69,555 results on '"Horne, A"'
Search Results
2. Connecting the X-ray/UV variability of Fairall 9 with NICER: A Possible Warm Corona
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Partington, Ethan R., Cackett, Edward M., Edelson, Rick, Horne, Keith, Gelbord, Jonathan, Kara, Erin, Malacaria, Christian, Miller, Jake A., Steiner, James F., and Sanna, Andrea
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Seyfert 1 AGN Fairall 9 was targeted by NICER, Swift, and ground-based observatories for a $\sim$1000-day long reverberation mapping campaign. The following analysis of NICER spectra taken at a two-day cadence provides new insights into the structure and heating mechanisms of the central black hole environment. Observations of Fairall 9 with NICER and Swift revealed a strong relationship between the flux of the UV continuum and the X-ray soft excess, indicating the presence of a "warm" Comptonized corona which likely lies in the upper layers of the innermost accretion flow, serving as a second reprocessor between the "hot" X-ray corona and the accretion disk. The X-ray emission from the hot corona lacks sufficient energy and variability to power slow changes in the UV light curve on timescales of 30 days or longer, suggesting an intrinsic disk-driven variability process in the UV and soft X-rays. Fast variability in the UV on timescales shorter than 30 days can be explained through X-ray reprocessing, and the observed weak X-ray/UV correlation suggests that the corona changes dynamically throughout the campaign., Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, Accepted to ApJ
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- 2024
3. Estimating Masses of Supermassive Black Holes in Active Galactic Nuclei from the Halpha Emission Line
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Bontà, E. Dalla, Peterson, B. M., Grier, C. J., Berton, M., Brandt, W. N., Ciroi, S., Corsini, E. M., Barba, B. Dalla, Davies, R., Dehghanian, M., Edelson, R., Foschini, L., Gasparri, D., Ho, L. C., Horne, K., Iodice, E., Morelli, L., Pizzella, A., Portaluri, E., Shen, Y., Schneider, D. P., and Vestergaard, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The goal of this project is to construct an estimator for the masses of supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) based on the broad Halpha emission line. We make use of published reverberation mapping data. We remeasure all Halpha time lags from the original data as we find that often the reverberation measurements are improved by detrending the light curves. We produce mass estimators that require only the Halpha luminosity and the width of the Halpha emission line as characterized by either the FWHM or the line dispersion. It is possible, on the basis of a single spectrum covering the Halpha emission line, to estimate the mass of the central supermassive black hole in AGNs, taking into account all three parameters believed to affect mass measurement: luminosity, line width, and Eddington ratio. The typical formal accuracy in such estimates is of order 0.2-0.3 dex., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, submitted to A&A
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- 2024
4. AGN STORM 2: X. The origin of the interband continuum delays in Mrk 817
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Netzer, Hagai, Goad, Michael R., Barth, Aaron J., Cackett, Edward M., Horne, Keith, Hu, Chen, Kara, Erin, Korista, Kirk T., Kriss, Gerard A., Lewin, Collin, Montano, John, Arav, Nahum, Behar, Ehud, Brotherton, Michael S., Chelouche, Doron, de Rosa, Gisella, Bonta, Elena Dalla, Dehghanian, Maryam, Ferland, Gary J., Fian, Carina, Homayouni, Yasaman, Ilic, Dragana, Kaspi, Shai, Kovacevic, Andjelka B., Landt, Hermine, Popovic, Luka C., Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa, Wang, Jian-Min, and Zaidouni, Fatima
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The local (z=0.0315) AGN Mrk 817, was monitored over more than 500 days with space-borne and ground-based instruments as part of a large international campaign AGN STORM 2. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of the broad-band continuum variations using detailed modeling of the broad line region (BLR), several types of disk winds classified by their optical depth, and new numerical simulations. We find that diffuse continuum (DC) emission, with additional contributions from strong and broad emission lines, can explain the continuum lags observed in this source during high and low luminosity phases. Disk illumination by the variable X-ray corona contributes only a small fraction of the observed continuum lags. Our BLR models assume radiation pressure-confined clouds distributed over a distance of 2-122 light days. We present calculated mean-emissivity radii of many emission lines, and DC emission, and suggest a simple, transfer-function-dependent method that ties them to cross-correlation lag determinations. We do not find clear indications for large optical depth winds but identify the signature of lower column density winds. In particular, we associate the shortest observed continuum lags with a combination of tau(1 Ryd) approx. 2 wind and a partly shielded BLR. Even smaller optical depth winds may be associated with X-ray absorption features and with noticeable variations in the width and lags of several high ionization lines like HeII and CIV. Finally, we demonstrate the effect of torus dust emission on the observed lags in the i and z bands., Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures. Corrected typographical error in the title of the paper as it appeared in the Metadata
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- 2024
5. Learning to Love Edge Cases in Formative Math Assessment: Using the AMMORE Dataset and Chain-of-Thought Prompting to Improve Grading Accuracy
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Henkel, Owen, Horne-Robinson, Hannah, Dyshel, Maria, Ch, Nabil, Moreau-Pernet, Baptiste, and Abood, Ralph
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
This paper introduces AMMORE, a new dataset of 53,000 math open-response question-answer pairs from Rori, a learning platform used by students in several African countries and conducts two experiments to evaluate the use of large language models (LLM) for grading particularly challenging student answers. The AMMORE dataset enables various potential analyses and provides an important resource for researching student math acquisition in understudied, real-world, educational contexts. In experiment 1 we use a variety of LLM-driven approaches, including zero-shot, few-shot, and chain-of-thought prompting, to grade the 1% of student answers that a rule-based classifier fails to grade accurately. We find that the best-performing approach -- chain-of-thought prompting -- accurately scored 92% of these edge cases, effectively boosting the overall accuracy of the grading from 98.7% to 99.9%. In experiment 2, we aim to better understand the consequential validity of the improved grading accuracy, by passing grades generated by the best-performing LLM-based approach to a Bayesian Knowledge Tracing (BKT) model, which estimated student mastery of specific lessons. We find that relatively modest improvements in model accuracy at the individual question level can lead to significant changes in the estimation of student mastery. Where the rules-based classifier currently used to grade student, answers misclassified the mastery status of 6.9% of students across their completed lessons, using the LLM chain-of-thought approach this misclassification rate was reduced to 2.6% of students. Taken together, these findings suggest that LLMs could be a valuable tool for grading open-response questions in K-12 mathematics education, potentially enabling encouraging wider adoption of open-ended questions in formative assessment.
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- 2024
6. Evolution of the Archean Atmosphere
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Goldblatt, Colin, Eager-Nash, Jake K., and Horne, Julia E.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Archean atmospheric evolution is the transition from an abiological atmosphere, to an atmosphere for which the composition and therefore climate is highly altered by life. We review the key processes and transitions in this evolution., Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication as: Colin Goldblatt, Jake K. Eager-Nash, and Julia E. Horne (in press) "Evolution of the Archean Atmosphere", in: "The Archean Earth" (ed.: Martin Homan, Paul Mason, Richard Ernst, Timothy Lyons, Christoph Heubeck, Dominic Papineau, Eva Stueeken, Rajat Mazumder, Alexander Webb, Wladyslaw Altermann), Elsevier
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- 2024
7. The SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project: A Kinematically Variable Broad-Line Region and Consequences for Masses of Luminous Quasars
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Fries, Logan B., Trump, Jonathan R., Horne, Keith, Davis, Megan C., Grier, Catherine J., Shen, Yue, Anderson, Scott F., Dwelly, Tom, Homayouni, Y., Morrison, Sean, Runnoe, Jessie C., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Assef, Roberto J., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Brandt, W. N., Breiding, Peter, Browstein, Joel, Chakraborty, Priyanka, Hall, P. B., Koekemoer, Anton M., Ibarra-Medel, Héctor J., Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Negrete, C. Alenka, Pan, Kaike, Ricci, Claudio, Scheider, Donald P., Sharp, Hugh W., Smith, Theodore B., Stone, Zachary, and Temple, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a velocity-resolved reverberation mapping analysis of the hypervariable quasar RM160 (SDSS J141041.25+531849.0) at z = 0.359 with 153 spectroscopic epochs of data representing a ten-year baseline (2013-2023). We split the baseline into two regimes based on the 3x flux increase in the light curve: a 'low state' phase during the years 2013-2019 and a 'high state' phase during the years 2022-2023. The velocity-resolved lag profiles (VRLP) indicate that gas with different kinematics dominates the line emission in different states. The H\b{eta} VRLP begins with a signature of inflow onto the BLR in the 'low state', while in the 'high state' it is flatter with less signature of inflow. The H{\alpha} VRLP begins consistent with a virialized BLR in the 'low state', while in the 'high state' shows a signature of inflow. The differences in the kinematics between the Balmer lines and between the 'low state' and the 'high state' suggests complex BLR dynamics. We find that the BLR radius and velocity (both FWHM and {\sigma}) do not obey a constant virial product throughout the monitoring period. We find that BLR lags and continuum luminosity are correlated, consistent with rapid response of the BLR gas to the illuminating continuum. The BLR kinematic profile changes in unpredictable ways that are not related to continuum changes and reverberation lag. Our observations indicate that non-virial kinematics can significantly contribute to observed line profiles, suggesting caution for black-hole mass estimation in luminous and highly varying quasars like RM160., Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures
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- 2024
8. AGN STORM 2. VII. A Frequency-resolved Map of the Accretion Disk in Mrk 817: Simultaneous X-ray Reverberation and UVOIR Disk Reprocessing Time Lags
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Lewin, Collin, Kara, Erin, Barth, Aaron J., Cackett, Edward M., De Rosa, Gisella, Homayouni, Yasaman, Horne, Keith, Kriss, Gerard A., Landt, Hermine, Gelbord, Jonathan, Montano, John, Arav, Nahum, Bentz, Misty C., Boizelle, Benjamin D., Bontà, Elena Dalla, Brotherton, Michael S., Dehghanian, Maryam, Ferland, Gary J., Fian, Carina, Goad, Michael R., Santisteban, Juan V. Hernández, Ilić, Dragana, Kaastra, Jelle, Kaspi, Shai, Korista, Kirk T., Kosec, Peter, Kovačević, Andjelka, Mehdipour, Missagh, Miller, Jake A., Netzer, Hagai, Neustadt, Jack M. M., Panagiotou, Christos, Partington, Ethan R., Popović, Luka Č., Sanmartim, David, Vestergaard, Marianne, Ward, Martin J., and Zaidouni, Fatima
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
X-ray reverberation mapping is a powerful technique for probing the innermost accretion disk, whereas continuum reverberation mapping in the UV, optical, and infrared (UVOIR) reveals reprocessing by the rest of the accretion disk and broad-line region (BLR). We present the time lags of Mrk 817 as a function of temporal frequency measured from 14 months of high-cadence monitoring from Swift and ground-based telescopes, in addition to an XMM-Newton observation, as part of the AGN STORM 2 campaign. The XMM-Newton lags reveal the first detection of a soft lag in this source, consistent with reverberation from the innermost accretion flow. These results mark the first simultaneous measurement of X-ray reverberation and UVOIR disk reprocessing lags$\unicode{x2013}$effectively allowing us to map the entire accretion disk surrounding the black hole. Similar to previous continuum reverberation mapping campaigns, the UVOIR time lags arising at low temporal frequencies are longer than those expected from standard disk reprocessing by a factor of 2-3. The lags agree with the anticipated disk reverberation lags when isolating short-timescale variability, namely timescales shorter than the H$\beta$ lag. Modeling the lags requires additional reprocessing constrained at a radius consistent with the BLR size scale inferred from contemporaneous H$\beta$-lag measurements. When we divide the campaign light curves, the UVOIR lags show substantial variations, with longer lags measured when obscuration from an ionized outflow is greatest. We suggest that, when the obscurer is strongest, reprocessing by the BLR elongates the lags most significantly. As the wind weakens, the lags are dominated by shorter accretion disk lags., Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
- Full Text
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9. Constraining atmospheric composition from the outflow: helium observations reveal the fundamental properties of two planets straddling the radius gap
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Zhang, Michael, Bean, Jacob L., Wilson, David, Duvvuri, Girish, Schneider, Christian, Knutson, Heather A., Dai, Fei, Collins, Karen A., Watkins, Cristilyn N., Schwarz, Richard P., Barkaoui, Khalid, Shporer, Avi, Horne, Keith, Sefako, Ramotholo, Murgas, Felipe, and Palle, Enric
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
TOI-836 is a $\sim2-3$ Gyr K dwarf with an inner super Earth ($R=1.7\,R_\oplus$, $P=3.8\,d$) and an outer mini Neptune ($R=2.6\,R_\oplus$, $P=8.6\,d$). Recent JWST/NIRSpec 2.8--5.2 $\mu$m observations have revealed flat transmission spectra for both planets. We present Keck/NIRSPEC observations of escaping helium from this system. While planet b shows no absorption in the 1083 nm line to deep limits ($<0.2$\%), 836c shows strong (0.7\%) absorption in both visits. These results demonstrate that the inner super-Earth has lost its primordial atmosphere while the outer mini-Neptune has not. Self-consistent 1D radiative-hydrodynamic models of c using pyTPCI, an updated version of The PLUTO-CLOUDY Interface, reveal that the helium signal is highly sensitive to metallicity: its equivalent width collapses by a factor of 13 as metallicity increases from 10x to 100x solar, and by a further factor of 12 as it increases to 200x solar. The observed equivalent width is 88\% of the model prediction for 100x metallicity, suggesting that c may have an atmospheric metallicity close to 100x solar. This is similar to K2-18b and TOI-270d, the first two mini-Neptunes with detected absorption features in JWST transmission spectra. We highlight the helium triplet as a potentially powerful probe of atmospheric composition, with complementary strengths and weaknesses to atmospheric retrievals. The main strength is its extreme sensitivity to metallicity in the scientifically significant range of 10--200x solar, and the main weakness is the enormous model uncertainties in outflow suppression and confinement mechanisms, such as magnetic fields and stellar winds., Comment: Submitted to AJ
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- 2024
10. The April 2023 SYM-H = -233 nT Geomagnetic Storm: A Classical Event
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Hajra, Rajkumar, Tsurutani, Bruce Tsatnam, Lu, Quanming, Horne, Richard B., Lakhina, Gurbax Singh, Yang, Xu, Henri, Pierre, Du, Aimin, Gao, Xingliang, Wang, Rongsheng, and Lu, San
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The 23-24 April 2023 double-peak (SYM-H intensities of -179 and -233 nT) intense geomagnetic storm was caused by interplanetary magnetic field southward component Bs associated with an interplanetary fast-forward shock-preceded sheath (Bs of 25 nT), followed by a magnetic cloud (MC) (Bs of 33 nT), respectively. At the center of the MC, the plasma density exhibited an order of magnitude decrease, leading to a sub-Alfvenic solar wind interval for ~2.1 hr. Ionospheric Joule heating accounted for a significant part (~81%) of the magnetospheric energy dissipation during the storm main phase. Equal amount of Joule heating in the dayside and nightside ionosphere is consistent with the observed intense and global-scale DP2 (disturbance polar) currents during the storm main phase. The sub-Alfvenic solar wind is associated with disappearance of substorms, a sharp decrease in Joule heating dissipation, and reduction in electromagnetic ion cyclotron wave amplitude. The shock/sheath compression of the magnetosphere led to relativistic electron flux losses in the outer radiation belt between L* = 3.5 and 5.5. Relativistic electron flux enhancements were detected in the lower L* < 3.5 region during the storm main and recovery phases. Equatorial ionospheric plasma anomaly structures are found to be modulated by the prompt penetration electric fields. Around the anomaly crests, plasma density at ~470 km altitude and altitude-integrated ionospheric total electron content are found to increase by ~60% and ~80%, with ~33% and ~67% increases in their latitudinal extents compared to their quiet-time values, respectively., Comment: manuscript accepted for publication through JGR: Space Physics
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- 2024
11. Building Capability for Teachers of Mathematics. Effective Mathematics Teaching: Building Partnerships to Co-Develop Evidence-Based Capability. [Symposium]
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA), Rhonda Horne, and Judith Hillman
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Teaching resources and professional development based on mathematics education research have the potential to support teachers to develop and sustain improved pedagogies. The Queensland Department of Education provided online professional learning modules for teachers of Prep (Foundation) to Year 10 mathematics. To support implementation of the Australian Curriculum: Mathematics this evidence-based resource would assist teachers in understanding the curriculum and providing support for quality teaching and learning. This resource exemplifies the partnerships between the department, researchers and teachers in building capability in mathematics teaching.
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- 2024
12. Mathematical Modelling for a Class Party: Challenges for Students in One Year 4 Classroom
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA), Kym Fry, Judith Hillman, Rhonda Horne, and Elizabeth Rasmussen
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The revised Australian curriculum presents a new emphasis in primary schools on the process of Mathematical Modelling. A modelling focus brings close attention to confidence and capability with a potentially new problem-solving process, associated language, and pedagogical processes. This paper presents a Year 4 classroom modelling experience that arose as students planned their end-of-year party through Guided Mathematical Inquiry. Classroom video data captured two students working on vertical whiteboards as they formulated and solved a problem involving carrot sticks and dip. Findings reflect the students as doers of mathematics, engaged in productive struggle.
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- 2024
13. Review of the August 1972 and March 1989 Space Weather Events: Can We Learn Anything New From Them?
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Tsurutani, Bruce T., Sen, Abhijit, Hajra, Rajkumar, Lakhina, Gurbax S., Horne, Richard B., and Hada, Tohru
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Updated summaries of the August 1972 and March 1989 space weather events have been constructed. The features of these two events are compared to the Carrington 1859 event and a few other major space weather events. It is concluded that solar active regions release energy in a variety of forms (X-rays, EUV photons, visible light, coronal mass ejection (CME) plasmas and fields) and they in turn can produce other energetic effects (solar energetic particles (SEPs), magnetic storms) in a variety of ways. It is clear that there is no strong one-to-one relationship between these various energy sinks. The energy is often distributed differently from one space weather event to the next. Concerning SEPs accelerated at interplanetary CME (ICME) shocks, it is concluded that the Fermi mechanism associated with quasi-parallel shocks is relatively weak and that the gradient drift mechanism (electric fields) at quasi-perpendicular shocks will produce harder spectra and higher fluxes. If the 4 Augusut 1972 intrinsic magnetic cloud condition (southward interplanetary magnetic field instead of northward) and the interplanetary Sun to 1 au conditions were different, a 4 August 1972 magnetic storm and magnetospheric dawn-to-dusk electric fields substantially larger than the Carrington event would have occurred. Under these special interplanetary conditions, a Miyake et al. (2012)-like extreme SEP event may have been formed. The long duration complex 1989 storm was probably greater than the Carrington storm in the sense that the total ring current particle energy was larger.
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- 2024
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14. Optimization of Superconducting Niobium Nitride Thin Films via High-Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering
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Horne, Hudson T., Hugo, Collin M., Reid, Brandon C., and Santavicca, Daniel F.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
We report a systematic comparison of niobium nitride thin films deposited on oxidized silicon substrates by reactive DC magnetron sputtering and reactive high-power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS). After determining the nitrogen gas concentration that produces the highest superconducting critical temperature for each process, we characterize the dependence of the critical temperature on film thickness. The optimal nitrogen concentration is higher for HiPIMS than for DC sputtering, and HiPIMS produces higher critical temperatures for all thicknesses studied. We attribute this to the HiPIMS process enabling the films to get closer to optimal stoichiometry before beginning to form a hexagonal crystal phase that reduces the critical temperature, along with the extra kinetic energy in the HiPIMS process improving crystallinity. We also study the ability to increase the critical temperature of the HiPIMS films through the use of an aluminum nitride buffer layer and substrate heating., Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures
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- 2024
15. Does the Source of a Warning Matter? Examining the Effectiveness of Veracity Warning Labels Across Warners
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Horne, Benjamin D.
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks - Abstract
In this study, we conducted an online, between-subjects experiment (N = 2,049) to better understand the impact of warning label sources on information trust and sharing intentions. Across four warners (the social media platform, other social media users, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and fact checkers), we found that all significantly decreased trust in false information relative to control, but warnings from AI were modestly more effective. All warners significantly decreased the sharing intentions of false information, except warnings from other social media users. AI was again the most effective. These results were moderated by prior trust in media and the information itself. Most noteworthy, we found that warning labels from AI were significantly more effective than all other warning labels for participants who reported a low trust in news organizations, while warnings from AI were no more effective than any other warning label for participants who reported a high trust in news organizations., Comment: To appear at ICWSM 2025
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- 2024
16. Intensive broadband reverberation mapping of Fairall 9 with 1.8 years of daily Swift monitoring
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Edelson, R., Peterson, B. M., Gelbord, J., Horne, K., Goad, M., McHardy, I., Vaughan, S., and Vestergaard, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present 1.8 years of near-daily Swift monitoring of the bright, strongly variable Type 1 AGN Fairall 9. Totaling 575 successful visits, this is the largest such campaign reported to date. Variations within the UV/optical are well-correlated, with longer wavelengths lagging shorter wavelengths in the direction predicted by thin disk/lamp-post models. The correlations are improved by detrending; subtracting a second-order polynomial fit to the UV/optical light curves to remove long-term trends that are not of interest to this study. Extensive testing indicates detrending with higher-order polynomials removes too much intrinsic variability signal on reverberation timescales. These data provide the clearest detection to date of interband lags within the UV, indicating that neither emission from a large disk nor diffuse continuum emission from the broad-line region can independently explain the full observed lag spectrum. The observed X-ray flux variations are poorly correlated with those in the UV/optical. Further, subdivision of the data into four ~160 day light curves shows that the UV/optical lag spectrum is highly stable throughout the four periods, but the X-ray to UV lags are unstable, significantly changing magnitude and even direction from one period to the next. This indicates the X-ray to UV relationship is more complex than predicted by the simple reprocessing model often adopted for AGN. A bowl model (lamp-post irradiation and blackbody reprocessing on a disk with a steep rim) fit suggests the disk thickens at a distance (~10 lt-day) and temperature (~8000K) consistent with the inner edge of the BLR., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, to appear in ApJ
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- 2024
17. Surviving in the Hot Neptune Desert: The Discovery of the Ultra-Hot Neptune TOI-3261b
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Nabbie, Emma, Huang, Chelsea X., Burt, Jennifer A., Armstrong, David J., Mamajek, Eric E., Adibekyan, Vardan, Sousa, Sérgio G., Lopez, Eric D., Thorngren, Daniel P., Fernández, Jorge, Li, Gongjie, Jenkins, James S., Vines, Jose I., da Silva, João Gomes, Wittenmyer, Robert A., Bayliss, Daniel, Briceño, César, Collins, Karen A., Dumusque, Xavier, Horne, Keith D., Keniger, Marcelo F., Law, Nicholas, Lillo-Box, Jorge, Liu, Shang-Fei, Mann, Andrew W., Nielsen, Louise Dyregaard, Osborn, Ares, Relles, Howard M., Rodrigues, José J., Bell, Juan, Srdoc, Gregor, Stockdale, Chris, Strøm, Paul A., Gardner-Watkins, Cristilyn N., Wheatley, Peter J., Wright, Duncan J., Zhou, George, Ziegler, Carl, Ricker, George R., Seager, Sara, Vanderspek, Roland, Winn, Joshua W., Jenkins, Jon M., Fausnaugh, Michael, Kunimoto, Michelle, Osborn, Hugh P., Quinn, Samuel N., and Wohler, Bill
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The recent discoveries of Neptune-sized ultra-short period planets (USPs) challenge existing planet formation theories. It is unclear whether these residents of the Hot Neptune Desert have similar origins to smaller, rocky USPs, or if this discrete population is evidence of a different formation pathway altogether. We report the discovery of TOI-3261b, an ultra-hot Neptune with an orbital period $P$ = 0.88 days. The host star is a $V = 13.2$ magnitude, slightly super-solar metallicity ([Fe/H] $\simeq$ 0.15), inactive K1.5 main sequence star at $d = 300$ pc. Using data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope, we find that TOI-3261b has a radius of $3.82_{-0.35}^{+0.42}$ $R_{\oplus}$. Moreover, radial velocities from ESPRESSO and HARPS reveal a mass of $30.3_{-2.4}^{+2.2}$ $M_{\oplus}$, more than twice the median mass of Neptune-sized planets on longer orbits. We investigate multiple mechanisms of mass loss that can reproduce the current-day properties of TOI-3261b, simulating the evolution of the planet via tidal stripping and photoevaporation. Thermal evolution models suggest that TOI-3261b should retain an envelope potentially enriched with volatiles constituting $\sim$5% of its total mass. This is the second highest envelope mass fraction among ultra-hot Neptunes discovered to date, making TOI-3261b an ideal candidate for atmospheric follow-up observations., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted to AJ
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- 2024
18. AGN STORM 2: VIII. Investigating the Narrow Absorption Lines in Mrk 817 Using HST-COS Observations
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Dehghanian, Maryam, Arav, Nahum, Kriss, Gerard A., Mehdipour, Missagh, Byun, Doyee, Walker, Gwen, Sharma, Mayank, Barth, Aaron J., Bentz, Misty C., Boizelle, Benjamin D., Brotherton, Michael S., Cackett, Edward M., Bonta, Elena Dalla, De Rosa, Gisella, Ferland, Gary J., Fian, Carina, Filippenko, Alexei V., Gelbord, Jonathan, Goad, Michael R., Horne, Keith, Homayouni, Yasaman, Ilic, Dragana, Joner, Michael D., Kara, Erin A., Kaspi, Shai, Kochanek, Christopher S., Korista, Kirk T., Kosec, Peter, Kovacevic, Andjelka B., Landt, Hermine, Lewin, Collin, Partington, Ethan R., Popovic, Luka C., Proga, Daniel, Rogantini, Daniele, Siebert, Matthew R., Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa, Vestergaard, Marianne, Waters, Timothy, Wang, Jian-Min, Zaidouni, Fatima, and Zu, Ying
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We observed the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk817 during an intensive multi-wavelength reverberation mapping campaign for 16 months. Here, we examine the behavior of narrow UV absorption lines seen in HST/COS spectra, both during the campaign and in other epochs extending over 14 years. We conclude that while the narrow absorption outflow system (at -3750 km/s with FWHM=177 km/s) responds to the variations of the UV continuum as modified by the X-ray obscurer, its total column density (logNH =19.5 cm-2) did not change across all epochs. The adjusted ionization parameter (scaled with respect to the variations in the Hydrogen ionizing continuum flux) is log UH =-1.0. The outflow is located at a distance smaller than 38 parsecs from the central source, which implies a hydrogen density of nH > 3000 cm-3. The absorption outflow system only covers the continuum emission source and not the broad emission line region, which suggests that its transverse size is small (< 1e16 cm), with potential cloud geometries ranging from spherical to elongated along the line of sight., Comment: 18 pages, 12 Figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2024
19. Understanding the Broad-line Region of Active Galactic Nuclei with Photoionization. I. the Moderate-Accretion Regime
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Wu, Qiaoya, Shen, Yue, Guo, Hengxiao, Anderson, Scott F., Brandt, W. N., Grier, Catherine J., Hall, Patrick B., Ho, Luis C., Homayouni, Yasaman, Horne, Keith, Li, Jennifer I-Hsiu, and Schneider, Donald P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Over three decades of reverberation mapping (RM) studies on local broad-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) have measured reliable black-hole (BH) masses for $> 100$ AGNs. These RM measurements reveal a significant correlation between the Balmer broad-line region size and the AGN optical luminosity (the $R-L$ relation). Recent RM studies for AGN samples with more diverse BH accretion parameters (e.g., mass and Eddington ratio) reveal a substantial intrinsic dispersion around the average $R-L$ relation, suggesting variations in the overall spectral energy distribution shape as functions of accretion parameters. Here we perform a detailed photoionization investigation of expected broad-line properties as functions of accretion parameters, using the latest models for the AGN continuum implemented in {\tt qsosed}. We compare theoretical predictions with observations of a sample of 67 $z\lesssim0.5$ reverberation-mapped AGNs with both rest-frame optical and UV spectra in the moderate-accretion regime (Eddington ratio $\lambda_{\rm Edd}\equiv L/L_{\rm Edd}<0.5$). The UV/optical line strengths and their dependences on accretion parameters can be reasonably well reproduced by the locally-optimally-emitting cloud (LOC) photoionization models. We provide quantitative recipes that use optical/UV line flux ratios to infer the ionizing continuum, which is not directly observable. In addition, photoionization models with universal values of ionization parameter ($\log U_{\rm H}=-2$) and hydrogen density ($\log n({\rm H})=12$) can qualitatively reproduce the observed global $R-L$ relation for the current AGN sample. However, such models fail to reproduce the observed trend of decreasing BLR size with $L/L_{\rm Edd}$ at fixed optical luminosity, which may imply that the gas density increases with the accretion rate., Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcome!
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- 2024
20. Digging deeper into the dense Galactic globular cluster Terzan 5 with Electron-Multiplying CCDs. Variable star detection and new discoveries
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Jaimes, R. Figuera, Catelan, M., Horne, K., Skottfelt, J., Snodgrass, C., Dominik, M., Jørgensen, U. G., Southworth, J., Hundertmark, M., Longa-Peña, P., Sajadian, S., Tregolan-Reed, J., Hinse, T. C., Andersen, M. I., Bonavita, M., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., Haikala, L., Khalouei, E., Korhonen, H., Peixinho, N., Rabus, M., and Rahvar, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context. High frame-rate imaging was employed to mitigate the effects of atmospheric turbulence (seeing) in observations of globular cluster Terzan 5. Aims. High-precision time-series photometry has been obtained with the highest angular resolution so far taken in the crowded central region of Terzan 5, with ground-based telescopes, and ways to avoid saturation of the brightest stars in the field observed. Methods. The Electron-Multiplying Charge Coupled Device (EMCCD) camera installed at the Danish 1.54-m telescope at the ESO La Silla Observatory was employed to produce thousands of short-exposure time images (ten images per second) that were stacked to produce the normal-exposure-time images (minutes). We employed difference image analysis in the stacked images to produce high-precision photometry using the DanDIA pipeline. Results. Light curves of 1670 stars with 242 epochs were analyzed in the crowded central region of Terzan 5 to statistically detect variable stars in the field observed. We present a possible visual counterpart outburst at the position of the pulsar J1748-2446N, and the visual counterpart light curve of the low-mass X-ray binary CX 3. Additionally, we present the discovery of 4 semiregular variables. We also present updated ephemerides and properties of the only RR Lyrae star previously known in the field covered by our observations in Terzan 5. Finally, we report a significant displacement of two sources by ~0.62 and 0.59 arcseconds with respect to their positions in previous images available in the literature., Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
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21. AGN STORM 2: IX. Studying the Dynamics of the Ionized Obscurer in Mrk 817 with High-resolution X-ray Spectroscopy
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Zaidouni, Fatima, Kara, Erin, Kosec, Peter, Mehdipour, Missagh, Rogantini, Daniele, Kriss, Gerard A., Behar, Ehud, Kaastra, Jelle, Barth, Aaron J., Cackett, Edward M., De Rosa, Gisella, Homayouni, Yasaman, Horne, Keith, Landt, Hermine, Arav, Nahum, Bentz, Misty C., Brotherton, Michael S., Bontà, Elena Dalla, Dehghanian, Maryam, Ferland, Gary J., Fian, Carina, Gelbord, Jonathan, Goad, Michael R., Buitrago, Diego H. González, Grier, Catherine J., Hall, Patrick B., Hu, Chen, Ilić, Dragana, Kaspi, Shai, Kochanek, Christopher S., Kovačević, Andjelka B., Kynoch, Daniel, Lewin, Collin, Montano, John, Netzer, Hagai, Neustadt, Jack M. M., Panagiotou, Christos, Partington, Ethan R., Plesha, Rachel, Popović, Luka Č., Proga, Daniel, Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa, Sanmartim, David, Siebert, Matthew R., Signorini, Matilde, Vestergaard, Marianne, Waters, Tim, and Zu, Ying
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results of the XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations taken as part of the ongoing, intensive multi-wavelength monitoring program of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 817 by the AGN Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping 2 (AGN STORM 2) Project. The campaign revealed an unexpected and transient obscuring outflow, never before seen in this source. Of our four XMM-Newton/NuSTAR epochs, one fortuitously taken during a bright X-ray state has strong narrow absorption lines in the high-resolution grating spectra. From these absorption features, we determine that the obscurer is in fact a multi-phase ionized wind with an outflow velocity of $\sim$5200 km s$^{-1}$, and for the first time find evidence for a lower ionization component with the same velocity observed in absorption features in the contemporaneous HST spectra. This indicates that the UV absorption troughs may be due to dense clumps embedded in diffuse, higher ionization gas responsible for the X-ray absorption lines of the same velocity. We observe variability in the shape of the absorption lines on timescales of hours, placing the variable component at roughly 1000 $R_g$ if attributed to transverse motion along the line of sight. This estimate aligns with independent UV measurements of the distance to the obscurer suggesting an accretion disk wind at the inner broad line region. We estimate that it takes roughly 200 days for the outflow to travel from the disk to our line of sight, consistent with the timescale of the outflow's column density variations throughout the campaign.
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- 2024
22. TESS Hunt for Young and Maturing Exoplanets (THYME) X: a two-planet system in the 210 Myr MELANGE-5 Association
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Thao, Pa Chia, Mann, Andrew W., Barber, Madyson G., Kraus, Adam L., Tofflemire, Benjamin M., Bush, Jonathan L., Wood, Mackenna L., Collins, Karen A., Vanderburg, Andrew, Quinn, Samuel N., Zhou, George, Newton, Elisabeth R., Ziegler, Carl, Law, Nicholas, Barkaoui, Khalid, Pozuelos, Francisco J., Timmermans, Mathilde, Gillon, Michaël, Jehin, Emmanuël, Schwarz, Richard P., Gan, Tianjun, Shporer, Avi, Horne, Keith, Sefako, Ramotholo, Suarez, Olga, Mekarnia, Djamel, Guillot, Tristan, Abe, Lyu, Triaud, Amaury H. M. J., Radford, Don J., Murillo, Ana Isabel Lopez, Ricker, George R., Winn, Joshua N., Jenkins, Jon M., Bouma, Luke G., Fausnaugh, Michael, Guerrero, Natalia M., and Kunimoto, Michelle
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Young (<500 Myr) planets are critical to studying how planets form and evolve. Among these young planetary systems, multi-planet configurations are particularly useful as they provide a means to control for variables within a system. Here, we report the discovery and characterization of a young planetary system, TOI-1224. We show that the planet-host resides within a young population we denote as MELANGE-5 . By employing a range of age-dating methods -- isochrone fitting, lithium abundance analysis, gyrochronology, and Gaia excess variability -- we estimate the age of MELANGE-5 to be 210$\pm$27 Myr. MELANGE-5 is situated in close proximity to previously identified younger (80 -110 Myr) associations, Crius 221 and Theia 424/Volans-Carina, motivating further work to map out the group boundaries. In addition to a planet candidate detected by the TESS pipeline and alerted as a TESS Object of Interest, TOI-1224 b, we identify a second planet, TOI-1224 c, using custom search tools optimized for young stars (Notch and LOCoR). We find the planets are 2.10$\pm$0.09$R_\oplus$ and 2.88$\pm$0.10$R_\oplus$ and orbit their host star every 4.18 and 17.95 days, respectively. With their bright ($K$=9.1 mag), small ($R_{*}$=0.44R$_{\odot}$), and cool ($T_{eff}$ =3326K) host star, these planets represent excellent candidates for atmospheric characterization with JWST., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal; 33 pages, 17 figures, 9 tables
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- 2024
23. Oh, for an arts degree!
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Horne, Julia
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- 2024
24. Exploring the Efficacy of an Online Intervention in Processing Experiences of Heterosexism among Autistic-LGBQ+ Individuals
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Meredith R. Maroney, Heidi M. Levitt, and Sharon G. Horne
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This experimental study explored the use of online expressive writing interventions to cope with distress from heterosexist events among a sample of autistic-LBGQ + individuals. This study included an open writing condition and an emotion focused therapy guided writing condition. Over 89% of the participants indicated that the writing exercises were helpful in processing the event, with significant decreases for measures of depressive and trauma/stressor symptoms. A thematic analysis identified specific aspects of each condition that were helpful for participants in coping with heterosexist distress, such as the development of insight through the emotion-focused exercises. This low-demand exercise is promising as a solo exercise or as a therapy homework assignment, especially given the accessibility of this online intervention for autistic-LGBQ + people.
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- 2024
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25. Challenges with sirolimus experimental data to inform QSP model of post‐transplantation cyclophosphamide regimens
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Mohanan, Ezhilpavai, Shen, Guofang, Ren, Suping, Fan, Hsuan‐Hao, Moua, Kao Tang Ying, Karolak, Aleksandra, Rockne, Russell C, Nakamura, Ryotaro, Horne, David A, Kanakry, Christopher G, Mager, Donald E, and McCune, Jeannine S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Transplantation ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Rare Diseases ,Humans ,Sirolimus ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Cyclophosphamide ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,T-Lymphocytes ,Regulatory ,Animals ,Models ,Biological ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,General Clinical Medicine ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
Dose optimization of sirolimus may further improve outcomes in allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) patients receiving post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) to prevent graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Sirolimus exposure-response association studies in HCT patients (i.e., the association of trough concentration with clinical outcomes) have been conflicting. Sirolimus has important effects on T-cells, including conventional (Tcons) and regulatory T-cells (Tregs), both of which have been implicated in the mechanisms by which PTCy prevents GVHD, but there is an absence of validated biomarkers of sirolimus effects on these cell subsets. Considering the paucity of existing biomarkers and the complexities of the immune system, we conducted a literature review to inform a quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) model of GVHD. The published literature presented multiple challenges. The sirolimus pharmacokinetic models insufficiently describe sirolimus distribution to relevant physiological compartments. Despite multiple publications describing sirolimus effects on Tcons and Tregs in preclinical and human ex vivo models, consistent parameters relating sirolimus concentrations to circulating Tcons and Tregs could not be found. Each aspect presents a challenge in building a QSP model of sirolimus and its temporal effects on T-cell subsets and GVHD prevention. To optimize GVHD prevention regimens, phase I studies and systematic studies of immunosuppressant concentration-effect association are needed for QSP modeling.
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- 2024
26. The Discovery and Follow-up of Four Transiting Short-period Sub-Neptunes Orbiting M dwarfs
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Hori, Y., Fukui, A., Hirano, T., Narita, N., de Leon, J. P., Ishikawa, H. T., Hartman, J. D., Morello, G., García, N. Abreu, Hernández, L. Álvarez, Béjar, V. J. S., Calatayud-Borras, Y., Carleo, I., Enoc, G., Esparza-Borges, E., Fukuda, I., Galán, D., Geraldía-González, S., Hayashi, Y., Ikoma, M., Ikuta, K., Isogai, K., Kagetani, T., Kawai, Y., Kawauchi, K., Kimura, T., Kodama, T., Korth, J., Kusakabe, N., Laza-Ramos, A., Livingston, J. H., Luque, R., Miyakawa, K., Mori, M., Torres, S. Muñoz, Murgas, F., Orell-Miquel, J., Palle, E., Parviainen, H., Peláez-Torres, A., Puig-Subirá, M., Sánchez-Benavente, M., Sosa-Guillén, P., Stangret, M., Terada, Y., Watanabe, N., Bakos, G. Á., Barkaoui, K., Beichman, C., Benkhaldoun, Z., Boyle, A. W., Ciardi, D. R., Clark, C. A., Collins, K. A., Collins, K. I., Conti, D. M., Crossfield, I. J. M., Everett, M. E., Furlan, E., Ghachoui, M., Gillon, M., Gonzales, E. J., Higuera, J., Horne, K., Howell, S. B., Jehin, E., Lester, K. V., Lund, M. B., Matson, R., Matthews, E. C., Pozuelos, F. J., Safonov, B. S., Schlieder, J. E., Schwarz, R. P., Sefako, R., Srdoc, G., Strakhov, I. A., Waalkes, W. C., Ziegler, C., Charbonneau, D., Essack, Z., Timmermans, M., Guerrero, N. M., Harakawa, H., Hedges, C., Ishizuka, M., Jenkins, J. M., Konishi, M., Kotani, T., Kudo, T., Kurokawa, T., Kuzuhara, M., Nishikawa, J., Omiya, M., Ricker, G. R., Seager, S., Serizawa, T., Striegel, S., Tamura, M., Ueda, A., Vanderspek, R., Vievard, S., and Winn, J. N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Sub-Neptunes with $2-3R_\oplus$ are intermediate in size between rocky planets and Neptune-sized planets. The orbital properties and bulk compositions of transiting sub-Neptunes provide clues to the formation and evolution of close-in small planets. In this paper, we present the discovery and follow-up of four sub-Neptunes orbiting M dwarfs (TOI-782, TOI-1448, TOI-2120, and TOI-2406), three of which were newly validated by ground-based follow-up observations and statistical analyses. TOI-782 b, TOI-1448 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b have radii of $R_\mathrm{p} = 2.740^{+0.082}_{-0.079}\,R_\oplus$, $2.769^{+0.073}_{-0.068}\,R_\oplus$, $2.120\pm0.067\,R_\oplus$, and $2.830^{+0.068}_{-0.066}\,R_\oplus$ and orbital periods of $P = 8.02$, $8.11$, $5.80$, and $3.08$\,days, respectively. Doppler monitoring with Subaru/InfraRed Doppler instrument led to 2$\sigma$ upper limits on the masses of $<19.1\ M_\oplus$, $<19.5\ M_\oplus$, $<6.8\ M_\oplus$, and $<15.6\ M_\oplus$ for TOI-782 b, TOI-1448 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b, respectively. The mass-radius relationship of these four sub-Neptunes testifies to the existence of volatile material in their interiors. These four sub-Neptunes, which are located above the so-called ``radius valley'', are likely to retain a significant atmosphere and/or an icy mantle on the core, such as a water world. We find that at least three of the four sub-Neptunes (TOI-782 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b) orbiting M dwarfs older than 1 Gyr, are likely to have eccentricities of $e \sim 0.2-0.3$. The fact that tidal circularization of their orbits is not achieved over 1 Gyr suggests inefficient tidal dissipation in their interiors., Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ, 32 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables
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- 2024
27. Brewer-Nash Scrutinised: Mechanised Checking of Policies featuring Write Revocation
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Capozucca, Alfredo, Cristiá, Maximiliano, Horne, Ross, and Katz, Ricardo
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
This paper revisits the Brewer-Nash security policy model inspired by ethical Chinese Wall policies. We draw attention to the fact that write access can be revoked in the Brewer-Nash model. The semantics of write access were underspecified originally, leading to multiple interpretations for which we provide a modern operational semantics. We go on to modernise the analysis of information flow in the Brewer-Nash model, by adopting a more precise definition adapted from Kessler. For our modernised reformulation, we provide full mechanised coverage for all theorems proposed by Brewer & Nash. Most theorems are established automatically using the tool {log} with the exception of a theorem regarding information flow, which combines a lemma in {log} with a theorem mechanised in Coq. Having covered all theorems originally posed by Brewer-Nash, achieving modern precision and mechanisation, we propose this work as a step towards a methodology for automated checking of more complex security policy models.
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- 2024
28. TOI-4336 A b: A temperate sub-Neptune ripe for atmospheric characterization in a nearby triple M-dwarf system
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Timmermans, M., Dransfield, G., Gillon, M., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Rackham, B. V., Aganze, C., Barkaoui, K., Briceño, C., Burgasser, A. J., Collins, K. A., Cointepas, M., Dévora-Pajares, M., Ducrot, E., Zúñiga-Fernández, S., Howell, S. B., Kaltenegger, L., Murray, C. A., Pass, E. K., Quinn, S. N., Raymond, S. N., Sebastian, D., Stassun, K. G., Ziegler, C., Almenara, J. M., Benkhaldoun, Z., Bonfils, X., Christiansen, J. L., Davoudi, F., de Wit, J., Delrez, L., Demory, B. -O., Fong, W., Fűrész, G., Ghachoui, M., Garcia, L. J., Chew, Y. Gómez Maqueo, Hooton, M. J., Horne, K., Günther, M. N., Jehin, E., Jenkins, J. M., Law, N., Mann, A. W., Murgas, F., Pozuelos, F. J., Pedersen, P. P., Queloz, D., Ricker, G., Rowden, P., Schwarz, R. P., Seager, S., Smart, R. L., Srdoc, G., Striegel, S., Thompson, S., Vanderspek, R., and Winn, J. N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Small planets transiting bright nearby stars are essential to our understanding of the formation and evolution of exoplanetary systems. However, few constitute prime targets for atmospheric characterization, and even fewer are part of multiple star systems. This work aims to validate TOI-4336 A b, a sub-Neptune-sized exoplanet candidate identified by the TESS space-based transit survey around a nearby M-dwarf. We validate the planetary nature of TOI-4336 A b through the global analysis of TESS and follow-up multi-band high-precision photometric data from ground-based telescopes, medium- and high-resolution spectroscopy of the host star, high-resolution speckle imaging, and archival images. The newly discovered exoplanet TOI-4336 A b has a radius of 2.1$\pm$0.1R$_{\oplus}$. Its host star is an M3.5-dwarf star of mass 0.33$\pm$0.01M$_{\odot}$ and radius 0.33$\pm$0.02R$_{\odot}$ member of a hierarchical triple M-dwarf system 22 pc away from the Sun. The planet's orbital period of 16.3 days places it at the inner edge of the Habitable Zone of its host star, the brightest of the inner binary pair. The parameters of the system make TOI-4336 A b an extremely promising target for the detailed atmospheric characterization of a temperate sub-Neptune by transit transmission spectroscopy with JWST., Comment: 27 pages, 19 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
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29. The first spectroscopic IR reverberation programme on Mrk 509
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Mitchell, J. A. J., Ward, M. J., Kynoch, D., Santisteban, J. V. Hernández, Horne, K., Pott, J. -U., Esser, J., Mercatoris, P., Packham, C., Ferland, G. J., Lawrence, A., Fischer, T., Barth, A. J., Villforth, C., and Winkler, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Near IR spectroscopic reverberation of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) potentially allows the infrared (IR) broad line region (BLR) to be reverberated alongside the disc and dust continua, while the spectra can also reveal details of dust astro-chemistry. Here, we describe results of a short pilot study (17 near-IR spectra over a 183 d period) for Mrk 509. The spectra give a luminosity-weighted dust radius of $\langle R_{\mathrm{d,lum}} \rangle = 186 \pm 4$ light-days for blackbody (large grain dust), consistent with previous (photometric) reverberation campaigns, whereas carbon and silicate dust give much larger radii. We develop a method of calibrating spectral data in objects where the narrow lines are extended beyond the slit width. We demonstrate this by showing our resultant photometric band light curves are consistent with previous results, with a hot dust lag at >40 d in the K band, clearly different from the accretion disc response at <20 d in the z band. We place this limit of 40 d by demonstrating clearly that the modest variability that we do detect in the H and K band does not reverberate on time-scales of less than 40 d. We also extract the Pa$\beta$ line light curve, and find a lag which is consistent with the optical BLR H$\beta$ line of $\sim$70-90 d. This is important as direct imaging of the near-IR BLR is now possible in a few objects, so we need to understand its relation to the better studied optical BLR., Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures
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- 2024
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30. Perceived Social Influence on Vaccination Decisions: A COVID-19 Case Study
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Yewell, Denise, Bentley, R. Alexander, and Horne, Benjamin D.
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Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
In this study, we examine the perceived influence of others, across both strong and weak social ties, on COVID-19 vaccination decisions in the United States. We add context to social influence by measuring related concepts, such as perceived agreement of others and perceived danger of COVID-19 to others. We find that vaccinated populations perceived more influence from their social circles than unvaccinated populations. This finding holds true across various social groups, including family, close friends, and neighbors. Vaccinated participants perceived that others agreed with their decision to get vaccinated more than unvaccinated participants perceived others to agree with their decision to not get vaccinated. Despite the clear differences in perceived social influence and agreement across the groups, the majority of participants across both vaccinated and unvaccinated populations perceived no social influence from all social group in their decisions. Aligning with this result, we find through open-ended responses that both vaccinated and unvaccinated participants frequently cited fear as a motivating factor in their decision, rather than social influence: vaccinated participants feared COVID-19, while unvaccinated participants feared the vaccine itself., Comment: Preprint of paper currently under review
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- 2024
31. Rotational Spectrum and First Interstellar Detection of 2-Methoxyethanol Using ALMA Observations of NGC 6334I
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Fried, Zachary T. P., El-Abd, Samer J., Hays, Brian M., Wenzel, Gabi, Byrne, Alex N., Margulès, Laurent, Motiyenko, Roman A., Shipman, Steven T., Horne, Maria P., Jørgensen, Jes K., Brogan, Crystal L., Hunter, Todd R., Remijan, Anthony J., Lipnicky, Andrew, Loomis, Ryan A., and McGuire, Brett A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use both chirped-pulse Fourier transform and frequency modulated absorption spectroscopy to study the rotational spectrum of 2-methoxyethanol in several frequency regions ranging from 8.7-500 GHz. The resulting rotational parameters permitted a search for this molecule in Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations toward the massive protocluster NGC 6334I as well as source B of the low-mass protostellar system IRAS 16293-2422. 25 rotational transitions are observed in the ALMA Band 4 data toward NGC 6334I, resulting in the first interstellar detection of 2-methoxyethanol. A column density of $1.3_{-0.9}^{+1.4} \times 10^{17}$ cm$^{-2}$ is derived at an excitation temperature of $143_{-39}^{+31}$ K. However, molecular signal is not observed in the Band 7 data toward IRAS 16293-2422B and an upper limit column density of $2.5 \times 10^{15}$ cm$^{-2}$ is determined. Various possible formation pathways--including radical recombination and insertion reactions--are discussed. We also investigate physical differences between the two interstellar sources that could result in the observed abundance variations., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2024
32. NELA-PS: A Dataset of Pink Slime News Articles for the Study of Local News Ecosystems
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Horne, Benjamin D. and Gruppi, Maurício
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Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
Pink slime news outlets automatically produce low-quality, often partisan content that is framed as authentic local news. Given that local news is trusted by Americans and is increasingly shutting down due to financial distress, pink slime news outlets have the potential to exploit local information voids. Yet, there are gaps in understanding of pink slime production practices and tactics, particularly over time. Hence, to support future research in this area, we built a dataset of over 7.9M articles from 1093 pink slime sources over 2.5 years., Comment: published at ICWSM 2024 Dataset Track
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- 2024
33. Thermal Earth Model for the Conterminous United States Using an Interpolative Physics-Informed Graph Neural Network (InterPIGNN)
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Aljubran, Mohammad J. and Horne, Roland N.
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Physics - Geophysics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
This study presents a data-driven spatial interpolation algorithm based on physics-informed graph neural networks used to develop national temperature-at-depth maps for the conterminous United States. The model was trained to approximately satisfy the three-dimensional heat conduction law by simultaneously predicting subsurface temperature, surface heat flow, and rock thermal conductivity. In addition to bottomhole temperature measurements, we incorporated other physical quantities as model inputs, such as depth, geographic coordinates, elevation, sediment thickness, magnetic anomaly, gravity anomaly, gamma-ray flux of radioactive elements, seismicity, and electric conductivity. We constructed surface heat flow, and temperature and thermal conductivity predictions for depths of 0-7 km at an interval of 1 km with spatial resolution of 18 km$^2$ per grid cell. Our model showed superior temperature, surface heat flow and thermal conductivity mean absolute errors of 4.8{\deg} C, 5.817 mW/m$^2$ and 0.022 W/(C-m)$, respectively. The predictions were visualized in two-dimensional spatial maps across the modeled depths. This thorough modeling of the Earth's thermal processes is crucial to understanding subsurface phenomena and exploiting natural underground resources., Comment: The thermal Earth model is made available as feature layers on ArcGIS at https://arcg.is/nLzzT0
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- 2024
34. ROME/REA: Three-year, Tri-color Timeseries Photometry of the Galactic Bulge
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Street, R. A., Bachelet, E., Tsapras, Y., Hundertmark, M. P. G., Bozza, V., Bramich, D. M., Cassan, A., Dominik, M., Jaimes, R. Figuera, Horne, K., Mao, S., Saha, A., Wambsganss, J., and Zang, Weicheng
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The ROME/REA (Robotic Observations of Microlensing Events/Reactive Event Assessment) Survey was a Key Project at Las Cumbres Observatory (hereafter LCO) which continuously monitored 20 selected fields (3.76 sq.deg.) in the Galactic Bulge throughout their seasonal visibility window over a three-year period, between March 2017 and March 2020. Observations were made in three optical passbands (SDSS-g', -r', -i'), and LCO's multi-site telescope network enabled the survey to achieve a typical cadence of $\sim$10\,hrs in i' and ~15 hrs in g' and r'. In addition, intervals of higher cadence (<1 hr) data were obtained during monitoring of key microlensing events within the fields. This paper describes the Difference Image Analysis data reduction pipeline developed to process these data, and the process for combining the photometry from LCO's three observing sites in the Southern Hemisphere. The full timeseries photometry for all 8 million stars, down to a limiting magnitude of i~18 mag is provided in the data release accompanying this paper, and samples of the data are presented for exemplar microlensing events, illustrating how the tri-band data are used to derive constraints on the microlensing source star parameters, a necessary step in determining the physical properties of the lensing object. The timeseries data also enables a wealth of additional science, for example in characterizing long-timescale stellar variability, and a few examples of the data for known variables are presented., Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP
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- 2024
35. Development and Validation of Clinical Prediction Models for Surgical Success in Patients With Endometriosis: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Study
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Marlin, Nadine, Rivas, Carol, Allotey, John, Dodds, Julie, Horne, Andrew, and Ball, Elizabeth
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundEndometriosis is a chronic inflammatory condition affecting 6%-10% of women of reproductive age and is defined by the presence of endometrial-like tissue outside the uterus (lesions), commonly affecting the pelvis and ovaries. It is associated with debilitating pelvic pain, infertility, and fatigue and often has devastating effects on the quality of life (QoL). Although it is as common as back pain, it is poorly understood, and treatment and diagnosis are often delayed, leading to unnecessary suffering. Endometriosis has no cure. Surgery is one of several management options. Quantifying the probability of successful surgery is important for guiding clinical decisions and treatment strategies. Factors predicting success through pain reduction after endometriosis surgery have not yet been adequately identified. ObjectiveThis study aims to determine which women with confirmed endometriosis benefit from surgical improvement in pain and QoL and whether these women could be identified from clinical symptoms measured before laparoscopy. MethodsFirst, we will carry out a systematic search and review and, if appropriate, meta-analysis of observational cohort and case-control studies reporting one or more risk factors for endometriosis and postsurgical treatment success. We will search PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane databases from inception without language restrictions and supplement the reference lists by manual searches. Second, we will develop separate clinical prediction models for women with confirmed and suspected diagnoses of endometriosis. A total of three suitable databases have been identified for development and external validation (the MEDAL [ISRCTN13028601] and LUNA [ISRCTN41196151] studies, and the BSGE database), and access has been guaranteed. The models will be developed using a linear regression approach that links candidate factors to outcomes. Third, we will hold 2 stakeholder co-design workshops involving eight clinicians and eight women with endometriosis separately and then bring all 16 participants together. Participants will discuss the implementation, delivery, usefulness, and sustainability of the prediction models. Clinicians will also focus on the ease of use and access to clinical prediction tools. ResultsThis project was funded in March 2018 and approved by the Institutional Research Ethics Board in December 2019. At the time of writing, this study was in the data analysis phase, and the results are expected to be available in April 2021. ConclusionsThis study is the first to aim to predict who will benefit most from laparoscopic surgery through the reduction of pain or increased QoL. The models will provide clinicians with robustly developed and externally validated support tools, improving decision making in the diagnosis and treatment of women. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/20986
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- 2021
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36. Impact of BCR::ABL1 single nucleotide variants on asciminib efficacy
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Innes, Andrew J., Hayden, Chloe, Orovboni, Victoria, Claudiani, Simone, Fernando, Fiona, Khan, Afzal, Rees, David, Byrne, Jennifer, Gallipoli, Paolo, Francis, Sebastian, Copland, Mhairi, Horne, Gillian, Raghavan, Manoj, Arnold, Claire, Collins, Angela, Cranfield, Tanya, Cunningham, Nicholas, Danga, Akila, Forsyth, Peter, Frewin, Rebecca, Garland, Paula, Hannah, Guy, Avenoso, Daniele, Hassan, Sandra, Huntly, Brian J. P., Husain, Jissan, Makkuni, Sudhakaran, Rothwell, Kate, Khorashad, Jamshid, Apperley, Jane F., and Milojkovic, Dragana
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- 2024
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37. Reliability and validity of the Turkish version of the medication practical barriers to adherence questionnaire in patients with chronic diseases
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Samuelyan, Nora, Ay, Pınar, Moon, Zoe, Sancar, Mesut, Horne, Rob, and Okuyan, Betul
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- 2024
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38. Talk Debt to Me: An Applied Linguistics Approach to Exploring College Student Preferences for Student Loan Debt Letters
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Taylor, Zachary W., Rainey, Elizabeth A., Charran, Chelseaia, Holthaus, Gretchen, Eguiluz, Linda, Horne, Ada, Francisco, Myra, and Weber-Wandel, Karla
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Although student loan debt has been rigorously studied over the past several decades, scant research has investigated how institutions of higher education communicate debt to current and former student borrowers. As COVID-19 forced the United States Department of Education to cancel the Annual Student Loan Acknowledgement as part of a student's signing of the master promissory note (MPN), there are no other mechanisms for students to be aware of their student loan debt beyond a debt letter from their institution or reviewing their National Student Loan Debt System (NSLDS) portal. This applied linguistics study surveyed 2,030 current student loan borrowers attending U.S. institutions of higher education to explore their preferences for receiving a student loan debt letter. Results suggest students of Color and first-generation in college students strongly prefer shorter, simpler letters, while there were no statistically significant preferences by gender. Implications for research and practice will be addressed.
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- 2023
39. Effective and Scalable Math Support: Evidence on the Impact of an AI- Tutor on Math Achievement in Ghana
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Henkel, Owen, Horne-Robinson, Hannah, Kozhakhmetova, Nessie, and Lee, Amanda
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
This study evaluates the impact of Rori, an AI powered conversational math tutor accessible via WhatsApp, on the math performance of approximately 1,000 students in grades 3-9 across 11 schools in Ghana. Each school was assigned to a treatment group or control group; the students in the control group continued their regular math instruction, while students in the treatment group engaged with Rori, for two 30-minute sessions per week over 8 months in addition to regular math instruction. We find that the math growth scores were substantially higher for the treatment group with an effect size of 0.37, and that the results were statistically significant (p < 0.001). The fact that Rori works with basic mobile devices on low-bandwidth data networks gives the intervention strong potential to support personalized learning on other low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs), where laptop ownership and high-speed internet - prerequisite for many video-centered learning platforms - remain extremely limited. While the results should be interpreted judiciously, as they only report on year 1 of the intervention, and future research is necessary to better understand which conditions are necessary for successful implementation, they do suggest that chat-based tutoring solutions leveraging artificial intelligence could offer a costeffective approach to enhancing learning outcomes for millions of students globally.
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- 2024
40. Reevaluating LSST's Capability for Time Delay Measurements in Quasar Accretion Discs
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Nuñez, F. Pozo, Czerny, B., Panda, S., Kovacevic, A., Brandt, W., and Horne, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory is poised to observe thousands of quasars using the Deep Drilling Fields (DDF) across six broadband filters over a decade. Understanding quasar accretion disc (AD) time delays is pivotal for probing the physics of these distant objects. Pozo Nu\~nez et al. (2023) has recently demonstrated the feasibility of recovering AD time delays with accuracies ranging from 5\% to 20\%, depending on the quasar's redshift and time sampling intervals. Here we reassess the potential for measuring AD time delays under the current DDF observing cadence, which is placeholder until a final cadence is decided. We find that contrary to prior expectations, achieving reliable AD time delay measurements for quasars is significantly more challenging, if not unfeasible, due to the limitations imposed by the current observational strategies., Comment: Accepted as a research note in RNAAS; 3 pages, 1 figure
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- 2024
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41. The TESS-Keck Survey XXI: 13 New Planets and Homogeneous Properties for 21 Subgiant Systems
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Chontos, Ashley, Huber, Daniel, Grunblatt, Samuel K., Saunders, Nicholas, Winn, Joshua N., McCormack, Mason, Knudstrup, Emil, Albrecht, Simon H., Crossfield, Ian J. M., Rodriguez, Joseph E., Ciardi, David R., Collins, Karen A., Jenkins, Jon M., Bieryla, Allyson, Batalha, Natalie M., Beard, Corey, Dai, Fei, Dalba, Paul A., Fetherolf, Tara, Giacalone, Steven, Hill, Michelle L., Howard, Andrew W., Isaacson, Howard, Kane, Stephen R., Lubin, Jack, MacDougall, Mason G., Močnik, Teo, Murphy, Joseph M. Akana, Petigura, Erik A., Pidhorodetska, Daria, Polanski, Alex S., Robertson, Paul, Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Turtelboom, Emma V., Weiss, Lauren M., Van Zandt, Judah, Rocker, George R., Vanderspek, Roland, Latham, David W., Seager, Sara, Quinn, Samuel N., Shporer, Avi, Eisner, Nora L., Goeke, Robert F., Levine, Alan M., Ting, Eric B., Howell, Steve, Schlieder, Joshua E., Benni, Paul, Boyle, Andrew W., Gan, Tianjun, Girardin, Eric, Gonzalez, Erica, Gregorio, Joao, Horne, Keith, Livingston, John, Lund, Michael B., Mann, Christopher R., Massey, Bob, Matthews, Elisabeth C., McLeod, Kim K., Palle, Enric, Popowicz, Adam, Relles, Howard M., Schwarz, Richard P., Sefako, Ramotholo, Srdoc, Grego, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Wang, Gavin, and Ziegler, Carl
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a dedicated transit and radial velocity survey of planets orbiting subgiant stars observed by the TESS Mission. Using $\sim$$16$ nights on Keck/HIRES, we confirm and characterize $12$ new transiting planets -- $\rm TOI-329\,b$, $\rm HD\,39688\,b$ ($\rm TOI-480$), $\rm TOI-603\,b$, $\rm TOI-1199\,b$, $\rm TOI-1294\,b$, $\rm TOI-1439\,b$, $\rm TOI-1605\,b$, $\rm TOI-1828\,b$, $\rm HD\,148193\,b$ ($\rm TOI-1836$), $\rm TOI-1885\,b$, $\rm HD\,83342\,b$ ($\rm TOI-1898$), $\rm TOI-2019\,b$ -- and provide updated properties for 9 previously confirmed TESS subgiant systems ($\rm TOI-197$, $\rm TOI-954$, $\rm TOI-1181$, $\rm TOI-1296$, $\rm TOI-1298$, $\rm TOI-1601$, $\rm TOI-1736$, $\rm TOI-1842$, $\rm TOI-2145$). We also report the discovery of an outer, non-transiting planet, $\rm TOI-1294\,c$ ($P=160.1\pm2.5$ days, $M_{\mathrm{p}}=148.3^{+18.2}_{-16.4} \,M_{\oplus}$), and three additional stars with long-term RV trends. We find that at least $19\pm8\%$ of subgiants in our sample of $21$ stars have outer companions, comparable to main-sequence stars. We perform a homogeneous analysis of the stars and planets in the sample, with median uncertainties of $3\%$, $8\%$ and $15\%$ for planet radii, masses and ages, doubling the number of known planets orbiting subgiant stars with bulk densities measured to better than $10\%$. We observe a dearth of giant planets around evolved stars with short orbital periods, consistent with tidal dissipation theories that predict the rapid inspiral of planets as their host stars leave the main sequence. We note the possible evidence for two distinct classes of hot Jupiter populations, indicating multiple formation channels to explain the observed distributions around evolved stars. Finally, continued RV monitoring of planets in this sample will provide a more comprehensive understanding of demographics for evolved planetary systems., Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, 9 tables
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- 2024
42. High-quality Extragalactic Legacy-field Monitoring (HELM) with DECam
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Zhuang, Ming-Yang, Yang, Qian, Shen, Yue, Adamow, Monika, Friedel, Douglas N., Gruendl, R. A., Liu, Xin, Martini, Paul, Abbott, Timothy M. C., Anderson, Scott F., Assef, Roberto J., Bauer, Franz E., Bielby, Rich, Brandt, W. N., Burke, Colin J., Casares, Jorge, Chen, Yu-Ching, De Rosa, Gisella, Drlica-Wagner, Alex, Dwelly, Tom, Eltvedt, Alice, Alvarez, Gloria Fonseca, Fu, Jianyang, Fuentes, Cesar, Graham, Melissa L., Grier, Catherine J., Golovich, Nathan, Hall, Patrick B., Hartigan, Patrick, Horne, Keith, Koekemoer, Anton M., Krumpe, Mirko, Li, Jennifer I., Lidman, Chris, Malik, Umang, Mangian, Amelia, Merloni, Andrea, Ricci, Claudio, Salvato, Mara, Sharp, Rob, Stone, Zachary, Trilling, David E., Tucker, Brad E., Wen, Di, Wideman, Zachary, Xue, Yongquan, Yu, Zhefu, and Zucker, Catherine
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
High-quality Extragalactic Legacy-field Monitoring (HELM) is a long-term observing program that photometrically monitors several well-studied extragalactic legacy fields with the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) imager on the CTIO 4m Blanco telescope. Since Feb 2019, HELM has been monitoring regions within COSMOS, XMM-LSS, CDF-S, S-CVZ, ELAIS-S1, and SDSS Stripe 82 with few-day cadences in the $(u)gri(z)$ bands, over a collective sky area of $\sim 38$ deg${\rm ^2}$. The main science goal of HELM is to provide high-quality optical light curves for a large sample of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), and to build decades-long time baselines when combining past and future optical light curves in these legacy fields. These optical images and light curves will facilitate the measurements of AGN reverberation mapping lags, as well as studies of AGN variability and its dependences on accretion properties. In addition, the time-resolved and coadded DECam photometry will enable a broad range of science applications from galaxy evolution to time-domain science. We describe the design and implementation of the program and present the first data release that includes source catalogs and the first $\sim 3.5$ years of light curves during 2019A--2022A., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, submitted to ApJS. Median source catalogs and light curves of individual objects are publicly available at https://ariel.astro.illinois.edu/helm/
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- 2024
43. Embedding Elites: Examining the Use of Tweets Embedded in Online News Articles across Reliable and Fringe Outlets
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Horne, Benjamin D., Phillips, Summer, and Koontz, Nelia
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks - Abstract
This study examines the use of embedded tweets in online news media. In particular, we add to the previous literature by exploring embedded tweets across reliable and unreliable news outlets. We use a mixed-method analysis to examine how the function and frequency of embedded tweets change across outlet reliability and news topic. We find that, no matter the outlet reliability, embedded tweets are most often used to relay the opinions of elites, to syndicate information from another news source, or to self-cite information an outlet previously produced. Our results also show some notable differences between reliable media and fringe media's use of tweets. Namely, fringe media embed tweets more and use those tweets as the source of news more than reliable media. Our work adds to the literature on hybrid media systems and the normalization of social media in journalism., Comment: MeLa Lab Preliminary Findings Report
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- 2024
44. RESTORE ME -- RCT of Oxaloacetate on Improving Fatigue in ME/CFS
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Bateman Horne Center
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- 2024
45. Intensive Swift and LCO monitoring of PG 1302$-$102: AGN disk reverberation mapping of a supermassive black hole binary candidate
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Liu, Tingting, Edelson, Rick, Santisteban, Juan V. Hernández, Kara, Erin, Montano, John, Gelbord, Jonathan, Horne, Keith, Barth, Aaron J., Cackett, Edward M., and Kaplan, David L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present an intensive multiwavelength monitoring campaign of the quasar PG 1302$-$102 with Swift and the Las Cumbres Observatory network telescopes. At $z\sim0.3$, it tests the limits of the reverberation mapping (RM) technique in probing the accretion disk around a supermassive black hole (SMBH) and extends the parameter space to high masses and high accretion rates. This is also the first time the RM technique has been applied to test disk structures predicted in the SMBH binary model that has been suggested for this source. PG 1302$-$102 was observed at a $\sim$daily cadence for $\sim 9$ months in 14 bands spanning from X-ray to UV and optical wavelengths, and it shows moderate to significant levels of variability correlated between wavelengths. We measure the inter-band time lags which are consistent with a $\tau \propto \lambda^{4/3}$ relation as expected from standard disk reprocessing, albeit with large errors. The disk size implied by the lag spectrum is consistent with the expected disk size for its black hole mass within uncertainties. While the source resembles other reverberation-mapped AGN in many respects, and we do not find evidence supporting the prevalent hypothesis that it hosts an SMBH binary, we demonstrate the feasibility of studying SMBH binaries from this novel angle and suggest possibilities for the LSST Deep Drilling Fields., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ. The full dataset will be available with the ApJ article
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- 2024
46. TOI-2266 b: a keystone super-Earth at the edge of the M dwarf radius valley
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Parviainen, Hannu, Murgas, Felipe, Esparza-Borges, Emma, Peláez-Torres, A., Palle, Enric, Luque, Rafael, Zapatero-Osorio, M. R., Korth, Judith, Fukui, Akihiko, Narita, Norio, Collins, K. A., Béjar, V. J. S., Morello, Guiseppe, Monelli, M., Garcia, N. Abreu, Chen, Guo, Crouzet, N., de Leon, J. P., Isogai, K., Kagetani, T., Kawauchi, K., Klagyivik, P., Kodama, T., Kusakabe, N., Livingston, J. H., Meni, P., Mori, M., Nowak, G., Tamura, M., Terada, Y., Watanabe, N., Ciardi, D. R., Lund, M. B., Christiansen, J. L., Dressing, C. D., Giacalone, S., Savel, A. B., Hirsch, L., Parsons, S. G., Brown, P., Collins, K. I., Barkaoui, K., Timmermans, M., Ghachoui, M., Soubkiou, A., Benkhaldoun, Z., McDermott, S., Pritchard, T., Rowden, P., Striegel, S., Gan, T., Horne, K., Jensen, E. L. N., Schwarz, R. P., Shporer, A., Srdoc, G., Seager, S., Winn, J. N., Jenkins, J. M., Ricker, G., Vanderspek, R., and Dragomir, D.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We validate the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) object of interest TOI-2266.01 (TIC 348911) as a small transiting planet (most likely a super-Earth) orbiting a faint M5 dwarf ($V=16.54$) on a 2.33~d orbit. The validation is based on an approach where multicolour transit light curves are used to robustly estimate the upper limit of the transiting object's radius. Our analysis uses SPOC-pipeline TESS light curves from Sectors 24, 25, 51, and 52, simultaneous multicolour transit photometry observed with MuSCAT2, MuSCAT3, and HiPERCAM, and additional transit photometry observed with the LCOGT telescopes. TOI-2266 b is found to be a planet with a radius of $1.54\pm\0.09\,R_\oplus$, which locates it at the edge of the transition zone between rocky planets, water-rich planets, and sub-Neptunes (the so-called M~dwarf radius valley). The planet is amenable to ground-based radial velocity mass measurement with red-sensitive spectrographs installed in large telescopes, such as MAROON-X and Keck Planet Finder (KPF), which makes it a valuable addition to a relatively small population of planets that can be used to probe the physics of the transition zone. Further, the planet's orbital period of 2.33 days places it inside a `keystone planet' wedge in the period-radius plane where competing planet formation scenarios make conflicting predictions on how the radius valley depends on the orbital period. This makes the planet also a welcome addition to the small population of planets that can be used to test small-planet formation scenarios around M~dwarfs., Comment: Accepted to A&A
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- 2024
47. Migration and Evolution of giant ExoPlanets (MEEP) I: Nine Newly Confirmed Hot Jupiters from the TESS Mission
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Schulte, Jack, Rodriguez, Joseph E., Bieryla, Allyson, Quinn, Samuel N., Collins, Karen A., Yee, Samuel W., Nine, Andrew C., Soares-Furtado, Melinda, Latham, David W., Eastman, Jason D., Barkaoui, Khalid, Ciardi, David R., Dragomir, Diana, Everett, Mark E., Giacalone, Steven, Mireles, Ismael, Murgas, Felipe, Narita, Norio, Shporer, Avi, Strakhov, Ivan A., Striegel, Stephanie, Vaňko, Martin, Vowell, Noah, Wang, Gavin, Ziegler, Carl, Bellaver, Michael, Benni, Paul, Bergeron, Serge, Boffin, Henri M. J., Briceño, César, Clark, Catherine A., Collins, Kevin I., de Leon, Jerome P., Dressing, Courtney D., Evans, Phil, Esparza-Borges, Emma, Fedewa, Jeremy, Fukui, Akihiko, Gan, Tianjun, Gerasimov, Ivan S., Hartman, Joel D., Gill, Holden, Gillon, Michaël, Horne, Keith, Horta, Ferran Grau, Howell, Steve B., Isogai, Keisuke, Jehin, Emmanuël, Jenkins, Jon M., Karjalainen, Raine, Kielkopf, John F., Lester, Kathryn V., Littlefield, Colin, Lund, Michael B., Mann, Andrew W., McCormack, Mason, Michaels, Edward J., Painter, Shane, Palle, Enric, Parviainen, Hannu, Peterson, David-Michael, Pozuelos, Francisco J., Raup, Zachary, Reed, Phillip, Relles, Howard M., Ricker, George R., Savel, Arjun B., Schwarz, Richard P., Seager, Sara, Sefako, Ramotholo, Srdoc, Gregor, Stockdale, Chris, Sullivan, Hannah, Timmermans, Mathilde, and Winn, Joshua N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Hot Jupiters were many of the first exoplanets discovered in the 1990s, but in the decades since their discovery, the mysteries surrounding their origins remain. Here, we present nine new hot Jupiters (TOI-1855 b, TOI-2107 b, TOI-2368 b, TOI-3321 b, TOI-3894 b, TOI-3919 b, TOI-4153 b, TOI-5232 b, and TOI-5301 b) discovered by NASA's TESS mission and confirmed using ground-based imaging and spectroscopy. These discoveries are the first in a series of papers named the Migration and Evolution of giant ExoPlanets (MEEP) survey and are part of an ongoing effort to build a complete sample of hot Jupiters orbiting FGK stars, with a limiting Gaia $G$-band magnitude of 12.5. This effort aims to use homogeneous detection and analysis techniques to generate a set of precisely measured stellar and planetary properties that is ripe for statistical analysis. The nine planets presented in this work occupy a range of masses (0.55 Jupiter masses (M$_{\rm{J}}$) $<$ M$_{\rm{P}}$ $<$ 3.88 M$_{\rm{J}}$) and sizes (0.967 Jupiter radii (R$_{\rm{J}}$) $<$ R$_{\rm{P}}$ $<$ 1.438 R$_{\rm{J}}$) and orbit stars that range in temperature from 5360 K $<$ Teff $<$ 6860 K with Gaia $G$-band magnitudes ranging from 11.1 to 12.7. Two of the planets in our sample have detectable orbital eccentricity: TOI-3919 b ($e = 0.259^{+0.033}_{-0.036}$) and TOI-5301 b ($e = 0.33^{+0.11}_{-0.10}$). These eccentric planets join a growing sample of eccentric hot Jupiters that are consistent with high-eccentricity tidal migration, one of the three most prominent theories explaining hot Jupiter formation and evolution., Comment: 35 pages, 7 tables, and 14 figures. Submitted to AAS Journals on 2023 Dec 28
- Published
- 2024
48. Dissociation between Linguistic and Nonlinguistic Statistical Learning in Children with Autism
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Anqi Hu, Violet Kozloff, Amanda Owen Van Horne, Diane Chugani, and Zhenghan Qi
- Abstract
Statistical learning (SL), the ability to detect and extract regularities from inputs, is considered a domain-general building block for typical language development. We compared 55 verbal children with autism (ASD, 6-12 years) and 50 typically-developing children in four SL tasks. The ASD group exhibited reduced learning in the linguistic SL tasks (syllable and letter), but showed intact learning for the nonlinguistic SL tasks (tone and image). In the ASD group, better linguistic SL was associated with higher language skills measured by parental report and sentence recall. Therefore, the atypicality of SL in autism is not domain-general but tied to specific processing constraints related to verbal stimuli. Our findings provide a novel perspective for understanding language heterogeneity in autism.
- Published
- 2024
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49. Outer membrane protein assembly mediated by BAM-SurA complexes
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Katherine L. Fenn, Jim E. Horne, Joel A. Crossley, Nils Böhringer, Romany J. Horne, Till F. Schäberle, Antonio N. Calabrese, Sheena E. Radford, and Neil A. Ranson
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract The outer membrane is a formidable barrier that protects Gram-negative bacteria against environmental threats. Its integrity requires the correct folding and insertion of outer membrane proteins (OMPs) by the membrane-embedded β-barrel assembly machinery (BAM). Unfolded OMPs are delivered to BAM by the periplasmic chaperone SurA, but how SurA and BAM work together to ensure successful OMP delivery and folding remains unclear. Here, guided by AlphaFold2 models, we use disulphide bond engineering in an attempt to trap SurA in the act of OMP delivery to BAM, and solve cryoEM structures of a series of complexes. The results suggest that SurA binds BAM at its soluble POTRA-1 domain, which may trigger conformational changes in both BAM and SurA that enable transfer of the unfolded OMP to the BAM lateral gate for insertion into the outer membrane. Mutations that disrupt the interaction between BAM and SurA result in outer membrane assembly defects, supporting the key role of SurA in outer membrane biogenesis.
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- 2024
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50. The Effects of Affective Expectations on Willingness to Expend Cognitive Effort in Dysphoric and Non-Dysphoric Individuals
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Horne, Sarah J. and Quigley, Leanne
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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