2,265 results on '"HESSE, M."'
Search Results
2. Magnetic Field Annihilation in a Magnetotail Electron Diffusion Region With Electron‐Scale Magnetic Island
- Author
-
Hasegawa, H, Denton, RE, Nakamura, TKM, Genestreti, KJ, Phan, TD, Nakamura, R, Hwang, K‐J, Ahmadi, N, Shi, QQ, Hesse, M, Burch, JL, Webster, JM, Torbert, RB, Giles, BL, Gershman, DJ, Russell, CT, Strangeway, RJ, Wei, HY, Lindqvist, P‐A, Khotyaintsev, YV, Ergun, RE, and Saito, Y
- Subjects
magnetic reconnection ,magnetotail ,electron diffusion region ,magnetic field annihilation ,magnetic diffusion ,magnetic island ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
We present observations in Earth's magnetotail by the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft that are consistent with magnetic field annihilation, rather than magnetic topology change, causing fast magnetic-to-electron energy conversion in an electron-scale current sheet. Multi-spacecraft analysis for the magnetic field reconstruction shows that an electron-scale magnetic island was embedded in the observed electron diffusion region (EDR), suggesting an elongated shape of the EDR. Evidence for the annihilation was revealed in the form of the island growing at a rate much lower than expected for the standard X-type geometry of the EDR, which indicates that magnetic flux injected into the EDR was not ejected from the X-point or accumulated in the island, but was dissipated in the EDR. This energy conversion process is in contrast to that in the standard EDR of a reconnecting current sheet where the energy of antiparallel magnetic fields is mostly converted to electron bulk-flow energy. Fully kinetic simulation also demonstrates that an elongated EDR is subject to the formation of electron-scale magnetic islands in which fast but transient annihilation can occur. Consistent with the observations and simulation, theoretical analysis shows that fast magnetic diffusion can occur in an elongated EDR in the presence of nongyrotropic electron effects. We suggest that the annihilation in elongated EDRs may contribute to the dissipation of magnetic energy in a turbulent collisionless plasma.
- Published
- 2022
3. Parker Solar Probe Observations of Solar Wind Energetic Proton Beams Produced by Magnetic Reconnection in the Near‐Sun Heliospheric Current Sheet
- Author
-
Phan, TD, Verniero, JL, Larson, D, Lavraud, B, Drake, JF, Øieroset, M, Eastwood, JP, Bale, SD, Livi, R, Halekas, JS, Whittlesey, PL, Rahmati, A, Stansby, D, Pulupa, M, MacDowall, RJ, Szabo, PA, Koval, A, Desai, M, Fuselier, SA, Velli, M, Hesse, M, Pyakurel, PS, Maheshwari, K, Kasper, JC, Stevens, JM, Case, AW, and Raouafi, NE
- Subjects
magnetic reconnection ,particle acceleration ,solar wind ,parker solar probe ,heliospheric current sheet ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
We report observations of reconnection exhausts in the Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS) during Parker Solar Probe Encounters 08 and 07, at 16 R s and 20 R s , respectively. Heliospheric current sheet (HCS) reconnection accelerated protons to almost twice the solar wind speed and increased the proton core energy by a factor of ∼3, due to the Alfvén speed being comparable to the solar wind flow speed at these near-Sun distances. Furthermore, protons were energized to super-thermal energies. During E08, energized protons were found to have leaked out of the exhaust along separatrix field lines, appearing as field-aligned energetic proton beams in a broad region outside the HCS. Concurrent dropouts of strahl electrons, indicating disconnection from the Sun, provide further evidence for the HCS being the source of the beams. Around the HCS in E07, there were also proton beams but without electron strahl dropouts, indicating that their origin was not the local HCS reconnection exhaust.
- Published
- 2022
4. Major Scientific Challenges and Opportunities in Understanding Magnetic Reconnection and Related Explosive Phenomena in Solar and Heliospheric Plasmas
- Author
-
Ji, H., Karpen, J., Alt, A., Antiochos, S., Baalrud, S., Bale, S., Bellan, P. M., Begelman, M., Beresnyak, A., Bhattacharjee, A., Blackman, E. G., Brennan, D., Brown, M., Buechner, J., Burch, J., Cassak, P., Chen, B., Chen, L. -J., Chen, Y., Chien, A., Comisso, L., Craig, D., Dahlin, J., Daughton, W., DeLuca, E., Dong, C. F., Dorfman, S., Drake, J., Ebrahimi, F., Egedal, J., Ergun, R., Eyink, G., Fan, Y., Fiksel, G., Forest, C., Fox, W., Froula, D., Fujimoto, K., Gao, L., Genestreti, K., Gibson, S., Goldstein, M., Guo, F., Hare, J., Hesse, M., Hoshino, M., Hu, Q., Huang, Y. -M., Jara-Almonte, J., Karimabadi, H., Klimchuk, J., Kunz, M., Kusano, K., Lazarian, A., Le, A., Lebedev, S., Li, H., Li, X., Lin, Y., Linton, M., Liu, Y. -H., Liu, W., Longcope, D., Loureiro, N., Lu, Q. -M., Ma, Z-W., Matthaeus, W. H., Meyerhofer, D., Mozer, F., Munsat, T., Murphy, N. A., Nilson, P., Ono, Y., Opher, M., Park, H., Parker, S., Petropoulou, M., Phan, T., Prager, S., Rempel, M., Ren, C., Ren, Y., Rosner, R., Roytershteyn, V., Sarff, J., Savcheva, A., Schaffner, D., Schoeffier, K., Scime, E., Shay, M., Sironi, L., Sitnov, M., Stanier, A., Swisdak, M., TenBarge, J., Tharp, T., Uzdensky, D., Vaivads, A., Velli, M., Vishniac, E., Wang, H., Werner, G., Xiao, C., Yamada, M., Yokoyama, T., Yoo, J., Zenitani, S., and Zweibel, E.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Magnetic reconnection underlies many explosive phenomena in the heliosphere and in laboratory plasmas. The new research capabilities in theory/simulations, observations, and laboratory experiments provide the opportunity to solve the grand scientific challenges summarized in this whitepaper. Success will require enhanced and sustained investments from relevant funding agencies, increased interagency/international partnerships, and close collaborations of the solar, heliospheric, and laboratory plasma communities. These investments will deliver transformative progress in understanding magnetic reconnection and related explosive phenomena including space weather events., Comment: 4 pages (including a title page), white paper submitted to Helio2050 workshop at https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/helio2050/. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2004.00079
- Published
- 2020
5. Major Scientific Challenges and Opportunities in Understanding Magnetic Reconnection and Related Explosive Phenomena throughout the Universe
- Author
-
Ji, H., Alt, A., Antiochos, S., Baalrud, S., Bale, S., Bellan, P. M., Begelman, M., Beresnyak, A., Blackman, E. G., Brennan, D., Brown, M., Buechner, J., Burch, J., Cassak, P., Chen, L. -J., Chen, Y., Chien, A., Craig, D., Dahlin, J., Daughton, W., DeLuca, E., Dong, C. F., Dorfman, S., Drake, J., Ebrahimi, F., Egedal, J., Ergun, R., Eyink, G., Fan, Y., Fiksel, G., Forest, C., Fox, W., Froula, D., Fujimoto, K., Gao, L., Genestreti, K., Gibson, S., Goldstein, M., Guo, F., Hesse, M., Hoshino, M., Hu, Q., Huang, Y. -M., Jara-Almonte, J., Karimabadi, H., Klimchuk, J., Kunz, M., Kusano, K., Lazarian, A., Le, A., Li, H., Li, X., Lin, Y., Linton, M., Liu, Y. -H., Liu, W., Longcope, D., Loureiro, N., Lu, Q. -M., Ma, Z-W., Matthaeus, W. H., Meyerhofer, D., Mozer, F., Munsat, T., Murphy, N. A., Nilson, P., Ono, Y., Opher, M., Park, H., Parker, S., Petropoulou, M., Phan, T., Prager, S., Rempel, M., Ren, C., Ren, Y., Rosner, R., Roytershteyn, V., Sarff, J., Savcheva, A., Schaffner, D., Schoeffier, K., Scime, E., Shay, M., Sitnov, M., Stanier, A., TenBarge, J., Tharp, T., Uzdensky, D., Vaivads, A., Velli, M., Vishniac, E., Wang, H., Werner, G., Xiao, C., Yamada, M., Yokoyama, T., Yoo, J., Zenitani, S., and Zweibel, E.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
This white paper summarizes major scientific challenges and opportunities in understanding magnetic reconnection and related explosive phenomena as a fundamental plasma process., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, white paper submitted to both Plasma 2020 and Astro 2020 Decadal Surveys
- Published
- 2020
6. Pharmacokinetics and Target Attainment of Antimicrobial Drugs Throughout Pregnancy: Part I—Penicillins
- Author
-
Hesse, M. R., Prins, J. R., Hooge, M. N. Lub-de, Winter, H. L. J., Kosterink, J. G. W., Touw, D. J., and Mian, Paola
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Electron acceleration and thermalization at magnetotail separatrices
- Author
-
Norgren, C., Hesse, M., Tenfjord, P., Graham, D. B., Khotyaintsev, Yu. V., Vaivads, A., Steinvall, K., Xu, Y., Gershman, D. J., Lindqvist, P. -A., and Burch, J. L.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
In this study we use the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission to investigate the electron acceleration and thermalization occurring along the magnetic reconnection separatrices in the magnetotail. We find that initially cold electron lobe populations are accelerated towards the X line forming beams with energies up to a few keV's, corresponding to a substantial fraction of the electron thermal energy inside the exhaust. The accelerated electron populations are unstable to the formation of electrostatic waves which develop into nonlinear electrostatic solitary waves. The waves' amplitudes are large enough to interact efficiently with a large part of the electron population, including the electron beam. The wave-particle interaction gradually thermalizes the beam, transforming directed drift energy to thermal energy.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Electron-Scale Dynamics of the Diffusion Region during Symmetric Magnetic Reconnection in Space
- Author
-
Torbert, R. B., Burch, J. L., Phan, T. D., Hesse, M., Argall, M. R., Shuster, J., Ergun, R. E., Alm, L., Nakamura, R., Genestreti, K., Gershman, D. J., Paterson, W. R., Turner, D. L., Cohen, I., Giles, B. L., Pollock, C. J., Wang, S., Chen, L. -J., Stawarz, Julia, Eastwood, J. P., Hwang, K. - J., Farrugia, C., Dors, I., Vaith, H., Mouikis, C., Ardakani, A., Mauk, B. H., Fuselier, S. A., Russell, C. T., Strangeway, R. J., Moore, T. E., Drake, J. F., Shay, M. A., Khotyaintsev, Yu. V., Lindqvist, P. -A., Baumjohann, W., Wilder, F. D., Ahmadi, N., Dorelli, J. C., Avanov, L. A., Oka, M., Baker, D. N., Fennell, J. F., Blake, J. B., Jaynes, A. N., Contel, O. Le, Petrinec, S. M., Lavraud, B., and Saito, Y.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Magnetic reconnection is an energy conversion process important in many astrophysical contexts including the Earth's magnetosphere, where the process can be investigated in-situ. Here we present the first encounter of a reconnection site by NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft in the magnetotail, where reconnection involves symmetric inflow conditions. The unprecedented electron-scale plasma measurements revealed (1) super-Alfvenic electron jets reaching 20,000 km/s, (2) electron meandering motion and acceleration by the electric field, producing multiple crescent-shaped structures, (3) spatial dimensions of the electron diffusion region implying a reconnection rate of 0.1-0.2. The well-structured multiple layers of electron populations indicate that, despite the presence of turbulence near the reconnection site, the key electron dynamics appears to be largely laminar., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, and supplementary material
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. On the Role of Separatrix Instabilities in Heating the Reconnection Outflow Region
- Author
-
Hesse, M., Norgren, C., Tenfjord, P., Burch, J., Liu, Y. -H., Chen, L. -J., Bessho, N., Wang, S., Nakamura, R., Eastwood, J., Hoshino, M., Torbert, R., and Ergun, R.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
A study of the role of microinstabilities at the reconnection separatrix can play in heating the electrons during the transition from inflow to outflow is being presented. We find that very strong flow shears at the separatrix layer lead to counterstreaming electron distributions in the region around the separatrix, which become unstable to a beam-type instability. Similar to what has been seen in earlier research, the ensuing instability leads to the formation of propagating electrostatic solitons. We show here that this region of strong electrostatic turbulence is the predominant electron heating site when transiting from inflow to outflow. The heating is the result of heating generated by electrostatic turbulence driven by overlapping beams, and its macroscopic effect is a quasi-viscous contribution to the overall electron energy balance. We suggest that instabilities at the separatrix can play a key role in the overall electron energy balance in magnetic reconnection.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. How the IMF $\mathit{B}_{y}$ Induces a Local $\mathit{B}_{y}$ Component During Northward IMF $\mathit{B}_{z}$ and Characteristic Timescales
- Author
-
Tenfjord, P., Østgaard, N., Haaland, S., Snekvik, K., Laundal, K. M., Reistad, J. P., Strangeway, R., Milan, S. E., Hesse, M., and Ohma, A.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We use the Lyon-Fedder-Mobarry global magnetohydrodynamics model to study the effects of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) $\mathit{B}_{y}$ component on the coupling between the solar wind and magnetosphere-ionosphere system when IMF $\mathit{B}_{z}$ $>$0. We describe the evolution of how a magnetospheric $\mathit{B}_{y}$ component is induced on closed field lines during these conditions. Starting from dayside lobe reconnection, the magnetic tension on newly reconnected field lines redistribute the open flux asymmetrically between the two hemispheres. This results in asymmetric magnetic energy density in the lobes. Shear flows are induced to restore equilibrium, and these flows are what effectively induces a local $\mathit{B}_{y}$ component. We show the radial dependence of the induced $\mathit{B}_{y}$ and compare the results to the induced $\mathit{B}_{y}$ during southward IMF conditions. We also show the response and reconfiguration time of the inner magnetosphere to IMF $\mathit{B}_{y}$ reversals during northward IMF $\mathit{B}_{z}$. A superposed epoch analysis of magnetic field measurements from seven Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite spacecraft at different local times both for negative-to-positive and positive-to-negative IMF $\mathit{B}_{y}$ reversals is presented. We find that the induced $\mathit{B}_{y}$ responds within 16 min of the arrival of IMF $\mathit{B}_{y}$ at the bow shock, and it completely reconfigures within 47 min.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Physical Foundation of the Reconnection Electric Field
- Author
-
Hesse, M., Liu, Y. -H., Chen, L. -J., Bessho, N., Wang, S., Burch, J., Moretto, T., Norgren, C., Genestreti, K. J., Phan, T. D., and Tenfjord, P.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,82D10, 76X05, 76W05 - Abstract
We report on computer simulations and analytic theory to provide a self-consistent understanding of the role of the reconnection electric field, which extends substantially beyond the simple change of magnetic connections. Rather, we find that the reconnection electric field is essential to maintaining the current density in the diffusion region, which would otherwise be dissipated by a set of processes. Natural candidates for current dissipation are the average convection of current carriers away from the reconnection region by the outflow of accelerated particles, or the average rotation of the current density by the magnetic field reversal in the vicinity. Instead, we show here that the current dissipation is the result of thermal effects, underlying the statistical interaction of current-carrying particles with the adjacent magnetic field. We find that this interaction serves to redirect the directed acceleration of the reconnection electric field to thermal motion. This thermalization manifests itself in form of quasi-viscous terms in the thermal energy balance of the current layer. These quasi-viscous terms act to increase the average thermal energy. Our predictions regarding current and thermal energy balance are readily amenable to exploration in the laboratory or by satellite missions, in particular, by NASAs Magnetospheric Multiscale mission., Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Localized Oscillatory Dissipation in Magnetopause Reconnection
- Author
-
Burch, J. L., Ergun, R. E., Cassak, P. A., Webster, J. M., Torbert, R. B., Giles, B. L., Dorelli, J. C., Rager, A. C., Hwang, K. -J., Phan, T. D., Genestreti, K. J., Allen, R. C., Chen, L. -J., Wang, S., Gershman, D., Contel, O. Le, Russell, C. T., Strangeway, R. J., Wilder, F. D., Graham, D. B., Hesse, M., Drake, J. F., Swisdak, M., Price, L. M., Shay, M. A., Lindqvist, P. -A., Pollock, C. J., Denton, R. E., and Newman, D. L.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Data from the NASA Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission are used to investigate asymmetric magnetic reconnection at the dayside boundary between the Earth's magnetosphere and the solar wind (the magnetopause). High-resolution measurements of plasmas, electric and magnetic fields, and waves are used to identify highly localized (~15 electron Debye lengths) standing wave structures with large electric-field amplitudes (up to 100 mV/m). These wave structures are associated with spatially oscillatory dissipation, which appears as alternatingly positive and negative values of J dot E (dissipation). For small guide magnetic fields the wave structures occur in the electron stagnation region at the magnetosphere edge of the EDR. For larger guide fields the structures also occur near the reconnection x-line. This difference is explained in terms of channels for the out-of-plane current (agyrotropic electrons at the stagnation point and guide-field-aligned electrons at the x-line).
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. On the collisionless asymmetric magnetic reconnection rate
- Author
-
Liu, Yi-Hsin, Hesse, M., Cassak, P. A., Shay, M. A., Wang, S., and Chen, L. -J.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
A prediction of the steady-state reconnection electric field in asymmetric reconnection is obtained by maximizing the reconnection rate as a function of the opening angle made by the upstream magnetic field on the weak magnetic field (magnetosheath) side. The prediction is within a factor of two of the widely examined asymmetric reconnection model [Cassak and Shay, Phys. Plasmas 14, 102114, 2007] in the collisionless limit, and they scale the same over a wide parameter regime. The previous model had the effective aspect ratio of the diffusion region as a free parameter, which simulations and observations suggest is on the order of 0.1, but the present model has no free parameters. In conjunction with the symmetric case [Liu et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 085101, 2017], this work further suggests that this nearly universal number 0.1, essentially the normalized fast reconnection rate, is a geometrical factor arising from maximizing the reconnection rate within magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)-scale constraints., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Prescription opioids among older adults: ten years of data across five countries
- Author
-
Hamina, A., Muller, A. E., Clausen, T., Skurtveit, S., Hesse, M., Tjagvad, C., Thylstrup, B., Odsbu, I., Zoega, H., Jónsdóttir, H. L., and Taipale, H.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Why does steady-state magnetic reconnection have a maximum local rate of order 0.1?
- Author
-
Liu, Yi-Hsin, Hesse, M., Guo, F., Daughton, W., Li, H., Cassak, P. A., and Shay, M. A.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Simulations suggest collisionless steady-state magnetic reconnection of Harris-type current sheets proceeds with a rate of order 0.1, independent of dissipation mechanism. We argue this long-standing puzzle is a result of constraints at the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) scale. We perform a scaling analysis of the reconnection rate as a function of the opening angle made by the upstream magnetic fields, finding a maximum reconnection rate close to 0.2. The predictions compare favorably to particle-in-cell simulations of relativistic electron-positron and non-relativistic electron-proton reconnection. The fact that simulated reconnection rates are close to the predicted maximum suggests reconnection proceeds near the most efficient state allowed at the MHD-scale. The rate near the maximum is relatively insensitive to the opening angle, potentially explaining why reconnection has a similar fast rate in differing models., Comment: Submitted to PRL for review on 08/17/2016. This article is a revision of arXiv:1605.05654. https://arxiv.org/abs/1605.05654
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. How does the magnetosphere go to sleep?
- Author
-
Moretto, T., Hesse, M., Kuznetsova, M., Rastätter, L., Vennerstrøm, S., and Tenfjord, P.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Deterministic Model for Asteroid Thermal Evolution With Fragmentation and Reassembly Into a Gravitational Aggregate.
- Author
-
Ren, J., Hesse, M. A., Dygert, N., and Lucas, M. P.
- Subjects
HEAT losses ,ENERGY dissipation ,RADIOACTIVE decay ,SOLAR system ,LOW temperatures ,ASTEROIDS - Abstract
We present a model for the thermal evolution of asteroids that experience catastrophic fragmentation and reassembly into a gravitational aggregate. The three stage model comprises the initial radiogenic heating, fragmentation and cooling, and reassembly into a porous gravitational aggregate. The heat loss during catastrophic fragmentation is largely determined by the production of small particles that equilibrate thermally with ambient space. To determine this heat loss we combine a power‐law for the cumulative fragment mass distribution with analytic solutions for conductive cooling. To keep the model deterministic we fragment the parent body and reassemble the gravitational aggregate in shells ordered in decreasing volume. We use the resulting model to show that catastrophic fragmentation can lead to significant heat loss despite the short reassembly times (e.g., ≤ ${\le} $1 year), due to the production of many small fragments. Despite the heat loss during fragmentation, the reassembled gravitational aggregate will retain more heat than the undisturbed parent body in the long term, due to the formation of an insulating megaregolith. Applied to the H‐chondrite parent body, our model can reproduce both the fast cooling rates at high temperatures and slow cooling rates at low temperature. Plain Language Summary: Ordinary chondrites are the most common rocky meteorites. Their parent body is generally assumed to follow the so‐called onion shell model where internal heating by radioactive decay warms up the interior and leads to concentric shells of different rock types. This model fits a large number of observations, for example, that these asteroids cooled very slowly at low temperatures. Recently, this quiet evolution has been challenged by the observation of very fast cooling rates from the peak temperature experienced by these asteroids. This requires that the asteroid is broken up into a large number of pieces by a collision with another asteroid. The fragments resulting from the collision can then cool rapidly as they are exposed to cold ambient space. A majority of these fragments must then assemble into a gravitational aggregate. The gravitational aggregate cools very slowly because it is insulated by a thick coat of rubble. Here, we develop a simple model to investigate the main consequences of fragmentation and reassembly into a gravitational aggregate for the thermal evolution of asteroids. Our results show that this is a viable model for the H‐chondrite parent body, consistent with both fast cooling at high temperature and slow cooling at low temperature. Key Points: Model quantifies the conductive heat loss due to asteroid catastrophic fragmentation as function to fragmentation level and reassembly timeDespite energy loss during fragmentation the formation of a low conductivity gravitational aggregate leads to long term energy retentionAsteroid fragmentation with reassembly can reproduce both fast cooling at high temperature and slow cooling at low temperature [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Determining different impact factors on the xylonic acid production using Gluconobacter oxydans DSM 2343
- Author
-
Hahn, Thomas, Torkler, S., van der Bolt, R., Gammel, N., Hesse, M., Möller, A., Preylowski, B., Hubracht, V., Patzsch, K., and Zibek, S.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Trusted Data Acquisition in Microelectronics Manufacturing as a Basis for ML-Optimized Processing
- Author
-
Becker, K. F., primary, Voges, S., additional, Fruehauf, P., additional, Heimann, M., additional, Nerreter, S., additional, Blank, R., additional, Erdmann, M., additional, Gottwald, S., additional, Hofmeister, A., additional, Lopuszanski, P., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Thies, M., additional, Mehrafsun, S., additional, Fust, R., additional, Beck, E., additional, Becicka, M., additional, Pawlikowski, J., additional, Schroeder, B., additional, Voigt, C., additional, Braun, T., additional, and Schneider-Ramelow, M., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Efficient targeting of heart lesions with cardiac myofibroblasts: Combined gene and cell therapy enhanced by magnetic steering
- Author
-
Schiffer, M., primary, Wagner, K., additional, Carls, E., additional, Nicke, J., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Fratila, R., additional, Hildebrand, S., additional, Pfeifer, A., additional, Eberbeck, D., additional, Malek Mohammadi, M., additional, De la Fuente, J.M., additional, Fleischmann, B.K., additional, and Roell, W., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Investigation on laser absorption and x-ray radiation in microstructured titanium targets heated by short-pulse relativistic laser pulses
- Author
-
Pan, X., primary, Šmíd, M., additional, Huang, L. G., additional, Kluge, T., additional, Bagnoud, V., additional, Brambrink, E., additional, Cowan, T. E., additional, Colgan, J., additional, Ebert, T., additional, Hartnagel, D., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Hornung, J., additional, Kleinschmidt, A., additional, Perez-Martin, P., additional, Neukirch, A., additional, Philipp, K., additional, Sander, S., additional, Schaumann, G., additional, Tebartz, A., additional, Zielbauer, B., additional, Roth, M., additional, and Falk, K., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Impact-driven mobilization of deep crustal brines on dwarf planet Ceres
- Author
-
Raymond, C. A., Ermakov, A. I., Castillo-Rogez, J. C., Marchi, S., Johnson, B. C., Hesse, M. A., Scully, J. E. C., Buczkowski, D. L., Sizemore, H. G., Schenk, P. M., Nathues, A., Park, R. S., Prettyman, T. H., Quick, L. C., Keane, J. T., Rayman, M. D., and Russell, C. T.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch sammt Einführungsgesetz: Mit Anhang: Gesetz über die Angelegenheiten der freiwilligen Gerichtsbarkeit und Grundbuchordnung
- Author
-
M. Hesse, M. Hesse
- Published
- 2020
24. The PLATO 2.0 Mission
- Author
-
Rauer, H., Catala, C., Aerts, C., Appourchaux, T., Benz, W., Brandeker, A., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Deleuil, M., Gizon, L., Goupil, M. -J., Güdel, M., Janot-Pacheco, E., Mas-Hesse, M., Pagano, I., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Santos, N. C., Smith, A., -C., J., Suárez, Szabó, R., Udry, S., Adibekyan, V., Alibert, Y., Almenara, J. -M., Amaro-Seoane, P., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Asplund, M., Antonello, E., Ball, W., Barnes, S., Baudin, F., Belkacem, K., Bergemann, M., Bihain, G., Birch, A. C., Bonfils, X., Boisse, I., Bonomo, A. S., Borsa, F., Brandão, I. M., Brocato, E., Brun, S., Burleigh, M., Burston, R., Cabrera, J., Cassisi, S., Chaplin, W., Charpinet, S., Chiappini, C., Church, R. P., Csizmadia, Sz., Cunha, M., Damasso, M., Davies, M. B., Deeg, H. J., DÍaz, R. F., Dreizler, S., Dreyer, C., Eggenberger, P., Ehrenreich, D., Eigmüller, P., Erikson, A., Farmer, R., Feltzing, S., Fialho, F. de Oliveira, Figueira, P., Forveille, T., Fridlund, M., García, R. A., Giommi, P., Giuffrida, G., Godolt, M., da Silva, J. Gomes, Granzer, T., Grenfell, J. L., Grotsch-Noels, A., Günther, E., Haswell, C. A., Hatzes, A. P., Hébrard, G., Hekker, S., Helled, R., Heng, K., Jenkins, J. M., Johansen, A., Khodachenko, M. L., Kislyakova, K. G., Kley, W., Kolb, U., Krivova, N., Kupka, F., Lammer, H., Lanza, A. F., Lebreton, Y., Magrin, D., Marcos-Arenal, P., Marrese, P. M., Marques, J. P., Martins, J., Mathis, S., Mathur, S., Messina, S., Miglio, A., Montalban, J., Montalto, M., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Moradi, H., Moravveji, E., Mordasini, C., Morel, T., Mortier, A., Nascimbeni, V., Nelson, R. P., Nielsen, M. B., Noack, L., Norton, A. J., Ofir, A., Oshagh, M., Ouazzani, R. -M., Pápics, P., Parro, V. C., Petit, P., Plez, B., Poretti, E., Quirrenbach, A., Ragazzoni, R., Raimondo, G., Rainer, M., Reese, D. R., Redmer, R., Reffert, S., Rojas-Ayala, B., Roxburgh, I. W., Salmon, S., Santerne, A., Schneider, J., Schou, J., Schuh, S., Schunker, H., Silva-Valio, A., Silvotti, R., Skillen, I., Snellen, I., Sohl, F., Sousa, S. G., Sozzetti, A., Stello, D., Strassmeier, K. G., Švanda, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Tkachenko, A., Valencia, D., van Grootel, V., Vauclair, S. D., Ventura, P., Wagner, F. W., Walton, N. A., Weingrill, J., Werner, S. C., Wheatley, P. J., and Zwintz, K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
PLATO 2.0 has recently been selected for ESA's M3 launch opportunity (2022/24). Providing accurate key planet parameters (radius, mass, density and age) in statistical numbers, it addresses fundamental questions such as: How do planetary systems form and evolve? Are there other systems with planets like ours, including potentially habitable planets? The PLATO 2.0 instrument consists of 34 small aperture telescopes (32 with 25 sec readout cadence and 2 with 2.5 sec candence) providing a wide field-of-view (2232 deg2) and a large photometric magnitude range (4-16 mag). It focusses on bright (4-11 mag) stars in wide fields to detect and characterize planets down to Earth-size by photometric transits, whose masses can then be determined by ground-based radial-velocity follow-up measurements. Asteroseismology will be performed for these bright stars to obtain highly accurate stellar parameters, including masses and ages. The combination of bright targets and asteroseismology results in high accuracy for the bulk planet parameters: 2%, 4-10% and 10% for planet radii, masses and ages, respectively. The planned baseline observing strategy includes two long pointings (2-3 years) to detect and bulk characterize planets reaching into the habitable zone (HZ) of solar-like stars and an additional step-and-stare phase to cover in total about 50% of the sky. PLATO 2.0 will observe up to 1,000,000 stars and detect and characterize hundreds of small planets, and thousands of planets in the Neptune to gas giant regime out to the HZ. It will therefore provide the first large-scale catalogue of bulk characterized planets with accurate radii, masses, mean densities and ages. This catalogue will include terrestrial planets at intermediate orbital distances, where surface temperatures are moderate. Coverage of this parameter range with statistical numbers of bulk characterized planets is unique to PLATO 2.0., Comment: 63 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Experimental Astronomy (ExA)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. ORIGIN: Metal Creation and Evolution from the Cosmic Dawn
- Author
-
Herder, J. W. den, Piro, L., Ohashi, T., Kouveliotou, C., Hartmann, D. H., Kaastra, J. S., Amati, L., Andersen, M. I., Arnaud, M., Attéia, J-L., Bandler, S., Barbera, M., Barcons, X., Barthelmy, S., Basa, S., Basso, S., Boer, M., Branchini, E., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Borgani, S., Boyarsky, A., Brunetti, G., Budtz-Jorgensen, C., Burrows, D., Butler, N., Campana, S., Caroli, E., Ceballos, M., Christensen, F., Churazov, E., Comastri, A., Colasanti, L., Cole, R., Content, R., Corsi, A., Costantini, E., Conconi, P., Cusumano, G., de Plaa, J., De Rosa, A., Del Santo, M., Di Cosimo, S., De Pasquale, M., Doriese, R., Ettori, S., Evans, P., Ezoe, Y., Ferrari, L., Finger, H., Figueroa-Feliciano, T., Friedrich, P., Fujimoto, R., Furuzawa, A., Fynbo, J., Gatti, F., Galeazzi, M., Gehrels, N., Gendre, B., Ghirlanda, G., Ghisellini, G., Gilfanov, M., Giommi, P., Girardi, M., Grindlay, J., Cocchi, M., Godet, O., Guedel, M., Haardt, F., Hartog, R. den, Hepburn, I., Hermsen, W., Hjorth, J., Hoekstra, H., Holland, A., Hornstrup, A., van der Horst, A., Hoshino, A., Zand, J. in 't, Irwin, K., Ishisaki, Y., Jonker, P., Kitayama, T., Kawahara, H., Kawai, N., Kelley, R., Kilbourne, C., de Korte, P., Kusenko, A., Kuvvetli, I., Labanti, M., Macculi, C., Maiolino, R., Hesse, M. Mas, Matsushita, K., Mazzotta, P., McCammon, D., Méndez, M., Mignani, R., Mineo, T., Mitsuda, K., Mushotzky, R., Molendi, S., Moscardini, L., Natalucci, L., Nicastro, F., O'Brien, P., Osborne, J., Paerels, F., Page, M., Paltani, S., Pedersen, K., Perinati, E., Ponman, T., Pointecouteau, E., Predehl, P., Porter, S., Rasmussen, A., Rauw, G., Röttgering, H., Roncarelli, M., Rosati, P., Quadrini, E., Ruchayskiy, O., Salvaterra, R., Sasaki, S., Sato, K., Savaglio, S., Schaye, J., Sciortino, S., Shaposhnikov, M., Sharples, R., Shinozaki, K., Spiga, D., Sunyaev, R., Suto, Y., Takei, Y., Tanvir, N., Tashiro, M., Tamura, T., Tawara, Y., Troja, E., Tsujimoto, M., Tsuru, T., Ubertini, P., Ullom, J., Ursino, E., Verbunt, F., van de Voort, F., Viel, M., Wachter, S., Watson, D., Weisskopf, M., Werner, N., White, N., Willingale, R., Wijers, R., Yamasaki, N., Yoshikawa, K., and Zane, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
ORIGIN is a proposal for the M3 mission call of ESA aimed at the study of metal creation from the epoch of cosmic dawn. Using high-spectral resolution in the soft X-ray band, ORIGIN will be able to identify the physical conditions of all abundant elements between C and Ni to red-shifts of z=10, and beyond. The mission will answer questions such as: When were the first metals created? How does the cosmic metal content evolve? Where do most of the metals reside in the Universe? What is the role of metals in structure formation and evolution? To reach out to the early Universe ORIGIN will use Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) to study their local environments in their host galaxies. This requires the capability to slew the satellite in less than a minute to the GRB location. By studying the chemical composition and properties of clusters of galaxies we can extend the range of exploration to lower redshifts (z ~ 0.2). For this task we need a high-resolution spectral imaging instrument with a large field of view. Using the same instrument, we can also study the so far only partially detected baryons in the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM). The less dense part of the WHIM will be studied using absorption lines at low redshift in the spectra for GRBs., Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures. ESA Cosmic Vision medium-class mission (M3) proposal. Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy. Including minor corrections in the author list
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Assessment of left atrial fibrosis by 18F-FDG PET/CT in persistent atrial fibrillation : comparison to electroanatomical mapping and cMR late gadolinium enhancement
- Author
-
Raoult, T, primary, Gerber, B G, additional, Roelants, V R, additional, Garnir, Q G, additional, Scavee, C S, additional, Varnavas, V V, additional, Wauters, A W, additional, Gruson, D G, additional, Nellessen, E N, additional, Hesse, M H, additional, Beauloye, C B, additional, and Marchandise, S M, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Self-regulation of the reconnecting current layer in relativistic pair plasma reconnection
- Author
-
Zenitani, S. and Hesse, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate properties of the reconnecting current layer in relativistic pair plasma reconnection. We found that the current layer self-regulates its thickness when the current layer runs out current carriers, and so relativistic reconnection retains a fast reconnection rate. Constructing a steady state Sweet-Parker model, we discuss conditions for the current sheet expansion. Based on the energy argument, we conclude that the incompressible assumption is invalid in relativistic Sweet-Parker reconnection. The guide field cases are more incompressible than the anti-parallel cases, and we find a more significant current sheet expansion., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal (to appear in vol. 685)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The role of the Weibel instability at the reconnection jet front in relativistic pair plasma reconnection
- Author
-
Zenitani, S. and Hesse, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The role of the Weibel instability is investigated for the first time in the context of the large-scale magnetic reconnection problem. A late-time evolution of magnetic reconnection in relativistic pair plasmas is demonstrated by particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. In the outflow regions, powerful reconnection jet piles up the magnetic fields and then a tangential discontinuity appears there. Further downstream, it is found that the two-dimensional extension of the relativistic Weibel instability generates electro-magnetic fields, which are comparable to the anti-parallel or piled-up fields. In a microscopic viewpoint, the instability allows plasma's multiple interactions with the discontinuity. In a macroscopic viewpoint, the instability leads to rapid expansion of the current sheet and then the reconnection jet front further propagates into the downstream. Possible application to the three-dimensional case is briefly discussed., Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures; References and typos are fixed
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Development of a pin-less reference head frame: An experimental setup and preliminary experiences
- Author
-
Carolus, A., Fürst, J., Weihe, S., Hesse, M., and Brenke, C.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton observations of the weak GRB 030227
- Author
-
Mereghetti, S., Gotz, D., Tiengo, A., Beckmann, V., Borkowski, J., Courvoisier, T. J. -L., von Kienlin, A., Schoenfelder, V., Roques, J. P., Bouchet, L., Ubertini, P., Castro-Tirado, A., Lebrun, F., Paul, J., Lund, N., Hesse, M. Mas, Hermsen, W., Hartog, P. den, and Winkler, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton observations of the prompt gamma-ray emission and the X-ray afterglow of GRB030227, the first GRB for which the quick localization obtained with the INTEGRAL Burst Alert System (IBAS) has led to the discovery of X-ray and optical afterglows. GRB030227 had a duration of about 20 s and a peak flux of 1.1 photons cm^-2 s^-1 in the 20-200 keV energy range. The time averaged spectrum can be fit by a single power law with photon index about 2 and we find some evidence for a hard to soft spectral evolution. The X-ray afterglow has been detected starting only 8 hours after the prompt emission, with a 0.2-10 keV flux decreasing as t^-1 from 1.3x10e-12 to 5x10e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1. The afterglow spectrum is well described by a power law with photon index 1.94+/-0.05 modified by a redshifted neutral absorber with column density of several 10e22 cm^-2. A possible emission line at 1.67 keV could be due to Fe for a redshift z=3, consistent with the value inferred from the absorption., Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, latex, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Fisher-Bickerstaff- und Guillain-Barré-Überlappungssyndrome im intensivstationären Management
- Author
-
Gramespacher, H., Doppler, C., Hesse, M. D., and Stetefeld, H. R.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Electron Acceleration and Heating during Magnetic Reconnection in the Earth's Quasi-parallel Bow Shock
- Author
-
Bessho, N., primary, Chen, L.-J., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Ng, J., additional, Wilson, L. B., additional, and Stawarz, J. E., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Healthcare workers’ attitudes towards antimicrobial-coated hospital textiles
- Author
-
Faes Hesse, M., Schreiber, P.W., Sonpar, A., and Wolfensberger, A.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Bright Stars and Recent Star Formation in the Irregular Magellanic Galaxy NGC2366
- Author
-
Aparicio, A., Cepa, J., Gallart, C., Castaneda, H., Chiosi, C., Bertelli, G., Munoz-Tunon, C., Telles, Eduardo, Tenorio-Tagle, G., Diaz, A. I., Garcia-Vargas, M. L., Garzon, F., Gonzalez-Delgado, R. Ma., Mas-Hesse, M., Perez, E., Rodriguez-Espinosa, J. M., Terlevich, E., Terlevich, R. J., Varela, A. M., and Vilchez, J. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The stellar content of the Im galaxy NGC 2366 is discussed on the basis of CCD BVR photometry. The three brightest blue and red stars have been used to estimate its distance, obtaining a balue of 2.9 Mpc. The spatial distribution of the young stellar population is discussed in the light of the integrated color indices and the color-magnitude diagrams of different zones of the galaxy. A generalized star formation burst seems to have taken place about 50 Myr ago. The youngest stars are preferentially formed in the South-West part of the bar, where the giant HII complex NGC 2363 is located, being younger and bluer. The bar seems to play a role favouring star formation in one of its extremes. Self-propagation however, does not seem to be triggering star formation at large scale. A small region, populated by very young stars has also been found at the East of the galaxy., Comment: Astronomical Journal, accepted. This is a uuencoded, compressed, tar file (102 Kbytes) of 1 text, 1 table postscript files. Figures are retrieved as a separate file. One single file with all figures and tables (552Kb) also available from http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~etelles/astronomy.html
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The predictive value of brief measures of externalizing behavior and internalizing problems in young people receiving substance use treatment : A secondary analysis
- Author
-
Hesse, M., Jones, Sheila, Pedersen, M. M., Skov, K. B. E., Thylstrup, B., Pedersen, M. U., Hesse, M., Jones, Sheila, Pedersen, M. M., Skov, K. B. E., Thylstrup, B., and Pedersen, M. U.
- Abstract
Background: Identifying people at risk of poor outcomes following treatment for substance use disorders is important for developing tailored services. The aim of this study was to test whether a brief measure of internalizing and externalizing behavior could identify young adults at high risk of psychiatric care episodes and criminal offending up to four years after enrolment in treatment for substance use disorder. Methods: Clients aged 15–25 years from a randomized multicenter study were included (N = 457). At baseline, all completed the YouthMap12 screener, a measure of internalizing symptoms (IP6) and externalizing problems (EP6). We used accelerated failure time regression to assess time to psychiatric care and criminal offending, adjusting for baseline occurrence, gender, age, treatment group, and uptake area. Youden's J was used to assess optimal cut-points for risk of events. Results: The IP6 was associated with shorter time to psychiatric care following treatment enrolment (beta = −0.71, 95% confidence interval [CI] = −0.94 to −0.48; adjusted beta = −0.45, 95% CI = −0.66 to −0.25). The EP6 was associated with shorter time to criminal offending, coefficient = −0.32, 95% CI = −0.44 to −0.19; adjusted coefficient = −0.18, 95% CI = −0.30 to −0.06). Optimal cut-points were two or more for the IP6 and three or more for the EP6. Conclusions: The IP6 and the EP6, two simple and easily administered instruments, can identify young adults who are at an increased risk of future criminal offending or in need of psychiatric care. The findings lend support to using the 12-item YouthMap, as it identifies relevant risks, is compatible with local service delivery needs, and is theoretically and empirically supported. © 2022 The Author(s)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Electron-scale measurements of magnetic reconnection in space
- Author
-
Burch, J. L., Torbert, R. B., Phan, T. D., Chen, L.-J., Moore, T. E., Ergun, R. E., Eastwood, J. P., Gershman, D. J., Cassak, P. A., Argall, M. R., Wang, S., Hesse, M., Pollock, C. J., Giles, B. L., Nakamura, R., Mauk, B. H., Fuselier, S. A., Russell, C. T., Strangeway, R. J., Drake, J. F., Shay, M. A., Khotyaintsev, Yu. V., Lindqvist, P.-A., Marklund, G., Wilder, F. D., Young, D. T., Torkar, K., Goldstein, J., Dorelli, J. C., Avanov, L. A., Oka, M., Baker, D. N., Jaynes, A. N., Goodrich, K. A., Cohen, I. J., Turner, D. L., Fennell, J. F., Blake, J. B., Clemmons, J., Goldman, M., Newman, D., Petrinec, S. M., Trattner, K. J., Lavraud, B., Reiff, P. H., Baumjohann, W., Magnes, W., Steller, M., Lewis, W., Saito, Y., Coffey, V., and Chandler, M.
- Published
- 2016
37. BRANCHING BROWNIAN MOTION IN A STRIP: SURVIVAL NEAR CRITICALITY
- Author
-
Harris, S. C., Hesse, M., and Kyprianou, A. E.
- Published
- 2016
38. Reduction of Post-Infarct Ventricular Tachycardia by Transplantation of Transgenic Cardiac Fibroblasts
- Author
-
Schiffer, M., additional, Carls, E., additional, Hildebrand, S., additional, De La Fuente, J. M., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Geisen, C., additional, Pfeifer, A., additional, Bakhtiary, F., additional, Fleischmann, B. K., additional, and Roell, W., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The PLATO mission
- Author
-
Rauer, H, Pagano, Isabella, and Mas-Hesse, M.
- Subjects
Mission ,PLATO - Abstract
PLATO (PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars) is ESA’s M3 mission and designed to detect and characterize extrasolar planets by high-precision, long-term photometric and asteroseismic monitoring of a large number of stars. PLATO will detect small planets around bright stars, including terrestrial planets in the habitable zone of solar-like stars. With the complement of radial velocity observation from ground, planets will be characterized for their radius, mass, and age with high accuracy. PLATO will provide us the first large-scale catalogue of well-characterized small planets up to intermediate orbital periods, relevant for a meaningful comparison to planet formation theories and to better understand planet evolution. It will make possible comparative exoplanetology to place our solar system planets in a broader context. PLATO will study (host) stars using asteroseismology, allowing us to determine the stellar properties with high accuracy, substantially enhancing our knowledge of stellar structure and evolution.PLATO is scheduled for a launch date end 2026. Development of the spacecraft and the payload, which includes the serial production of its 26 cameras, has started. This presentation will give an overview of the PLATO science goals, of its instrument and mission profile status., The 28th IUGG General Assembly (IUGG2023) (Berlin 2023)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Magnetic Reconnection in a Quasi‐Parallel Shock: Two‐Dimensional Local Particle‐in‐Cell Simulation
- Author
-
Bessho, N, Chen, L.-J, Wang, S, Hesse, M, and Wilson, L. B., III
- Subjects
Geophysics - Abstract
Magnetic reconnection in a quasi‐parallel bow shock is investigated with two‐dimensional local particle‐in‐cell simulations. In the shock transition and downstream regions, large amplitude magnetic fluctuations exist, and abundant current sheets form. In some current sheets, reconnection occurs, and ion‐scale and electron‐scale magnetic islands are generated. In electron‐scale island regions, only electron outflow jets are observed, producing a quadrupolar out‐of‐plane magnetic field pattern, while in ion‐scale islands, both ions and electrons are involved and energized in reconnection. Normalized reconnection rates are obtained to be between around 0.1 to 0.2, and particle acceleration signatures are seen in distribution functions.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Electron Diffusion Regions in Magnetotail Reconnection Under Varying Guide Fields
- Author
-
Chen, L.‐J, Wang, S, Hesse, M, Ergun, R. E, Moore, T, Giles, B, Bessho, N, Russell, C, Burch, J, Torbert, R. B, Genestreti, K. J, Paterson, W, Pollock, C, Lavraud, B, Le Contel, O, Strangeway, R, Khotyaintsev, Yu V, and Lindqvist, P.‐A
- Subjects
Geophysics - Abstract
Kinetic structures of electron diffusion regions (EDRs) under finite guide fields in magnetotail reconnection are reported. The EDRs with guide fields 0.14–0.5 (in unit of the reconnecting component) are detected by the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. The key new features include the following: (1) cold inflowing electrons accelerated along the guide field and demagnetized at the magnetic field minimum while remaining a coherent population with a low perpendicular temperature, (2) wave fluctuations generating strong perpendicular electron flows followed by alternating parallel flows inside the reconnecting current sheet under an intermediate guide field, and (3) gyrophase bunched electrons with high parallel speeds leaving the X‐line region. The normalized reconnection rates for the three EDRs range from 0.05 to 0.3. The measurements reveal that finite guide fields introduce new mechanisms to break the electron frozen‐in condition.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Scientific Foundations of Forecasting Magnetospheric Space Weather
- Author
-
Eastwood, J. P., Nakamura, R., Turc, L., Mejnertsen, L., and Hesse, M.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Magnetic Field Perturbations from Currents in the Dark Polar Regions During Quiet Geomagnetic Conditions
- Author
-
Friis-Christensen, E., Finlay, C. C., Hesse, M., and Laundal, K. M.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Ambulante Lehre in fachspezialistischen Praxen - eine qualitative Studie mit Ärzt*innen zu Einstellungen, Einflussfaktoren und fachbezogenen Besonderheiten
- Author
-
Schulz, S, Hesse, M, Matthes, A, Petruschke, I, and Bleidorn, J
- Subjects
teaching motivation ,medizinische Ausbildung ,Lehrpraxen ,outpatient teaching ,ddc: 610 ,medical training ,specialist ,teaching practice ,ambulante Lehre ,Fachspezialist ,Lehrmotivation - Abstract
Aim: The aim is to record existing attitudes, influencing factors and specialised requirements with regard to the training of medical students in specialist outpatient care with doctors working in outpatient care.Method: Between September 2020 and May 2021, individual interviews with 15 specialists employed in outpatient care were held as part of this qualitative study. The recorded interviews were evaluated structurally in accordance with the Kuchartz method.Results: Enhanced outpatient training for medical students in specialist teaching practices was considered as important by all participants. Among other things, motivational factors were pleasure in teaching, a feeling of duty, the desire to pass something on, the need to convey one's own ideas and to generate future talent for the field. A lack of time, greater organisational effort and legal concerns were stated as hurdles. Reducing organisational effort for teaching practices, appreciation of their teaching activity and financial considerations were in particular given as significant incentives for participating. The attitude of participants towards financial remuneration was heterogeneous. Different specialist features and requirements for student training were mapped out. Conclusion: This study provides, for the first time, findings about teaching in specialist outpatient establishments. They point to a great degree of willingness of specialist doctors to undertake teaching and provide starting points for creating concepts about producing teaching practices in specialist fields. Further quantitative investigation is required to substantiate the findings before us. Zielsetzung: Ziel ist es, vorhandene Einstellungen, Einflussfaktoren und fachbezogene Voraussetzungen hinsichtlich der Ausbildung Medizinstudierender in der fachspezialistischen ambulanten Versorgung bei ambulant tätigen Ärzt*innen zu erfassen.Methodik: In dieser qualitativen Studie wurden im Zeitraum September 2020 - Mai 2021 leitfadengestützte Einzelinterviews mit 15 ambulant tätigen Fachspezialist*innen durchgeführt. Die per Audio aufgenommenen Interviews wurden inhaltlich strukturierend nach Kuckartz ausgewertet.Ergebnisse: Eine verstärkte ambulante Ausbildung Medizinstudierender in fachspezialistischen Lehrpraxen wurde von allen Teilnehmer*innen als wichtig erachtet. Motivatoren waren u.a. die Freude an der Lehrtätigkeit, ein Verpflichtungsgefühl, der Wunsch etwas weiterzugeben, das Bedürfnis eigene Ideale zu vermitteln und die Nachwuchsgenerierung für das Fach. Als Hürden wurden fehlende Zeit, hoher organisatorischer Aufwand und rechtliche Bedenken geäußert. Als wesentliche Anreize zur Beteiligung an der studentischen Lehre wurden insbesondere die organisatorische Aufwandreduktion für die Lehrpraxen, Wertschätzung ihrer Lehrtätigkeit und finanzielle Vergütung angesprochen. Die Haltung der Teilnehmer*innen zur finanziellen Vergütung war heterogen. Unterschiedliche, fachspezifische Besonderheiten und Voraussetzungen für die studentische Ausbildung wurden herausgearbeitet. Schlussfolgerung: Mit dieser Studie liegen erstmals Erkenntnisse zur Lehre in fachspezialistischen ambulanten Praxen vor. Sie weisen auf eine hohe Bereitschaft der Ärzt*innen zur Durchführung der Lehre hin und geben Ansatzpunkte für Konzepte zur Lehrpraxengewinnung in den fachspezialistischen Fächern. Es sind weiterführende quantitative Untersuchungen erforderlich, um die vorliegenden Ergebnisse zu untermauern.
- Published
- 2022
45. Evidence of a Nonorthogonal X-line in Guide-field Magnetic Reconnection
- Author
-
Pathak, Neha, primary, Ergun, R. E., additional, Qi, Y., additional, Schwartz, S. J., additional, Vo, T., additional, Usanova, M. E., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Phan, T. D., additional, Drake, J. F., additional, Eriksson, S., additional, Ahmadi, N., additional, Chasapis, A., additional, Wilder, F. D., additional, Stawarz, J. E., additional, Burch, J. L., additional, Genestreti, K. J., additional, Torbert, R. B., additional, and Nakamura, R., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Using a User Experience Framework to Improve a Learning Management System Informing the Implementation of Healthy Pantry Practice Initiatives at Food Pantries Within the Virginia Federation of Food Banks
- Author
-
Good, K. and Hesse, M.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Development and validation of a semi-automated surveillance system—lowering the fruit for non-ventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia (nvHAP) prevention
- Author
-
Wolfensberger, A., Jakob, W., Faes Hesse, M., Kuster, S.P., Meier, A.H., Schreiber, P.W., Clack, L., and Sax, H.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Magnetic Field Perturbations from Currents in the Dark Polar Regions During Quiet Geomagnetic Conditions
- Author
-
Friis-Christensen, E., primary, Finlay, C. C., additional, Hesse, M., additional, and Laundal, K. M., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. List of Contributors
- Author
-
Aas, M., primary, Abalo, R., additional, Abdel-Salam, O.M.E., additional, Abilio, V.C., additional, Adelli, G.R., additional, Ahmed, M.H., additional, Alhouayek, M., additional, Allen, J., additional, Allsop, D.J., additional, Almada, R.C., additional, Almeida, V., additional, Aloway, A., additional, Amanullah, S., additional, Ames, S.L., additional, Annaheim, B., additional, Appendino, G., additional, Aramaki, H., additional, Arias-Horcajadas, F., additional, Ariza, C., additional, Arnold, J.C., additional, Asmaro, D., additional, Auwärter, V., additional, Bachmann, S., additional, Baker, A., additional, Balter, R.E., additional, Baraldi, P.G., additional, Barber, P.A., additional, Barbería, E., additional, Bar-Sela, G., additional, Bastiani, L., additional, Basu, D., additional, Basurte, I., additional, Beck, O., additional, Behrendt, S., additional, Bergen-Cico, D., additional, Berrendero, F., additional, Bhagav, P., additional, Bhattacharyya, S., additional, Bioque, M., additional, Bolkent, S., additional, Boman, J.H., additional, Bondallaz, P., additional, Bonnet, U., additional, Borges, R.S., additional, Borowiak, K., additional, Boschi, I., additional, Brents, L.K., additional, Bridts, C.H., additional, Bruno, A., additional, Burrows, B.T., additional, Busatto, G.F., additional, Callaghan, R.C., additional, Campos, A.C., additional, Camsari, U.M., additional, Canfield, A., additional, Carra, E., additional, Carrillo-Salinas, F.-J., additional, Cascini, F., additional, Castelli, M.P., additional, Cawich, S.O., additional, Cawston, E.E., additional, Cedro, C., additional, Chagas, M.H.N., additional, Chen, C., additional, Chisari, C., additional, Chtioui, H., additional, Cico, R.D., additional, Ciechomska, I.A., additional, Coimbra, N.C., additional, Cole, J., additional, Cookey, J., additional, Copeland, J., additional, Coskun, Z.M., additional, Crano, W.D., additional, Crippa, J.A.S., additional, Crocker, C.E., additional, Cuesta, M.J., additional, Cunha, P.J., additional, Cutando, L., additional, da Silva, A.B.F., additional, da Silva, J.A., additional, da Silva, V.K., additional, Dan, D., additional, De Boni, R.B., additional, Rodríguez de Fonseca, F., additional, Gómez de Heras, R., additional, de Oliveira, A.C.P., additional, de Souza Crippa, A.C., additional, de Souza Crippa, J.A., additional, Degenhardt, F., additional, Degenhardt, L., additional, Deiana, S., additional, Deonarine, U., additional, Di Forti, M., additional, dos Anjos-Garcia, T., additional, Guimarães dos Santos, R., additional, Drozd, M., additional, Duran, F.L.S., additional, Earleywine, M., additional, Ebo, D.G., additional, Egashira, N., additional, Egnatios, J., additional, Ellert-Miklaszewska, A., additional, ElShebiney, S.A., additional, ElSohly, M.A., additional, Evren, C., additional, Fañanás, L., additional, Faber, M.M., additional, Farag, S., additional, Farré, A., additional, Farré, M., additional, Fatjó-Vilas, M., additional, Favrat, B., additional, Feingold, D., additional, Feliú, A., additional, Fernández, A.A., additional, Fernández-Artamendi, S., additional, Ferrari, A.J., additional, Ferraro, L., additional, Fichna, J., additional, Finlay, D.B., additional, Fiz, J., additional, Flores, Á., additional, Fogel, J.S., additional, Fornari, E., additional, Fortunato, L., additional, Fyfe, T., additional, Gaafar, A.E.D.M., additional, Gade, S., additional, Gaffal, E., additional, Galal, A.F., additional, Gandhi, R., additional, Gates, P., additional, Gatley, J.M., additional, Giroud, C., additional, Glass, M., additional, Goldberg, S.R., additional, González-Ortega, I., additional, González-Pinto, A., additional, Guaza, C., additional, Guillon, V., additional, Guimarães, F.S., additional, Gul, W., additional, Guven, F.M., additional, Hall, W.D., additional, Hallak, J.E.C., additional, Hamerle, M., additional, Haney, M., additional, Harding, H.E., additional, Hassan, S., additional, Haugland, K., additional, Healey, A., additional, Heck, C., additional, Helander, A., additional, Hernandez-Folgado, L., additional, Herzig, D.A., additional, Hesse, M., additional, Hill, M.G., additional, Hirst, R., additional, Hjorthøj, C.R., additional, Hoch, E., additional, Holder, M.D., additional, Holtkamp, M., additional, Hunter, M.R., additional, Ikeda, E., additional, Izumi, Y., additional, Janus, T., additional, Kaminska, B., additional, Kanaan, A.S., additional, Karinen, R., additional, Karl, T., additional, Katsu, T., additional, Kay-Lambkin, F., additional, Kayser, O., additional, Kells, M., additional, Kelly, B.C., additional, Kelly, T.H., additional, Kokona, A., additional, Kumar, A., additional, Kumar, P., additional, La Barbera, D., additional, Lagerberg, T.V., additional, Lahat, A., additional, Larsen, H.J., additional, Laun, A.S., additional, Lecomte, T., additional, Legleye, S., additional, Lev-Ran, S., additional, Lile, J.A., additional, Limberger, R.P., additional, Linares, I.M.P., additional, Lisdahl, K.M., additional, Little, M., additional, Liu, W., additional, Loflin, M.J., additional, Lorente-Omeñaca, R., additional, Lorenzetti, V., additional, Lu, D., additional, Mørland, J., additional, Müller-Vahl, K.R., additional, Machoy-Mokrzyńska, A., additional, Maeder, P., additional, Majumdar, S., additional, Maldonado, R., additional, Maple, K.E., additional, Marrón, T., additional, Martínez-Cengotitabengoa, M., additional, Martín-Fontelles, M. Isabel, additional, Martín-Santos, R., additional, Masuda, K., additional, McRae-Clark, A.L., additional, Mecha, M., additional, Medallo, J., additional, Melle, I., additional, Menahem, S., additional, Mendes-Gomes, J., additional, Mesías, B., additional, Miller, S., additional, Mizrahi, R., additional, Molinaro, S., additional, Moore, C., additional, Moraes, M.F., additional, Moreira, F.A., additional, Moreno-Izco, L., additional, Morris, H.A., additional, Muñoz, E., additional, Muccioli, G.G., additional, Muscatello, M.R.A., additional, Nada, S.A., additional, Naraynsingh, V., additional, Narimatsu, S., additional, Nogueira-Filho, G., additional, Nordentoft, M., additional, Oguz, G., additional, Øiestad, Å.M.L., additional, Øiestad, E.L., additional, Okazaki, H., additional, Olive, M.F., additional, Orio, L., additional, Ozaita, A., additional, Pérez, A., additional, Panagis, G., additional, Pandolfo, G., additional, Panlilio, L.V., additional, Paquin, K., additional, Parakh, P., additional, Parker, L.A., additional, Patel, V.B., additional, Pawson, M., additional, Peres, F.F., additional, Petras, H., additional, Pollastro, F., additional, Porcu, A., additional, Potente, R., additional, Potter, D.E., additional, Potvin, S., additional, Prats, C., additional, Preedy, V.R., additional, Rajendram, R., additional, Rathke, L., additional, Reed, K.L., additional, Repka, M.A., additional, Rigter, H., additional, Rock, E.M., additional, Rohrbacher, H., additional, Rosa, P.G.P., additional, Sánchez-Martínez, F., additional, Sánchez-Torres, A.M., additional, Sałaga, M., additional, Sabato, V., additional, Sanders, A.N., additional, Santos, L.C., additional, Scalese, M., additional, Schaufelberger, M.S., additional, Schröder, N., additional, Scimeca, G., additional, Secades-Villa, R., additional, Selvarajah, D., additional, Senormanci, O., additional, Shivakumar, K., additional, Shrier, L.A., additional, Siciliano, V., additional, Sideli, L., additional, Siegel, J.T., additional, Sleem, A.A., additional, Sobczyński, J., additional, Sodos, L., additional, Solowij, N., additional, Song, Z.-H., additional, Stacy, A.W., additional, Stehle, F., additional, Stogner, J.M., additional, Sussman, S., additional, Swift, W., additional, Szerman, N., additional, Tüting, T., additional, Aghazadeh Tabrizi, M., additional, Taglialatela-Scafati, O., additional, Takahashi, R.N., additional, Takeda, S., additional, Tarricone, I., additional, Tashkin, D.P., additional, Tellioğlu, T., additional, Tellioğlu, Z., additional, Tesfaye, S., additional, Thornton, L., additional, Thylstrup, B., additional, Tibbo, P.G., additional, Todd, G., additional, Torrens, M., additional, Tsai, J., additional, Tseng, H.-H., additional, Turner, A., additional, Tuv, S.S., additional, Ullah, F., additional, Van der Linden, T., additional, Van Gasse, A.L., additional, Vega, P., additional, Vera, G., additional, Verdichevski, M., additional, Vieira Sousa, T.R., additional, Vilela, L.R., additional, Vindenes, V., additional, Walsh, Z., additional, Watanabe, K., additional, Watterson, L.R., additional, White, J.M., additional, Wright, N.E., additional, Yücel, M., additional, Yamamoto, I., additional, Yamaori, S., additional, Zalesky, A., additional, Zalman, D., additional, Zhang, J., additional, Zhang, Y., additional, Zoccali, R., additional, Zorumski, C.F., additional, and Zuardi, A.W., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Cannabis Withdrawal Syndrome— Symptoms and Time Course
- Author
-
Hesse, M., primary and Thylstrup, B., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.