2,865 results on '"Dietrich M"'
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2. Fokus Beatmung, Sauerstofftherapie und Weaning 2022–2024: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Fiedler-Kalenka, M. O., Brenner, T., Bernhard, M., Reuß, C. J., Beynon, C., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Weigand, M. A., and Dietrich, M.
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- 2024
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3. Fokus Sepsis und allgemeine Intensivmedizin 2023/2024: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Reuß, C. J., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Fiedler-Kalenka, M. O., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Schmitt, F. C. F., Brenner, T., Weigand, M. A., and Dietrich, M.
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- 2024
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4. Correction to: Robotic colorectal resection in combination with a multimodal enhanced recovery program - results of the first 100 cases
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El-Ahmar, M., Peters, F., Green, M., Dietrich, M., Ristig, M., Moikow, L., and Ritz, J.-P.
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- 2024
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5. Synergetische Effekte von ERAS und Robotik in der kolorektalen Chirurgie
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El-Ahmar, M., Peters, F., Green, M., Dietrich, M., Ulmer, S., and Ritz, J.-P.
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- 2023
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6. Fokus Notfallmedizin 2022/2023 – Zusammenfassung ausgewählter notfallmedizinischer Studien
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Katzenschlager, S., Obermaier, M., Kuhner, M., Spöttl, W., Dietrich, M., Weigand, M. A., Weilbacher, F., and Popp, E.
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- 2023
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7. Fokus Sepsis und allgemeine Intensivmedizin 2022/2023: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Dietrich, M., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Fiedler, M. O., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Schmitt, F. C. F., Brenner, T., Weigand, Markus A., and Reuß, C. J.
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- 2023
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8. Robotic colorectal resection in combination with a multimodal enhanced recovery program - results of the first 100 cases
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El-Ahmar, M., Peters, F., Green, M., Dietrich, M., Ristig, M., Moikow, L., and Ritz, J.-P.
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- 2023
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9. Fokus Beatmung, Sauerstofftherapie und Weaning 2021/2022: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Fiedler, M. O., Dietrich, M., Reuß, C. J., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Weigand, M. A., and Brenner, T.
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- 2023
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10. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. XII. Broad-Line Region Modeling of NGC 5548
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Williams, P. R., Pancoast, A., Treu, T., Brewer, B. J., Peterson, B. M., Barth, A. J., Malkan, M. A., De Rosa, G., Horne, Keith, Kriss, G. A., Arav, N., Bentz, M. C., Cackett, E. M., Bontà, E. Dalla, Dehghanian, M., Done, C., Ferland, G. J., Grier, C. J., Kaastra, J., Kara, E., Kochanek, C. S., Mathur, S., Mehdipour, M., Pogge, R. W., Proga, D., Vestergaard, M., Waters, T., Adams, S. M., Anderson, M. D., Arévalo, P., Beatty, T. G., Bennert, V. N., Bigley, A., Bisogni, S., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brotherton, M., Brown, J. E., Brown, J. S., Canalizo, G., Carini, M. T., Clubb, K. I., Comerford, J. M., Corsini, E. M., Crenshaw, D. M., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Deason, A. J., De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A., Denney, K. D., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Efimova, N. V., Ely, J., Evans, P. A., Fausnaugh, M. M., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Fox, O. D., Gardner, E., Gates, E. L., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Greene, J. E., Grupe, D., Gupta, A., Hall, P. B., Henderson, C. B., Hicks, S., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, P. L., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S., Kim, S. C., King, A., Klimanov, S. A., Knigge, C., Krongold, Y., Lau, M. W., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Li, Miao, Lira, P., Lochhaas, C., Ma, Zhiyuan, Manne-Nicholas, E. R., MacInnis, F., Mauerhan, J. C., McGurk, R., Hardy, I. M. Mc, Montuori, C., Morelli, L., Mosquera, A., Mudd, D., Müller-Sánchez, F., Nazarov, S. V., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Okhmat, D. N., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pei, L., Penny, M. T., Pizzella, A., Poleski, R., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Runnoe, J., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Scott, B., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Siegel, M., Simonian, G. V., Siviero, A., Skielboe, A., Somers, G., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, D. J., Sung, H. -I., Tayar, J., Tejos, N., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Van Saders, J., Vaughan, S. A., Vican, L., Villanueva Jr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., Yuk, H., Zheng, W., Zhu, W., and Zu, Y.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present geometric and dynamical modeling of the broad line region for the multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign focused on NGC 5548 in 2014. The dataset includes photometric and spectroscopic monitoring in the optical and ultraviolet, covering the H$\beta$, C IV, and Ly$\alpha$ broad emission lines. We find an extended disk-like H$\beta$ BLR with a mixture of near-circular and outflowing gas trajectories, while the C IV and Ly$\alpha$ BLRs are much less extended and resemble shell-like structures. There is clear radial structure in the BLR, with C IV and Ly$\alpha$ emission arising at smaller radii than the H$\beta$ emission. Using the three lines, we make three independent black hole mass measurements, all of which are consistent. Combining these results gives a joint inference of $\log_{10}(M_{\rm BH}/M_\odot) = 7.64^{+0.21}_{-0.18}$. We examine the effect of using the $V$ band instead of the UV continuum light curve on the results and find a size difference that is consistent with the measured UV-optical time lag, but the other structural and kinematic parameters remain unchanged, suggesting that the $V$ band is a suitable proxy for the ionizing continuum when exploring the BLR structure and kinematics. Finally, we compare the H$\beta$ results to similar models of data obtained in 2008 when the AGN was at a lower luminosity state. We find that the size of the emitting region increased during this time period, but the geometry and black hole mass remain unchanged, which confirms that the BLR kinematics suitably gauge the gravitational field of the central black hole., Comment: 26 pages, 19 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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11. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. IX. Velocity-Delay Maps for Broad Emission Lines in NGC 5548
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Horne, Keith, De Rosa, G., Peterson, B. M., Barth, A. J., Ely, J., Fausnaugh, M. M., Kriss, G. A., Pei, L., Adams, S. M., Anderson, M. D., Arevalo, P., Beatty, T G., Bennert, V. N., Bentz, M. C., Bigley, A., Bisogni, S., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brotherton, M., Brown, J. E., Brown, J. S., Cackett, E. M., Canalizo, G., Carini, M. T., Clubb, K. I., Comerford, J. M., Corsini, E. M., Crenshaw, D. M., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Bonta, E. Dalla, Deason, A. J., Dehghanian, M., De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Denney, K. D., Dietrich, M., Done, C., Edelson, R., Efimova, N. V., Eracleous, M., Evans, P. A., Ferland, G. J., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Fox, O. D., Gardner, E., Gates, E. L., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Goad, M. R., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Greene, J. E., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Gupta, A., Hall, P. B., Henderson, C. B., Hicks, S., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, P. L., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S., Kim, S. C., King, A., Klimanov, S. A., Kochanek, C. S., Korista, K. T., Krongold, Y., Lau, M. W., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Li, Miao, Lira, P., Lochhaas, C., Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F., Malkan, M. A., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mathur, S., Mauerhan, J. C., McGurk, R., Hardy, I. M. Mc, Montuori, C., Morelli, L., Mosquera, A., Mudd, D., Mueller-Sanchez, F., Nazarov, S. V., Netzer, H., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Okhmat, D. N., Pancoast, A., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Penny, M. T., Pizzella, A., Pogge, R. W., Poleski, R., Pott, J. -U., Proga, D., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Runnoe, J., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Schnuelle, K., Scott, B., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Siegel, M., Simonian, G. V., Siviero, A., Skielboe, A., Somers, G., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, D. J., Strauss, M. A., Sung, H. -I., Tayar, J., Teems, K. G., Tejos, N., Treu, T., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Van Saders, J ., Vestergaard, M., Vican, L., Villanueva Jr, S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., Yuk, H., Zakamska, N. L., Zheng, W., Zhu, W., and Zu, Y.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report velocity-delay maps for prominent broad emission lines, Ly_alpha, CIV, HeII and H_beta, in the spectrum of NGC5548. The emission-line responses inhabit the interior of a virial envelope. The velocity-delay maps reveal stratified ionization structure. The HeII response inside 5-10 light-days has a broad single-peaked velocity profile. The Ly_alpha, CIV, and H_beta responses peak inside 10 light-days, extend outside 20 light-days, and exhibit a velocity profile with two peaks separated by 5000 km/s in the 10 to 20 light-day delay range. The velocity-delay maps show that the M-shaped lag vs velocity structure found in previous cross-correlation analysis is the signature of a Keplerian disk with a well-defined outer edge at R=20 light-days. The outer wings of the M arise from the virial envelope, and the U-shaped interior of the M is the lower half of an ellipse in the velocity-delay plane. The far-side response is weaker than that from the near side, so that we see clearly the lower half, but only faintly the upper half, of the velocity--delay ellipse. The delay tau=(R/c)(1-sin(i))=5 light-days at line center is from the near edge of the inclined ring, giving the inclination i=45 deg. A black hole mass of M=7x10^7 Msun is consistent with the velocity-delay structure. A barber-pole pattern with stripes moving from red to blue across the CIV and possibly Ly_alpha line profiles suggests the presence of azimuthal structure rotating around the far side of the broad-line region and may be the signature of precession or orbital motion of structures in the inner disk. Further HST observations of NGC 5548 over a multi-year timespan but with a cadence of perhaps 10 days rather than 1 day could help to clarify the nature of this new AGN phenomenon., Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, ApJ in press
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- 2020
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12. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. IX. Velocity–Delay Maps for Broad Emission Lines in NGC 5548
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Horne, Keith, De Rosa, G, Peterson, BM, Barth, AJ, Ely, J, Fausnaugh, MM, Kriss, GA, Pei, L, Bentz, MC, Cackett, EM, Edelson, R, Eracleous, M, Goad, MR, Grier, CJ, Kaastra, J, Kochanek, CS, Krongold, Y, Mathur, S, Netzer, H, Proga, D, Tejos, N, Vestergaard, M, Villforth, C, Adams, SM, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Beatty, TG, Bennert, VN, Bigley, A, Bisogni, S, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brandt, WN, Breeveld, AA, Brotherton, M, Brown, JE, Brown, JS, Canalizo, G, Carini, MT, Clubb, KI, Comerford, JM, Corsini, EM, Crenshaw, DM, Croft, S, Croxall, KV, Bontà, E Dalla, Deason, AJ, Dehghanian, M, De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A, Denney, KD, Dietrich, M, Done, C, Efimova, NV, Evans, PA, Ferland, GJ, Filippenko, AV, Flatland, K, Fox, OD, Gardner, E, Gates, EL, Gehrels, N, Geier, S, Gelbord, JM, Gonzalez, L, Gorjian, V, Greene, JE, Grupe, D, Gupta, A, Hall, PB, Henderson, CB, Hicks, S, Holmbeck, E, Holoien, TW-S, Hutchison, T, Im, M, Jensen, JJ, Johnson, CA, Joner, MD, Jones, J, Kaspi, S, Kelly, PL, Kennea, JA, Kim, M, Kim, S, Kim, SC, King, A, Klimanov, SA, Korista, KT, Lau, MW, Lee, JC, Leonard, DC, Li, Miao, Lira, P, Lochhaas, C, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F, Malkan, MA, Manne-Nicholas, ER, and Mauerhan, JC
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astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
In this contribution, we achieve the primary goal of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) STORM campaign by recovering velocity-delay maps for the prominent broad emission lines (Lyα, C iv, He ii, and Hβ) in the spectrum of NGC 5548. These are the most detailed velocity-delay maps ever obtained for an AGN, providing unprecedented information on the geometry, ionization structure, and kinematics of the broad-line region. Virial envelopes enclosing the emission-line responses show that the reverberating gas is bound to the black hole. A stratified ionization structure is evident. The He ii response inside 5-10 lt-day has a broad single-peaked velocity profile. The Lyα, C iv, and Hβ responses extend from inside 2 to outside 20 lt-day, with double peaks at ±2500 km s-1 in the 10-20 lt-day delay range. An incomplete ellipse in the velocity-delay plane is evident in Hβ. We interpret the maps in terms of a Keplerian disk with a well-defined outer rim at R = 20 lt-day. The far-side response is weaker than that from the near side. The line-center delay days gives the inclination i ≈ 45°. The inferred black hole mass is M BH ≈ 7 × 107 M o˙. In addition to reverberations, the fit residuals confirm that emission-line fluxes are depressed during the "BLR Holiday"identified in previous work. Moreover, a helical "Barber-Pole"pattern, with stripes moving from red to blue across the C iv and Lyα line profiles, suggests azimuthal structure rotating with a 2 yr period that may represent precession or orbital motion of inner-disk structures casting shadows on the emission-line region farther out.
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- 2021
13. Spectroscopic Study and Lifetime Measurement of the $6d7p$ $ ^{3}F_{2}^{o}$ state of radium
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Booth, D. W., Rabga, T., Ready, R., Bailey, K. G., Bishof, M., Dietrich, M. R., Greene, J. P., Mueller, P., O'Connor, T. P., and Singh, J. T.
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Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
We report a method for the precision measurement of the oscillator strengths and the branching ratios of the decay channels of the $6d7p$ $^3F_2$ state in $^{226}$Ra. This method exploits a set of metastable states present in Ra, allowing a measurement of the oscillator strengths that does not require knowledge of the number of atoms in the atomic beam. We measure the oscillator strengths and the branching ratios for decays to the $7s6d$ $^3D_1$, $7s6d$ $^3D_2$, and $7s6d$ $^1D_2$ states and constrain the branching ratio to the $7s6d$ $^3D_3$ state to be less than 0.4$\%$ (68$\%$ confidence limit). The lifetime of the $^3F_2$ state is determined to be $15 \pm 4$ ns., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Physical Review A
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- 2019
14. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. VIII. Time Variability of Emission and Absorption in NGC 5548 Based on Modeling the Ultraviolet Spectrum
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Kriss, G. A., De Rosa, G., Ely, J., Peterson, B. M., Kaastra, J., Mehdipour, M., Ferland, G. J., Dehghanian, M., Mathur, S., Edelson, R., Korista, K. T., Arav, N., Barth, A. J., Bentz, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Crenshaw, D. M., Bontà, E. Dalla, Denney, K. D., Done, C., Eracleous, M., Fausnaugh, M. M., Gardner, E., Goad, M. R., Grier, C. J., Horne, Keith, Kochanek, C. S., Mchardy, I. M., Netzer, H., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Pogge, R. W., Proga, D., Silva, C., Tejos, N., Vestergaard, M., Adams, S. M., Anderson, M. D., Arévalo, P., Beatty, T G., Behar, E., Bennert, V. N., Bianchi, S., Bigley, A., Bisogni, S., Boissay-Malaquin, R., Borman, G. A., Bottorff, M. C., Breeveld, A. A., Brotherton, M., Brown, J. E., Brown, J. S., Cackett, E. M., Canalizo, G., Cappi, M., Carini, M. T., Clubb, K. I., Comerford, J. M., Coker, C. T., Corsini, E. M., Costantini, E., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Deason, A. J., De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A., De Marco, B., Dietrich, M., Di Gesu, L., Ebrero, J., Evans, P. A., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Gates, E. L., Gehrels, N., Geier, Z S., Gelbord, J. M., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Grupe, D., Gupta, A., Hall, P. B., Henderson, C. B., Hicks, S., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Hutchison, T. A., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Joner, M. D., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kelly, P. L., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S. C., Kim, S. Y., King, A., Klimanov, S. A., Krongold, Y., Lau, M. W., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Li, Miao, Lira, P., Lochhaas, C., Ma, Zhiyuan, Macinnis, F., Malkan, M. A., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Matt, G., Mauerhan, J. C., Mcgurk, R., Montuori, C., Morelli, L., Mosquera, A., Mudd, D., Müller-Sánchez, F., Nazarov, S. V., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Okhmat, D. N., Paltani, S., Parks, J. R., Pinto, C., Pizzella, A., Poleski, R., Ponti, G., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Runnoe, J., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Schnülle, K., Scott, B., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Siegel, M., Simonian, G. V., Siviero, A., Skielboe, A., Somers, G., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, D. J., Sung, H. -I., Tayar, J., Teems, K. G., Treu, T., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Van Saders, J ., Vican, L., Villforth, C., Villanueva Jr., S., Walton, D. J., Waters, T., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Yuk, H., Zheng, W., Zhu, W., and Zu, Y.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We model the ultraviolet spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC~5548 obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope during the 6-month reverberation-mapping campaign in 2014. Our model of the emission from NGC 5548 corrects for overlying absorption and deblends the individual emission lines. Using the modeled spectra, we measure the response to continuum variations for the deblended and absorption-corrected individual broad emission lines, the velocity-dependent profiles of Ly$\alpha$ and C IV, and the narrow and broad intrinsic absorption features. We find that the time lags for the corrected emission lines are comparable to those for the original data. The velocity-binned lag profiles of Ly$\alpha$ and C IV have a double-peaked structure indicative of a truncated Keplerian disk. The narrow absorption lines show delayed response to continuum variations corresponding to recombination in gas with a density of $\sim 10^5~\rm cm^{-3}$. The high-ionization narrow absorption lines decorrelate from continuum variations during the same period as the broad emission lines. Analyzing the response of these absorption lines during this period shows that the ionizing flux is diminished in strength relative to the far-ultraviolet continuum. The broad absorption lines associated with the X-ray obscurer decrease in strength during this same time interval. The appearance of X-ray obscuration in $\sim\,2012$ corresponds with an increase in the luminosity of NGC 5548 following an extended low state. We suggest that the obscurer is a disk wind triggered by the brightening of NGC 5548 following the decrease in size of the broad-line region during the preceding low-luminosity state., Comment: 50 pages, 30 figures, uses aastex62.cls. Accepted for publication in ApJ, 07/06/2019. High-level products page in MAST will go live after 7/15/2019. Replaced Figure 4 on 7/12/2019 to be more red/green color-blind friendly
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- 2019
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15. Characterizing the Optical Trapping of Rare Isotopes by Monte Carlo Simulation
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Potterveld, D. H., Fromm, S. A., Bailey, K. G., Bishof, M., Booth, D. W., Dietrich, M. R., Greene, J. P., Holt, R. J., Kalita, M. R., Korsch, W., Lemke, N. D., Mueller, P., O'Connor, T. P., Parker, R. H., Rabga, T., and Singh, J. T.
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Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
Optical trapping techniques are an efficient way to probe limited quantities of rare isotopes. In order to achieve the highest possible measurement precision, it is critical to optimize the optical trapping efficiency. This work presents the development of a three-dimensional semi-classical Monte Carlo simulation of the optical trapping process and its application to optimizing the optical trapping efficiency of Radium for use in the search of the permanent electric dipole moment of $^{225}$Ra. The simulation includes an effusive-oven atomic beam source, transverse cooling and Zeeman slowing of an atomic beam, a three-dimensional magneto-optical trap, and additional processes such as collisions with residual gas molecules. We benchmark the simulation against a well-characterized $^{88}$Sr optical trap before applying it to the $^{225}$Ra optical trap. The simulation reproduces the relative gains in optical trapping efficiency measured in both the $^{88}$Sr and $^{225}$Ra optical traps. The measured and simulated values of the overall optical trapping efficiencies for $^{88}$Sr are in agreement; however, they differ by a factor of $30$ for $^{225}$Ra. Studies of several potential imperfections in the apparatus or systematic effects, such as atomic beam source misalignment and laser frequency noise, show only limited effects on the simulated trapping efficiency for $^{225}$Ra. We rule out any one systematic effect as the sole cause of the discrepancy between the simulated and measured $^{225}$Ra optical trapping efficiencies; but, we do expect that a combination of systematic effects contribute to this discrepancy. The accurate relative gains predicted by the simulation prove that it is useful for testing planned upgrades to the apparatus., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Physical Review A
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- 2019
16. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. XII. Broad-line Region Modeling of NGC 5548
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Williams, PR, Pancoast, A, Treu, T, Brewer, BJ, Peterson, BM, Barth, AJ, Malkan, MA, Rosa, GD, Horne, K, Kriss, GA, Arav, N, Bentz, MC, Cackett, EM, Bontà, ED, Dehghanian, M, Done, C, Ferland, GJ, Grier, CJ, Kaastra, J, Kara, E, Kochanek, CS, Mathur, S, Mehdipour, M, Pogge, RW, Proga, D, Vestergaard, M, Waters, T, Adams, SM, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Beatty, TG, Bennert, VN, Bigley, A, Bisogni, S, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brandt, WN, Breeveld, AA, Brotherton, M, Brown, JE, Brown, JS, Canalizo, G, Carini, MT, Clubb, KI, Comerford, JM, Corsini, EM, Crenshaw, DM, Croft, S, Croxall, KV, Deason, AJ, Lorenzo-Cáceres, AD, Denney, KD, Dietrich, M, Edelson, R, Efimova, NV, Ely, J, Evans, PA, Fausnaugh, MM, Filippenko, AV, Flatland, K, Fox, OD, Gardner, E, Gates, EL, Gehrels, N, Geier, S, Gelbord, JM, Gonzalez, L, Gorjian, V, Greene, JE, Grupe, D, Gupta, A, Hall, PB, Henderson, CB, Hicks, S, Holmbeck, E, Holoien, TWS, Hutchison, T, Im, M, Jensen, JJ, Johnson, CA, Joner, MD, Jones, J, Kaspi, S, Kelly, PL, Kennea, JA, Kim, M, Kim, S, Kim, SC, King, A, Klimanov, SA, Knigge, C, Krongold, Y, Lau, MW, Lee, JC, Leonard, DC, Li, M, Lira, P, Lochhaas, C, and Ma, Z
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Active galaxies ,Active galactic nuclei ,Reverberation mapping ,Seyfert galaxies ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present geometric and dynamical modeling of the broad line region (BLR) for the multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign focused on NGC 5548 in 2014. The data set includes photometric and spectroscopic monitoring in the optical and ultraviolet, covering the Hβ, C iv, and Ly broad emission lines. We find an extended disk-like Hβ BLR with a mixture of near-circular and outflowing gas trajectories, while the C iv and Ly BLRs are much less extended and resemble shell-like structures. There is clear radial structure in the BLR, with C iv and Ly emission arising at smaller radii than the Hβ emission. Using the three lines, we make three independent black hole mass measurements, all of which are consistent. Combining these results gives a joint inference of . We examine the effect of using the V band instead of the UV continuum light curve on the results and find a size difference that is consistent with the measured UV-optical time lag, but the other structural and kinematic parameters remain unchanged, suggesting that the V band is a suitable proxy for the ionizing continuum when exploring the BLR structure and kinematics. Finally, we compare the Hβ results to similar models of data obtained in 2008 when the active galactic nucleus was at a lower luminosity state. We find that the size of the emitting region increased during this time period, but the geometry and black hole mass remained unchanged, which confirms that the BLR kinematics suitably gauge the gravitational field of the central black hole.
- Published
- 2020
17. Fokus Neurologische Intensivmedizin 2021/2022: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Michalski, D., Jungk, C., Brenner, T., Nusshag, C., Reuß, C. J., Fiedler, M. O., Schmitt, F. C. F., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Weigand, M. A., and Dietrich, M.
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- 2022
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18. Thrombotischer Verschluss der extrakorporalen Zirkulation während hepatischer Chemosaturation trotz zielgerechter Antikoagulation: Ein Fallbericht
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Kuhner, M., Tan, B., Fiedler, M. O., Biecker, O., Klein, B., Chang, D. H., Weigand, M. A., and Dietrich, M.
- Published
- 2022
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19. Fokus allgemeine Intensivmedizin 2021/2022: Zusammenfassung ausgewählter intensivmedizinischer Studien
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Dietrich, M., Beynon, C., Fiedler, M. O., Bernhard, M., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Schmitt, F. C. F., Brenner, T., Weigand, M. A., and Reuß, C. J.
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- 2022
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20. CHAPTER 6 ZOONOTIC PATHOGENS AND OTHER INFECTIOUS MICROBES: DIVERSITY, EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY, AND TRANSMISSION
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Tortosa, P., primary, Dietrich, M., additional, Gomard, Y., additional, Cordonin, C., additional, Hoarau, A. O. G., additional, Andriamandimby, S. F., additional, Joffrin, L., additional, Brook, C. E., additional, Rabemananjara, H. A., additional, Filippone, C., additional, Wilkinson, D., additional, Héraud, J.-M., additional, Lebarbenchon, C., additional, Olive, M.-M., additional, Guis, H., additional, Miatrana Rasamoelina, V., additional, Tantely, L., additional, Mavingui, P., additional, Ramasindrazana, B., additional, Rasoanoro, M., additional, Ranaivoson, H. C., additional, Randrianarivelojosia, M., additional, Goodman, S. M., additional, Rasambainarivo, F., additional, and Zohdy, S., additional
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- 2022
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21. Optimization of anastomotic technique and gastric conduit perfusion with hyperspectral imaging and machine learning in an experimental model for minimally invasive esophagectomy
- Author
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Nickel, F., Studier-Fischer, A., Özdemir, B., Odenthal, J., Müller, L.R., Knoedler, S., Kowalewski, K.F., Camplisson, I., Allers, M.M., Dietrich, M., Schmidt, K., Salg, G.A., Kenngott, H.G., Billeter, A.T., Gockel, I., Sagiv, C., Hadar, O.E., Gildenblat, J., Ayala, L., Seidlitz, S., Maier-Hein, L., and Müller-Stich, B.P.
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- 2023
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22. Maternal and Child Health Pipeline Training Programs: A Description of Training Across 6 Funded Programs
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Moerchen, V., Taylor-DeOliveira, L., Dietrich, M., Armstrong, A., Azeredo, J., Belcher, H., and Copeland-Linder, N.
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Child health services -- Management -- Training ,Maternal health services -- Study and teaching -- Management -- Training ,Medical students -- Training ,Health care disparities -- Management ,Company business management ,Health care industry - Abstract
Purpose The HRSA-funded maternal and child health pipeline training programs (MCHPTPs) are a response to the critical need to diversify the MCH workforce, as a strategy to reduce health disparities in MCH populations. These MCHPTPs support students from undergraduate to graduate education and ultimately into the MCH workforce. Description The models and components of training across the six MCHPTPs funded in 2016-2021 are summarized, to examine the design and delivery of undergraduate pipeline training and the insights gained across programs. Assessment Strategies that emerged across training programs were organized into three themes: recruitment, support for student persistence (in education), and pipeline-to-workforce intentionality. Support for student persistence included financial support, mentoring, creating opportunity for students to develop a sense of belonging, and the use of research as a tool to promote learning and competitiveness for graduate education. Finally, the link to Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) long-term training and other MCHB opportunities for professional development contributed significant nuance to the pipeline-to-workforce objectives of these programs. Conclusions The MCHPTPs not only increase the diversity of the MCH workforce, they also actively prepare the next generation of MCH leaders. The intentional connection of undergraduates to the infrastructure and continuum of MCH training, underscores the comprehensive impact of this funding., Author(s): V. Moerchen [sup.1] , L. Taylor-DeOliveira [sup.1] , M. Dietrich [sup.1] , A. Armstrong [sup.2] , J. Azeredo [sup.2] , H. Belcher [sup.3] , N. Copeland-Linder [sup.3] , P. [...]
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- 2022
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23. Determination of Local Residual Stress on Post-Treated TiAlN-Coated Tungsten Carbide Tools
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Breidenstein, B., Vogel, N., Behrens, H., Dietrich, M., and Andersson, J. M.
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- 2022
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24. Achtzehn Monate als zertifiziertes ERAS®-Zentrum für kolorektale Resektionen: „Lessons learned“ und Ergebnisse der ersten 261 Patienten
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Koch, F., Green, M., Dietrich, M., Pontau, F., Moikow, L., Ulmer, S., Dietrich, N., and Ritz, J. P.
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- 2022
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25. When to operate after SARS-CoV-2 infection? A review on the recent consensus recommendation of the DGC/BDC and the DGAI/BDA
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Noll, J., Reichert, M., Dietrich, M., Riedel, J. G., Hecker, M., Padberg, W., Weigand, M. A., and Hecker, A.
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- 2022
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26. LEPTOSPIRA BACTERIA ON MADAGASCAR
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Dietrich, M., primary, Gomard, Y., additional, Cordonin, C., additional, and Tortosa, P., additional
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- 2022
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27. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. VIII. Time Variability of Emission and Absorption in NGC 5548 Based on Modeling the Ultraviolet Spectrum
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Kriss, GA, De Rosa, G, Ely, J, Peterson, BM, Kaastra, J, Mehdipour, M, Ferland, GJ, Dehghanian, M, Mathur, S, Edelson, R, Korista, KT, Arav, N, Barth, AJ, Bentz, MC, Brandt, WN, Crenshaw, DM, Bontà, E Dalla, Denney, KD, Done, C, Eracleous, M, Fausnaugh, MM, Gardner, E, Goad, MR, Grier, CJ, Horne, Keith, Kochanek, CS, McHardy, IM, Netzer, H, Pancoast, A, Pei, L, Pogge, RW, Proga, D, Silva, C, Tejos, N, Vestergaard, M, Adams, SM, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Beatty, TG, Behar, E, Bennert, VN, Bianchi, S, Bigley, A, Bisogni, S, Boissay-Malaquin, R, Borman, GA, Bottorff, MC, Breeveld, AA, Brotherton, M, Brown, JE, Brown, JS, Cackett, EM, Canalizo, G, Cappi, M, Carini, MT, Clubb, KI, Comerford, JM, Coker, CT, Corsini, EM, Costantini, E, Croft, S, Croxall, KV, Deason, AJ, De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A, De Marco, B, Dietrich, M, Di Gesu, L, Ebrero, J, Evans, PA, Filippenko, AV, Flatland, K, Gates, EL, Gehrels, N, Geier, S, Gelbord, JM, Gonzalez, L, Gorjian, V, Grupe, D, Gupta, A, Hall, PB, Henderson, CB, Hicks, S, Holmbeck, E, Holoien, TW-S, Hutchison, TA, Im, M, Jensen, JJ, Johnson, CA, Joner, MD, Kaspi, S, Kelly, BC, Kelly, PL, Kennea, JA, Kim, M, Kim, SC, Kim, SY, King, A, Klimanov, SA, Krongold, Y, and Lau, MW
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galaxies: active ,galaxies: individual ,galaxies: nuclei ,galaxies: Seyfert ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We model the ultraviolet spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548 obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope during the 6 month reverberation mapping campaign in 2014. Our model of the emission from NGC 5548 corrects for overlying absorption and deblends the individual emission lines. Using the modeled spectra, we measure the response to continuum variations for the deblended and absorption-corrected individual broad emission lines, the velocity-dependent profiles of Ly and C iv, and the narrow and broad intrinsic absorption features. We find that the time lags for the corrected emission lines are comparable to those for the original data. The velocity-binned lag profiles of Ly and C iv have a double-peaked structure indicative of a truncated Keplerian disk. The narrow absorption lines show a delayed response to continuum variations corresponding to recombination in gas with a density of ∼105 cm-3. The high-ionization narrow absorption lines decorrelate from continuum variations during the same period as the broad emission lines. Analyzing the response of these absorption lines during this period shows that the ionizing flux is diminished in strength relative to the far-ultraviolet continuum. The broad absorption lines associated with the X-ray obscurer decrease in strength during this same time interval. The appearance of X-ray obscuration in ∼2012 corresponds with an increase in the luminosity of NGC 5548 following an extended low state. We suggest that the obscurer is a disk wind triggered by the brightening of NGC 5548 following the decrease in size of the broad-line region during the preceding low-luminosity state.
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- 2019
28. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. VII. Understanding the UV anomaly in NGC 5548 with X-Ray Spectroscopy
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Mathur, S., Gupta, A., Page, K., Pogge, R. W., Krongold, Y., Goad, M. R., Adams, S. M., Anderson, M. D., Arevalo, P., Barth, A. J., Bazhaw, C., Beatty, T. G., Bentz, M. C., Bigley, A., Bisogni, S., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brown, J. E., Brown, J. S., Cackett, E. M., Canalizo, G., Carini, M. T., Clubb, K. I., Comerford, J. M., Coker, C. T., Corsini, E. M., Crenshaw, D. M., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Bonta, E. Dalla, Deason, A. J., Denney, K. D., De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., De Rosa, G., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Ely, J., Eracleous, M., Evans, P. A., Fausnaugh, M. M., Ferland, G. J., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Fox, O. D., Gates, E. L., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Gorjian, V., Greene, J. E., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Hall, P. B., Henderson, C. B., Hicks, S., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Horenstein, D., Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kelly, P. L., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S., Kim, S. C., King, A., Klimanov, S. A., Kochanek, C. S., Korista, K. T., Kriss, G. A., Lau, M. W., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Li, M., Lira, P., Ma, Z., MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Malkan, M. A., Mauerhan, J. C., McGurk, R., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Morelli, L., Mosquera, A., Mudd, D., Muller-Sanchez, F., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Netzer, H., Nguyen, M. L., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Ochner, P., Okhmat, D. N., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pei, L., Peterson, B. M., Pizzella, A., Poleski, R., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Runnoe, J., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Schnülle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Siegel, M., Simonian, G. V., Siviero, A., Skielboe, A., Somers, G., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, D. J., Sung, H. -I., Tayar, J., Tejos, N., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Van Saders, J., Vestergaard, M., Vican, L., VillanuevaJr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., Yuk, H., Zheng, W., Zhu, W., and Zu, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
During the Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project (STORM) observations of NGC 5548, the continuum and emission-line variability became de-correlated during the second half of the 6-month long observing campaign. Here we present Swift and Chandra X-ray spectra of NGC 5548 obtained as a part of the campaign. The Swift spectra show that excess flux (relative to a power-law continuum) in the soft X-ray band appears before the start of the anomalous emission-line behavior, peaks during the period of the anomaly, and then declines. This is a model-independent result suggesting that the soft excess is related to the anomaly. We divide the Swift data into on- and off-anomaly spectra to characterize the soft excess via spectral fitting. The cause of the spectral differences is likely due to a change in the intrinsic spectrum rather than being due to variable obscuration or partial covering. The Chandra spectra have lower signal-to-noise ratios, but are consistent with Swift data. Our preferred model of the soft excess is emission from an optically thick, warm Comptonizing corona, the effective optical depth of which increases during the anomaly. This model simultaneously explains all the three observations: the UV emission line flux decrease, the soft-excess increase, and the emission line anomaly., Comment: ApJ in press. Replaced with the accepted version
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- 2017
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29. A lightweight thermal heat switch for redundant cryocooling on satellites
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Dietrich, M., Euler, A., and Thummes, G.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
A previously designed cryogenic thermal heat switch for space applications has been optimized for low mass, high structural stability, and reliability. The heat switch makes use of the large linear thermal expansion coefficient (CTE) of the thermoplastic UHMW-PE for actuation. A structure model, which includes the temperature dependent properties of the actuator, is derived to be able to predict the contact pressure between the switch parts. This pressure was used in a thermal model in order to predict the switch performance under different heat loads and operating temperatures. The two models were used to optimize the mass and stability of the switch. Its reliability was proven by cyclic actuation of the switch and by shaker tests., Comment: short communication, 8 pages, 6 figures
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- 2017
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30. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. V. Optical Spectroscopic Campaign and Emission-Line Analysis for NGC 5548
- Author
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Pei, L., Fausnaugh, M. M., Barth, A. J., Peterson, B. M., Bentz, M. C., De Rosa, G., Denney, K. D., Goad, M. R., Kochanek, C. S., Korista, K. T., Kriss, G. A., Pogge, R. W., Bennert, V. N., Brotherton, M., Clubb, K. I., Bontà, E. Dalla, Filippenko, A. V., Greene, J. E., Grier, C. J., Vestergaard, M., Zheng, W., Adams, Scott M., Beatty, Thomas G., Bigley, A., Brown, Jacob E., Brown, Jonathan S., Canalizo, G., Comerford, J. M., Coker, Carl T., Corsini, E. M., Croft, S., Croxall, K. V., Deason, A. J., Eracleous, Michael, Fox, O. D., Gates, E. L., Henderson, C. B., Holmbeck, E., Holoien, T. W. -S., Jensen, J. J., Johnson, C. A., Kelly, P. L., Kim, S., King, A., Lau, M. W., Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mauerhan, J. C., Malkan, M. A., McGurk, R., Morelli, L., Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Sanchez, F. Muller, Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Penny, Matthew T., Pizzella, A., Poleski, Radosław, Runnoe, Jessie, Scott, B., Schimoia, Jaderson S., Shappee, B. J., Shivvers, I., Simonian, Gregory V., Siviero, A., Somers, Garrett, Stevens, Daniel J., Strauss, M. A., Tayar, Jamie, Tejos, N., Treu, T., Van Saders, J., Vican, L., Villanueva Jr., S., Yuk, H., Zakamska, N. L., Zhu, W., Anderson, M. D., Arévalo, P., Bazhaw, C., Bisogni, S., Borman, G. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Cackett, E. M., Carini, M. T., Crenshaw, D. M., De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Efimova, N. V., Ely, J., Evans, P. A., Ferland, G. J., Flatland, K., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Grupe, D., Gupta, A., Hall, P. B., Hicks, S., Horenstein, D., Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T., Im, M., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S. C., Klimanov, S. A., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Lira, P., MacInnis, F., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Netzer, H., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Okhmat, D. N., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Saylor, D. A., Schnülle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Siegel, M., Skielboe, A., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Sung, H. -I., Teems, K. G., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., and Zu, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of an optical spectroscopic monitoring program targeting NGC 5548 as part of a larger multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign. The campaign spanned six months and achieved an almost daily cadence with observations from five ground-based telescopes. The H$\beta$ and He II $\lambda$4686 broad emission-line light curves lag that of the 5100 $\AA$ optical continuum by $4.17^{+0.36}_{-0.36}$ days and $0.79^{+0.35}_{-0.34}$ days, respectively. The H$\beta$ lag relative to the 1158 $\AA$ ultraviolet continuum light curve measured by the Hubble Space Telescope is roughly $\sim$50% longer than that measured against the optical continuum, and the lag difference is consistent with the observed lag between the optical and ultraviolet continua. This suggests that the characteristic radius of the broad-line region is $\sim$50% larger than the value inferred from optical data alone. We also measured velocity-resolved emission-line lags for H$\beta$ and found a complex velocity-lag structure with shorter lags in the line wings, indicative of a broad-line region dominated by Keplerian motion. The responses of both the H$\beta$ and He II $\lambda$4686 emission lines to the driving continuum changed significantly halfway through the campaign, a phenomenon also observed for C IV, Ly $\alpha$, He II(+O III]), and Si IV(+O IV]) during the same monitoring period. Finally, given the optical luminosity of NGC 5548 during our campaign, the measured H$\beta$ lag is a factor of five shorter than the expected value implied by the $R_\mathrm{BLR} - L_\mathrm{AGN}$ relation based on the past behavior of NGC 5548., Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, accepted to ApJ
- Published
- 2017
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31. Alignment of a Vector Magnetometer to an Optical Prism
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Dietrich, M. R., Bailey, K. G., and O'Connor, T. P.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
A method for alignment of a vector magnetometer to a rigidly attached prism is presented. This enables optical comparison of the magnetometer axes to physical surfaces in an apparatus, and thus an absolute determination of the magnetic field direction in space. This is in contrast with more common techniques, which focus on precise determination of the relative angles between magnetometer axes, and so are more suited to measuring differences in the direction of magnetic fields. Here we demonstrate precision better than 500 $\mu$rad on a fluxgate magnetometer, which also gives the coil orthogonality errors to a similar precision. The relative sensitivity of the 3 axes is also determined, with precision of about 5$\times 10^{-4}$., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures
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- 2016
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32. Fokus Nephrologie: Intensivmedizinische Studien 2020/2021
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Nusshag, Christian, Reuß, C. J., Dietrich, M., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Michalski, D., Fiedler, M. O., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Weigand, M. A., and Brenner, T.
- Published
- 2021
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33. A Pediatric Case of Histoplasmosis-Related Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome
- Author
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Kim, J., primary, Hanna, M., additional, Aviles, D., additional, Dietrich, M., additional, and Swetland, D.V., additional
- Published
- 2024
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34. Perennial Disaster Patterns in Central Europe since 2000: Implications for Hospital Preparedness Planning – A cross sectional Analysis
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von der Forst, M, primary, Dietrich, M, additional, Schmitt, FCF, additional, Popp, E, additional, and Ries, M, additional
- Published
- 2024
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35. Fokus Beatmung, Sauerstofftherapie und Weaning: Intensivmedizinische Studien aus 2020/2021
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Fiedler, Mascha O., Reuß, C. J., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., Hecker, A., Jungk, C., Nusshag, C., Michalski, D., Brenner, T., Weigand, M. A., and Dietrich, M.
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
36. Neurochirurgische Intensivmedizin: Intensivmedizinische Studien aus 2020/2021
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Beynon, C., Bernhard, M., Brenner, T., Dietrich, M., Fiedler, M. O., Nusshag, C., Weigand, M. A., Reuß, C. J., Michalski, D., and Jungk, C.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project VI: reverberating Disk Models for NGC 5548
- Author
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Starkey, D., Horne, Keith, Fausnaugh, M. M., Peterson, B. M., Bentz, M. C., Kochanek, C. S., Denney, K. D., Edelson, R., Goad, M. R., De Rosa, G., Anderson, M. D., Arevalo, P., Barth, A. J., Bazhaw, C., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Cackett, E. M., Carini, M. T., Croxall, K. V., Crenshaw, D. M., Bonta, E. Dalla, De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Dietrich, M., Efimova, N. V., Ely, J., Evans, P. A., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Hall, P. B., Hicks, S., Horenstein, D., Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kim, S. C., Kim, M., Klimanov, S. A., Korista, K. T., Kriss, G. A., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Lira, P., MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Okhmat, D. N., Pancoast, A., Parks, J. R., Pei, L., Pogge, R. W., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. W., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Schnulle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Siegel, M. H., Spencer, M., Sung, H. -I., Teems, K. G., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Vestergaard, M., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., Zheng, W., and Zu, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We conduct a multiwavelength continuum variability study of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548 to investigate the temperature structure of its accretion disk. The 19 overlapping continuum light curves (1158 to 9157 angstroms) combine simultaneous HST , Swift , and ground-based observations over a 180 day period from 2014 January to July. Light-curve variability is interpreted as the reverberation response of the accretion disk to irradiation by a central time-varying point source. Our model yields the disk inclination, i, temperature T1 at 1 light day from the black hole, and a temperature-radius slope, alpha. We also infer the driving light curve and find that it correlates poorly with both the hard and soft X-ray light curves, suggesting that the X-rays alone may not drive the ultraviolet and optical variability over the observing period. We also decompose the light curves into bright, faint, and mean accretion-disk spectra. These spectra lie below that expected for a standard blackbody accretion disk accreting at L/LEdd = 0.1, Comment: V2: Oops wrong title! V1: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 20 Pages, 11 Figures
- Published
- 2016
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38. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. IV. Anomalous behavior of the broad ultraviolet emission lines in NGC 5548
- Author
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Goad, M. R., Korista, K. T., De Rosa, G., Kriss, G. A., Edelson, R., Barth, A. J., Ferland, G. J., Kochanek, C. S., Netzer, H., Peterson, B. M., Bentz, M. C., Bisogni, S., Crenshaw, D. M., Denney, K. D., Ely, J., Fausnaugh, M. M., Grier, C. J., Gupta, A., Horne, K. D., Kaastra, J., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Pogge, R. W., Skielboe, A., Starkey, D., Vestergaard, M., Zu, Y., Anderson, M. D., Arevalo, P., Bazhaw, C., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brewer, B. J., Cackett, E. M., Carini, M. T., Croxall, K. V., Bonta, E. Dalla, de Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Dietrich, M., Efimova, N. V., Evans, P. A., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, G. M., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Grupe, D., Hall, P. B., Hicks, S., Horenstein, D., Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Joner, M. D., Jones, J., Kaspi, S., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kim, M., Kim, S. C., Klimanov, S. A., Larionov, V. M., Lee, J. C., Leonard, D. C., Lira, P., MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Okhmat, D. N., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Schnulle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Siegel, M., Spencer, M., Sung, H. -I., Teems, K. G., Treu, T., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., Young, S., and Zheng, W. -K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
During an intensive Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) UV monitoring campaign of the Seyfert~1 galaxy NGC 5548 performed from 2014 February to July, the normally highly correlated far-UV continuum and broad emission-line variations decorrelated for ~60 to 70 days, starting ~75 days after the first HST/COS observation. Following this anomalous state, the flux and variability of the broad emission lines returned to a more normal state. This transient behavior, characterised by significant deficits in flux and equivalent width of the strong broad UV emission lines, is the first of its kind to be unambiguously identified in an active galactic nucleus reverberation mapping campaign. The largest corresponding emission-line flux deficits occurred for the high-ionization collisionally excited lines, C IV and Si IV(+O IV]), and also He II(+O III]), while the anomaly in Ly-alpha was substantially smaller. This pattern of behavior indicates a depletion in the flux of photons with E_{\rm ph} > 54 eV, relative to those near 13.6 eV. We suggest two plausible mechanisms for the observed behavior: (i) temporary obscuration of the ionizing continuum incident upon BLR clouds by a moving veil of material lying between the inner accretion disk and inner BLR, perhaps resulting from an episodic ejection of material from the disk, or (ii) a temporary change in the intrinsic ionizing continuum spectral energy distribution resulting in a deficit of ionizing photons with energies > 54 eV, possibly due to a transient restructuring of the Comptonizing atmosphere above the disk. Current evidence appears to favor the latter explanation., Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, Friday 25th March 2016. A movie of the anomalous emission-line behavior can be found in the ancilliary documents
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- 2016
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39. Bedside hyperspectral imaging indicates a microcirculatory sepsis pattern - an observational study
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Dietrich, M., Marx, S., von der Forst, M., Bruckner, T., Schmitt, F.C.F., Fiedler, M.O., Nickel, F., Studier-Fischer, A., Müller-Stich, B.P., Hackert, T., Brenner, T., Weigand, M.A., Uhle, F., and Schmidt, K.
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- 2021
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40. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. VII. Understanding the Ultraviolet Anomaly in NGC 5548 with X-Ray Spectroscopy
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Mathur, S, Gupta, A, Page, K, Pogge, RW, Krongold, Y, Goad, MR, Adams, SM, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Barth, AJ, Bazhaw, C, Beatty, TG, Bentz, MC, Bigley, A, Bisogni, S, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brandt, WN, Breeveld, AA, Brown, JE, Brown, JS, Cackett, EM, Canalizo, G, Carini, MT, Clubb, KI, Comerford, JM, Coker, CT, Corsini, EM, Crenshaw, DM, Croft, S, Croxall, KV, Bontà, E Dalla, Deason, AJ, Denney, KD, De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A, De Rosa, G, Dietrich, M, Edelson, R, Ely, J, Eracleous, M, Evans, PA, Fausnaugh, MM, Ferland, GJ, Filippenko, AV, Flatland, K, Fox, OD, Gates, EL, Gehrels, N, Geier, S, Gelbord, JM, Gorjian, V, Greene, JE, Grier, CJ, Grupe, D, Hall, PB, Henderson, CB, Hicks, S, Holmbeck, E, Holoien, TW-S, Horenstein, D, Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T, Im, M, Jensen, JJ, Johnson, CA, Joner, MD, Jones, J, Kaastra, J, Kaspi, S, Kelly, BC, Kelly, PL, Kennea, JA, Kim, M, Kim, S, Kim, SC, King, A, Klimanov, SA, Kochanek, CS, Korista, KT, Kriss, GA, Lau, MW, Lee, JC, Leonard, DC, Li, M, Lira, P, Ma, Z, MacInnis, F, Manne-Nicholas, ER, Malkan, MA, Mauerhan, JC, McGurk, R, McHardy, IM, Montouri, C, Morelli, L, Mosquera, A, Mudd, D, Muller-Sanchez, F, Musso, R, and Nazarov, SV
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galaxies: active ,galaxies: individual ,X-rays: galaxies ,X-rays: individual ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
During the Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project observations of NGC 5548, the continuum and emission-line variability became decorrelated during the second half of the six-month-long observing campaign. Here we present Swift and Chandra X-ray spectra of NGC 5548 obtained as part of the campaign. The Swift spectra show that excess flux (relative to a power-law continuum) in the soft X-ray band appears before the start of the anomalous emission-line behavior, peaks during the period of the anomaly, and then declines. This is a model-independent result suggesting that the soft excess is related to the anomaly. We divide the Swift data into on- and off-anomaly spectra to characterize the soft excess via spectral fitting. The cause of the spectral differences is likely due to a change in the intrinsic spectrum rather than to variable obscuration or partial covering. The Chandra spectra have lower signal-to-noise ratios, but are consistent with the Swift data. Our preferred model of the soft excess is emission from an optically thick, warm Comptonizing corona, the effective optical depth of which increases during the anomaly. This model simultaneously explains all three observations: the UV emission-line flux decrease, the soft-excess increase, and the emission-line anomaly.
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- 2017
41. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. V. Optical Spectroscopic Campaign and Emission-line Analysis for NGC 5548
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Pei, L, Fausnaugh, MM, Barth, AJ, Peterson, BM, Bentz, MC, De Rosa, G, Denney, KD, Goad, MR, Kochanek, CS, Korista, KT, Kriss, GA, Pogge, RW, Bennert, VN, Brotherton, M, Clubb, KI, Bontà, E Dalla, Filippenko, AV, Greene, JE, Grier, CJ, Vestergaard, M, Zheng, W, Adams, Scott M, Beatty, Thomas G, Bigley, A, Brown, Jacob E, Brown, Jonathan S, Canalizo, G, Comerford, JM, Coker, Carl T, Corsini, EM, Croft, S, Croxall, KV, Deason, AJ, Eracleous, Michael, Fox, OD, Gates, EL, Henderson, CB, Holmbeck, E, Holoien, TW-S, Jensen, JJ, Johnson, CA, Kelly, PL, Kim, S, King, A, Lau, MW, Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, Manne-Nicholas, ER, Mauerhan, JC, Malkan, MA, McGurk, R, Morelli, L, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Sanchez, F Muller, Nguyen, ML, Ochner, P, Ou-Yang, B, Pancoast, A, Penny, Matthew T, Pizzella, A, Poleski, Radosław, Runnoe, Jessie, Scott, B, Schimoia, Jaderson S, Shappee, BJ, Shivvers, I, Simonian, Gregory V, Siviero, A, Somers, Garrett, Stevens, Daniel J, Strauss, MA, Tayar, Jamie, Tejos, N, Treu, T, Van Saders, J, Vican, L, Villanueva, S, Yuk, H, Zakamska, NL, Zhu, W, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Bazhaw, C, Bisogni, S, Borman, GA, Bottorff, MC, Brandt, WN, Breeveld, AA, Cackett, EM, Carini, MT, Crenshaw, DM, De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A, Dietrich, M, Edelson, R, Efimova, NV, Ely, J, Evans, PA, and Ferland, GJ
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galaxies: active ,galaxies: individual ,galaxies: nuclei ,galaxies: Seyfert ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of an optical spectroscopic monitoring program targeting NGC 5548 as part of a larger multiwavelength reverberation mapping campaign. The campaign spanned 6 months and achieved an almost daily cadence with observations from five ground-based telescopes. The Hβ and He ii λ4686 broad emission-line light curves lag that of the 5100 +-optical continuum by 4.17+0.36-0.36 and 0.79+0.35-0.34 days, respectively. The Hβ lag relative to the 1158 ultraviolet continuum light curve measured by the Hubble Space Telescope is ∼50% longer than that measured against the optical continuum, and the lag difference is consistent with the observed lag between the optical and ultraviolet continua. This suggests that the characteristic radius of the broad-line region is ∼50% larger than the value inferred from optical data alone. We also measured velocity-resolved emission-line lags for Hβ and found a complex velocity-lag structure with shorter lags in the line wings, indicative of a broad-line region dominated by Keplerian motion. The responses of both the Hβ and He ii emission lines to the driving continuum changed significantly halfway through the campaign, a phenomenon also observed for C iv, Lyα, He ii(+O iii]), and Si iv(+O iv]) during the same monitoring period. Finally, given the optical luminosity of NGC 5548 during our campaign, the measured Hβ lag is a factor of five shorter than the expected value implied by the R BLR-L AGN relation based on the past behavior of NGC 5548.
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- 2017
42. SPACE TELESCOPE AND OPTICAL REVERBERATION MAPPING PROJECT.VI. REVERBERATING DISK MODELS FOR NGC 5548
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Starkey, D, Horne, Keith, Fausnaugh, MM, Peterson, BM, Bentz, MC, Kochanek, CS, Denney, KD, Edelson, R, Goad, MR, De Rosa, G, Anderson, MD, Arévalo, P, Barth, AJ, Bazhaw, C, Borman, GA, Boroson, TA, Bottorff, MC, Brandt, WN, Breeveld, AA, Cackett, EM, Carini, MT, Croxall, KV, Crenshaw, DM, Bontà, E Dalla, De Lorenzo-Cáceres, A, Dietrich, M, Efimova, NV, Ely, J, Evans, PA, Filippenko, AV, Flatland, K, Gehrels, N, Geier, S, Gelbord, JM, Gonzalez, L, Gorjian, V, Grier, CJ, Grupe, D, Hall, PB, Hicks, S, Horenstein, D, Hutchison, T, Im, M, Jensen, JJ, Joner, MD, Jones, J, Kaastra, J, Kaspi, S, Kelly, BC, Kennea, JA, Kim, SC, Kim, M, Klimanov, SA, Korista, KT, Kriss, GA, Lee, JC, Leonard, DC, Lira, P, MacInnis, F, Manne-Nicholas, ER, Mathur, S, McHardy, IM, Montouri, C, Musso, R, Nazarov, SV, Norris, RP, Nousek, JA, Okhmat, DN, Pancoast, A, Parks, JR, Pei, L, Pogge, RW, Pott, J-U, Rafter, SE, Rix, H-W, Saylor, DA, Schimoia, JS, Schnülle, K, Sergeev, SG, Siegel, MH, Spencer, M, Sung, H-I, Teems, KG, Turner, CS, Uttley, P, Vestergaard, M, Villforth, C, Weiss, Y, Woo, J-H, Yan, H, Young, and S, Zheng, W, and Zu, Y
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accretion ,accretion disks ,galaxies: active ,galaxies: individual ,galaxies: nuclei ,galaxies: Seyfert ,astro-ph.GA ,astro-ph.HE ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We conduct a multiwavelength continuum variability study of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548 to investigate the temperature structure of its accretion disk. The 19 overlapping continuum light curves (1158 A oto 9157 A o) combine simultaneous Hubble Space Telescope, Swift, and ground-based observations over a 180 day period from 2014 January to July. Light-curve variability is interpreted as the reverberation response of the accretion disk to irradiation by a central time-varying point source. Our model yields the disk inclination i = 36° ±10° temperature T1 = 44 ±6 ) × 10 3 K at 1 light day from the black hole, and a temperatureradius slope (T ∞r-a) of a = 0.99 ±0.03. We also infer the driving light curve and find that it correlates poorly with both the hard and soft X-ray light curves, suggesting that the X-rays alone may not drive the ultraviolet and optical variability over the observing period. We also decompose the light curves into bright, faint, and mean accretion-disk spectra. These spectra lie below that expected for a standard blackbody accretion disk accreting at L LEdd = 0.1.
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- 2017
43. Fokus neurologische Intensivmedizin. Intensive Care Studies from 2020/2021
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Michalski, D., Jungk, C., Brenner, T., Dietrich, M., Nusshag, C., Reuß, C. J., Fiedler, M. O., Bernhard, M., Beynon, C., and Weigand, M. A.
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- 2021
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44. Lower cortical thickness index does not correlate with increased surgical complications in proximal femoral fractures: a clinical and radiological study
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Kabelitz, M, Waltenspül, M, Dietrich, M, Kabelitz, M, Waltenspül, M, and Dietrich, M
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- 2024
45. Funktionelle Neurologische Störung im Bereich der Phoniatrie - ein wenig beachtetes Krankheitsbild mit der Notwendigkeit neuer Versorgungsmodelle
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Herrmann, P, Nolte, A, Dietrich, M, Herrmann, P, Nolte, A, and Dietrich, M
- Abstract
Hintergrund: Bei Funktionellen Neurologischen Störungen (FNS) sind aktuell keine spezifischen strukturellen Läsionen des Nervensystems bekannt. Fehlanpassungen und Fehlsteuerungen, sie sich in veränderten neuronalen Aktivierungsmustern zeigen können führen zu sehr unterschiedlichen Symptomenkomplexen. Auch phoniatrische Krankheitsbilder können so auftreten. Stimmstörungen und Schluckstörungen sind auf diesen Hintergrund zu überprüfen.Material und Methoden: Fallbeispiel: Eine 27-jährige Patientin wurde bei uns zur Schluckdiagnostik vorstellig. Seit 4 Jahren war eine funktionelle neurologische Störung mit dissoziativen Anfällen bekannt. Die Symptomatik umfasste bislang Lähmungserscheinungen der unteren Extremität und Krampfanfälle. Seit einigen Monaten klagte sie zusätzlich über häufiges Verschlucken und Unvermögen abzuschlucken. Seitdem hatte die Patientin circa 10 kg Gewicht verloren.Ergebnisse: Wir führten eine FEES bei der Patientin durch. Hierbei zeigte sich eine kompensierte Penetration und Aspiration für Flüssigkeiten im Sinne eines Eindringens bis auf Glottisebene. Durch Husten und Räuspern wurde der Luftweg bereinigt. Breiige und feste Kost verblieb oberhalb der Stimmlippen und wurde im weiteren Verlauf ebenfalls aus den Luftwegen entfernt.Fazit: Die Behandlung funktioneller neurologischer Störungsbilder erfordert eine enge interdisziplinäre Zusammenarbeit und Kooperation auf unterschiedlichen Ebenen. Auch die Phoniatrie ist in diesem Bereich gefragt. Neue innovative Versorgungsmodelle mit enger fachübergreifender Kooperation sind zur Diagnostik und Therapie dieses komplexen und noch wenig erforschten Krankheitsbildes notwendig.
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- 2024
46. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. III. Optical Continuum Emission and Broad-Band Time Delays in NGC 5548
- Author
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Fausnaugh, M. M., Denney, K. D., Barth, A. J., Bentz, M. C., Bottorff, M. C., Carini, M. T., Croxall, K. V., De Rosa, G., Goad, M. R., Horne, Keith, Joner, M. D., Kaspi, S., Kim, M., Klimanov, S. A., Kochanek, C. S., Leonard, D. C., Netzer, H., Peterson, B. M., Schnulle, K., Sergeev, S. G., Vestergaard, M., Zheng, W. -K., Zu, Y., Anderson, M. D., Arevalo, P., Bazhaw, C., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brewer, B. J., Cackett, E. M., Crenshaw, D. M., Bonta, E. Dalla, De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Efimova, N. V., Ely, J., Evans, P. A., Filippenko, A. V., Flatland, K., Gehrels, N., Geier, S., Gelbord, J. M., Gonzalez, L., Gorjian, V., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Hall, P. B., Hicks, S., Horenstein, D., Hutchison, T., Im, M., Jensen, J. J., Jones, J., Kaastra, J., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kim, S. C., Korista, K. T., Kriss, G. A., Lee, J. C., Lira, P., MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Montouri, C., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Norris, R. P., Nousek, J. A., Okhmat, D. N., Pancoast, A., Papadakis, I., Parks, J. R., Pei, L., Pogge, R. W., Pott, J. -U., Rafter, S. E., Rix, H. -W., Saylor, D. A., Schimoia, J. S., Siegel, M., Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Sung, H. -I., Teems, K. G., Treu, T., Turner, C. S., Uttley, P., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Woo, J. -H., Yan, H., and Young, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present ground-based optical photometric monitoring data for NGC 5548, part of an extended multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign. The light curves have nearly daily cadence from 2014 January to July in nine filters (\emph{BVRI} and \emph{ugriz}). Combined with ultraviolet data from the \emph{Hubble Space Telescope} and \emph{Swift}, we confirm significant time delays between the continuum bands as a function of wavelength, extending the wavelength coverage from 1158\,\AA\ to the $z$ band ($\sim\!9160$\,\AA). We find that the lags at wavelengths longer than the {\it V} band are equal to or greater than the lags of high-ionization-state emission lines (such as He\,{\sc ii}\,$\lambda 1640$ and $\lambda 4686$), suggesting that the continuum-emitting source is of a physical size comparable to the inner broad-line region (BLR). The trend of lag with wavelength is broadly consistent with the prediction for continuum reprocessing by an accretion disk with $\tau \propto \lambda^{4/3}$. However, the lags also imply a disk radius that is 3 times larger than the prediction from standard thin-disk theory, assuming that the bolometric luminosity is 10\% of the Eddington luminosity ($L = 0.1L_{\rm Edd}$). Using optical spectra from the Large Binocular Telescope, we estimate the bias of the interband continuum lags due to BLR emission observed in the filters. We find that the bias for filters with high levels of BLR contamination ($\sim\! 20\%$) can be important for the shortest continuum lags, and likely has a significant impact on the {\it u} and {\it U} bands owing to Balmer continuum emission., Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, accepted to ApJ. For a brief video describing the main results of this paper, please see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yaYtcDvIoP0&feature=youtu.be
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- 2015
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47. Simple and Compact Nozzle Design for Laser Vaporization Sources
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Kokish, M. G., Dietrich, M. R., and Odom, B. C.
- Subjects
Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
We have developed and implemented a compact transparent nozzle for use in laser vaporization sources. This nozzle eliminates the need for an ablation aperture, allowing for a more intense molecular beam. We use this nozzle to prepare a molecular beam of aluminum monohydride (AlH) suitable for ion trap loading of AlH$^+$ via photoionization in ultra-high vacuum. We demonstrate stable AlH production over hour time scales using a liquid ablation target. The long-term stability, low heat load and fast ion production rate of this source are well-suited to molecular ion experiments employing destructive state readout schemes requiring frequent trap reloading.
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- 2015
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48. First Measurement of the Atomic Electric Dipole Moment of $^{225}$Ra
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Parker, R. H., Dietrich, M. R., Kalita, M. R., Lemke, N. D., Bailey, K. G., Bishof, M. N., Greene, J. P., Holt, R. J., Korsch, W., Lu, Z. -T., Mueller, P., O'Connor, T. P., and Singh, J. T.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
The radioactive radium-225 ($^{225}$Ra) atom is a favorable case to search for a permanent electric dipole moment (EDM). Due to its strong nuclear octupole deformation and large atomic mass, $^{225}$Ra is particularly sensitive to interactions in the nuclear medium that violate both time-reversal symmetry and parity. We have developed a cold-atom technique to study the spin precession of $^{225}$Ra atoms held in an optical dipole trap, and demonstrated the principle of this method by completing the first measurement of its atomic EDM, reaching an upper limit of $|$$d$($^{225}$Ra)$|$ $<$ $5.0\!\times\!10^{-22}$ $e \cdot$cm (95$\%$ confidence).
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- 2015
49. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. I. Ultraviolet Observations of the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 5548 with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on Hubble Space Telescope
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De Rosa, G., Peterson, B. M., Ely, J., Kriss, G. A., Crenshaw, D. M., Horne, Keith, Korista, K. T., Netzer, H., Pogge, R. W., Arevalo, P., Barth, A. J., Bentz, M. C., Brandt, W. N., Breeveld, A. A., Brewer, B. J., Bonta, E. Dalla, De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Denney, K. D., Dietrich, M., Edelson, R., Evans, P. A., Fausnaugh, M. M., Gehrels, N., Gelbord, J. M., Goad, M. R., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Hall, P. B., Kaastra, J., Kelly, B. C., Kennea, J. A., Kochanek, C. S., Lira, P., Mathur, S., McHardy, I. M., Nousek, J. A., Pancoast, A., Papadakis, I., Pei, L., Schimoia, J. S., Siegel, M., Starkey, D., Treu, T., Uttley, P., Vaughan, S., Vestergaard, M., Villforth, C., Yan, H., Young, S., and Zu, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We describe the first results from a six-month long reverberation-mapping experiment in the ultraviolet based on 170 observations of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548 with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope. Significant correlated variability is found in the continuum and broad emission lines, with amplitudes ranging from ~30% to a factor of two in the emission lines and a factor of three in the continuum. The variations of all the strong emission lines lag behind those of the continuum, with He II 1640 lagging behind the continuum by ~2.5 days and Lyman alpha 1215, C IV 1550, and Si IV 1400 lagging by ~5-6 days. The relationship between the continuum and emission lines is complex. In particular, during the second half of the campaign, all emission-line lags increased by a factor of 1.3-2 and differences appear in the detailed structure of the continuum and emission-line light curves. Velocity-resolved cross-correlation analysis shows coherent structure in lag versus line-of-sight velocity for the emission lines; the high-velocity wings of C IV respond to continuum variations more rapidly than the line core, probably indicating higher velocity BLR clouds at smaller distances from the central engine. The velocity-dependent response of Lyman alpha, however, is more complex and will require further analysis., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 20 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables. See also STORM Paper II "Space telescope and optical reverberation mapping project. II. Reverberation mapping of the accretion disk with SWIFT and HST" by R. Edelson et al
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- 2015
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50. Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. II. Swift and HST Reverberation Mapping of the Accretion Disk of NGC 5548
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Edelson, R., Gelbord, J. M., Horne, K., McHardy, I. M., Peterson, B. M., Arevalo, P., Breeveld, A. A., De Rosa, G., Evans, P. A., Goad, M. R., Kriss, G. A., Brandt, W. N., Gehrels, N., Grupe, D., Kennea, J. A., Kochanek, C. S., Nousek, J. A., Papadakis, I., Siegel, M., Starkey, D., Uttley, P., Vaughan, S., Young, S., Barth, A. J., Bentz, M. C., Brewer, B. J., Crenshaw, D. M., Bonta, E. Dalla, De Lorenzo-Caceres, A., Denney, K. D., Dietrich, M., Ely, J., Fausnaugh, M. M., Grier, C. J., Hall, P. B., Kaastra, J., Kelly, B. C., Korista, K. T., Lira, P., Mathur, S., Netzer, H., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Pogge, R. W., Schimoia, J. S., Treu, T., Vestergaard, M., Villforth, C., Yan, H., and Zu, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Recent intensive Swift monitoring of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548 yielded 282 usable epochs over 125 days across six UV/optical bands and the X-rays. This is the densest extended AGN UV/optical continuum sampling ever obtained, with a mean sampling rate <0.5 day. Approximately daily HST UV sampling was also obtained. The UV/optical light curves show strong correlations (r_max = 0.57 - 0.90) and the clearest measurement to date of interband lags. These lags are well-fit by a \tau propto \lambda^4/3 wavelength dependence, with a normalization that indicates an unexpectedly large disk radius of 0.35 +/- 0.05 lt-day at 1367 A, assuming a simple face-on model. The U-band shows a marginally larger lag than expected from the fit and surrounding bands, which could be due to Balmer continuum emission from the broad-line region as suggested by Korista and Goad. The UV/X-ray correlation is weaker (r_max < 0.45) and less consistent over time. This indicates that while Swift is beginning to measure UV/optical lags in general agreement with accretion disk theory (although the derived size is larger than predicted), the relationship with X-ray variability is less well understood. Combining this accretion disk size estimate with those from quasar microlensing studies suggests that AGN disk sizes scale approximately linearly with central black hole mass over a wide range of masses., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Seventeen pages, 10 figures, 6 tables. See also STORM Paper I: "Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Project. I. Ultraviolet Observations of the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 5548 with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on Hubble Space Telescope" by G. De Rosa et al., http://arxiv.org/abs/1501.05954
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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