330 results on '"Jiang X. J."'
Search Results
2. Constraining the Evolution of ZZ Ceti
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Mukadam A. S., Kepler S. O., Winget D. E., Nather R. E., Kilic M., Mullally F., Hippel T. von, Kleinman S. J., Nitta A., Guzik J. A., Bradley P. A., Matthews J., Sekiguchi K., Sullivan D. J., Shobbrook R. R., Birch P., Jiang X. J., Xu D. W., Joshi S., Ashoka B.N., Ibbetson P., Leibowitz E., Ofek E. O., Meištas E. G., Janulis R., Ališauskas D., Kalytis R., Handler G., Kilkenny D., O’Donoghue D., Kurtz D. W., Müller M., Moskalik P., Ogłoza W., Zoła S., Krzesiński J., Johannessen F., Gonzalez-Perez J. M., Solheim J-E., Silvotti R., Bernabei S., Vauclair G., Dolez N., Fu J. N., Chevreton M., Manteiga M., Súarez O., Ulla A., Cunha M. S., Metcalfe T. S., Kanaan A., Fraga L., Costa A. F. M., Giovannini O., Fontaine G., Bergeron P., O’Brien M. S., Sanwal D., Wood M. A., Ahrens T. J., Silvestri N., Klumpe E. W., Kawaler S. D., Riddle R., Reed M. D., and Watson T. K.
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stars ,white dwarfs ,individual ,ZZ Cet ,R548 - stars ,pulsations ,evolution ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Abstract
We report our analysis of the stability of pulsation periods in the DAV star (pulsating hydrogen atmosphere white dwarf) ZZ Ceti, also called R548. Based on observations that span 31 years, we conclude that the period 213.132605 s observed in ZZ Ceti drifts at a rate dP/dt≤(5.5±1.9)×10−15 s/s, after correcting for proper motion. Our results are consistent with previous Ṗ values for this mode and an improvement over them due to the larger time-base. The characteristic stability timescale implied for the pulsation period is |P/ Ṗ|≥1.2 Gyr, comparable to the theoretical cooling timescale for the star. Our current stability limit for the period 213.132605 s is only slightly less than the present measurement for G117-B15A for the period 215.2 s, another DAV, establishing this mode in ZZ Ceti as the second most stable optical clock known, more stable than atomic clocks and most pulsars.
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- 2003
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3. Preliminary Results from XCOV 17: PG 1336-018
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Reed M. D., Kilkenny D., Kawaler S. D., Mukadam A., Kleinman S. J., Nitta-Kleinman A., Provencal J. L., Watson T., Sullivan D., Sullivan T., Shobbrook B., Jiang X. J., Ashoka B. N., Seetha S., Leibowitz E., Ibbetson P., Mendelson H., Meistas E. G., Kalytis R., Alisauskas D., O'Donoghue D., Martinez P., Wyk F. van, Stobie R., Marang F., Zola S., Krzesinski J., Ogloza W., Mosaklik P., Silvotti R., Piccioni A., Vauclair G., Dolez N., Rene-Fremy J., Chevreton M., Ulla A., Dreizler S., Schuh S., Deetjen J., Solheim J. E., Perez J., Suarez O., Manteiga M., Burleigh M., Barstow M., Kepler S. O., Kanaan A., Giovannini O., Metcalfe T., and Ostensen R.
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Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Published
- 2000
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4. WET Observations and Smoothed Particle Simulations of DQ Herculis
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Wood M. A., Simpson J. C., Kawaler S. D., O'Brien M. S., Nather R. E., Metcalfe T. S., Winget D. E., Montgomery M., Jiang X. J., Leibowitz E. M., Ibbetson P., O'Donoghue D., Krzesinski J., Pajdosz G., Zola S., Vauclair G., Dolez N., and Chevreton M.
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Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Published
- 2000
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5. identification in pulsating white dwarfs using the HST
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Kepler S. O., Robinson E. L., Koester D., Clemens J. C., Nather R. E., and Jiang X. J.
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Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Published
- 2000
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6. Hourly Warning for Strong Earthquakes
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Chen, T., Li, L., Zhang, X. -X., Wang, C., Jin, X. -B., Ma, Q. -M., Xu, J. -Y., He, Z. -H., Li, H., Xiao, S. -G., Wang, X. -Z., Shen, X. -H., Zhang, X. -M., Li, H. -B., Zeren, Z. -M., Huang, J. -P., Huang, F. -Q., Che, S., Zou, Z. -M., Xiong, P., Liu, J., Zhang, L. -Q., Guo, Q., Roth, I., Makhmutov, V. S., Liu, Yong, Huang, Z. -H., Luo, J., Jiang, X. -J., Dai, L., Duan, S. -P., Peng, X. -D., Hu, X., Wu, H., Ti, S., Zeng, C., Song, J. -J., Xiao, F., Guo, J. -G., Yao, L., Du, A. -M., Wei, Y., Yuan, H., Wang, S., Cui, H. -Y., Li, C., Liu, Y., Yang, J., Sun, Q., Su, J. -F., Li, W., Zhang, Y. -C., Li, D. -L., Wang, S. -H., Cai, C. -L., and Yan, G. -Q.
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Physics - Geophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
A promising perspective is presented that humans can provide hourly warning for strong land earthquakes (EQs, Ms6). Two important atmospheric electrostatic signal features are described. A table that lists 9 strong land EQs with shock time, epicenter, magnitude, weather in the region near the epicenter, precursor beginning time, and precursor duration demonstrates that at approximately several hours to one day before a strong land EQ, the weather conditions are fair near the epicenter, and an abnormal negative atmospheric electrostatic signal is very obvious. Moreover, the mechanism is explained. A method by which someone could determine the epicenter and the magnitude of a forthcoming strong EQ is suggested. Finally, the possibility of realizing hourly warning for strong land EQs in the near future is pointed out.
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- 2021
7. CHIMPS2: Survey description and $^{12}$CO emission in the Galactic Centre
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Eden, D. J., Moore, T. J. T., Currie, M. J., Rigby, A. J., Rosolowsky, E., Su, Y., Kim, Kee-Tae, Parsons, H., Morata, O., Chen, H. -R., Minamidani, T., Park, Geumsook, Ragan, S. E., Urquhart, J. S., Rani, R., Tahani, K., Billington, S. J., Deb, S., Figura, C., Fujiyoshi, T., Joncas, G., Liao, L. W., Liu, T., Ma, H., Tuan-Anh, P., Yun, Hyeong-Sik, Zhang, S., Zhu, M., Henshaw, J. D., Longmore, S. N., Kobayashi, M. I. N., Thompson, M. A., Ao, Y., Campbell-White, J., Ching, T. -C., Chung, E. J., Duarte-Cabral, A., Fich, M., Gao, Y., Graves, S. F., Jiang, X. -J., Kemper, F., Kuan, Y. -J., Kwon, W., Lee, C. W., Lee, J. -E., Liu, M., Penaloza, C. H., Peretto, N., Phuong, N. T., Pineda, J. E., Plume, R., Puspitaningrum, E., Samal, M. R., Soam, A., Sun, Y., Tang, X. D., Traficante, A., White, G. J., Yan, C. -H., Yang, A., Yuan, J., Yue, N., Bemis, A., Brunt, C. M., Chen, Z., Cho, J., Clark, P. C., Cyganowski, C. J., Friberg, P., Fuller, G. A., Han, I., Hoare, M. G., Izumi, N., Kim, H. -J., Kim, J., Kim, S., Koch, E. W., Kuno, N., Lacialle, K. M., Lai, S. -P., Lee, H. Lee Y. -H., Li, D. L., Liu, S. -Y., Mairs, S., Oka, T., Pan, Z., Qian, L., Scicluna, P., Shi, C. -S., Shi, H., Srinivasan, S., Tan, Q. -H., Thomas, H. S., Torii, K., Trejo, A., Umemoto, T., Violino, G., Wallstrom, S., Wang, B., Wu, Y., Yuan, L., Zhang, C., Zhang, M., Zhou, C., and Zhou, J. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The latest generation of Galactic-plane surveys is enhancing our ability to study the effects of galactic environment upon the process of star formation. We present the first data from CO Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey 2 (CHIMPS2). CHIMPS2 is a survey that will observe the Inner Galaxy, the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), and a section of the Outer Galaxy in $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO, and C$^{18}$O $(J = 3\rightarrow2)$ emission with the Heterodyne Array Receiver Program on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The first CHIMPS2 data presented here are a first look towards the CMZ in $^{12}$CO J = 3$\rightarrow$2 and cover $-3^{\circ}\leq\,\ell\,\leq\,5^{\circ}$ and $\mid$b$\mid \leq 0.5^{\circ}$ with angular resolution of 15 arcsec, velocity resolution of 1 km s$^{-1}$, and rms $\Delta T_A ^\ast =$ 0.58 K at these resolutions. Such high-resolution observations of the CMZ will be a valuable data set for future studies, whilst complementing the existing Galactic Plane surveys, such as SEDIGISM, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey, and ATLASGAL. In this paper, we discuss the survey plan, the current observations and data, as well as presenting position-position maps of the region. The position-velocity maps detect foreground spiral arms in both absorption and emission., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2020
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8. The near surface vertical atmospheric electric field abnormality could be as a promising imminent precursor of major earthquakes
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Chen, T., Wu, H., Zhang, X. -X., Wang, C., Jin, X. -B., Ma, Q. -M., Xu, J. -Y., Duan, S. -P., He, Z. -H., Li, H., Xiao, S. -G., Wang, X. -Z., Shen, X. -H, Guo, Q., Roth, I., Makhmutov, V. S., Liu, Y., Luo, J., Jiang, X. -J., Dai, L., Peng, X. -D., Hu, X., Li, L., Zeng, C., Song, J. -J., Xiao, F., Guo, J. -G., Cui, H. -Y., Li, C., and Sun, Q.
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Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
A promising short term precursor of major earthquakes (EQ) is very crucial in saving people and preventing huge losses. Ez, atmospheric electrostatic field vertical component, under fair air conditions, is generally oriented downwards (positive). Anomalous negative Ez signals could be used as an indicator of a great number of radioactive gases which are released from great number of rock clefts just before major earthquakes. Enhanced emission of radon radioactive decay will produce an anomalously large number of ion pairs. The positive particles will be transported downward by the fair weather electrostatic field and pile up near the surface. Finally, obviously and abnormally, an oriented upward atmospheric electric field Ez near the ground could be formed. Therefore, monitoring this Ez may be applied effectively in earthquake warning.
- Published
- 2020
9. Redox effect on carbon and nitrogen mineralization in the drawdown zone of the Three Gorges Reservoir
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Zha, Y. X., Faeflen, S. J.-W., Zhou, X. B., Tecimen, H. B., Wright, A. L., and Jiang, X. J.
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- 2022
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10. Ensemble asteroseismology of pulsating B-type stars in NGC 6910
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Moździerski, D., Pigulski, A., Kołaczkowski, Z., Michalska, G., Kopacki, G., Carrier, F., Walczak, P., Narwid, A., Stęślicki, M., Fu, J. -N., Jiang, X. -J., Zhang, Ch., Jackiewicz, J., Telting, J., Morel, T., Saesen, S., Zahajkiewicz, E., Bruś, P., Śródka, P., Vučković, M., Verhoelst, T., Van Helshoecht, V., Lefever, K., Gielen, C., Decin, L., Vanautgaerden, J., and Aerts, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroseismology offers the possibility of probing stellar interiors and testing evolutionary and seismic models. Precise photometry and spectroscopy obtained during multi-site campaigns on young open clusters allows discovering rich samples of pulsating stars and using them in a simultaneous seismic modelling called ensemble asteroseismology. The aim of this study is to obtain the age of the open cluster NGC 6910 by means of ensemble asteroseismology of the early-type pulsating members, to derive their stellar parameters, and to classify the excited modes. We used time-series analysis, performed photometric and spectroscopic mode identification, and calculated grids of evolutionary and seismic models to apply the procedure of ensemble asteroseismology for nine pulsating members of NGC 6910. With two iterations of the procedure of ensemble asteroseismology applied to nine pulsating stars we derived an age of 10.6$^{+0.9}_{-0.8}$ Myr for NGC 6910. Of the nine pulsating stars examined in the paper, eight are $\beta$ Cep stars, including three that are hybrid $\beta$ Cep and slowly pulsating B-type (SPB) pulsators, and one is an SPB star. Interestingly, the least massive $\beta$ Cep star, NGC 6910-38, has a mass of about 5.6 M$_\odot$. The present theory does not predict unstable $p$ modes in B-type stars with such a low mass. The $g$ modes with relatively high frequencies ($>3.5$ d$^{-1}$), observed in three members of the cluster, are also stable according to seismic modelling. Both findings pose a challenge for theoretical calculations and prompt a revision of the opacities. The procedure of ensemble asteroseismology was found to be successful for NGC 6910 and $\chi$ Per on the basis of pulsating B-type stars and can therefore be applied to other young open clusters that are rich in such stars., Comment: 22 pages, 24 figures. Caution: arXiv abstract is shorter than in the article
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- 2019
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11. Precise determination of stellar parameters of the ZZ Ceti and DAZ white dwarf GD 133 through asteroseismology
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Fu, J. -N., Vauclair, G., Su, J., Machado, L. Fox, Colas, F., Kim, S. -L., Cang, T. Q., Li, C., Niu, H. B., Xue, H. F., Li, Y., Jiang, X. -J., Michel, R., Alvarez, M., Dolez, N., Ma, L., Esamdin, A., and Liu, J. Z.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
An increasing number of white dwarf stars show atmospheric chemical composition polluted by heavy elements accreted from debris disk material. The existence of such debris disks strongly suggests the presence of one or more planet(s) whose gravitational interaction with rocky planetesimals is responsible for their disruption by tidal effect. The ZZ Ceti pulsator and polluted DAZ white dwarf GD 133 is a good candidate for searching for such a potential planet. We started in 2011 a photometric follow-up of its pulsations. As a result of this work in progress, we used the data gathered from 2011 to 2015 to make an asteroseismological analysis of GD 133, providing the star parameters from a best fit model with $M$/$M_{\odot}$ = 0.630 $\pm$ 0.002, $T_{\rm eff}$ = 12400 K $\pm$ 70 K, log($M_{\rm He}/M$) = -2.00 $\pm$ 0.02, log($M_{\rm H}/M$) = -4.50 $\pm$ 0.02 and determining a rotation period of $\approx$ 7 days., Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, accepted by MNRAS
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- 2019
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12. GD358: three decades of observations for the in-depth asteroseismology of a DBV star
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Bischoff-Kim, Agnes, Provencal, J. L., Bradley, P. A., Montgomery, M. H., Shipman, H. L., Harrold, Samuel T., Howard, B., Strickland, W., Chandler, D., Campbell, D., Arredondo, A., Linn, R., Russell, D. P., Doyle, D., Brickhouse, A., Peters, D., Kim, S. -L., Jiang, X. J., Mao, Y-N., Kusakin, A. V., Sergeev, A. V., Andreev, M., Velichko, S., Janulis, R., Pakstiene, E., Alicavus, F., Horoz, N., Zola, S., Ogloza, W., Koziel-Wierzbowska, D., Kundera, T., Jableka, D., Debski, B., Baran, A., Meingast, S., Nagel, T., Loebling, L., Heinitz, C., Hoyer, D., Bognar, Zs., and Castanheira, B. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the analysis of 34 years of photometric observations of the pulsating helium atmosphere white dwarf GD358. The complete data set includes archival data from 1982-2006, and 1195.2 hours of new observations from 2007- 2016. From this data set, we extract 15 frequencies representing g-mode pulsation modes, adding 4 modes to the 11 modes known previously. We present evidence that these 15 modes are ell = 1 modes, 13 of which belong to a consecutive sequence in radial overtone k. We perform a detailed asteroseismic analysis using models that include parameterized, complex carbon and oxygen core composition profiles to fit the periods. Recent spectroscopic analyses place GD358 near the red edge of the DBV instability strip, at 24,000 plus or minus 500 K and a log g of 7.8 plus or minus 0.08 dex. The surface gravity translates to a mass range of 0.455 to 0.540 solar masses. Our best fit model has a temperature of 23,650 K and a mass of 0.5706 solar masses. That is slightly more massive than suggested by most the recent spectroscopy. We find a pure helium layer mass of 10^-5.50, consistent with the result of previous studies and the outward diffusion of helium over time., Comment: 94 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables, Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2018
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13. Optical Observing Conditions at Delingha Station
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Tian, J. F., Deng, L. C., Zhang, X. B., Lu, X. M., Sun, J. J., Liu, Q. L., Zhou, Q., Yan, Z. Z., Xin, Y., Wang, K., Jiang, X. J., Luo, Z. Q., and Yang, J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
SONG is a global ground based network of 1 meter telescopes for stellar time-domain science, an international collaboration involving many countries across the world. In order to enable a favourable duty cycle, the SONG network plans to create a homogeneous distribution of 4 nodes in each of the northern and southern hemispheres. A natural possibility was building one of the northern nodes in East Asia, preferably on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. During the last decade, a great deal of effort has been invested in searching for high a quality site for ground based astronomy in China, since this has been one of the major concerns for the development of Chinese astronomy. A number of sites on the plateau have been in operation for many years, but most of them are used only for radio astronomy, as well as small optical telescopes for applied astronomy. Several potential sites for large optical instruments have been identified by the plateau site survey, but as yet none of them have been adequately quantitatively characterised. Here we present results from a detailed multi-year study of the Delingha site, which was eventually selected for the SONG-China node. We also describe the site monitoring system that will allow an isolated SONG and 50BiN node to operate safely in an automated mode., Comment: 30 pages, 15 figures
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- 2016
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14. Levels of sgRNA as a Major Factor Affecting CRISPRi Knockdown Efficiency in K562 Cells
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Wang, Y., Xie, Y., Dong, Z. C., Jiang, X. J., Gong, P., Lu, J., and Wan, F.
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- 2021
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15. Empirical Determination of Convection Parameters in White Dwarfs I : Whole Earth Telescope Observations of EC14012-1446
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Provencal, J. L., Montgomery, M. H., Kanaan, A., Thompson, S. E., Dalessio, J., Shipman, H. L., Childers, D., Clemens, J. C., Rosen, R., Henrique, P., Bischoff-Kim, A., Strickland, W., Chandler, D., Walter, B., Watson, T. K., Castanheira, B., Wang, S., Handler, G., Wood, M., Vennes, S., Nemeth, P., Kepler, S. O., Reed, M., Nitta, A., Kleinman, S. J., Brown, T., Kim, S. -L., Sullivan, D., Chen, Wen-Ping, Yang, M., Shih, Chia-You, Jiang, X. J., Sergeev, A. V., Maksim, A., Janulis, R., Baliyan, K. S., Vats, H. O., Zola, S., Baran, A., Winiarski, M., Ogloza, W., Paparo, M., Bognar, Z., Papics, P., Kilkenny, D., Sefako, R., Buckley, D., Loaring, N., Kniazev, A., Silvotti, R., Galleti, S., Nagel, T., Vauclair, G., Dolez, N., Fremy, J. R., Perez, J., Almenara, J. M., and Fraga, L.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on analysis of 308.3 hrs of high speed photometry targeting the pulsating DA white dwarf EC14012-1446. The data were acquired with the Whole Earth Telescope (WET) during the 2008 international observing run XCOV26. The Fourier transform of the light curve contains 19 independent frequencies and numerous combination frequencies. The dominant peaks are 1633.907, 1887.404, and 2504.897 microHz. Our analysis of the combination amplitudes reveals that the parent frequencies are consistent with modes of spherical degree l=1. The combination amplitudes also provide m identifications for the largest amplitude parent frequencies. Our seismology analysis, which includes 2004--2007 archival data, confirms these identifications, provides constraints on additional frequencies, and finds an average period spacing of 41 s. Building on this foundation, we present nonlinear fits to high signal-to-noise light curves from the SOAR 4.1m, McDonald 2.1m, and KPNO 2m telescopes. The fits indicate a time-averaged convective response timescale of 99.4 +/- 17 s, a temperature exponent 85 +/- 6.2 and an inclination angle of 32.9 +/- 3.2 degrees. We present our current empirical map of the convective response timescale across the DA instability strip., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2012
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16. Photometric multi-site campaign on the open cluster NGC 884 I. Detection of the variable stars
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Saesen, S., Carrier, F., Pigulski, A., Aerts, C., Handler, G., Narwid, A., Fu, J. N., Zhang, C., Jiang, X. J., Vanautgaerden, J., Kopacki, G., Stȩślicki, M., Acke, B., Poretti, E., Uytterhoeven, K., Gielen, C., Østensen, R., De Meester, W., Reed, M. D., Kołaczkowski, Z., Michalska, G., Schmidt, E., Yakut, K., Leitner, A., Kalomeni, B., Cherix, M., Spano, M., Prins, S., Van Helshoecht, V., Zima, W., Huygen, R., Vandenbussche, B., Lenz, P., Ladjal, D., Antolín, E. Puga, Verhoelst, T., De Ridder, J., Niarchos, P., Liakos, A., Lorenz, D., Dehaes, S., Reyniers, M., Davignon, G., Kim, S. -L., Kim, D. H., Lee, Y. -J., Lee, C. -U., Kwon, J. -H., Broeders, E., Van Winckel, H., Vanhollebeke, E., Waelkens, C., Raskin, G., Blom, Y., Eggen, J. R., Degroote, P., Beck, P., Puschnig, J., Schmitzberger, L., Gelven, G. A., Steininger, B., Blommaert, J., Drummond, R., Briquet, M., and Debosscher, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
CONTEXT: Recent progress in the seismic interpretation of field beta Cep stars has resulted in improvements of the physics in the stellar structure and evolution models of massive stars. Further asteroseismic constraints can be obtained from studying ensembles of stars in a young open cluster, which all have similar age, distance and chemical composition. AIMS: To improve our comprehension of the beta Cep stars, we studied the young open cluster NGC 884 to discover new B-type pulsators, besides the two known beta Cep stars, and other variable stars. METHODS: An extensive multi-site campaign was set up to gather accurate CCD photometry time series in four filters (U, B, V, I) of a field of NGC884. Fifteen different instruments collected almost 77500 CCD images in 1286 hours. The images were calibrated and reduced to transform the CCD frames into interpretable differential light curves. Various variability indicators and frequency analyses were applied to detect variable stars in the field. Absolute photometry was taken to deduce some general cluster and stellar properties. RESULTS: We achieved an accuracy for the brightest stars of 5.7 mmag in V, 6.9 mmag in B, 5.0 mmag in I and 5.3 mmag in U. The noise level in the amplitude spectra is 50 micromag in the V band. Our campaign confirms the previously known pulsators, and we report more than one hundred new multi- and mono-periodic B-, A- and F-type stars. Their interpretation in terms of classical instability domains is not straightforward, pointing to imperfections in theoretical instability computations. In addition, we have discovered six new eclipsing binaries and four candidates as well as other irregular variable stars in the observed field., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 21 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables. The full appendix is available at http://www.ster.kuleuven.be/~sophies/Appendix.pdf (74 MB, 169 pages, 343 figures, 1 table)
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- 2010
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17. 2006 Whole Earth Telescope Observations of GD358: A New Look at the Prototype DBV
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Provencal, J. L., Montgomery, M. H., Kanaan, A., Shipman, H. L., Childers, D., Baran, A., Kepler, S. O., Reed, M., Zhou, A., Eggen, J., Watson, T. K., Winget, D. E., Thompson, S. E., Riaz, B., Nitta, A., Kleinman, S. J., Crowe, R., Slivkoff, J., Sherard, P., Purves, N., Binder, P., Knight, R., Kim, S. -L., Chen, Wen-Ping, Yang, M., Lin, H. C., Lin, C. C., Chen, C. W., Jiang, X. J., Sergeev, A. V., Mkrtichian, D., Janiashvili, E., Andreev, M., Janulis, R., Siwak, M., Zola, S., Koziel, D., Stachowski, G., Paparo, M., Bognar, Zs., Handler, G., Lorenz, D., Steininger, B., Beck, P., Nagel, T., Kusterer, D., Hoffman, A., Reiff, E., Kowalski, R., Vauclair, G., Charpinet, S., Chevreton, M., Solheim, J. E., Pakstiene, E., Fraga, L., and Dalessio, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the analysis of 436.1 hrs of nearly continuous high-speed photometry on the pulsating DB white dwarf GD358 acquired with the Whole Earth Telescope (WET) during the 2006 international observing run, designated XCOV25. The Fourier transform (FT) of the light curve contains power between 1000 to 4000 microHz, with the dominant peak at 1234 microHz. We find 27 independent frequencies distributed in 10 modes, as well as numerous combination frequencies. Our discussion focuses on a new asteroseismological analysis of GD358, incorporating the 2006 data set and drawing on 24 years of archival observations. Our results reveal that, while the general frequency locations of the identified modes are consistent throughout the years, the multiplet structure is complex and cannot be interpreted simply as l=1 modes in the limit of slow rotation. The high k multiplets exhibit significant variability in structure, amplitude and frequency. Any identification of the m components for the high k multiplets is highly suspect. The k=9 and 8 modes typically do show triplet structure more consistent with theoretical expectations. The frequencies and amplitudes exhibit some variability, but much less than the high k modes. Analysis of the k=9 and 8 multiplet splittings from 1990 to 2008 reveal a long-term change in multiplet splittings coinciding with the 1996 "sforzando" event, where GD358 dramatically altered its pulsation characteristics on a timescale of hours. We explore potential implications, including the possible connections between convection and/or magnetic fields and pulsations. We suggest future investigations, including theoretical investigations of the relationship between magnetic fields, pulsation, growth rates, and convection., Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2008
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18. Whole Earth Telescope observations of the hot helium atmosphere pulsating white dwarf EC 20058-5234
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WET Collaboration, Sullivan, D. J., Metcalfe, T. S., O'Donoghue, D., Winget, D. E., Kilkenny, D., van Wyk, F., Kanaan, A., Kepler, S. O., Nitta, A., Kawaler, S. D., Montgomery, M. H., Nather, R. E., O'Brien, M. S., Bischoff-Kim, A., Wood, M., Jiang, X. J., Leibowitz, E. M., Ibbetson, P., Zola, S., Krzesinski, J., Pajdosz, G., Vauclair, G., Dolez, N., and Chevreton, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of a total of 177h of high-quality optical time-series photometry of the helium atmosphere pulsating white dwarf (DBV) EC 20058-5234. The bulk of the observations (135h) were obtained during a WET campaign (XCOV15) in July 1997 that featured coordinated observing from 4 southern observatory sites over an 8-day period. The remaining data (42h) were obtained in June 2004 at Mt John Observatory in NZ over a one-week observing period. This work significantly extends the discovery observations of this low-amplitude (few percent) pulsator by increasing the number of detected frequencies from 8 to 18, and employs a simulation procedure to confirm the reality of these frequencies to a high level of significance (1 in 1000). The nature of the observed pulsation spectrum precludes identification of unique pulsation mode properties using any clearly discernable trends. However, we have used a global modelling procedure employing genetic algorithm techniques to identify the n, l values of 8 pulsation modes, and thereby obtain asteroseismic measurements of several model parameters, including the stellar mass (0.55 M_sun) and T_eff (~28200 K). These values are consistent with those derived from published spectral fitting: T_eff ~ 28400 K and log g ~ 7.86. We also present persuasive evidence from apparent rotational mode splitting for two of the modes that indicates this compact object is a relatively rapid rotator with a period of 2h. In direct analogy with the corresponding properties of the hydrogen (DAV) atmosphere pulsators, the stable low-amplitude pulsation behaviour of EC 20058 is entirely consistent with its inferred effective temperature, which indicates it is close to the blue edge of the DBV instability strip. (abridged), Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 5 tables, MNRAS accepted
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- 2008
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19. The pulsation modes of the pre-white dwarf PG 1159-035
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Costa, J. E. S., Kepler, S. O., Winget, D. E., O'Brien, M. S., Kawaler, S. D., Costa, A. F. M., Giovannini, O., Kanaan, A., Mukadam, A. S., Mullally, F., Nitta, A., Provençal, J. L., Shipman, H., Wood, M. A., Ahrens, T. J., Grauer, A., Kilic, M., Bradley, P. A., Sekiguchi, K., Crowe, R., Jiang, X. J., Sullivan, D., Sullivan, T., Rosen, R., Clemens, J. C., Janulis, R., O'Donoghue, D., Ogloza, W., Baran, A., Silvotti, R., Marinoni, S., Vauclair, G., Dolez, N., Chevreton, M., Dreizler, S., Schuh, S., Deetjen, J., Nagel, T., Solheim, J. -E., Perez, J. M. Gonzalez, Ulla, A., Barstow, Martin, Burleigh, M., Good, S., Metcalfe, T. S., Kim, S. -L., Lee, H., Sergeev, A., Akan, M. C., Çakirli, Ö., Paparo, M., Viraghalmy, G., Ashoka, B. N., Handler, G., Hürkal, Özlem, Johannessen, F., Kleinman, S. J., Kalytis, R., Krzesinski, J., Klumpe, E., Larrison, J., Lawrence, T., Meištas, E., Martinez, P., Nather, R. E., Fu, J. -N., Pakštienė, E., Romero-Colmenero, E., Riddle, R., Seetha, S., Silvestri, N. M., Vučković, M., Warner, B., Zola, S., Althaus, L. G., Córsico, A. H., and Montgomery, M. H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
PG 1159-035, a pre-white dwarf with T_eff=140,000 K, is the prototype of both two classes: the PG1159 spectroscopic class and the DOV pulsating class. Previous studies of PG 1159-035 photometric data obtained with the Whole Earth Telescope (WET) showed a rich frequency spectrum allowing the identification of 122 pulsation modes. In this work, we used all available WET photometric data from 1983, 1985, 1989, 1993 and 2002 to identify the pulsation periods and identified 76 additional pulsation modes, increasing to 198 the number of known pulsation modes in PG 1159-035, the largest number of modes detected in any star besides the Sun. From the period spacing we estimated a mass M = 0.59 +/- 0.02 solar masses for PG 1159-035, with the uncertainty dominated by the models, not the observation. Deviations in the regular period spacing suggest that some of the pulsation modes are trapped, even though the star is a pre-white dwarf and the gravitational settling is ongoing. The position of the transition zone that causes the mode trapping was calculated at r_c = 0.83 +/- 0.05 stellar radius. From the multiplet splitting, we calculated the rotational period P_rot = 1.3920 +/- 0.0008 days and an upper limit for the magnetic field, B < 2000 G. The total power of the pulsation modes at the stellar surface changed less than 30% for l=1 modes and less than 50% for l=2 modes. We find no evidence of linear combinations between the 198 pulsation mode frequencies. PG 1159-035 models have not significative convection zones, supporting the hypothesis that nonlinearity arises in the convection zones in cooler pulsating white dwarf stars., Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, appendix with 6 long tables. The resolution of some of the figures were changed and some of them can appear with a bit lower quality
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- 2007
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20. A multisite photometric campaign on the Pre-Main-Sequence delta Scuti pulsator IP Per
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Ripepi, V., Bernabei, S., Marconi, M., Palla, F., Ferro, A. Arellano, Bonanno, A., Ferrara, P., Frasca, A., Jiang, X. J., Kim, S. -L., Marinoni, S., Mignemi, G., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Oswalt, T. D., Reegen, P., Janulis, R., Rodriguez, E., Rolland, A., Ruoppo, A., Terranegra, L., and Zwintz, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a photometric multisite campaign on the $\delta$ Scuti Pre-Main-Sequence star IP Per. Nine telescopes have been involved in the observations, with a total of about 190 hours of observations over 38 nights. Present data confirms the multiperiodic nature of this star and leads to the identification of at least nine pulsational frequencies. Comparison with the predictions of linear non-adiabatic radial pulsation models allowed us to identify only five of the nine observed frequencies, and to constrain the position of IP Per in the HR diagram. The latter is in good agreement with the empirical determination of the stellar parameters obtained by Miroshnichenko et al. (2001). An initial interpretation of the observed frequencies using the Aarhus non-radial pulsation code suggests that three frequencies could be associated with non-radial ($l$=2) modes. Finally, we present new evolutionary and pulsation models at lower metallicity (Z=0.008) to take into account the possibility that IP Per is metal deficient, as indicated by Miroshnichenko et al. (2001)., Comment: 10 pages 11 figures, accepted for publication on A&A
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- 2005
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21. Multisite observations of the PMS delta Scuti star V351 Ori
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Ripepi, V., Marconi, M., Bernabei, S., Palla, F., Pinheiro, F. J. G., Folha, D. F. M., Oswalt, T. D., Terranegra, L., Ferro, A. Arellano, Jiang, X. J., Alcalá, J. M., Marinoni, S., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Rudkin, M., and Johnston, K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of multisite observations spanning two years on the pre--main-sequence (PMS) star V351 Ori. A total of around 180 hours of observations over 29 nights have been collected, allowing us to measure five different periodicities, most likely related to the delta Scuti variability of V351 Ori. Comparison with the predictions of linear nonadiabatic radial pulsation models put stringent constraints on the stellar parameters and indicate that the distance to V351 Ori is intermediate between the lower limit measured by Hipparcos (210 pc) and that of the Orion Nebula (450 pc). However, radial pulsation models are unable to reproduce all of the observed frequencies with a single choice of (M, L, and Te), suggesting the presence of additional nonradial modes., Comment: 10 pages, including 7 postscript figures, accepted for publication on A&A
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- 2003
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22. 1RXS J232953.9+062814: a New SU UMa Dwarf Nova below the Period Minimum
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Wei, J. Y., Jiang, X. J., Xu, D. W., Zhou, A. Y., and Hu, J. Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
1RXS J232953.9+062814 was identified as a cataclysmic variable by Wei et al. (1999). Four low-resolution spectra of 1RXS J232953.9+062814 were obtained by using the 2.16-m telescope of the National Astronomical Observatories, in which two of them were at outburst, and the other two were at quiescence. The system is about 16.8 B and 16.5 V at quiescence, and 12.6 B and 12.6 V at outburst. The quiescent spectra were dominated by double-peaked Balmer emissions, which indicates a hydrogen-rich system with a high-inclination accretion disc. MgH and TiO absorption bands appeared in the quiescent spectrum imply a companion with a spectral type of early M dwarf. If we take it as a M0 dwarf, the system is located at a distance of 350 pc with a proper motion velocity 150 km s$^{-1}$. The superhump period of 0.046311 days (Uemura et al. 2001) was confirmed by our V photometry. The short period and the hydrogen-rich nature reveal that this system is another SU Ursae Majoris-type dwarf nova below the period minimum after V485 Centauri. 1RXS J232953.9+062814 is one of the most important systems for studying the evolutionary scenario of cataclysmic variables since it is much brighter than V485 Cen., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Chin. J. Astron. Astrophys
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- 2001
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23. Mode identification of Pulsating White Dwarfs using the HST
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Kepler, S. O., Robinson, E. L., Koester, D., Clemens, J. C., Nather, R. E., and Jiang, X. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have obtained time-resolved ultraviolet spectroscopy for the pulsating DAV stars G226-29 and G185-32, and for the pulsating DBV star PG1351+489 with the Hubble Space Telescope Faint Object Spectrograph, to compare the ultraviolet to the optical pulsation amplitude and determine the pulsation indices. We find that for essentially all observed pulsation modes, the amplitude rises to the ultraviolet as the theoretical models predict for l=1 non-radial g-modes. We do not find any pulsation mode visible only in the ultraviolet, nor any modes whose phase flips by 180 degrees; in the ultraviolet, as would be expected if high l pulsations were excited. We find one periodicity in the light curve of G185-32, at 141 s, which does not fit theoretical models for the change of amplitude with wavelength of g-mode pulsations., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, Aug 2000
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- 2000
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24. The photometric behaviour of the peculiar PG1159 star HS2324+3944 at high frequency resolution
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Silvotti, R., Dreizler, S., Handler, G., and Jiang, X. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results from 135 hours of nearly continuous time series photometry on the ``hybrid'' (H-rich) PG1159 variable star HS2324+3944, obtained in August-September 1997. The power spectrum of the data shows several frequencies (about 20 or more), concentrated in three narrow and very crowded regions near 475, 390 and 950 microHz in decreasing amplitude order. Most (if not all) of the peaks in the latter region are linear combinations of the high-amplitude frequencies between 455 and 500 microHz. If we divide the data set into two equal parts, the power spectra are different. This is probably due to a not sufficiently long (and therefore not completely resolved) light curve; nevertheless an alternative hypothesis of a single damped oscillator may not be completely ruled out. If we adopt the first hypothesis, the high concentration of peaks between 455 and 500 microHz suggests the presence of both l=1 and l=2 high-overtone nonradial g-modes. The insufficient frequency resolution of our data does not allow to obtain definite precision asteroseismology results. Nevertheless a spacing of the signals is observed, probably due to stellar rotation with a period of 2.3 days. If the signal spacing was due to the successive overtones, the period spacings would be equal to 18.8 (l=1) and 10.4 (l=2) s., Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, A&A in press, ps version available at http://www.na.astro.it/~silvotti/pubs.html
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- 1998
25. Clinical characteristics and treatment of renal artery fibromuscular dysplasia with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty: a long-term follow-up study
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Yang, Y. K., Zhang, Y., Meng, X., Yang, K. Q., Jiang, X. J., Wu, H. Y., Zhang, H. M., Song, L., Wang, L. P., Gao, L. G., and Zhou, X. L.
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- 2016
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26. Etiology of renal artery stenosis in 2047 patients: a single-center retrospective analysis during a 15-year period in China
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Peng, M, Jiang, X-j, Dong, H, Zou, Y-b, Zhang, H-m, Song, L, Li, B, Yang, Y-j, Wu, H-y, Gao, R-l, Zhang, W-g, and Liu, L-s
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- 2016
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27. Feige 48: A Model Match for the Coolest Pulsating Subdwarf B Star
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WHOLE EARTH TELESCOPE XCOV 17, 19, & 21 TEAMS, Reed, M. D., Kawaler, S. D., Zola, S., Jiang, X. J., de Martino, Domitilla, editor, Silvotti, Roberto, editor, Solheim, Jan-Erik, editor, and Kalytis, Romualdas, editor
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- 2003
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28. Manganese oxide affects nitrification and N2O emissions in a subtropical paddy soil with variable water regimes
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Xin, X. P., Wright, A. L., He, Z. L., and Jiang, X. J.
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- 2017
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29. New Cataclysmic Variables from Rass
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Jiang, X. J., Engels, D., Wei, J. Y., Hu, J. Y., Cheng, K. S., editor, Chau, H. F., editor, Chan, K. L., editor, and Leung, K. C., editor
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- 2000
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30. Effect of Minor Yttrium Additions on the Mechanical Properties of 8090 Al-Li Alloy at Ambient and Cryogenic Temperatures
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Li, Y. Y., Gui, Q. H., Ma, L. M., Jiang, X. J., Reed, Richard P., editor, Fickett, Fred R., editor, Summers, Leonard T., editor, and Stieg, M., editor
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- 1994
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31. Effects of Scandium on the Microstructure and Tensile Behavior of Al-Li-Cu-Mg-Zr Alloy
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Jiang, X. J., Li, Y. Y., Deng, W., Xiong, L. Y., Wu, W. M., Gao, Y. J., Shi, C. X., Reed, Richard P., editor, Fickett, Fred R., editor, Summers, Leonard T., editor, and Stieg, M., editor
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- 1994
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32. The Tensile Fracture of Ag-Containing Al-Li-Cu-Mg-Zr Alloys
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Jiang, X. J., Li, Y. Y., Shi, C. X., Reed, Richard P., editor, Fickett, Fred R., editor, Summers, Leonard T., editor, and Stieg, M., editor
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- 1994
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33. Ferroptosis in neurodegenerative diseases: inhibitors as promising candidate mitigators.
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ZHANG, R.-F., ZENG, M., LV, N., WANG, L.-M., YANG, Q.-Y., GAN, J.-L., LI, H.-H., YU, B., JIANG, X.-J., and YANG, L.
- Abstract
Ferroptosis is a new form of iron-dependent programmed cell death, characterized by intracellular iron overload and lipid peroxidation. Several studies have revealed that ferroptosis is associated with the occurrence and development of various neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). Therefore, this paper reviews the mechanism and related genes of ferroptosis, focusing on the research of antiferroptosis drugs in NDs to provide theoretical support for future experimental research and clinical application. This work focuses on ferroptosis, and the authors searched the literature on PubMed related to ferroptosis using the keywords "neurodegenerative diseases" and 'neurons". All articles were from August 2022 and earlier, excluding irrelevant or retracted articles, and articles from the last five years were used as the main inclusion criteria. After collection and summary, it was found that ferroptosis in NDs was not only related to iron metabolism, lipid metabolism, and amino acid metabolism but also related to genes such as Nrf2, FSP1, VDACs, and p53. We also summarized drugs that inhibited ferroptosis in NDs and classified them according to their mechanism of action. Ferroptosis was involved in the progression of NDs through its production mechanism and related genes. Targeting ferroptosis might be a new strategy for treating NDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
34. Microstructure and Cryogenic Tensile Fracture Behavior of an Al-Li-Zn-Zr Alloy
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Jiang, X. J., Li, Y. Y., Fickett, F. R., editor, and Reed, R. P., editor
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- 1992
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35. Killing two birds with one stone: miR-126 involvement in both cancer and atherosclerosis.
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YANG, Q.-Y., YU, Q., ZENG, W.-Y., ZENG, M., ZHANG, X.-L., ZHANG, Y.-L., GUO, L., JIANG, X.-J., and GAN, J.-L.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Both cancer and atherosclerosis are the main causes of morbidity and mortality in the world, and some patients even suffer from both of them. Several studies have shown an association between the pathogenesis of cancer and atherosclerosis. It has been reported that miR-126 may participate in the pathological process of cancer and atherosclerosis. Therefore, we aimed to summarize the role of miR-126 in cancer and atherosclerosis respectively, as well as a possible association between them. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this paper, “miR-126” and “microRNA-126” are used as the first group of keywords, “atheromatosis” and “atherosclerosis” are used as the second group of keywords, and “tumor” and “cancer” are used as the third group of keywords. In PubMed, the authors selected one of the first group and the second group of keywords to search the literature related to miR-126 and cancer, and one of the first group and the third group of keywords was selected to search the literature on miR-126 and atherosclerosis. All collected articles are from 2021 and before. Irrelevant, withdrawn and review articles were excluded, and the included literature was mainly in the recent five years. RESULTS: After collection and summary, miR126 is found involved in cell apoptosis, proliferation, angiogenesis, inflammation, and other processes in both cancer and atherosclerosis by negatively targeting PI3K, VEGF, VCAM-1, EGFL7, CXCL12-CXCR4 axis, and LRP6. Moreover, we briefly review the prospects of miR-126 as a biomarker for the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and atherosclerosis in clinical applications. CONCLUSIONS: It has been demonstrated that miR-126 can influence cancer and atherosclerosis by affecting the same or different target genes. Therefore, it facilitates our understanding of the common prevention and treatment strategies of cancer and atherosclerosis by regulating the miR126-target genes network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
36. Analysis of the contact stresses in curvic couplings of gas turbine in a blade-off event
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Jiang, X.-J., Zhang, Y.-Y., and Yuan, S.-X.
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- 2012
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37. CHIMPS2: survey description and ¹²CO emission in the Galactic Centre
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Eden, DJ, Moore, TJT, Currie, MJ, Rigby, AJ, Rosolowsky, E, Su, Y, Kim, K-T, Parsons, H, Morata, O, Chen, H-R, Minamidani, T, Park, G, Ragan, SE, Urquhart, JS, Rani, R, Tahani, K, Billington, SJ, Deb, S, Figura, C, Fujiyoshi, T, Joncas, G, Liao, LW, Liu, T, Ma, H, Tuan-Anh, P, Yun, H-S, Zhang, S, Zhu, M, Henshaw, JD, Longmore, SN, Kobayashi, MIN, Thompson, MA, Ao, Y, Campbell-White, J, Ching, T-C, Chung, EJ, Duarte-Cabral, A, Fich, M, Gao, Y, Graves, SF, Jiang, X-J, Kemper, F, Kuan, Y-J, Kwon, W, Lee, CW, Lee, J-E, Liu, M, Peñaloza, CH, Peretto, N, Phuong, NT, Pineda, JE, Plume, R, Puspitaningrum, E, Samal, MR, Soam, A, Sun, Y, Tang, XD, Traficante, A, White, GJ, Yan, C-H, Yang, AY, Yuan, J, Yue, N, Bemis, A, Brunt, CM, Chen, Z, Cho, J, Clark, PC, Cyganowski, CJ, Friberg, P, Fuller, GA, Han, I, Hoare, MG, Izumi, N, Kim, H-J, Kim, J, Kim, S, Koch, EW, Kuno, N, Lacialle, KM, Lai, S-P, Lee, H, Lee, Y-H, Li, DL, Liu, S-Y, Mairs, S, Pan, Z, Qian, L, Scicluna, P, Shi, C-S, Shi, H, Srinivasan, S, Tan, Q-H, Thomas, HS, Torii, K, Trejo, A, Umemoto, T, Violino, G, Wallström, S, Wang, B, Wu, Y, Yuan, L, Zhang, C, Zhang, M, Zhou, C, and Zhou, JJ
- Abstract
The latest generation of Galactic Plane surveys is enhancing our ability to study the effects of galactic environment upon the process of star formation. We present the first data from CO Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey 2 (CHIMPS2). CHIMPS2 is a survey that will observe the Inner Galaxy, the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), and a section of the Outer Galaxy in 12CO, 13CO, and C18O (J = 3 → 2) emission with the Heterodyne Array Receiver Program on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The first CHIMPS2 data presented here are a first look towards the CMZ in 12CO J = 3 → 2 and cover −3◦ ≤ ≤ 5◦ and | b | ≤ 0. ◦5 with angular resolution of 15 arcsec, velocity resolution of 1 km s−1, and rms T ∗ A = 0.58 K at these resolutions. Such high-resolution observations of the CMZ will be a valuable data set for future studies, whilst complementing the existing Galactic Plane surveys, such as SEDIGISM, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey, and ATLASGAL. In this paper, we discuss the survey plan, the current observations and data, as well as presenting position–position maps of the region. The position–velocity maps detect foreground spiral arms in both absorption and emission.
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- 2020
38. The Roy Adaptation Model Assesses Quality Care for Patients with Angina Study on the Influence of Treatment Compliance and Effectiveness
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Luo, Y. N., primary, Jiang, X. J., additional, Liu, R., additional, and Qin, C. L., additional
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- 2021
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39. Уровень sgРНК как основной фактор, влияющий на эффективность CRISPRi нокдауна в клеточной линии K562
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Wang, Y., primary, Xie, Y., additional, Dong, Z. C., additional, Jiang, X. J., additional, Gong, P., additional, Lu, J., additional, and Wan, F., additional
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- 2021
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40. Influence of zirconium and copper on the early stages of aging in Al-Zn-Mg alloys
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Jiang, X. J., Noble, B., Hansen, V., and Tafto, J.
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- 2001
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41. Differential scanning calorimetry and electron diffraction investigation on low-temperature aging in Al-Zn-Mg alloys
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Jiang, X. J., Tafto, J., Noble, B., Holme, B., and Waterloo, G.
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- 2000
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42. CHIMPS2: survey description and 12CO emission in the Galactic Centre
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Eden, D J, primary, Moore, T J T, additional, Currie, M J, additional, Rigby, A J, additional, Rosolowsky, E, additional, Su, Y, additional, Kim, Kee-Tae, additional, Parsons, H, additional, Morata, O, additional, Chen, H-R, additional, Minamidani, T, additional, Park, Geumsook, additional, Ragan, S E, additional, Urquhart, J S, additional, Rani, R, additional, Tahani, K, additional, Billington, S J, additional, Deb, S, additional, Figura, C, additional, Fujiyoshi, T, additional, Joncas, G, additional, Liao, L W, additional, Liu, T, additional, Ma, H, additional, Tuan-Anh, P, additional, Yun, Hyeong-Sik, additional, Zhang, S, additional, Zhu, M, additional, Henshaw, J D, additional, Longmore, S N, additional, Kobayashi, M I N, additional, Thompson, M A, additional, Ao, Y, additional, Campbell-White, J, additional, Ching, T-C, additional, Chung, E J, additional, Duarte-Cabral, A, additional, Fich, M, additional, Gao, Y, additional, Graves, S F, additional, Jiang, X-J, additional, Kemper, F, additional, Kuan, Y-J, additional, Kwon, W, additional, Lee, C W, additional, Lee, J-E, additional, Liu, M, additional, Peñaloza, C H, additional, Peretto, N, additional, Phuong, N T, additional, Pineda, J E, additional, Plume, R, additional, Puspitaningrum, E, additional, Samal, M R, additional, Soam, A, additional, Sun, Y, additional, Tang, X D, additional, Traficante, A, additional, White, G J, additional, Yan, C-H, additional, Yang, A Y, additional, Yuan, J, additional, Yue, N, additional, Bemis, A, additional, Brunt, C M, additional, Chen, Z, additional, Cho, J, additional, Clark, P C, additional, Cyganowski, C J, additional, Friberg, P, additional, Fuller, G A, additional, Han, I, additional, Hoare, M G, additional, Izumi, N, additional, Kim, H-J, additional, Kim, J, additional, Kim, S, additional, Koch, E W, additional, Kuno, N, additional, Lacialle, K M, additional, Lai, S-P, additional, Lee, H, additional, Lee, Y-H, additional, Li, D L, additional, Liu, S-Y, additional, Mairs, S, additional, Pan, Z, additional, Qian, L, additional, Scicluna, P, additional, Shi, C-S, additional, Shi, H, additional, Srinivasan, S, additional, Tan, Q-H, additional, Thomas, H S, additional, Torii, K, additional, Trejo, A, additional, Umemoto, T, additional, Violino, G, additional, Wallström, S, additional, Wang, B, additional, Wu, Y, additional, Yuan, L, additional, Zhang, C, additional, Zhang, M, additional, Zhou, C, additional, and Zhou, J J, additional
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- 2020
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43. sgRNA level is a major factor affecting CRISPRi knockdown efficiency in K562 cells
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Wang, Y., primary, Xie, Y., additional, Dong, Z. C., additional, Jiang, X. J., additional, Gong, P., additional, Lu, J., additional, and Wan, F., additional
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- 2020
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44. Expression of osteopontin mRNA in normal and stone-forming rat kidney
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Jiang, X. J., Feng, T., Chang, L. S., Kong, X. T., Wang, G., Zhang, Z. W., and Guo, Y. L.
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- 1998
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45. Synchronous or Staged Carotid Stenting Followed by Cardiac Surgery: Peri-Procedural and Long-Term Results
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Jiang, X J
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- 2010
46. Differential Effect of the Combination of Amlodipine and Angiotensin Receptor Blocker or Diuretics on Central Aortic Systolic Pressure in Tonometer Substudy of CHIEF Trial
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Jiang, X J, Zhang, L Q, Wang, W, Zhang, Y Q, and Liu, L S
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- 2010
47. Ensemble asteroseismology of pulsating B-type stars in NGC 6910
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Moździerski, D., primary, Pigulski, A., additional, Kołaczkowski, Z., additional, Michalska, G., additional, Kopacki, G., additional, Carrier, F., additional, Walczak, P., additional, Narwid, A., additional, Stęślicki, M., additional, Fu, J.-N., additional, Jiang, X.-J., additional, Zhang, Ch., additional, Jackiewicz, J., additional, Telting, J., additional, Morel, T., additional, Saesen, S., additional, Zahajkiewicz, E., additional, Bruś, P., additional, Śródka, P., additional, Vučković, M., additional, Verhoelst, T., additional, Van Helshoecht, V., additional, Lefever, K., additional, Gielen, C., additional, Decin, L., additional, Vanautgaerden, J., additional, and Aerts, C., additional
- Published
- 2019
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48. Genetic diagnosis of Hailey–Hailey disease in two Chinese families: novel mutations in the ATP2C1 gene
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Ding, Y. G., Fang, H., Lao, L. M., Jiang, X. J., and Chen, H. C.
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- 2009
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49. Relationship between a family history of malignancy and the incidence of laryngeal carcinoma in the Liaoning province of China
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Li, X.-Y., Guo, X., Feng, S., Li, X.-T., Wei, H.-Q., Yang, H.-A., Ren, Z., and Jiang, X.-J.
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- 2009
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50. Implantation of BM cells transfected with phVEGF165 enhances functional improvement of the infarcted heart
- Author
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Xu, H.-X., Li, G.-S., Jiang, H., Wang, J., Lü, J.-J., Jiang, W., Qian, H.-Y., Jiang, X.-J., Li, X.-Y., Li, J.-J., and Liu, W.-H.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
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