Marques-Chaves, R, primary, Álvarez-Márquez, J, additional, Colina, L, additional, Pérez-Fournon, I, additional, Schaerer, D, additional, Dalla Vecchia, C, additional, Hashimoto, T, additional, Jiménez-Ángel, C, additional, and Shu, Y, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Kinematic analysis of eagle simulations: evolution of λRe and its connection with mergers and gas accretion
- Author
-
Walo-Martín, D, primary, Falcón-Barroso, J, additional, Dalla Vecchia, C, additional, Pérez, I, additional, and Negri, A, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Deep spectroscopy in nearby galaxy clusters – V. The Perseus cluster
- Author
-
Aguerri, J A L, primary, Girardi, M, primary, Agulli, I, primary, Negri, A, primary, Dalla Vecchia, C, primary, and Domínguez Palmero, L, primary
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. A case study of hurdle and generalized additive models in astronomy: the escape of ionizing radiation
- Author
-
Hattab, M W, primary, de Souza, R S, additional, Ciardi, B, additional, Paardekooper, J-P, additional, Khochfar, S, additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Evaluating hydrodynamical simulations with green valley galaxies.
- Author
-
Angthopo, J, Negri, A, Ferreras, I, de la Rosa, I G, Dalla Vecchia, C, and Pillepich, A
- Subjects
GALAXIES ,STELLAR mass ,GALAXY formation ,STAR formation ,ASTRONOMICAL surveys ,BLACK holes ,EARLY stars - Abstract
We test cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation regarding the properties of the blue cloud (BC), green valley (GV), and red sequence (RS), as measured on the 4000Å break strength versus stellar mass plane at z = 0.1. We analyse the RefL0100N1504 run of EAGLE and the TNG100 run of IllustrisTNG project, by comparing them with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), while taking into account selection bias. Our analysis focuses on the GV, within stellar mass |$\log \, \mathrm{{\it M}_\star /M_{\odot }} \simeq 10\!-\!11$| , selected from the bimodal distribution of galaxies on the D
n (4000) versus stellar mass plane, following Angthopo et al. methodology. Both simulations match the fraction of AGN in the GV. However, they overproduce quiescent GV galaxies with respect to observations, with IllustrisTNG yielding a higher fraction of quiescent GV galaxies than EAGLE. In both, GV galaxies have older luminosity-weighted ages with respect to the SDSS, while a better match is found for mass-weighted ages. We find EAGLE GV galaxies quench their star formation early, but undergo later episodes of star formation, matching observations. In contrast, IllustrisTNG GV galaxies have a more extended star formation history, and quench more effectively at later cosmic times, producing the excess of quenched galaxies in GV compared with SDSS, based on the 4000Å break strength. These results suggest the AGN feedback subgrid physics, more specifically, the threshold halo mass for black hole input and the black hole seed mass, could be the primary cause of the overproduction of quiescent galaxies found with respect to the observational constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The VANDELS survey:dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies at z=3-4
- Author
-
Cullen, F., McLure, R. J., Khochfar, S., Dunlop, J. S., Dalla Vecchia, C., Carnall, A. C., Bourne, N., Castellano, M., Cimatti, A., Cirasuolo, M., Elbaz, D., Fynbo, J. P. U., Garilli, B., Koekemoer, A., Marchi, F., Pentericci, L., Talia, M., Zamorani, G., Cullen, F., McLure, R. J., Khochfar, S., Dunlop, J. S., Dalla Vecchia, C., Carnall, A. C., Bourne, N., Castellano, M., Cimatti, A., Cirasuolo, M., Elbaz, D., Fynbo, J. P. U., Garilli, B., Koekemoer, A., Marchi, F., Pentericci, L., Talia, M., and Zamorani, G.
- Published
- 2018
16. Kinematic analysis of eagle simulations: evolution of λRe and its connection with mergers and gas accretion.
- Author
-
Walo-Martín, D, Falcón-Barroso, J, Dalla Vecchia, C, Pérez, I, and Negri, A
- Subjects
ACCRETION (Astrophysics) ,ANGULAR momentum (Mechanics) ,GALACTIC evolution ,ELLIPTICAL galaxies - Abstract
We have developed a new tool to analyse galaxies in the eagle simulations as close as possible to observations. We investigated the evolution of their kinematic properties by means of the angular momentum proxy parameter, λ
Re , for galaxies with M⋆ ≥ 5 × 109 M⊙ in the RefL0100N1504 simulation up to redshift two (z = 2). Galaxies in the simulation show a wide variety of kinematic features, similiar to those found in integral-field spectroscopic studies. At z = 0 the distribution of galaxies in the λRe –ε plane is also in good agreement with results from observations. Scaling relations at z = 0 indicate that there is a critical mass, Mcrit /M⊙ = 1010.3 , that divides two different regimes when we include the λRe parameter. The simulation shows that the distribution of galaxies in the λRe –ε plane evolves with time until z = 2 when galaxies are equally distributed in both λRe and ε. We studied the evolution of λRe with time and found that there is no connection between the angular momentum at z = 2 and z = 0. All systems reach their maximum λRe at z = 1 and then steadily lose angular momentum regardless of their merger history, except for the high star-forming systems that sustain that maximum value over time. The evolution of λRe in galaxies that have not experienced any merger in the last 10 Gyr can be explained by their level of gas accretion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Growing a ‘cosmic beast’: observations and simulations of MACS J0717.5+3745
- Author
-
Jauzac, M, primary, Eckert, D, additional, Schaller, M, additional, Schwinn, J, additional, Massey, R, additional, Bahé, Y, additional, Baugh, C, additional, Barnes, D, additional, Dalla Vecchia, C, additional, Ebeling, H, additional, Harvey, D, additional, Jullo, E, additional, Kay, S T, additional, Kneib, J-P, additional, Limousin, M, additional, Medezinski, E, additional, Natarajan, P, additional, Nonino, M, additional, Robertson, A, additional, Tam, S I, additional, and Umetsu, K, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The VANDELS survey: dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies at z = 3-4
- Author
-
Cullen, F, primary, McLure, R J, additional, Khochfar, S, additional, Dunlop, J S, additional, Dalla Vecchia, C, additional, Carnall, A C, additional, Bourne, N, additional, Castellano, M, additional, Cimatti, A, additional, Cirasuolo, M, additional, Elbaz, D, additional, Fynbo, J P U, additional, Garilli, B, additional, Koekemoer, A, additional, Marchi, F, additional, Pentericci, L, additional, Talia, M, additional, and Zamorani, G, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The First Billion Years project: constraining the dust attenuation law of star-forming galaxies at z ≃ 5
- Author
-
Cullen, F., primary, McLure, R. J., additional, Khochfar, S., additional, Dunlop, J. S., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Deep spectroscopy in nearby galaxy clusters – III. Orbital structure of galaxies in Abell 85
- Author
-
Aguerri, J. A. L., primary, Agulli, I., additional, Diaferio, A., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Testing the conditional mass function of dark matter haloes against numerical N-body simulations
- Author
-
Tramonte, D., primary, Rubiño-Martín, J. A., additional, Betancort-Rijo, J., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. case study of hurdle and generalized additive models in astronomy: the escape of ionizing radiation.
- Author
-
Hattab, M W, de Souza, R S, Ciardi, B, Paardekooper, J-P, Khochfar, S, and Dalla Vecchia, C
- Subjects
STAR formation ,IONIZING radiation ,PHOTONS ,GALAXIES ,UNIVERSE - Abstract
The dark ages of the Universe end with the formation of the first generation of stars residing in primeval galaxies. These objects were the first to produce ultraviolet ionizing photons in a period when the cosmic gas changed from a neutral state to an ionized one, known as Epoch of Reionization (EoR). A pivotal aspect to comprehend the EoR is to probe the intertwined relationship between the fraction of ionizing photons capable to escape dark haloes, also known as the escape fraction (f
esc ), and the physical properties of the galaxy. This work develops a sound statistical model suitable to account for such non-linear relationships and the non-Gaussian nature of fesc . This model simultaneously estimates the probability that a given primordial galaxy starts the ionizing photon production and estimates the mean level of the fesc once it is triggered. The model was employed in the First Billion Years simulation suite, from which we show that the baryonic fraction and the rate of ionizing photons appear to have a larger impact on fesc than previously thought. A naive univariate analysis of the same problem would suggest smaller effects for these properties and a much larger impact for the specific star formation rate, which is lessened after accounting for other galaxy properties and non-linearities in the statistical model. A snippet code to reproduce the analysis of this paper is available at COIN toolbox [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Deep spectroscopy of nearby galaxy clusters – I. Spectroscopic luminosity function of Abell 85
- Author
-
Agulli, I., primary, Aguerri, J. A. L., additional, Sánchez-Janssen, R., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, Diaferio, A., additional, Barrena, R., additional, Dominguez Palmero, L., additional, and Yu, H., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The origin of discs and spheroids in simulated galaxies
- Author
-
Sales, LV, Navarro, JF, Theuns, T, Schaye, J, White, SDM, Frenk, CS, Crain, RA, and Dalla Vecchia, C
- Subjects
Physics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,QC ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,QB - Abstract
The major morphological features of a galaxy are thought to be determined by the assembly history and net spin of its surrounding dark halo. In the simplest scenario, disc galaxies form predominantly in haloes with high angular momentum and quiet recent assembly history, whereas spheroids are the slowly rotating remnants of repeated merging events. We explore these assumptions using 100 systems with halo masses similar to that of the Milky Way, identified in a series of cosmological gasdynamical simulations: the GalaxiesIntergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation (gimic). At z= 0, the simulated galaxies exhibit a wide variety of morphologies, from dispersion-dominated spheroids to pure disc galaxies. Surprisingly, these morphological features are very poorly correlated with their halo properties: discs form in haloes with high and low net spin, and mergers play a negligible role in the formation of spheroids, whose stars form primarily in situ. With hindsight, this weak correlation between halo and galaxy properties is unsurprising given that a minority of the available baryons (similar to 40 per cent) end up in galaxies. More important to morphology is the coherent alignment of the angular momentum of baryons that accrete over time to form a galaxy. Spheroids tend to form when the spin of newly accreted gas is misaligned with that of the extant galaxy, leading to the episodic formation of stars with different kinematics that cancel out the net rotation of the system. Discs, on the other hand, form out of gas that flows in with similar angular momentum to that of earlier accreted material. Gas accretion from a hot corona thus favours disc formation, whereas gas that flows cold, often along separate, misaligned filaments, favours the formation of spheroids. In this scenario, many spheroids consist of the superposition of stellar components with distinct kinematics, age and metallicity, an arrangement that might survive to the present day given the paucity of major mergers. Since angular momentum is acquired largely at turnaround, morphology depends on the early interplay between the tidal field and the shape of the material destined to form a galaxy.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Absorption signatures of warm-hot gas at low redshift : broad HI Lyα absorbers
- Author
-
Tepper-García, T., Richter, P., Schaye, J., Booth, C.M., Dalla Vecchia, C., and Theuns, Tom
- Subjects
numerical [Methods] ,absorption lines [Quasars] ,Physics ,theory. [Cosmology] ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,formation [Galaxies] ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Intergalactic medium - Abstract
We investigate the physical state of H?i absorbing gas at low redshift (z = 0.25) using a subset of cosmological, hydrodynamic simulations from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations project, focusing in particular on broad (bHI=40 km s-1) H?i Lya absorbers (BLAs), which are believed to originate in shock-heated gas in the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM). Our fiducial model, which includes radiative cooling by heavy elements and feedback by supernovae and active galactic nuclei, predicts that by z = 0.25 nearly 60?per cent of the gas mass ends up at densities and temperatures characteristic of the WHIM and we find that half of this fraction is due to outflows. The standard H?i observables (distribution of H?i column densities NH?I, distribution of Doppler parameters bHI, bHINH?I correlation) and the BLA line number density predicted by our simulations are in remarkably good agreement with observations. BLAs arise in gas that is hotter, more highly ionized and more enriched than the gas giving rise to typical Lya forest absorbers. The majority of the BLAs arise in warm-hot [log?(T/?K) similar to 5] gas at low (log?? < 1.5) overdensities. On average, thermal broadening accounts for at least 60?per cent of the BLA linewidth, which in turn can be used as a rough indicator of the thermal state of the gas. Detectable BLAs account for only a small fraction of the true baryon content of the WHIM at low redshift. In order to detect the bulk of the mass in this gas phase, a sensitivity at least one order of magnitude better than achieved by current ultraviolet spectrographs is required. We argue that BLAs mostly trace gas that has been shock heated and enriched by outflows and that they therefore provide an important window on a poorly understood feedback process.
- Published
- 2012
26. Cosmological simulations of the formation of the stellar haloes around disc galaxies
- Author
-
Font, A.S., McCarthy, I.G., Crain, R.A., Theuns, Tom, Schaye, J., Wiersma, R.P.C., and dalla Vecchia, C.
- Subjects
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Physics ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,QC ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,QB ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the Galaxies-Intergalactic Medium Interaction Calculation (GIMIC) suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to study the formation of stellar spheroids of Milky Way-mass disc galaxies. The simulations contain accurate treatments of metal-dependent radiative cooling, star formation, supernova feedback, and chemodynamics, and the large volumes that have been simulated yield an unprecedentedly large sample of ~400 simulated L_* disc galaxies. The simulated galaxies are surrounded by low-mass, low-surface brightness stellar haloes that extend out to ~100 kpc and beyond. The diffuse stellar distributions bear a remarkable resemblance to those observed around the Milky Way, M31 and other nearby galaxies, in terms of mass density, surface brightness, and metallicity profiles. We show that in situ star formation typically dominates the stellar spheroids by mass at radii of r < 30 kpc, whereas accretion of stars dominates at larger radii and this change in origin induces a change in slope of the surface brightness and metallicity profiles, which is also present in the observational data. The system-to-system scatter in the in situ mass fractions of the spheroid, however, is large and spans over a factor of 4. Consequently, there is a large degree of scatter in the shape and normalisation of the spheroid density profile within r < 30 kpc (e.g., when fit by a spherical powerlaw profile the indices range from -2.6 to -3.4). We show that the in situ mass fraction of the spheroid is linked to the formation epoch of the system. Dynamically older systems have, on average, larger contributions from in situ star formation, although there is significant system-to-system scatter in this relationship. Thus, in situ star formation likely represents the solution to the longstanding failure of pure accretion-based models to reproduce the observed properties of the inner spheroid., The paper contains 22 pages and 14 figures. Accepted to MNRAS (2011 June 13)
- Published
- 2011
27. The effects of galaxy formation on the matter power spectrum: A challenge for precision cosmology
- Author
-
Daalen, M.P. van, Schaye, J., Booth, C.M., and Dalla Vecchia, C.
- Published
- 2011
28. The impact of angular momentum on black hole accretion rates in simulations of galaxy formation
- Author
-
Rosas-Guevara, Y. M., primary, Bower, R. G., additional, Schaye, J., additional, Furlong, M., additional, Frenk, C. S., additional, Booth, C. M., additional, Crain, R. A., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, Schaller, M., additional, and Theuns, T., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evolution of galaxy stellar masses and star formation rates in the eagle simulations
- Author
-
Furlong, M., primary, Bower, R. G., additional, Theuns, T., additional, Schaye, J., additional, Crain, R. A., additional, Schaller, M., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, Frenk, C. S., additional, McCarthy, I. G., additional, Helly, J., additional, Jenkins, A., additional, and Rosas-Guevara, Y. M., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The case for AGN feedback in galaxy groups
- Author
-
McCarthy, I.G., Schaye, J., Ponman, T.J., Bower, R.G., Booth, C.M., Dalla Vecchia, C., Crain, R.A., Springel, V., Theuns, Tom, and Wiersma, R.P.C.
- Subjects
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Physics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Cosmology ,Clusters ,X-rays ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Intergalactic medium ,QB ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] The relatively recent insight that energy input from supermassive black holes (BHs) can have a substantial effect on the star formation rates (SFRs) of galaxies motivates us to examine its effects on the scale of galaxy groups. At present, groups contain most of the galaxies and a significant fraction of the overall baryon content of the universe. To explore the effects of BH feedback on groups, we analyse two high resolution cosmological hydro simulations from the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations project. While both include galactic winds driven by supernovae, only one includes feedback from BHs. We compare the properties of the simulated groups to a wide range of observational data, including hot gas radial profiles and gas mass fractions (fgas), luminosity-mass-temperature (L-M-T) scaling relations, K-band luminosity of the group and its central brightest galaxy (CBG), SFRs and ages of the CBG, and gas/stellar metallicities. Both runs yield entropy profiles similar to the data, while the run without AGN feedback yields highly peaked temperature profiles, in discord with the observations. Energy input from BHs significantly reduces fgas for groups with masses less than ~10^14 Msun, yielding fgas-T and L-T relations that are in agreement with the data. The run without AGN feedback suffers from the well known overcooling problem; the resulting K-band luminosities are much larger than observed. By contrast, the run that includes BH feedback yields K-band luminosities and CBG SFRs and ages in agreement with current estimates. Both runs yield very similar gas-phase metallicities that match X-ray data, but they predict very different stellar metallicities. Based on the above, galaxy groups provide a compelling case that BH feedback is a crucial ingredient in the formation of massive galaxies., 21 pages, 13 figures - to match the accepted MNRAS version. Clarifications made to text, results and conclusions unchanged.
- Published
- 2010
31. The First Billion Years project: gamma-ray bursts at z > 5
- Author
-
Elliott, J., primary, Khochfar, S., additional, Greiner, J., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Rotation rates, sizes and star formation efficiencies of a representative population of simulated disc galaxies
- Author
-
McCarthy, I. G., primary, Schaye, J., additional, Font, A. S., additional, Theuns, T., additional, Frenk, C. S., additional, Crain, R. A., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Influence of baryons on the orbital structure of dark matter haloes
- Author
-
Bryan, S. E., primary, Mao, S., additional, Kay, S. T., additional, Schaye, J., additional, Dalla Vecchia, C., additional, and Booth, C. M., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Simulations of Magnetic Fields in Filaments
- Author
-
Brüggen, M., primary, Ruszkowski, M., additional, Simionescu, A., additional, Hoeft, M., additional, and Dalla Vecchia, C., additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The eaglesimulations of galaxy formation: Public release of halo and galaxy catalogues
- Author
-
McAlpine, S., Helly, J.C., Schaller, M., Trayford, J.W., Qu, Y., Furlong, M., Bower, R.G., Crain, R.A., Schaye, J., Theuns, T., Dalla Vecchia, C., Frenk, C.S., McCarthy, I.G., Jenkins, A., Rosas-Guevara, Y., White, S.D.M., Baes, M., Camps, P., and Lemson, G.
- Abstract
We present the public data release of halo and galaxy catalogues extracted from the eaglesuite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation. These simulations were performed with an enhanced version of the gadgetcode that includes a modified hydrodynamics solver, time-step limiter and subgrid treatments of baryonic physics, such as stellar mass loss, element-by-element radiative cooling, star formation and feedback from star formation and black hole accretion. The simulation suite includes runs performed in volumes ranging from 25 to 100 comoving megaparsecs per side, with numerical resolution chosen to marginally resolve the Jeans mass of the gas at the star formation threshold. The free parameters of the subgrid models for feedback are calibrated to the redshift z=0galaxy stellar mass function, galaxy sizes and black hole mass–stellar mass relation. The simulations have been shown to match a wide range of observations for present-day and higher-redshift galaxies. The raw particle data have been used to link galaxies across redshifts by creating merger trees. The indexing of the tree produces a simple way to connect a galaxy at one redshift to its progenitors at higher redshift and to identify its descendants at lower redshift. In this paper we present a relational database which we are making available for general use. A large number of properties of haloes and galaxies and their merger trees are stored in the database, including stellar masses, star formation rates, metallicities, photometric measurements and mock griimages. Complex queries can be created to explore the evolution of more than 105galaxies, examples of which are provided in the Appendix. The relatively good and broad agreement of the simulations with a wide range of observational datasets makes the database an ideal resource for the analysis of model galaxies through time, and for connecting and interpreting observational datasets.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Stability study of siliconic resins employed in the stone conservation
- Author
-
Biscontin, G., Botteghi, C., DALLA VECCHIA, C., Driussi, G., Moretti, Giuseppe, and Valle, A.
- Published
- 1987
37. Studio della stabilità di resine siliconiche impiegate nella conservazione di materiali lapidei
- Author
-
Biscontin, G., Botteghi, C., DALLA VECCHIA, C., Driussi, G., Moretti, Giuseppe, and Valle, A.
- Published
- 1986
38. The intracluster/intragroup medium
- Author
-
Mccarthy, I., Schaye, J., Richard Bower, Ponman, T., Booth, C., Crain, R., Dalla Vecchia, C., Springel, V., and Theuns, T.
39. Toward self-consistent models of Galaxy Evolution
- Author
-
Giovanni Carraro, Dalla Vecchia, C., and Jungwiert, B.
40. The discovery of the most UV–Ly α luminous star-forming galaxy: a young, dust- and metal-poor starburst with QSO-like luminosities
- Author
-
C. Jiménez-Ángel, C. Dalla Vecchia, Yiping Shu, Luis Colina, Takuya Hashimoto, Daniel Schaerer, Ismael Perez-Fournon, Rui Marques-Chaves, J. Álvarez-Márquez, Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737, Shu, Y. [0000-0002-9063-698X], Dalla Vecchia, C. [0000-0002-2620-7056], Marqués Chaves, R. [0000-0001-8442-1846], Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO), and Spanish State Research Agency (AEI)
- Subjects
Gran Telescopio Canarias ,SLOPE ,SIMILAR-TO 2 ,Stellar mass ,MODELS ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Luminosity ,0103 physical sciences ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star formation ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,REGIONS ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,formation [Galaxies] ,Galaxy ,Redshift ,EVOLUTION ,Baryon ,Gravitational lens ,Space and Planetary Science ,EMITTERS ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,DENSITY ,high redshift [Galaxies] ,high-redshift [galaxies] - Abstract
We report the discovery of BOSS-EUVLG1 at z = 2.469, by far the most luminous, almost un-obscured star-forming galaxy known at any redshift. First classified as a QSO within the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, follow-up observations with the Gran Telescopio Canarias reveal that its large luminosity, MUV ≃ -24.40 and log(LLyα/erg s-1) ≃ 44.0, is due to an intense burst of star formation, and not to an active galactic nucleus or gravitational lensing. BOSS-EUVLG1 is a compact (reff ≃ 1.2 kpc), young (4-5 Myr) starburst with a stellar mass log(Mz.ast;/M) = 10.0-0.1 and a prodigious star formation rate of ≃1000 M yr-1. However, it is metal- and dust-poor [12 + log(O/H) = 8.13 ± 0.19, E(B - V) ≃ 0.07, log(LIR/LUV) < -1.2], indicating that we are witnessing the very early phase of an intense starburst that has had no time to enrich the ISM. BOSS-EUVLG1 might represent a short-lived (, With funding from the Spanish government through the "María de Maeztu Unit of Excellence" accreditation (MDM-2017-0737)
- Published
- 2020
41. Deep spectroscopy in nearby galaxy clusters - V. The Perseus cluster
- Author
-
Marisa Girardi, L. Dominguez Palmero, C. Dalla Vecchia, J. A. L. Aguerri, I Agulli, A. Negri, Aguerri, J. A. L., Girardi, M., Agulli, I., Negri, A., Dalla Vecchia, C., and Dominguez Palmero, L.
- Subjects
Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Perseus Cluster ,Galaxies: clusters: individual: Abell 426 ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,clusters: general [Galaxies] ,01 natural sciences ,clusters: individual: Abell 426 [Galaxies] ,Galaxies: clusters: general ,Space and Planetary Science ,0103 physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Spectroscopy ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Galaxy cluster - Abstract
Dwarfs are the largest population of galaxies in number in the nearby Universe. Deep spectroscopic data are still missing to obtain a better understanding of their formation and evolution processes. This study shows the results obtained from a spectroscopic campaign in the Perseus cluster. We have obtained 963 new galaxy spectra. We have measured the recessional velocity of the galaxies by using a cross-correlation technique. These data have been used to obtain the cluster membership, the dynamics of the galaxies, and the spectroscopic luminosity function (LF) of the cluster. The cluster membership was obtained by using the peak + gap technique, reporting a total of 403 galaxies as cluster members within 1.4r200. The mean velocity and velocity dispersion of the cluster galaxies are Vc = 5258 km s−1 and σc = 1040 km s−1, respectively. We obtained M200 = 1.2 × 1015 M⊙ and r200 = 2.2 Mpc for this cluster. The clusters members were classified blue and red according to their g − r stellar colour. The velocity dispersion of these two families of galaxies is different, indicating that the blue galaxies can be classified as recently accreted into the cluster. We present the spectroscopic galaxy LF of the cluster. This function turned to be flat: α = 0.99 ± 0.06. In addition, blue and red galaxies show similar densities in the faint end of the LF. This indicates that Perseus does not have a population of red dwarf galaxias as large as other nearby clusters. We have compared the LF of the Perseus cluster with other spectroscopic LFs of nearby clusters and those from cosmological simulations. This comparison shows that the spectroscopic LF of nearby galaxy cluster is far from universal.
- Published
- 2020
42. The VANDELS survey: dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies at z = 3-4
- Author
-
Laura Pentericci, G. Zamorani, Marco Castellano, Michele Cirasuolo, Anton M. Koekemoer, A. C. Carnall, D. Elbaz, Andrea Cimatti, Nathan Bourne, Fergus Cullen, Ross J. McLure, C. Dalla Vecchia, Sadegh Khochfar, F. Marchi, B. Garilli, Johan P. U. Fynbo, Margherita Talia, James Dunlop, Cullen, F., McLure, R. J., Khochfar, S., Dunlop, J. S., Dalla Vecchia, C., Carnall, A. C., Bourne, N., Castellano, M., Cimatti, A., Cirasuolo, M., Elbaz, D., Fynbo, J. P. U., Garilli, B., Koekemoer, A., Marchi, F., Pentericci, L., Talia, M., and Zamorani, G.
- Subjects
Stellar mass ,Stellar population ,Star (game theory) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,0103 physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star formation ,Galaxies: evolution ,Spectral density ,Dust ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Extinction ,Astronomy and Astrophysic ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Galaxies: high redshift ,Billion years ,Redshift ,Galaxy ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a new study of dust attenuation at redshifts $3 < z < 4$ based on a sample of $236$ star-forming galaxies from the VANDELS spectroscopic survey. Motivated by results from the First Billion Years (FiBY) simulation project, we argue that the intrinsic spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of star-forming galaxies at these redshifts have a self-similar shape across the mass range $8.2 \leq$ log$(M_{\star}/M_{\odot}) \leq 10.6$ probed by our sample. Using FiBY data, we construct a set of intrinsic SED templates which incorporate both detailed star formation and chemical abundance histories, and a variety of stellar population synthesis (SPS) model assumptions. With this set of intrinsic SEDs, we present a novel approach for directly recovering the shape and normalization of the dust attenuation curve. We find, across all of the intrinsic templates considered, that the average attenuation curve for star-forming galaxies at $z\simeq3.5$ is similar in shape to the commonly-adopted Calzetti starburst law, with an average total-to-selective attenuation ratio of $R_{V}=4.18\pm0.29$. We show that the optical attenuation ($A_V$) versus stellar mass ($M_{\star}$) relation predicted using our method is consistent with recent ALMA observations of galaxies at $2, Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2018
43. Purulent lesion on a woman's hand.
- Author
-
Cavaliere R, Dalla Vecchia C, and Carroll C
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Hand pathology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Implementation of a chest injury pathway in the emergency department.
- Author
-
Dalla Vecchia C, McDermott C, O'Keeffe F, Ramiah V, and Breslin T
- Subjects
- Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Pain Management, Analgesia, Rib Fractures complications, Rib Fractures therapy, Thoracic Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Rib fractures represent a substantial health burden. Chest injuries contribute to 25% of deaths after trauma and survivors can experience long-standing consequences, such as reduced functional capabilities and loss of employment. Over recent years, there has been an increase in the awareness of the importance of early identification, aggressive pain management and adequate safety netting for patients with chest injuries. Substandard management leads to increased rates of morbidity and mortality. The development of protocols in the emergency department (ED) for management of patients with chest wall injuries has demonstrated reduction of complication rates.Our aim was to develop an evidence-based, multidisciplinary chest injury pathway for the management of patients presenting with rib injury to our ED.Prior to implementation of the pathway in our department, only 39% of patients were documented as having received analgesia and only 7% of discharged patients had documented written verbal advice. There was no standardised method to perform regional anaesthetic blocks. Using quality improvement methods, we standardised imaging modality, risk stratification with a scoring system, analgesia with emphasis on regional anaesthesia blocks and disposition with information leaflets for those discharged.Implementation of the pathway increased rates of documented analgesia received from 39% to 70%. The number of regional anaesthetic blocks performed went from 0% to 60% and the number of patients receiving discharge advice went from 7% to 70%. Compliance of doctors and nurses with the pathway was 63%.Our previous audits showed substandard management of patients with chest injuries in our department. Through this quality improvement project, we were able to improve the quality of care provided to patients attending with rib fractures by increasing rate of analgesia received, regional blocks performed and discharge advice given., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Intravascular access routes while wearing personal protective equipment: are we close to the bone or not?
- Author
-
Paganini M, Dalla Vecchia C, and Franco M
- Subjects
- Administration, Intravenous, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Personal Protective Equipment
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.