1,118 results on '"Davis, Allen"'
Search Results
2. Hydrogel and Its Composites for Pseudocapacitors
- Author
-
Horinek, Jeffery, Davis, Allen, Gupta, Ram K., and Gupta, Ram K., editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pseudocapacitive Materials for Metal-Air Batteries
- Author
-
Davis, Allen, Gupta, Ram K., and Gupta, Ram K., editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Spinning up a Daze: TESS Uncovers a Hot Jupiter orbiting the Rapid-Rotator TOI-778
- Author
-
Clark, Jake, Addison, Brett, Okumura, Jack, Vach, Sydney, Heitzmann, Alexis, Rodriguez, Joseph, Wright, Duncan, Clerte, Mathieu, Brown, Carolyn, Fetherolf, Tara, Wittenmyer, Robert, Plavchan, Peter, Kane, Stephen, Horner, Jonathan, Kielkopf, John, Shporer, Avi, Tinney, C., Hui-Gen, Liu, Ballard, Sarah, Bowler, Brendan, Mengel, Matthew, Zhou, George, Lee, Annette, David, Avelyn, Heim, Jessica, Lee, Michele, Sevilla, Veronica, Zafar, Naqsh, Hinkel, Natalie, Allen, Bridgette, Bayliss, Daniel, Berberyan, Arthur, Berlind, Perry, Bieryla, Allyson, Bouchy, Francois, Brahm, Rafael, Bryant, Edward, Christiansen, Jessie, Ciardi, David, Ciardi, Krys, Collins, Karen, Dallant, Jules, Davis, Allen, Diaz, Matias, Dressing, Courtney, Esquerdo, Gilbert, Harre, Jan-Vincent, Howell, Steve, Jenkins, Jon, Jensen, Eric, Jones, Matias, Jordan, Andres, Latham, David, Lund, Michael, McCormac, James, Nielsen, Louise, Otegi, Jon, Quinn, Samuel, Radford, Don, Ricker, George, Schwarz, Richard, Seager, Sara, Smith, Alexis, Stockdale, Chris, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Udry, Stephane, Vanderspek, Roland, Gunther, Maximilian, Wang, Songhu, Wingham, Geof, and Winn, Joshua
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, has been uncovering a growing number of exoplanets orbiting nearby, bright stars. Most exoplanets that have been discovered by TESS orbit narrow-line, slow-rotating stars, facilitating the confirmation and mass determination of these worlds. We present the discovery of a hot Jupiter orbiting a rapidly rotating ($v\sin{(i)}= 35.1\pm1.0$km/s) early F3V-dwarf, HD115447 (TOI-778). The transit signal taken from Sectors 10 and 37 of TESS's initial detection of the exoplanet is combined with follow-up ground-based photometry and velocity measurements taken from Minerva-Australis, TRES, CORALIE and CHIRON to confirm and characterise TOI-778b. A joint analysis of the light curves and the radial velocity measurements yield a mass, radius, and orbital period for TOI-778b of $2.76^{+0.24}_{-0.23}$Mjup, $1.370\pm0.043$Rjup and $\sim4.63$ days, respectively. The planet orbits a bright ($V = 9.1$mag) F3-dwarf with $M=1.40\pm0.05$Msun, $R=1.70\pm0.05$Rsun, and $\log g=4.05\pm0.17$. We observed a spectroscopic transit of TOI-778b, which allowed us to derive a sky-projected spin-orbit angle of $18^{\circ}\pm11^{\circ}$, consistent with an aligned planetary system. This discovery demonstrates the capability of smaller aperture telescopes such as Minerva-Australis to detect the radial velocity signals produced by planets orbiting broad-line, rapidly rotating stars., Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, and 4 tables. Submitted to the Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. When roads want to be dams: looking to dam safety to regulate transportation embankments
- Author
-
O’Shaughnessy, Amanda, Dayioglu, Asli Y., Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Forget Me Not : Solo Agers, Too, Want to Be Remembered
- Author
-
Young, Mary and Davis, Allen
- Published
- 2023
7. Using organic amendments in disturbed soil to enhance soil organic matter, nutrient content and turfgrass establishment
- Author
-
Morash, Jennifer, Pamuru, Sai Thejaswini, Lea-Cox, John D., Ristvey, Andrew G., Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Nutrient transport, shear strength and hydraulic characteristics of topsoils amended with mulch, compost and biosolids
- Author
-
Pamuru, Sai Thejaswini, Morash, Jennifer, Lea-Cox, John D., Ristvey, Andrew G., Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Interactions of particulate- and dissolved-phase heavy metals in a mature stormwater bioretention cell
- Author
-
Croft, Kristen, Kjellerup, Birthe V., and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. TOI-481 b & TOI-892 b: Two long period hot Jupiters from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite
- Author
-
Brahm, Rafael, Nielsen, Louise D., Wittenmyer, Robert A., Wang, Songhu, Rodriguez, Joseph E., Espinoza, Néstor, Jones, Matías I., Jordán, Andrés, Henning, Thomas, Hobson, Melissa, Kossakowski, Diana, Rojas, Felipe, Sarkis, Paula, Schlecker, Martin, Trifonov, Trifon, Shahaf, Sahar, Ricker, George, Vanderspek, Roland, Latham, David W., Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N., Jenkins, Jon M., Addison, Brett C., Bakos, Gáspár Á., Bhatti, Waqas, Bayliss, Daniel, Berlind, Perry, Bieryla, Allyson, Bouchy, Francois, Bowler, Brendan P., Briceño, César, Brown, Timothy M., Bryant, Edward M., Caldwell, Douglas A., Charbonneau, David, Collins, Karen A., Davis, Allen B., Esquerdo, Gilbert A., Fulton, Benjamin J., Guerrero, Natalia M., Henze, Christopher E., Hogan, Aleisha, Horner, Jonathan, Huang, Chelsea X., Irwin, Jonathan, Kane, Stephen R., Kielkopf, John, Mann, Andrew W., Mazeh, Tsevi, McCormac, James, McCully, Curtis, Mengel, Matthew W., Mireles, Ismael, Okumura, Jack, Plavchan, Peter, Quinn, Samuel N., Rabus, Markus, Saesen, Sophie, Schlieder, Joshua E., Segransan, Damien, Shiao, Bernie, Shporer, Avi, Siverd, Robert J., Stassun, Keivan G., Suc, Vincent, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Torres, Pascal, Tinney, Chris G., Udry, Stephane, Vanzi, Leonardo, Vezie, Michael, Vines, Jose I., Vuckovic, Maja, Wright, Duncan J., Yahalomi, Daniel A., Zapata, Abner, Zhang, Hui, and Ziegler, Carl
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of two new 10-day period giant planets from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite ($TESS$) mission, whose masses were precisely determined using a wide diversity of ground-based facilities. TOI-481 b and TOI-892 b have similar radii ($0.99\pm0.01$ $\rm R_{J}$ and $1.07\pm0.02$ $\rm R_{J}$, respectively), and orbital periods (10.3311 days and 10.6266 days, respectively), but significantly different masses ($1.53\pm0.03$ $\rm M_{J}$ versus $0.95\pm0.07$ $\rm M_{J}$, respectively). Both planets orbit metal-rich stars ([Fe/H]= $+0.26\pm 0.05$ dex and [Fe/H] = $+0.24 \pm 0.05$ dex, for TOI-481 and TOI-892, respectively) but at different evolutionary stages. TOI-481 is a $\rm M_{\star}$ = $1.14\pm0.02$ $\rm M_{\odot}$, $\rm R_{\star}$ = $1.66\pm0.02$ $\rm R_{\odot}$ G-type star ($T_{\rm eff}$ = $5735 \pm 72$ K), that with an age of 6.7 Gyr, is in the turn-off point of the main sequence. TOI-892, on the other hand, is a F-type dwarf star ($T_{\rm eff}$ = $6261 \pm 80$ K), which has a mass of $\rm M_{\star}$ = $1.28\pm0.03$ $\rm M_{\odot}$, and a radius of $\rm R_{\star}$ = $1.39\pm0.02$ $\rm R_{\odot}$. TOI-481 b and TOI-892 b join the scarcely populated region of transiting gas giants with orbital periods longer than 10 days, which is important to constrain theories of the formation and structure of hot Jupiters., Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in AJ
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. EXPRES I. HD~3651 an Ideal RV Benchmark
- Author
-
Brewer, John M., Fischer, Debra A., Blackman, Ryan T., Cabot, Samuel H. C., Davis, Allen B., Laughlin, Gregory, Leet, Christopher, Ong, J. M. Joel, Petersburg, Ryan R., Szymkowiak, Andrew E., Zhao, Lily L., Henry, Gregory W., and Llama, Joe
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The next generation of exoplanet-hunting spectrographs should deliver up to an order of magnitude improvement in radial velocity precision over the standard 1 m/s state of the art. This advance is critical for enabling the detection of Earth-mass planets around Sun-like stars. New calibration techniques such as laser frequency combs and stabilized etalons ensure that the instrumental stability is well characterized. However, additional sources of error include stellar noise, undetected short-period planets, and telluric contamination. To understand and ultimately mitigate error sources, the contributing terms in the error budget must be isolated to the greatest extent possible. Here, we introduce a new high cadence radial velocity program, the EXPRES 100 Earths program, which aims to identify rocky planets around bright, nearby G and K dwarfs. We also present a benchmark case: the 62-d orbit of a Saturn-mass planet orbiting the chromospherically quiet star, HD 3651. The combination of high eccentricity (0.6) and a moderately long orbital period, ensures significant dynamical clearing of any inner planets. Our Keplerian model for this planetary orbit has a residual RMS of 58 cm/s over a $\sim 6$ month time baseline. By eliminating significant contributors to the radial velocity error budget, HD 3651 serves as a standard for evaluating the long term precision of extreme precision radial velocity (EPRV) programs., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Performance Verification of the EXtreme PREcision Spectrograph
- Author
-
Blackman, Ryan T., Fischer, Debra A., Jurgenson, Colby A., Sawyer, David, McCracken, Tyler M., Szymkowiak, Andrew E., Petersburg, Ryan R., Ong, J. M. Joel, Brewer, John M., Zhao, Lily L., Leet, Christopher, Buchhave, Lars A., Tronsgaard, René, Llama, Joe, Sawyer, Travis, Davis, Allen B., Cabot, Samuel H. C., Shao, Michael, Trahan, Russell, Nemati, Bijan, Genoni, Matteo, Pariani, Giorgio, Riva, Marco, Probst, Rafael A., Holzwarth, Ronald, Steinmetz, Tilo, Fournier, Paul, and Pawluczyk, Rafal
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The EXtreme PREcision Spectrograph (EXPRES) is a new Doppler spectrograph designed to reach a radial velocity measurement precision sufficient to detect Earth-like exoplanets orbiting nearby, bright stars. We report on extensive laboratory testing and on-sky observations to quantitatively assess the instrumental radial velocity measurement precision of EXPRES, with a focused discussion of individual terms in the instrument error budget. We find that EXPRES can reach a single-measurement instrument calibration precision better than 10 cm/s, not including photon noise from stellar observations. We also report on the performance of the various environmental, mechanical, and optical subsystems of EXPRES, assessing any contributions to radial velocity error. For atmospheric and telescope related effects, this includes the fast tip-tilt guiding system, atmospheric dispersion compensation, and the chromatic exposure meter. For instrument calibration, this includes the laser frequency comb (LFC), flat-field light source, CCD detector, and effects in the optical fibers. Modal noise is mitigated to a negligible level via a chaotic fiber agitator, which is especially important for wavelength calibration with the LFC. Regarding detector effects, we empirically assess the impact on radial velocity precision due to pixel-position non-uniformities (PPNU) and charge transfer inefficiency (CTI). EXPRES has begun its science survey to discover exoplanets orbiting G-dwarf and K-dwarf stars, in addition to transit spectroscopy and measurements of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect., Comment: 39 pages, 30 figures, accepted to AJ
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. An Extreme Precision Radial Velocity Pipeline: First Radial Velocities from EXPRES
- Author
-
Petersburg, Ryan R., Ong, J. M. Joel, Zhao, Lily L., Blackman, Ryan T., Brewer, John M., Buchhave, Lars A., Cabot, Samuel H. C., Davis, Allen B., Jurgenson, Colby A., Leet, Christopher, McCracken, Tyler M., Sawyer, David, Sharov, Mikhail, Tronsgaard, René, Szymkowiak, Andrew E., and Fischer, Debra A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The EXtreme PREcision Spectrograph (EXPRES) is an environmentally stabilized, fiber-fed, $R=137,500$, optical spectrograph. It was recently commissioned at the 4.3-m Lowell Discovery Telescope (LDT) near Flagstaff, Arizona. The spectrograph was designed with a target radial-velocity (RV) precision of 30$\mathrm{~cm~s^{-1}}$. In addition to instrumental innovations, the EXPRES pipeline, presented here, is the first for an on-sky, optical, fiber-fed spectrograph to employ many novel techniques---including an "extended flat" fiber used for wavelength-dependent quantum efficiency characterization of the CCD, a flat-relative optimal extraction algorithm, chromatic barycentric corrections, chromatic calibration offsets, and an ultra-precise laser frequency comb for wavelength calibration. We describe the reduction, calibration, and radial-velocity analysis pipeline used for EXPRES and present an example of our current sub-meter-per-second RV measurement precision, which reaches a formal, single-measurement error of 0.3$\mathrm{~m~s^{-1}}$ for an observation with a per-pixel signal-to-noise ratio of 250. These velocities yield an orbital solution on the known exoplanet host 51 Peg that matches literature values with a residual RMS of 0.895$\mathrm{~m~s^{-1}}$.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. TOI-257b (HD 19916b): A Warm sub-Saturn Orbiting an Evolved F-type Star
- Author
-
Addison, Brett C., Wright, Duncan J., Nicholson, Belinda A., Cale, Bryson, Mocnik, Teo, Huber, Daniel, Plavchan, Peter, Wittenmyer, Robert A., Vanderburg, Andrew, Chaplin, William J., Chontos, Ashley, Clark, Jake T., Eastman, Jason D., Ziegler, Carl, Brahm, Rafael, Carter, Bradley D., Clerte, Mathieu, Espinoza, Néstor, Horner, Jonathan, Bentley, John, Jordán, Andrés, Kane, Stephen R., Kielkopf, John F., Laychock, Emilie, Mengel, Matthew W., Okumura, Jack, Stassun, Keivan G., Bedding, Timothy R., Bowler, Brendan P., Burnelis, Andrius, Blanco-Cuaresma, Sergi, Collins, Michaela, Crossfield, Ian, Davis, Allen B., Evensberget, Dag, Heitzmann, Alexis, Howell, Steve B., Law, Nicholas, Mann, Andrew W., Marsden, Stephen C., Matson, Rachel A., O'Connor, James, Shporer, Avi, Stevens, Catherine, Tinney, C. G., Tylor, Christopher, Wang, Songhu, Zhang, Hui, Henning, Thomas, Kossakowski, Diana, Ricker, George, Sarkis, Paula, Schlecker, Martin, Torres, Pascal, Vanderspek, Roland, Latham, David W., Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N., Jenkins, Jon M., Mireles, Ismael, Rowden, Pam, Pepper, Joshua, Daylan, Tansu, Schlieder, Joshua E., Collins, Karen A., Collins, Kevin I., Tan, Thiam-Guan, Ball, Warrick H., Basu, Sarbani, Buzasi, Derek L., Campante, Tiago L., Corsaro, Enrico, González-Cuesta, Lucía, Davies, Guy R., de Almeida, Leandro, Nascimento, Jr., Jose-Dias do, a, Rafael A. Garcí, Guo, Zhao, Handberg, Rasmus, Hekker, Saskia, Hey, Daniel R., Kallinger, Thomas, Kawaler, Steven D., Kayhan, Cenk, Kuszlewicz, James S., Lund, Mikkel N., Lyttle, Alexander, Mathur, Savita, Miglio, Andrea, Mosser, Benoit, Nielsen, Martin B., Serenelli, Aldo M., Aguirre, Victor Silva, and Themeßl, Nathalie
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a warm sub-Saturn, TOI-257b (HD 19916b), based on data from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The transit signal was detected by TESS and confirmed to be of planetary origin based on radial velocity observations. An analysis of the TESS photometry, the Minerva-Australis, FEROS, and HARPS radial velocities, and the asteroseismic data of the stellar oscillations reveals that TOI-257b has a mass of $M_P=0.138\pm0.023$\,$\rm{M_J}$ ($43.9\pm7.3$\,$M_{\rm \oplus}$), a radius of $R_P=0.639\pm0.013$\,$\rm{R_J}$ ($7.16\pm0.15$\,$R_{\rm \oplus}$), bulk density of $0.65^{+0.12}_{-0.11}$ (cgs), and period $18.38818^{+0.00085}_{-0.00084}$\,$\rm{days}$. TOI-257b orbits a bright ($\mathrm{V}=7.612$\,mag) somewhat evolved late F-type star with $M_*=1.390\pm0.046$\,$\rm{M_{\odot}}$, $R_*=1.888\pm0.033$\,$\rm{R_{\odot}}$, $T_{\rm eff}=6075\pm90$\,$\rm{K}$, and $v\sin{i}=11.3\pm0.5$\,km\,s$^{-1}$. Additionally, we find hints for a second non-transiting sub-Saturn mass planet on a $\sim71$\,day orbit using the radial velocity data. This system joins the ranks of a small number of exoplanet host stars ($\sim100$) that have been characterized with asteroseismology. Warm sub-Saturns are rare in the known sample of exoplanets, and thus the discovery of TOI-257b is important in the context of future work studying the formation and migration history of similar planetary systems., Comment: 24 pages, 20 figures, 6 tables. Published in MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Expanded Systematic Evidence Map for Hundreds of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) and Comprehensive PFAS Human Health Dashboard
- Author
-
Shirke, Avanti V., Radke, Elizabeth G., Lin, Cynthia, Blain, Robyn, Vetter, Nicole, Lemeris, Courtney, Hartman, Pamela, Hubbard, Heidi, Angrish, Michelle, Arzuaga, Xabier, Congleton, Johanna, Davis, Allen, Dishaw, Laura V., Jones, Ryan, Judson, Richard, Kaiser, J. Phillip, Kraft, Andrew, Lizarraga, Lucina, Noyes, Pamela D., Patlewicz, Grace, Taylor, Michele, Williams, Antony J., Thayer, Kristina A., and Carlson, Laura M.
- Subjects
United States. Environmental Protection Agency -- Surveys -- International economic relations ,Epidemiology -- Surveys -- Health aspects ,Machine learning -- Health aspects -- Surveys ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
Background: Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) encompass a class of chemically and structurally diverse compounds that are extensively used in industry and detected in the environment. The US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) 2021 PFAS Strategic Roadmap describes national research plans to address the challenge of PFAS. Objectives: Systematic Evidence Map (SEM) methods were used to survey and summarize available epidemiological and mammalian bioassay evidence that could inform human health hazard identification for a set of 345 PFAS that were identified by the US EPA's Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure (CCTE) for in vitro toxicity and toxicokinetic assay testing and through interagency discussions on PFAS of interest. This work builds from the 2022 evidence map that collated evidence on a separate set of ~150 PFAS. Like our previous work, this SEM does not include PFAS that are the subject of ongoing or completed assessments at the US EPA. Methods: SEM methods were used to search, screen, and inventory mammalian bioassay and epidemiological literature from peer-reviewed and gray literature sources using manual review and machine-learning software. For each included study, study design details and health end points examined were summarized in interactive web-based literature inventories. Some included studies also underwent study evaluation and detailed extraction of health end point data. All underlying data is publicly available online as interactive visuals with downloadable metadata. Results: More than 13,000 studies were identified from scientific databases. Screening processes identified 121 mammalian bioassay and 111 epidemiological studies that met screening criteria. Epidemiological evidence (available for 12 PFAS) mostly assessed the reproductive, endocrine, developmental, metabolic, cardiovascular, and immune systems. Mammalian bioassay evidence (available for 30 PFAS) commonly assessed effects in the reproductive, whole-body, nervous, and hepatic systems. Overall, 41 PFAS had evidence across mammalian bioassay and epidemiology data streams (roughly 11% of searched chemicals). Discussion: No epidemiological and/or mammalian bioassay evidence were identified for most of the PFAS included in our search. Results from this SEM, our 2022 SEM on ~150 PFAS, and other PFAS assessment products from the US EPA are compiled into a comprehensive PFAS dashboard that provides researchers and regulators an overview of the current PFAS human health landscape including data gaps and can serve as a scoping tool to facilitate prioritization of PFAS-related research and/or risk assessment activities. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP13423, Introduction There is a growing need to understand the human health effects of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) because human exposure to these persistent and bioaccumulative compounds is widespread. (1) [...]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Erratum: 'Systematic Evidence Map for over One Hundred and Fifty Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)'
- Author
-
Carlson, Laura M., Angrish, Michelle, Shirke, Avanti V., Radke, Elizabeth G., Schulz, Brittany, Kraft, Andrew, Judson, Richard, Patlewicz, Grace, Blain, Robyn, Lin, Cynthia, Vetter, Nicole, Lemeris, Courtney, Hartman, Pamela, Hubbard, Heidi, Arzuaga, Xabier, Davis, Allen, Dishaw, Laura V., Druwe, Ingrid L., Hollinger, Hillary, Jones, Ryan, Kaiser, J. Phillip, Lizarraga, Lucina, Noyes, Pamela D., Taylor, Michele, Shapiro, Andrew J., Williams, Antony J., and Thayer, Kristina A.
- Subjects
United States. Environmental Protection Agency ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
Environ Health Perspect. 130(5):056001 (2022), https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10343 In the originally published article, 6 of the 171 PFAS included in the evidence map were inadvertently omitted in literature search updates for 2020 [...]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The role of species and geography in the elemental profiles of farm-raised shrimp from Indonesia
- Author
-
Davis, Robert, Boyd, Claude, Ahyani, Nur, Sasmita, Pande Gde, Harris, Blake, McNevin, Aaron, Shatova, Olga, Wakefield, Joshua, and Davis, Allen
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Adult female with intermittent epigastric pain
- Author
-
Sam Chiacchia, Peter Davis‐Allen, Sean Dowling, and Timothy J. Batchelor
- Subjects
acute cholangitis ,bile duct stent ,biliary obstruction ,emergency medicine ,POCUS ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Distribution and biodegradation potential of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) accumulated in media of a stormwater bioretention
- Author
-
Yuan, Chen, Davis, Allen P., Kaya, Devrim, and Kjellerup, Birthe V.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. TOI 564 b and TOI 905 b: Grazing and Fully Transiting Hot Jupiters Discovered by TESS
- Author
-
Davis, Allen B., Wang, Songhu, Jones, Matias, Eastman, Jason D., Günther, Maximilian N., Stassun, Keivan G., Addison, Brett C., Collins, Karen A., Quinn, Samuel N., Latham, David W., Trifonov, Trifon, Shahaf, Sahar, Mazeh, Tsevi, Kane, Stephen R., Wang, Xian-Yu, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Tokovinin, Andrei, Ziegler, Carl, Tronsgaard, René, Millholland, Sarah, Cruz, Bryndis, Berlind, Perry, Calkins, Michael L., Esquerdo, Gilbert A., Collins, Kevin I., Conti, Dennis M., Evans, Phil, Lewin, Pablo, Radford, Don J., Paredes, Leonardo A., Henry, Todd J., James, Hodari-Sadiki, Law, Nicholas M., Mann, Andrew W., Briceño, César, Ricker, George R., Vanderspek, Roland, Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N., Jenkins, Jon M., Krishnamurthy, Akshata, Batalha, Natalie M., Burt, Jennifer, Colón, Knicole D., Dynes, Scott, Caldwell, Douglas A., Morris, Robert, Henze, Christopher E., and Fischer, Debra A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery and confirmation of two new hot Jupiters discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS): TOI 564 b and TOI 905 b. The transits of these two planets were initially observed by TESS with orbital periods of 1.651 d and 3.739 d, respectively. We conducted follow-up observations of each system from the ground, including photometry in multiple filters, speckle interferometry, and radial velocity measurements. For TOI 564 b, our global fitting revealed a classical hot Jupiter with a mass of $1.463^{+0.10}_{-0.096}\ M_J$ and a radius of $1.02^{+0.71}_{-0.29}\ R_J$. TOI 905 b is a classical hot Jupiter as well, with a mass of $0.667^{+0.042}_{-0.041}\ M_J$ and radius of $1.171^{+0.053}_{-0.051}\ R_J$. Both planets orbit Sun-like, moderately bright, mid-G dwarf stars with V ~ 11. While TOI 905 b fully transits its star, we found that TOI 564 b has a very high transit impact parameter of $0.994^{+0.083}_{-0.049}$, making it one of only ~20 known systems to exhibit a grazing transit and one of the brightest host stars among them. TOI 564 b is therefore one of the most attractive systems to search for additional non-transiting, smaller planets by exploiting the sensitivity of grazing transits to small changes in inclination and transit duration over the time scale of several years., Comment: 21 pages and 10 figures. Submitted to AJ
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. TOI-677 b: A Warm Jupiter (P=11.2d) on an eccentric orbit transiting a late F-type star
- Author
-
Jordán, Andrés, Brahm, Rafael, Espinoza, Néstor, Henning, Thomas, Jones, Matías I., Kossakowski, Diana, Sarkis, Paula, Trifonov, Trifon, Rojas, Felipe, Torres, Pascal, Drass, Holger, Nandakumar, Sangeetha, Barbieri, Mauro, Davis, Allen, Wang, Songhu, Bayliss, Daniel, Bouma, Luke, Dragomir, Diana, Eastman, Jason D., Daylan, Tansu, Guerrero, Natalia, Barclay, Thomas, Ting, Eric B., Henze, Christopher E., Ricker, George, Vanderspek, Roland, Latham, David W., Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua, Jenkins, Jon M., Wittenmyer, Robert A., Bowler, Brendan P., Crossfield, Ian, Horner, Jonathan, Kane, Stephen R., Kielkopf, John F., Morton, Timothy D., Plavchan, Peter, Tinney, C. G., Addison, Brett, Mengel, Matthew W., Okumura, Jack, Shahaf, Sahar, Mazeh, Tsevi, Rabus, Markus, Shporer, Avi, Ziegler, Carl, Mann, Andrew W., and Hart, Rhodes
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of TOI-677 b, first identified as a candidate in light curves obtained within Sectors 9 and 10 of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission and confirmed with radial velocities. TOI-677 b has a mass of M_p = 1.236$^{+0.069}_{-0.067}$ M_J, a radius of R_p = 1.170 +- 0.03 R_J,and orbits its bright host star (V=9.8 mag) with an orbital period of 11.23660 +- 0.00011 d, on an eccentric orbit with e = 0.435 +- 0.024. The host star has a mass of M_* = 1.181 +- 0.058 M_sun, a radius of R_* = 1.28 +- 0.03 R_sun, an age of 2.92$^{+0.80}_{-0.73}$ Gyr and solar metallicity, properties consistent with a main sequence late F star with T_eff = 6295 +- 77 K. We find evidence in the radial velocity measurements of a secondary long term signal which could be due to an outer companion. The TOI-677 b system is a well suited target for Rossiter-Mclaughlin observations that can constrain migration mechanisms of close-in giant planets., Comment: Submitted to AAS journals, 15 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Modeling the Echelle Spectra Continuum with Alpha Shapes and Local Regression Fitting
- Author
-
Xu, Xin, Cisewski-Kehe, Jessi, Davis, Allen B., Fischer, Debra A., and Brewer, John M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Continuum normalization of echelle spectra is an important data analysis step that is difficult to automate. Polynomial fitting requires a reasonably high order model to follow the steep slope of the blaze function. However, in the presence of deep spectral lines, a high order polynomial fit can result in ripples in the normalized continuum that increase errors in spectral analysis. Here, we present two algorithms for flattening the spectrum continuum. The Alpha-shape Fitting to Spectrum algorithm (AFS) is completely data-driven, using an alpha shape to obtain an initial estimate of the blaze function. The Alpha-shape and Lab Source Fitting to Spectrum algorithm (ALSFS) incorporates a continuum constraint from a lab source reference spectrum for the blaze function estimation. These algorithms are tested on a simulated spectrum, where we demonstrate improved normalization compared to polynomial regression for continuum fitting. We show an additional application, using the algorithms for mitigation of spatially correlated quantum efficiency variations and fringing in the CCD detector of the EXtreme PREcision Spectrometer (EXPRES).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. HD 202772A B: A Transiting Hot Jupiter Around A Bright, Mildly Evolved Star In A Visual Binary Discovered By Tess
- Author
-
Wang, Songhu, Jones, Matias, Shporer, Avi, Fulton, Benjamin J., Paredes, Leonardo A., Trifonov, Trifon, Kossakowski, Diana, Eastman, Jason, Gunther, Maximilian N., Huang, Chelsea X., Millholland, Sarah, Seligman, Darryl, Fischer, Debra, Brahm, Rafael, Wang, Xian-Yu, Cruz, Bryndis, James, Hodari-Sadiki, Addison, Brett, Henry, Todd, Liang, En-Si, Davis, Allen B., Tronsgaard, Rene, Worku, Keduse, Brewer, John, Kurster, Martin, Beichman, Charles A., Bieryla, Allyson, Brown, Timothy M., Christiansen, Jessie L., Ciardi, David R., Collins, Karen A., Esquerdo, Gilbert A., Howard, Andrew W., Isaacson, Howard, Latham, David W., Mazeh, Tsevi, Petigura, Erik A., Quinn, Samuel N., Shahaf, Sahar, Siverd, Robert J., Ricker, George R., Vanderspek, Roland, Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N., Jenkins, Jon M., Boyd, Patricia T., Furesz, Gabor, Henze, Christopher, Levine, Alen M., Morris, Robert, Paegert, Martin, Stassun, Keivan G., Ting, Eric B., Vezie, Michael, and Laughlin, Gregory
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first confirmation of a hot Jupiter discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission: HD 202772A b. The transit signal was detected in the data from TESS Sector 1, and was confirmed to be of planetary origin through radial-velocity measurements. HD 202772A b is orbiting a mildly evolved star with a period of 3.3 days. With an apparent magnitude of V = 8.3, the star is among the brightest known to host a hot Jupiter. Based on the 27days of TESS photometry, and radial velocity data from the CHIRON and HARPS spectrographs, the planet has a mass of 1.008+/-0.074 M_J and radius of 1.562+/-0.053 R_J , making it an inflated gas giant. HD 202772A b is a rare example of a transiting hot Jupiter around a quickly evolving star. It is also one of the most strongly irradiated hot Jupiters currently known., Comment: Submitted to AAS Journal
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. HD 202772A b: A Transiting Hot Jupiter around a Bright, Mildly Evolved Star in a Visual Binary Discovered by TESS
- Author
-
Wang, Songhu, Jones, Matias, Shporer, Avi, Fulton, Benjamin J, Paredes, Leonardo A, Trifonov, Trifon, Kossakowski, Diana, Eastman, Jason, Redfield, Seth, Günther, Maximilian N, Kreidberg, Laura, Huang, Chelsea X, Millholland, Sarah, Seligman, Darryl, Fischer, Debra, Brahm, Rafael, Wang, Xian-Yu, Cruz, Bryndis, Henry, Todd, James, Hodari-Sadiki, Addison, Brett, Liang, En-Si, Davis, Allen B, Tronsgaard, René, Worku, Keduse, Brewer, John M, Kürster, Martin, Zhang, Hui, Beichman, Charles A, Bieryla, Allyson, Brown, Timothy M, Christiansen, Jessie L, Ciardi, David R, Collins, Karen A, Esquerdo, Gilbert A, Howard, Andrew W, Isaacson, Howard, Latham, David W, Mazeh, Tsevi, Petigura, Erik A, Quinn, Samuel N, Shahaf, Sahar, Siverd, Robert J, Rodler, Florian, Reffert, Sabine, Zakhozhay, Olga, Ricker, George R, Vanderspek, Roland, Seager, Sara, Winn, Joshua N, Jenkins, Jon M, Boyd, Patricia T, Fűrész, Gábor, Henze, Christopher, Levine, Alen M, Morris, Robert, Paegert, Martin, Stassun, Keivan G, Ting, Eric B, Vezie, Michael, and Laughlin, Gregory
- Subjects
planetary systems ,planets and satellites: detection ,stars: individual (TIC 290131778-TOI 123-HD 202772 ,techniques: radial velocities ,astro-ph.EP ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first confirmation of a hot Jupiter discovered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission: HD 202772A b. The transit signal was detected in the data from TESS Sector 1, and was confirmed to be of planetary origin through radial velocity (RV) measurements. HD 202772A b is orbiting a mildly evolved star with a period of 3.3 days. With an apparent magnitude of V = 8.3, the star is among the brightest and most massive known to host a hot Jupiter. Based on the 27 days of TESS photometry and RV data from the CHIRON, HARPS, and Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph, the planet has a mass of and radius of , making it an inflated gas giant. HD 202772A b is a rare example of a transiting hot Jupiter around a quickly evolving star. It is also one of the most strongly irradiated hot Jupiters currently known.
- Published
- 2019
25. Transiting Exoplanet Monitoring Project (TEMP). V. Transit Follow Up for HAT-P-9b, HAT-P-32b, and HAT-P-36b
- Author
-
Wang, Yong-Hao, Wang, Songhu, Hinse, Tobias C, Wu, Zhen-Yu, Davis, Allen B, Hori, Yasunori, Yoon, Joh-Na, Han, Wonyong, Nie, Jun-Dan, Liu, Hui-Gen, Zhang, Hui, Zhou, Ji-Lin, Wittenmyer, RA, Peng, Xi-Yan, and Laughlin, Gregory
- Subjects
planets and satellites: fundamental parameters ,stars: fundamental parameters ,techniques: photometric ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
© 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. During the past five years, 6, 7, and 26 transit observations were carried out for the HAT-P-9b, HAT-P-32b, and HAT-P-36b systems, respectively, through the Transiting Exoplanet Monitoring Project network. Combined with the published photometric data and radial-velocity measurements, our new photometry allows us to revisit the system parameters and search for additional close-in planetary companions in these hot Jupiter systems. We measure an updated R P /R ∗ = 0.1260 ±0.0011 for HAT-P-36 system in the R band, which is 4.5σ larger than the published i-band radius ratio of 0.1186 ±0.0012. We also perform a transit timing variation (TTV) analysis for each system. Because no significant TTVs were found, we place an upper mass limit on an additional planet for each system.
- Published
- 2019
26. Systematic evidence map (SEM) template: Report format and methods used for the US EPA Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) program, Provisional Peer Reviewed Toxicity Value (PPRTV) program, and other “fit for purpose” literature-based human health analyses
- Author
-
Thayer, Kristina A., Angrish, Michelle, Arzuaga, Xabier, Carlson, Laura M., Davis, Allen, Dishaw, Laura, Druwe, Ingrid, Gibbons, Catherine, Glenn, Barbara, Jones, Ryan, Phillip Kaiser, J., Keshava, Channa, Keshava, Nagalakshmi, Kraft, Andrew, Lizarraga, Lucina, Persad, Amanda, Radke, Elizabeth G., Rice, Glenn, Schulz, Brittany, Shaffer, Rachel M., Shannon, Teresa, Shapiro, Andrew, Thacker, Shane, Vulimiri, Suryanarayana V., Williams, Antony J., Woodall, George, Yost, Erin, Blain, Robyn, Duke, Katherine, Goldstone, Alexandra E., Hartman, Pam, Hobbie, Kevin, Ingle, Brandall, Lemeris, Courtney, Lin, Cynthia, Lindahl, Alex, McKinley, Kristen, Soleymani, Parnian, and Vetter, Nicole
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Considerations for evaluating innovative stormwater treatment media for removal of dissolved contaminants of concern with focus on biochar
- Author
-
Kaya, Devrim, Croft, Kristen, Pamuru, Sai Thejaswini, Yuan, Chen, Davis, Allen P., and Kjellerup, Birthe V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Insights on the Spectral Signatures of Stellar Activity and Planets from PCA
- Author
-
Davis, Allen B., Cisewski, Jessi, Dumusque, Xavier, Fischer, Debra A., and Ford, Eric B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Photospheric velocities and stellar activity features such as spots and faculae produce measurable radial velocity signals that currently obscure the detection of sub-meter-per-second planetary signals. However, photospheric velocities are imprinted differently in a high-resolution spectrum than Keplerian Doppler shifts. Photospheric activity produces subtle differences in the shapes of absorption lines due to differences in how temperature or pressure affects the atomic transitions. In contrast, Keplerian Doppler shifts affect every spectral line in the same way. With high enough S/N and high enough resolution, statistical techniques can exploit differences in spectra to disentangle the photospheric velocities and detect lower-amplitude exoplanet signals. We use simulated disk-integrated time-series spectra and principal component analysis (PCA) to show that photospheric signals introduce spectral line variability that is distinct from Doppler shifts. We quantify the impact of instrumental resolution and S/N for this work., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted to ApJ
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Chemical characterization of urban stormwater: Traditional and emerging contaminants
- Author
-
Pamuru, Sai Thejaswini, Forgione, Erica, Croft, Kristen, Kjellerup, Birthe V., and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Unconventional microbial mechanisms for the key factors influencing inorganic nitrogen removal in stormwater bioretention columns
- Author
-
Huang, Liuqin, Luo, Junyue, Li, Linxin, Jiang, Hongchen, Sun, Xiaoxi, Yang, Jian, She, Weiyu, Liu, Wen, Li, Liqing, and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Bioretention systems for stormwater management: Recent advances and future prospects
- Author
-
Vijayaraghavan, Kuppusamy, Biswal, Basanta Kumar, Adam, Max Gerrit, Soh, Soon Hong, Tsen-Tieng, Daryl Lee, Davis, Allen P., Chew, Soon Hoe, Tan, Puay Yok, Babovic, Vladan, and Balasubramanian, Rajasekhar
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Hydrologic Performance of Vegetated Compost Blankets for Highway Stormwater Management.
- Author
-
Forgione, Erica R., Felton, Gary K., Aydilek, Ahmet H., and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Application of a unified probabilistic framework to the dose-response assessment of acrolein
- Author
-
Blessinger, Todd, Davis, Allen, Chiu, Weihsueh A., Stanek, John, Woodall, George M., Gift, Jeff, Thayer, Kristina A., and Bussard, David
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Model averaging methods for the evaluation of dose-response model uncertainty when assessing the suitability of studies for estimating risk
- Author
-
Mendez, William, Jr., Shao, Kan, Lee, Janice S., Cote, Ila, Druwe, Ingrid L., Davis, Allen, and Gift, Jeffrey S.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Measuring soil coverage using image feature descriptors and the decision tree learning algorithm
- Author
-
Owen, Dylan C., Bensi, Michelle T., Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Structure and Dynamics of the 13/14 November 2012 Eclipse White-Light Corona
- Author
-
Pasachoff, Jay M., Rusin, Vojtech, Saniga, Metod, Babcock, Bryce A., Lu, Muzhou, Davis, Allen B., Dantowitz, Ronald F., Gaintatzis, Pavlos, Seiradakis, John H., Voulgaris, Aristeidis, Seaton, Daniel B., and Shiota, Kazuo
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Continuing our series of observations of the motion and dynamics of the solar corona over the solar-activity cycle, we observed the corona from sites in Queensland, Australia, during the 13 (UT)/14 (local time) November 2012 total solar eclipse. The corona took the low-ellipticity shape typical of solar maximum (flattening index {\epsilon} = 0.01), showing a change from the composite coronal images that we had observed and analyzed in this journal and elsewhere for the 2006, 2008, 2009, and 2010 eclipses. After crossing the northeast Australian coast, the rest of the path of totality was over the ocean, so further totality was seen only by shipborne observers. Our results include measurements of velocities of a coronal mass ejection; during the 36 minutes of passage from the Queensland coast to a ship north of New Zealand, we find a speed of 413 km/s, and we analyze its dynamics. We discuss the shapes and positions of several types of coronal features seen on our higher-resolution composite Queensland images of the solar corona, including, many helmet streamers, very faint bright and dark loops at the base of helmet streamers, voids and radially oriented thin streamers. We compare our eclipse observations with a hairy-ball model of the magnetic field, confirming the validity of the prediction, and we relate the eclipse phenomenology seen with the near-simultaneous images from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly on the NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO/AIA), the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager on NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO/EUVI), ESA/ROB's PROBA2/SWAP, and NRL's LASCO on ESA's SOHO. For example, the southeastern CME is related to the solar flare whose origin we trace with a SWAP series of images., Comment: 33 pages, 21 figures in 32 parts
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Measurement of net electric charge and dipole moment of dust aggregates in a complex plasma
- Author
-
Yousefi, Razieh, Davis, Allen B., Carmona-Reyes, Jorge, Matthews, Lorin S., and Hyde, Truell W.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Understanding the agglomeration of dust particles in complex plasmas requires a knowledge of the basic properties such as the net electrostatic charge and dipole moment of the dust. In this study, dust aggregates are formed from gold coated mono-disperse spherical melamine-formaldehyde monomers in a radio-frequency (rf) argon discharge plasma. The behavior of observed dust aggregates is analyzed both by studying the particle trajectories and by employing computer models examining 3D structures of aggregates and their interactions and rotations as induced by torques arising from their dipole moments. These allow the basic characteristics of the dust aggregates, such as the electrostatic charge and dipole moment, to be determined. It is shown that the experimental results support the predicted values from computer models for aggregates in these environments., Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A single nucleotide polymorphism assay sheds light on the extent and distribution of genetic diversity, population structure and functional basis of key traits in cultivated north American cannabis
- Author
-
Philippe Henry, Surender Khatodia, Karan Kapoor, Britni Gonzales, Alexis Middleton, Kevin Hong, Aaron Hilyard, Steve Johnson, Davis Allen, Zachary Chester, Dan Jin, José Carlos Rodriguez Jule, Iain Wilson, Manu Gangola, Jason Broome, Deron Caplan, Dinesh Adhikary, Michael K. Deyholos, Michael Morgan, Oliver W. Hall, Brent J. Guppy, and Cindy Orser
- Subjects
Cannabis ,Hemp ,Genetic assay ,Cannabinoids ,Terpenes ,Compliance ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Abstract Background The taxonomic classification of Cannabis genus has been delineated through three main types: sativa (tall and less branched plant with long and narrow leaves), indica (short and highly branched plant with broader leaves) and ruderalis (heirloom type with short stature, less branching and small thick leaves). While still under discussion, particularly whether the genus is polytypic or monotypic, this broad classification reflects putative geographical origins of each group and putative chemotype and pharmacologic effect. Methods Here we describe a thorough investigation of cannabis accessions using a set of 23 highly informative and polymorphic SNP (Single Nucleotide Polymorphism) markers associated with important traits such as cannabinoid and terpenoid expression as well as fibre and resin production. The assay offers insight into cannabis population structure, phylogenetic relationship, population genetics and correlation to secondary metabolite concentrations. We demonstrate the utility of the assay for rapid, repeatable and cost-efficient genotyping of commercial and industrial cannabis accessions for use in product traceability, breeding programs, regulatory compliance and consumer education. Results We identified 5 clusters in the sample set, including industrial hemp (K5) and resin hemp, which likely underwent a bottleneck to stabilize cannabidiolic acid (CBDA) accumulation (K2, Type II & III). Tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) resin (Type I) makes up the other three clusters with terpinolene (K4 - colloquial “sativa” or “Narrow Leaflet Drug” (NLD), myrcene/pinene (K1) and myrcene/limonene/linalool (K3 - colloquial “indica”, “Broad Leaflet Drug” (BLD), which also putatively harbour an active version of the cannabichrometic acid Synthase gene (CBCAS). Conclusion The final chemical compositions of cannabis products have key traits related to their genetic identities. Our analyses in the context of the NCBI Cannabis sativa Annotation Release 100 allows for hypothesis testing with regards to secondary metabolite production. Genetic markers related to secondary metabolite production will be important in many sectors of the cannabis marketplace. For example, markers related to THC production will be important for adaptable and compliant large-scale seed production under the new US Domestic Hemp Production Program.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Evaluation of an enhanced treatment media and permeable pavement base to remove stormwater nitrogen, phosphorus, and metals under simulated rainfall
- Author
-
Ostrom, Travis K. and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Polychlorinated biphenyls in stormwater sediments: Relationships with land use and particle characteristics
- Author
-
Cao, Siqi, Capozzi, Staci L., Kjellerup, Birthe V., and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Ettringite and monosulfate formation to reduce alkalinity in reactions of alum-based water treatment residual with steel slag
- Author
-
Özkök, Enes, Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Adult female with intermittent epigastric pain
- Author
-
Chiacchia, Sam, primary, Davis‐Allen, Peter, additional, Dowling, Sean, additional, and Batchelor, Timothy J., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. When roads want to be dams: looking to dam safety to regulate transportation embankments
- Author
-
O’Shaughnessy, Amanda, primary, Dayioglu, Asli Y., additional, Davis, Allen P., additional, and Aydilek, Ahmet H., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Systematic Evidence Map for Over One Hundred and Fifty Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)
- Author
-
Carlson, Laura M., Angrish, Michelle, Shirke, Avanti V., Radke, Elizabeth G., Schulz, Brittany, Kraft, Andrew, Judson, Richard, Patlewicz, Grace, Blain, Robyn, Lin, Cynthia, Vetter, Nicole, Hartman, Courtney Lemeris Pamela, Hubbard, Heidi, Arzuaga, Xabier, Davis, Allen, Dishaw, Laura V., Druwe, Ingrid L., Hollinger, Hillary, Jones, Ryan, Kaiser, J. Phillip, Lizarraga, Lucina, Noyes, Pamela D., Taylor, Michele, Shapiro, Andrew J., Williams, Antony J., and Thayer, Kristina A.
- Subjects
Biological assay -- Usage ,Health risk assessment -- Methods ,Environmental issues ,Health - Abstract
Background: Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a large class of synthetic (man-made) chemicals widely used in consumer products and industrial processes. Thousands of distinct PFAS exist in commerce. The 2019 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Action Plan outlines a multiprogram national research plan to address the challenge of PFAS. One component of this strategy involves the use of systematic evidence map (SEM) approaches to characterize the evidence base for hundreds of PFAS. Objective: SEM methods were used to summarize available epidemiological and animal bioassay evidence for a set of ~ 150 PFAS that were prioritized in 2019 by the U.S. EPA's Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure (CCTE) for in vitro toxicity and toxicokinetic assay testing. Methods: Systematic review methods were used to identify and screen literature using manual review and machine-learning software. The Populations, Exposures, Comparators, and Outcomes (PECO) criteria were kept broad to identify mammalian animal bioassay and epidemiological studies that could inform human hazard identification. A variety of supplemental content was also tracked, including information on in vitro model systems; exposure measurement-only studies in humans; and absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME). Animal bioassay and epidemiology studies meeting PECO criteria were summarized with respect to study design, and health system(s) were assessed. Because animal bioassay studies with [greater than or equal to]21-d exposure duration (or reproductive/developmental study design) were most useful to CCTE analyses, these studies underwent study evaluation and detailed data extraction. All data extraction is publicly available online as interactive visuals with downloadable metadata. Results: More than 40,000 studies were identified from scientific databases. Screening processes identified 44 animal and 148 epidemiology studies from the peer-reviewed literature and 95 animal and 50 epidemiology studies from gray literature that met PECO criteria. Epidemiological evidence (available for 15 PFAS) mostly assessed the reproductive, endocrine, developmental, metabolic, cardiovascular, and immune systems. Animal evidence (available for 40 PFAS) commonly assessed effects in the reproductive, developmental, urinary, immunological, and hepatic systems. Overall, 45 PFAS had evidence across animal and epidemiology data streams. Discussion: Many of the ~ 150 PFAS were data poor. Epidemiological and animal evidence were lacking for most of the PFAS included in our search. By disseminating this information, we hope to facilitate additional assessment work by providing the initial scoping literature survey and identifying key research needs. Future research on data-poor PFAS will help support a more complete understanding of the potential health effects from PFAS exposures. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10343, Introduction Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a large class of synthetic compounds with widespread presence used in consumer products and industrial processes. The core structure of PFAS consists of [...]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Ammonium Removal from Synthetic Stormwater using Clinoptilolite and Hydroaluminosilicate Columns
- Author
-
Khorsha, Golnaz and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2017
46. Adsorption of Compounds that Mimic Urban Stormwater Dissolved Organic Nitrogen
- Author
-
Mohtadi, Mehrdad, James, Bruce R., and Davis, Allen P.
- Published
- 2017
47. Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) in Dissolved and Particulate Phases of Urban Stormwater before and after Bioretention Treatment
- Author
-
Cao, Siqi, primary, Bensi, Michelle, additional, Davis, Allen P., additional, and Kjellerup, Birthe V., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. When roads want to be dams: looking to dam safety to regulate transportation embankments.
- Author
-
O'Shaughnessy, Amanda, Dayioglu, Asli Y., Davis, Allen P., and Aydilek, Ahmet H.
- Subjects
EMBANKMENTS ,DAM safety ,TRANSPORTATION safety measures ,SLOPE stability ,EARTH dams ,GRANULAR materials - Abstract
The potential for failure processes developing in transportation embankments temporarily impounding water has not been a common consideration in the design and management of these structures. However, changes in water elevations due to land development and climate change have prompted concern about impoundment on seepage rates and overall stability of the constructed embankments. This study was conducted to examine how different aspects of dam safety can be incorporated in transportation embankment management. Evolving issues pertaining to water impoundment were investigated, transportation and dam embankments were compared, current US Mid-Atlantic state policies were summarized, and numerical modeling of seepage and slope stability was conducted to understand how example transportation embankments behave under various water impoundment scenarios. Performance assessment of granular materials commonly used in transportation embankments indicates their ability to withstand piping erosion but demonstrate poor slope stability during rapid drawdown. Recommendations are provided on prioritizing evaluations of transportation embankments. Results demonstrate the need for infrastructure inventories and hydrologic research on this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Systematic Evidence Map for Over One Hundred and Fifty Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS).
- Author
-
Carlson, Laura M., Angrish, Michelle, Shirke, Avanti V., Radke, Elizabeth G., Schulz, Brittany, Kraft, Andrew, Judson, Richard, Patlewicz, Grace, Blain, Robyn, Lin, Cynthia, Vetter, Nicole, Lemeris, Courtney, Hartman, Pamela, Hubbard, Heidi, Arzuaga, Xabier, Davis, Allen, Dishaw, Laura V., Druwe, Ingrid L., Hollinger, Hillary, and Jones, Ryan
- Subjects
IN vitro studies ,ONLINE information services ,SUBJECT headings ,ANIMAL experimentation ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,UNCERTAINTY ,MACHINE learning ,PHARMACY databases ,RESEARCH funding ,BIOLOGICAL assay ,MEDLINE ,TOXICOLOGY ,FLUOROPOLYMERS ,GREY literature ,MICE - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a large class of synthetic (man-made) chemicals widely used in consumer products and industrial processes. Thousands of distinct PFAS exist in commerce. The 2019 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Action Plan outlines a multiprogram national research plan to address the challenge of PFAS. One component of this strategy involves the use of systematic evidence map (SEM) approaches to characterize the evidence base for hundreds of PFAS. OBJECTIVE: SEM methods were used to summarize available epidemiological and animal bioassay evidence for a set of ~150 PFAS that were prioritized in 2019 by the U.S. EPA’s Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure (CCTE) for in vitro toxicity and toxicokinetic assay testing. METHODS: Systematic review methods were used to identify and screen literature using manual review and machine-learning software. The Populations, Exposures, Comparators, and Outcomes (PECO) criteria were kept broad to identify mammalian animal bioassay and epidemiological studies that could inform human hazard identification. A variety of supplemental content was also tracked, including information on in vitro model systems; exposure measurement-only studies in humans; and absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME). Animal bioassay and epidemiology studies meeting PECO criteria were summarized with respect to study design, and health system(s) were assessed. Because animal bioassay studies with ≥21-d exposure duration (or reproductive/developmental study design) were most useful to CCTE analyses, these studies underwent study evaluation and detailed data extraction. All data extraction is publicly available online as interactive visuals with downloadable metadata. RESULTS: More than 40,000 studies were identified from scientific databases. Screening processes identified 44 animal and 148 epidemiology studies from the peer-reviewed literature and 95 animal and 50 epidemiology studies from gray literature that met PECO criteria. Epidemiological evidence (available for 15 PFAS) mostly assessed the reproductive, endocrine, developmental, metabolic, cardiovascular, and immune systems. Animal evidence (available for 40 PFAS) commonly assessed effects in the reproductive, developmental, urinary, immunological, and hepatic systems. Overall, 45 PFAS had evidence across animal and epidemiology data streams. DISCUSSION: Many of the ~150 PFAS were data poor. Epidemiological and animal evidence were lacking for most of the PFAS included in our search. By disseminating this information, we hope to facilitate additional assessment work by providing the initial scoping literature survey and identifying key research needs. Future research on data-poor PFAS will help support a more complete understanding of the potential health effects from PFAS exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Understanding Nitrogen and Phosphorus Leaching from Compost Addition to Bioretention Media
- Author
-
Owen, Dylan C., primary, Gardina, Colleen, additional, Ostrom, Travis K., additional, and Davis, Allen P., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.