765 results on '"Kudryavtseva, N"'
Search Results
2. Correlations of Expression Levels of Lung Cancer Marker Gene Eno2 and Genes of Carcinogenesis and Apoptosis in the Hypothalamus of Mice with Depression-Like Behavior
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Galyamina, A. G., Kovalenko, I. L., Smagin, D. A., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
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- 2024
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3. Experimental Determination of the Thermophysical Properties of a Hybride Structure Based on Graphite
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Belyavskii, A. E. and Kudryavtseva, N. S.
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- 2023
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4. Changes in Expression of Genes Associated with Calcium Processes in the Hippocampus in Mice Exposed to Chronic Social Stress
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Pavlova, M. B., Smagin, D. A., Kudryavtseva, N. N., and Dyuzhikova, N. A.
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- 2023
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5. Efficiency of Hybrid Radiant Heat Exchanger
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Belyavskii, A. E., Kudryavtseva, N. S., Sorokin, A. E., and Nagornov, A. Yu.
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- 2022
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6. Radiant Heat Exchanger in the Thermal Control System of a Lunar Base Module: Thermodynamic Analysis
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Belyavskii, A. E., Kudryavtseva, N. S., and Sorokin, A. E.
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- 2022
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7. A Matched Filter Technique For Slow Radio Transient Detection And First Demonstration With The Murchison Widefield Array
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Feng, L., Vaulin, R., Hewitt, J. N., Remillard, R., Kaplan, D. L., Murphy, Tara, Kudryavtseva, N., Hancock, P., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Many astronomical sources produce transient phenomena at radio frequencies, but the transient sky at low frequencies (<300 MHz) remains relatively unexplored. Blind surveys with new widefield radio instruments are setting increasingly stringent limits on the transient surface density on various timescales. Although many of these instruments are limited by classical confusion noise from an ensemble of faint, unresolved sources, one can in principle detect transients below the classical confusion limit to the extent that the classical confusion noise is independent of time. We develop a technique for detecting radio transients that is based on temporal matched filters applied directly to time series of images rather than relying on source-finding algorithms applied to individual images. This technique has well-defined statistical properties and is applicable to variable and transient searches for both confusion-limited and non-confusion-limited instruments. Using the Murchison Widefield Array as an example, we demonstrate that the technique works well on real data despite the presence of classical confusion noise, sidelobe confusion noise, and other systematic errors. We searched for transients lasting between 2 minutes and 3 months. We found no transients and set improved upper limits on the transient surface density at 182 MHz for flux densities between ~20--200 mJy, providing the best limits to date for hour- and month-long transients., Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, accepted to AJ
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- 2017
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8. Characteristics of the Medical Support System for Interplanetary Flight
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Belozerova, I. N. and Kudryavtseva, N. S.
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- 2021
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9. Validation of the multi-mission altimeter wave height data for the Baltic Sea region
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Kudryavtseva, N. A. and Soomere, T.
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
We present a complete cross-validation of significant wave heights (SWH) extracted from altimetry data from all ten existing satellites with available in situ (buoy and echosounder) wave measurements for the Baltic Sea basin. The main purpose is to select an adequate altimetry data subset for a subsequent evaluation of the wave climate. The satellite measurements with the backscatter coefficients > 13.5 cdb, errors in the SWH normalized standard deviation > 0.5 m and snapshots with centroids closer than 0.2 degrees to the land are not reliable. The ice flag usually denotes the ice concentration of > 50%. The presence of ice affects the SWH data starting from concentrations 10%, but substantial effects are only evident for concentrations > 30%. The altimetry data selected based on these criteria have very good correspondence with in situ data, except for GEOSAT Phase 1 data (1985-1989) that could not be validated. The root-mean-square difference of altimetry and in situ data is in the range of 0.23-0.37, which is significant for the Baltic Sea, compared with an average wave height of ~1 m. The bias for CRYOSAT-2, ERS-2, JASON-1/2 and SARAL data is below 0.06 m. The ENVISAT, ERS-1, GEOSAT and TOPEX satellites revealed larger biases up to 0.23 m. The SWH time series from several satellite pairs (ENVISAT/JASON-1, SARAL/JASON-2, ERS-1/TOPEX) exhibit substantial mutual temporal drift and part of them evidently are not homogeneous in time. A new high-resolution SWH data set from the SARAL satellite reveals a very good correspondence with the in situ data and with the data stream from previous satellites., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, Estonian Journal of Earth Sciences
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- 2016
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10. The Importance of Wide-field Foreground Removal for 21 cm Cosmology: A Demonstration With Early MWA Epoch of Reionization Observations
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Pober, J. C., Hazelton, B. J., Beardsley, A. P., Barry, N. A., Martinot, Z. E., Sullivan, I. S., Morales, M. F., Bell, M. E., Bernardi, G., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Deshpande, A. A., Dillon, Joshua. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A. M., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, N., Jacobs, D. C., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, Han-Seek, Kittiwisit, P., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, Sourabh, Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Sethi, Shiv K., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we present observations, simulations, and analysis demonstrating the direct connection between the location of foreground emission on the sky and its location in cosmological power spectra from interferometric redshifted 21 cm experiments. We begin with a heuristic formalism for understanding the mapping of sky coordinates into the cylindrically averaged power spectra measurements used by 21 cm experiments, with a focus on the effects of the instrument beam response and the associated sidelobes. We then demonstrate this mapping by analyzing power spectra with both simulated and observed data from the Murchison Widefield Array. We find that removing a foreground model which includes sources in both the main field-of-view and the first sidelobes reduces the contamination in high k_parallel modes by several percent relative to a model which only includes sources in the main field-of-view, with the completeness of the foreground model setting the principal limitation on the amount of power removed. While small, a percent-level amount of foreground power is in itself more than enough to prevent recovery of any EoR signal from these modes. This result demonstrates that foreground subtraction for redshifted 21 cm experiments is truly a wide-field problem, and algorithms and simulations must extend beyond the main instrument field-of-view to potentially recover the full 21 cm power spectrum., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, matches version accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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11. Murchison Widefield Array Observations of Anomalous Variability: A Serendipitous Night-time Detection of Interplanetary Scintillation
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Kaplan, D. L., Tingay, S. J., Manoharan, P. K., Macquart, J. -P., Hancock, P., Morgan, J., Mitchell, D. A., Ekers, R. D., Wayth, R. B., Trott, C., Murphy, T., Oberoi, D., Cairns, I. H., Feng, L., Kudryavtseva, N., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hurley-Walker, N., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Morgan, E., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of high-amplitude rapid (2 s) variability toward two bright, compact extragalactic radio sources out of several hundred of the brightest radio sources in one of the 30x30 deg MWA Epoch of Reionization fields using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) at 155 MHz. After rejecting intrinsic, instrumental, and ionospheric origins we consider the most likely explanation for this variability to be interplanetary scintillation (IPS), likely the result of a large coronal mass ejection propagating from the Sun. This is confirmed by roughly contemporaneous observations with the Ooty Radio Telescope. We see evidence for structure on spatial scales ranging from <1000 km to >1e6 km. The serendipitous night-time nature of these detections illustrates the new regime that the MWA has opened for IPS studies with sensitive night-time, wide-field, low-frequency observations. This regime complements traditional dedicated strategies for observing IPS and can be utilized in real-time to facilitate dedicated follow-up observations. At the same time, it allows large-scale surveys for compact (arcsec) structures in low-frequency radio sources despite the 2 arcmin resolution of the array., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters, in press
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- 2015
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12. Ionospheric modelling using GPS to calibrate the MWA. 1: Comparison of first order ionospheric effects between GPS models and MWA observations
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Arora, B. S., Morgan, J., Ord, S. M., Tingay, S. J., Hurley-Walker, N., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, R., Briggs, F., Callingham, J. R., Deshpande, A. A., Dwarakanath, K. S., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., For, B. -Q., Hancock, P., Hazelton, B. J., Hindson, L., Jacobs, D., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kapińska, A. D., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Pindor, B., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Staveley-Smith, L., Wayth, R. B., Wu, C., Zheng, Q., Bowman, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Prabu, T., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We compare first order (refractive) ionospheric effects seen by the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) with the ionosphere as inferred from Global Positioning System (GPS) data. The first order ionosphere manifests itself as a bulk position shift of the observed sources across an MWA field of view. These effects can be computed from global ionosphere maps provided by GPS analysis centres, namely the Center for Orbit Determination in Europe (CODE), using data from globally distributed GPS receivers. However, for the more accurate local ionosphere estimates required for precision radio astronomy applications, data from local GPS networks needs to be incorporated into ionospheric modelling. For GPS observations, the ionospheric parameters are biased by GPS receiver instrument delays, among other effects, also known as receiver Differential Code Biases (DCBs). The receiver DCBs need to be estimated for any non-CODE GPS station used for ionosphere modelling, a requirement for establishing dense GPS networks in arbitrary locations in the vicinity of the MWA. In this work, single GPS station-based ionospheric modelling is performed at a time resolution of 10 minutes. Also the receiver DCBs are estimated for selected Geoscience Australia (GA) GPS receivers, located at Murchison Radio Observatory (MRO1), Yarragadee (YAR3), Mount Magnet (MTMA) and Wiluna (WILU). The ionospheric gradients estimated from GPS are compared with the ionospheric gradients inferred from radio source position shifts observed with the MWA. The ionospheric gradients at all the GPS stations show a correlation with the gradients observed with the MWA. The ionosphere estimates obtained using GPS measurements show promise in terms of providing calibration information for the MWA., Comment: 24 pages
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- 2015
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13. Power spectrum analysis of ionospheric fluctuations with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Loi, Shyeh Tjing, Trott, Cathryn M., Murphy, Tara, Cairns, Iver H., Bell, Martin, Hurley-Walker, Natasha, Morgan, John, Lenc, Emil, Offringa, A. R., Feng, L., Hancock, P. J., Kaplan, D. L., Kudryavtseva, N., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Low-frequency, wide field-of-view (FoV) radio telescopes such as the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) enable the ionosphere to be sampled at high spatial completeness. We present the results of the first power spectrum analysis of ionospheric fluctuations in MWA data, where we examined the position offsets of radio sources appearing in two datasets. The refractive shifts in the positions of celestial sources are proportional to spatial gradients in the electron column density transverse to the line of sight. These can be used to probe plasma structures and waves in the ionosphere. The regional (10-100 km) scales probed by the MWA, determined by the size of its FoV and the spatial density of radio sources (typically thousands in a single FoV), complement the global (100-1000 km) scales of GPS studies and local (0.01-1 km) scales of radar scattering measurements. Our data exhibit a range of complex structures and waves. Some fluctuations have the characteristics of travelling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs), while others take the form of narrow, slowly-drifting bands aligned along the Earth's magnetic field., Comment: Accepted for publication in Radio Science
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- 2015
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14. Hybrid Radiator for Spacecraft Thermal Control Systems
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Belyavskii, A. E., Kudryavtseva, N. S., and Sorokin, A. E.
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- 2022
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15. The Murchison Widefield Array Correlator
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Ord, S. M., Crosse, B., Emrich, D., Pallot, D., Wayth, R. B., Clark, M. A., Tremblay, S. E., Arcus, W., Barnes, D., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Bunton, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., deSouza, L., Ewell-Wice, A., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Herne, D., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, H., Jacobs, D., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kincaid, B. B., Koenig, R., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A., Pathikulangara, J., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Remillard, R. A., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Salah, J. E., Sault, R. J., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Stevens, J., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a Square Kilometre Array (SKA) Precursor. The telescope is located at the Murchison Radio--astronomy Observatory (MRO) in Western Australia (WA). The MWA consists of 4096 dipoles arranged into 128 dual polarisation aperture arrays forming a connected element interferometer that cross-correlates signals from all 256 inputs. A hybrid approach to the correlation task is employed, with some processing stages being performed by bespoke hardware, based on Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), and others by Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) housed in general purpose rack mounted servers. The correlation capability required is approximately 8 TFLOPS (Tera FLoating point Operations Per Second). The MWA has commenced operations and the correlator is generating 8.3 TB/day of correlation products, that are subsequently transferred 700 km from the MRO to Perth (WA) in real-time for storage and offline processing. In this paper we outline the correlator design, signal path, and processing elements and present the data format for the internal and external interfaces., Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in PASA. Some figures altered to meet astro-ph submission requirements
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- 2015
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16. Modelling of the Spectral Energy Distribution of Fornax A: Leptonic and Hadronic Production of High Energy Emission from the Radio Lobes
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McKinley, B., Yang, R., López-Caniego, M., Briggs, F., Hurley-Walker, N., Wayth, R. B., Offringa, A. R., Crocker, R., Bernardi, G., Procopio, P., Gaensler, B. M., Tingay, S. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., McDonald, M., Bell, M., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Jacobs, D., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, D. A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present new low-frequency observations of the nearby radio galaxy Fornax A at 154 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array, microwave flux-density measurements obtained from WMAP and Planck data, and gamma-ray flux densities obtained from Fermi data. We also compile a comprehensive list of previously published images and flux-density measurements at radio, microwave and X-ray energies. A detailed analysis of the spectrum of Fornax A between 154 MHz and 1510 MHz reveals that both radio lobes have a similar spatially-averaged spectral index, and that there exists a steep-spectrum bridge of diffuse emission between the lobes. Taking the spectral index of both lobes to be the same, we model the spectral energy distribution of Fornax A across an energy range spanning eighteen orders of magnitude, to investigate the origin of the X-ray and gamma-ray emission. A standard leptonic model for the production of both the X-rays and gamma-rays by inverse-Compton scattering does not fit the multi-wavelength observations. Our results best support a scenario where the X-rays are produced by inverse-Compton scattering and the gamma-rays are produced primarily by hadronic processes confined to the filamentary structures of the Fornax A lobes., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures
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- 2014
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17. First Look Murchison Widefield Array observations of Abell 3667
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Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Hurley-Walker, N., Buckley, K., Morgan, J., Carretti, E., Dwarakanath, K. S., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Jacobs, D., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Offringa, A. R., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a new low frequency interferometric radio telescope, operating in the remote Murchison Radio Observatory in Western Australia. In this paper we present the first MWA observations of the well known radio relics in Abell 3667 (A3667) between 120 and 226 MHz. We clearly detect the radio relics in A3667 and present flux estimates and spectral indices for these features. The average spectral index of the north-west (NW) and south-east (SE) relics is -0.9 +/- 0.1 between 120 and 1400 MHz. We are able to resolve spatial variation in the spectral index of the NW relic from -1.7 to -0.4, which is consistent with results found at higher frequencies., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for the 31st URSI General Assembly Proceedings to be published in IEEE Xplore
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- 2014
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18. The first Murchison Widefield Array low frequency radio observations of cluster scale non-thermal emission: the case of Abell 3667
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Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Hurley-Walker, N., Buckley, K., Morgan, J., Carretti, E., Dwarakanath, K. S., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Jacobs, D., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Offringa, A. R., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first Murchison Widefield Array observations of the well-known cluster of galaxies Abell 3667 (A3667) between 105 and 241 MHz. A3667 is one of the best known examples of a galaxy cluster hosting a double radio relic and has been reported to contain a faint radio halo and bridge. The origins of radio halos, relics and bridges is still unclear, however galaxy cluster mergers seems to be an important factor. We clearly detect the North-West (NW) and South-East (SE) radio relics in A3667 and find an integrated flux density at 149 MHz of 28.1 +/- 1.7 and 2.4 +/- 0.1 Jy, respectively, with an average spectral index, between 120 and 1400 MHz, of -0.9 +/- 0.1 for both relics. We find evidence of a spatial variation in the spectral index across the NW relic steepening towards the centre of the cluster, which indicates an ageing electron population. These properties are consistent with higher frequency observations. We detect emission that could be associated with a radio halo and bridge. How- ever, due to the presence of poorly sampled large-scale Galactic emission and blended point sources we are unable to verify the exact nature of these features., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
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- 2014
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19. WSClean: an implementation of a fast, generic wide-field imager for radio astronomy
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Offringa, A. R., McKinley, B., Hurley-Walker, N., Briggs, F. H., Wayth, R. B., Kaplan, D. L., Bell, M. E., Feng, L., Neben, A. R., Hughes, J. D., Rhee, J., Murphy, T., Bhat, N. D. R., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jacobs, D. C., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Procopio, P., Prabu, T., Riding, J., Roshi, D. A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Astronomical widefield imaging of interferometric radio data is computationally expensive, especially for the large data volumes created by modern non-coplanar many-element arrays. We present a new widefield interferometric imager that uses the w-stacking algorithm and can make use of the w-snapshot algorithm. The performance dependencies of CASA's w-projection and our new imager are analysed and analytical functions are derived that describe the required computing cost for both imagers. On data from the Murchison Widefield Array, we find our new method to be an order of magnitude faster than w-projection, as well as being capable of full-sky imaging at full resolution and with correct polarisation correction. We predict the computing costs for several other arrays and estimate that our imager is a factor of 2-12 faster, depending on the array configuration. We estimate the computing cost for imaging the low-frequency Square-Kilometre Array observations to be 60 PetaFLOPS with current techniques. We find that combining w-stacking with the w-snapshot algorithm does not significantly improve computing requirements over pure w-stacking. The source code of our new imager is publicly released., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2014
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20. Thermal Testing of Spacecraft Radioelectronic Equipment Operating in Brief Communication Sessions
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Alekseev, V. A., Sorokin, A. E., Kudryavtseva, N. S., and Titova, A. S.
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- 2021
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21. Differentially Expressed Genes of the Slc6a Family as Markers of Altered Brain Neurotransmitter System Function in Pathological States in Mice
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Babenko, V. N., Smagin, D. A., Kovalenko, I. L., Galyamina, A. G., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
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- 2020
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22. On the detection and tracking of space debris using the Murchison Widefield Array. I. Simulations and test observations demonstrate feasibility
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Tingay, S. J., Kaplan, D. L., McKinley, B., Briggs, F., Wayth, R. B., Hurley-Walker, N., Kennewell, J., Smith, C., Zhang, K., Arcus, W., Bhat, R., Emrich, D., Herne, D., Kudryavtseva, N., Lynch, M., Ord, S. M., Waterson, M., Barnes, D. G., Bell, M., Gaensler, B. M., Lenc, E., Bernardi, G., Greenhill, L. J., Kasper, J. C., Bowman, J. D., Jacobs, D., Bunton, J. D., deSouza, L., Koenig, R., Pathikulangara, J., Stevens, J., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Kincaid, B. B., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Rogers, A. E. E., Salah, J. E., Whitney, A. R., Deshpande, A., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Morgan, E., Remillard, R. A., Williams, C. L., Hazelton, B. J., Morales, M. F., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Mitchell, D. A., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Webster, R. L., Wyithe, J. S. B., Oberoi, D., Roshi, A., Sault, R. J., and Williams, A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a new low frequency interferomeric radio telescope. The MWA is the low frequency precursor to the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) and is the first of three SKA precursors to be operational, supporting a varied science mission ranging from the attempted detection of the Epoch of Reionisation to the monitoring of solar flares and space weather. We explore the possibility that the MWA can be used for the purposes of Space Situational Awareness (SSA). In particular we propose that the MWA can be used as an element of a passive radar facility operating in the frequency range 87.5 - 108 MHz (the commercial FM broadcast band). In this scenario the MWA can be considered the receiving element in a bi-static radar configuration, with FM broadcast stations serving as non-cooperative transmitters. The FM broadcasts propagate into space, are reflected off debris in Earth orbit, and are received at the MWA. The imaging capabilities of the MWA can be used to simultaneously detect multiple pieces of space debris, image their positions on the sky as a function of time, and provide tracking data that can be used to determine orbital parameters. Such a capability would be a valuable addition to Australian and global SSA assets, in terms of southern and eastern hemispheric coverage. We provide a feasibility assessment of this proposal, based on simple calculations and electromagnetic simulations that shows the detection of sub-metre size debris should be possible (debris radius of >0.5 m to ~1000 km altitude). We also present a proof-of-concept set of observations that demonstrate the feasibility of the proposal, based on the detection and tracking of the International Space Station via reflected FM broadcast signals originating in south-west Western Australia. These observations broadly validate our calculations and simulations., Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, accepted by The Astronomical Journal. Abstract abridged here due to character number limits
- Published
- 2013
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23. Age spread in Galactic star forming region W3 Main
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Bik, A., Henning, Th., Stolte, A., Brandner, W., Gouliermis, D. A., Gennaro, M., Pasquali, A., Rochau, B., Beuther, H., Ageorges, N., Seifert, W., Wang, Y., and Kudryavtseva, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present near-infrared JHKs imaging as well as K-band multi-object spectroscopy of the massive stellar content of W3 Main using LUCI at the LBT. We confirm 13 OB stars by their absorption line spectra in W3 Main and spectral types between O5V and B4V have been found. Three massive Young Stellar Objects are identified by their emission line spectra and near-infrared excess. From our spectrophotometric analysis of the massive stars and the nature of their surrounding HII regions we derive the evolutionary sequence of W3 Main and we find an age spread of 2-3 Myr., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, To appear in conference proceedings of "370 years of Astronomy in Utrecht"
- Published
- 2012
24. Multiple episodes of star formation in the CN15/16/17 molecular complex
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Gennaro, M., Bik, A., Brandner, W., Stolte, A., Rochau, B., Beuther, H., Gouliermis, D., Tackenberg, J., Kudryavtseva, N., Hussmann, B., Schuller, F., and Henning, Th.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have started a campaign to identify massive star clusters inside bright molecular bubbles towards the Galactic Center. The CN15/16/17 molecular complex is the first example of our study. The region is characterized by the presence of two young clusters, DB10 and DB11, visible in the NIR, an ultra-compact HII region identified in the radio, several young stellar objects visible in the MIR, a bright diffuse nebulosity at 8\mu m coming from PAHs and sub-mm continuum emission revealing the presence of cold dust. Given its position on the sky (l=0.58, b=-0.85) and its kinematic distance of ~7.5 kpc, the region was thought to be a very massive site of star formation in proximity of the CMZ. The cluster DB11 was estimated to be as massive as 10^4 M_sun. However the region's properties were known only through photometry and its kinematic distance was very uncertain given its location at the tangential point. We aimed at better characterizing the region and assess whether it could be a site of massive star formation located close to the Galactic Center. We have obtained NTT/SofI JHKs photometry and long slit K band spectroscopy of the brightest members. We have additionally collected data in the radio, sub-mm and mid infrared, resulting in a quite different picture of the region. We have confirmed the presence of massive early B type stars and have derived a spectro-photometric distance of ~1.2 kpc, much smaller than the kinematic distance. Adopting this distance we obtain clusters masses of M(DB10) ~ 170 M_sun and M(DB11) ~ 275 M_sun. This is consistent with the absence of any O star, confirmed by the excitation/ionization status of the nebula. No HeI diffuse emission is detected in our spectroscopic observations at 2.113\mu m, which would be expected if the region was hosting more massive stars. Radio continuum measurements are also consistent with the region hosting at most early B stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Fig. 1 and 3 presented in reduced resolution
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- 2012
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25. Age spread in W3 Main: LBT/LUCI near-infrared spectroscopy of the massive stellar content
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Bik, A., Henning, Th., Stolte, A., Brandner, W., Gouliermis, D. A., Gennaro, M., Pasquali, A., Rochau, B., Beuther, H., Ageorges, N., Seifert, W., Wang, Y., and Kudryavtseva, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present near-infrared multi-object spectroscopy and JHKs imaging of the massive stellar content of the Galactic star-forming region W3 Main, obtained with LUCI at the Large Binocular Telescope. We confirm 15 OB stars in W3 Main and derive spectral types between O5V and B4V from their absorption line spectra. Three massive Young Stellar Objects are identified by their emission line spectra and near-infrared excess. The color-color diagram of the detected sources allows a detailed investigation of the slope of the near-infrared extinction law towards W3 Main. Analysis of the Hertzsprung Russell diagram suggests that the Nishiyama extinction law fits the stellar population of W3 Main best (E(J-H)/E(H-Ks) = 1.76 and R_(Ks) = 1.44). From our spectrophotometric analysis of the massive stars and the nature of their surrounding HII regions we derive the evolutionary sequence of W3 Main and we find evidence of an age spread of at least 2-3 Myr. While the most massive star (IRS2) is already evolved, indications for high-mass pre-main-sequence evolution is found for another star (IRS N1), deeply embedded in an ultra compact HII region, in line with the different evolutionary phases observed in the corresponding HII regions. We derive a stellar mass of W3 Main of (4 +- 1) 10^3 Msun, by extrapolating from the number of OB stars using a Kroupa IMF and correcting for our spectroscopic incompleteness. We have detected the photospheres of OB stars from the more evolved diffuse HII region to the much younger UCHII regions, suggesting that these stars have finished their formation and cleared away their circumstellar disks very fast. Only in the hyper-compact HII region (IRS5), the early type stars seem to be still surrounded by circumstellar material., Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 14 pages, 4 figures
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- 2011
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26. A new method for estimating frequency-dependent core shifts in active galactic nucleus jets
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Kudryavtseva, N. A., Gabuzda, D. C., Aller, M. F., and Aller, H. D.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss the opacity in the core regions of active galactic nuclei observed with Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), and describe a new method for deriving the frequency-dependent shifts of the VLBI core from the frequency-dependent time lags of flares observed with single-dish observations. Application of the method to the core shifts of the quasar 3C 345 shows a very good agreement between the core shifts directly measured from VLBI observations and derived from flares in the total flux density using the proposed method. The frequency-dependent time lags of flares can be used to derive physical parameters of the jets, such as distance from the VLBI core to the base of the jet and the magnetic fields in the core region. Our estimates for 3C 345 indicate core magnetic fields ~0.1 G and magnetic field at 1 pc ~0.4 G., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2011
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27. GRAVITY: a four-telescope beam combiner instrument for the VLTI
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Gillessen, S., Eisenhauer, F., Perrin, G., Brandner, W., Straubmeier, C., Perraut, K., Amorim, A., Schöller, M., Araujo-Hauck, C., Bartko, H., Baumeister, H., Berger, J. -P., Carvas, P., Cassaing, F., Chapron, F., Choquet, E., Clenet, Y., Collin, C., Eckart, A., Fedou, P., Fischer, S., Gendron, E., Genzel, R., Gitton, P., Gonte, F., Gräter, A., Haguenauer, P., Haug, M., Haubois, X., Henning, T., Hippler, S., Hofmann, R., Jocou, L., Kellner, S., Kervella, P., Klein, R., Kudryavtseva, N., Lacour, S., Lapeyrere, V., Laun, W., Lena, P., Lenzen, R., Lima, J., Moch, D., Moratschke, D., Moulin, T., Naranjo, V., Neumann, U., Nolot, A., Paumard, T., Pfuhl, O., Rabien, S., Ramos, J., Rees, J. M., Rohloff, R. -R., Rouan, D., Rousset, G., Sevin, A., Thiel, M., Wagner, K., Wiest, M., Yazici, S., and Ziegler, D.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
GRAVITY is an adaptive optics assisted Beam Combiner for the second generation VLTI instrumentation. The instrument will provide high-precision narrow-angle astrometry and phase-referenced interferometric imaging in the astronomical K-band for faint objects. We describe the wide range of science that will be tackled with this instrument, highlighting the unique capabilities of the VLTI in combination with GRAVITY. The most prominent goal is to observe highly relativistic motions of matter close to the event horizon of Sgr A*, the massive black hole at center of the Milky Way. We present the preliminary design that fulfils the requirements that follow from the key science drivers: It includes an integrated optics, 4-telescope, dual feed beam combiner operated in a cryogenic vessel; near-infrared wavefrontsensing adaptive optics; fringe-tracking on secondary sources within the field of view of the VLTI and a novel metrology concept. Simulations show that 10 {\mu}as astrometry within few minutes is feasible for a source with a magnitude of mK = 15 like Sgr A*, given the availability of suitable phase reference sources (mK = 10). Using the same setup, imaging of mK = 18 stellar sources in the interferometric field of view is possible, assuming a full night of observations and the corresponding UV coverage of the VLTI., Comment: 20 pages, Proceedings SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation Conference 2010
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- 2010
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28. Anxiety as a Factor in the Development of Autistic Spectrum Symptoms: an Experimental Study
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Kovalenko, I. L. and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
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Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology ,Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
It is well known that psychoemotional disorders may be accompanied by decreased sociability in humans. It has been shown that repeated social defeats in 10 daily agonistic interactions in male mice led to development of the expressed level of anxiety and to reduction of communication estimated in the elevated plus-maze and partition tests, respectively. In the social interactions test, sociable behavior toward unfamiliar partner and exploratory activity were dramatically decreased in defeated male mice. Avoidance of approaching partner was significantly increased. Demonstration of self-grooming behavior was increased in defeated males. Chronic diazepam treatment (0.5 mg/kg, i.p., 2 weeks) led to significant decrease of anxiety level estimated in the elevated plus maze test and to improvement of communication in the partition test. In the social interaction test diazepam completely restored the level of sociability and exploratory activity and reduced avoidance behavior of approaching partner. Diazepam did not affect self-grooming demonstration. It is concluded that main factor which provokes decrease in communication in defeated male mice is the high level of anxiety. Similarity between changes in social behavior in defeated mice and symptoms of autism in humans is discussed. It is supposed that this behavioral approach may be useful for studying the molecular mechanisms of autistic spectrum disorders, developing under chronic negative social experiences., Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, in Russian
- Published
- 2010
29. The kinematics in the pc-scale jets of AGN The case of S5 1803+784
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Britzen, S., Kudryavtseva, N. A., Witzel, A., Campbell, R. M., Ros, E., Karouzos, M., Mehta, A., Aller, M. F., Aller, H. D., Beckert, T., and Zensus, J. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a kinematic analysis of jet component motion in the VLBI jet of the BL Lac object S5 1803+784, which does not reveal long-term outward motion for most of the components. Understanding the complex kinematic phenomena can possibly provide insights into the differences between quasars and BL Lac objects. The blazar S5 1803+784 has been studied with VLBI at $\nu$ =1.6, 2.3, 5, 8.4, and 15 GHz between 1993.88 and 2005.68 in 26 observing runs. We (re)analyzed the data and present Gaussian model-fits. We collected the already published kinematic information for this source from the literature and re-identified the components according to the new scenario presented in this paper. Altogether, 94 epochs of observations have been investigated. A careful study of the long-term kinematics reveals a new picture for component motion in S5 1803+784. In contrast to previously discussed motion scenarios, we find that the jet structure within 12 mas of the core can most easily be described by the coexistence of several bright jet features that remain on the long-term at roughly constant core separations (in addition to the already known {\it stationary} jet component $\sim$ 1.4 mas) and one faint component moving with an apparent superluminal speed ($\sim$ 19c, based on 3 epochs). While most of the components maintain long-term roughly constant distances from the core, we observe significant, smooth changes in their position angles. We report on an evolution of the whole jet ridge line with time over the almost 12 years of observations. The width of the jet changes periodically with a period of $\sim$ 8 to 9 years. We find a correlation between changes in the position angle and maxima in the total flux-density. We present evidence for a geometric origin of the phenomena and discuss possible models., Comment: The manuscript will be published by A&A
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- 2010
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30. Modeling nuclei of radio galaxies from VLBI radio observations. Application to the BL Lac Object S5 1803+784
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Roland, J., Britzen, S., Kudryavtseva, N. A., Witzel, A., and Karouzos, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a new method to fit the variations of both coordinates of a VLBI component as a function of time, assuming that the nucleus of the radio source contains a binary black hole system (BBH system). The presence of a BBH system produces 2 perturbations of the trajectory of the ejected VLBI components. By using only the VLBI coordinates, the problem we have to solve reduces to an astrometric problem. Knowledge of the variations of the VLBI coordinates as a function of time contains the kinematical information, thus we are able to deduce the inclination angle of the source and the bulk Lorentz factor of the ejected component. Generally, there is a family of the BBH system producing the same fit to our data. To illustrate this method, we apply it to the source 1807+784. We find that the inclination of the source is i = 5.8+-1.8 degrees and the VLBI component is ejected with a bulk Lorentz factor of 3.7+-0.3. We determine the family of the BBH system which provides the best fit, assuming at first that the masses of the 2 black holes are equal and then that the masses are different. Each family of BBH systems is characterized by Tp/Tb~1.967, where Tp and Tb are the precession period of the accretion disk of the black hole ejecting the VLBI component and the orbiting period of the BBH system., Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures
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- 2008
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31. A Possible Periodicity in the Radio Lightcurves of 3C454.3
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Qian, S. J., Kudryavtseva, N. A., Britzen, S., Krichbaum, T. P., Witzel, A., Zensus, J. A., Aller, M. F., Aller, H. D., and Zhang, X. Z.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
During the period 1966.5 - 2006.2 the 15GHz and 8GHz lightcurves of 3C454.3 (z=0.859) show a qsasi-periodicity of ~12.8 yr (~6.9 yr in the rest frame of the source) with a double-bump structure. This periodic behaviour is interpreted in terms of a rotating double-jet model in which the two jets are created from the black holes in a binary system and rotate with the period of the orbital motion. The periodic variations in the radio fluxes of 3C454.3 are suggested to be mainly due to the lighthouse effects (or the variation in Doppler boosting) of the precessing jets which are caused by the orbital motion. In addition, variations in the mass-flow rates accreting onto the black holes may be also involved., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures
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- 2007
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32. Effect of THz-radiation on Behavior of Male Mice
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Bondar, N. P., Kovalenko, I. L., Avgustinovich, D. F., Khamoyan, A. G., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
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Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology - Abstract
Effect of terahertz radiation (3.6 THz, 81.5 mkm,15 mV) on some behavioral patterns of intact mice has been investigated. In home cage mice demonstrated avoidance of laser ray and enhanced replacement activity in free behavior. Animals irradiated during 30 minutes manifested an increased level of anxiety, which was evaluated in the plus maze test on the day following the radiation., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables
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- 2007
33. Partition test and sexual motivation in male mice
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Kudryavtseva, N. N.
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Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology - Abstract
Theoretical analysis of own and literature investigations of sexual motivation with the use of the partition test [Kudryavtseva, 1987, 1994] in male mice was carried out. It has been shown that appearance of a receptive female in the neighboring compartment of common cage separated by perforated transparent partition produces the enhancement of testosterone level in blood and stimulates the behavioral activity near partition as a reaction to the receptive female in naive males. In many studies this behavioral activity is considered as sexual motivation, arising in this experimental context in male mice. The lack of correlation between behavioral parameters and gonad reaction of males on receptive female, uninterconnected changes of these two parameters as well as the lack of sexual behavior between naive male and female when partition is removed cast doubt on this data interpretation. It has been supposed that in naive males behavioral reaction to a receptive female is induced by positive incentive - odor of the female associated with nursing and warmth from mother and other females which look after posterity. Short-term increase of the level of testosterone (possessing rewarding properties) is innate stimulus-response reaction which stimulates and prolongs behavioral interest of male to receptive female. It has been supposed that after sexual experience female odor is associated in experienced males with sexual behavior directed to the sexual partner and resulted in the formation of sexual motivation. The data are considered also in the light of the theory of motivated behavior including "liking", "wanting" and "learning" [Robinson and Berridge, 1993, 2000]., Comment: 11 pages
- Published
- 2007
34. New method for the study of psychotropic drug effects under simulated clinical conditions
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Kudryavtseva, N. N., Avgustinovich, D. F., Bondar, N. P., Tenditnik, M. V., Kovalenko, I. L., and Koryakina, L. A.
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Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
The sensory contact model allows forming different psychopathological states (anxious depression, catalepsy, social withdrawal, pathological aggression, hypersensitivity, cognition disturbances, anhedonia, alcoholism etc.) produced by repeated agonistic interactions in male mice and investigating the therapeutic and preventive properties of any drug as well as its efficiency under simulated clinical conditions. This approach can be useful for a better understanding of the drugs' action in different stages of disease development in individuals. It is suggested that this pharmacological approach may be applied for the screening of different novel psychotropic drugs., Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables
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- 2007
35. Influence of experimental context on the development of anhedonia in male mice imposed to chronic social stress
- Author
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Bondar, N. P., Kovalenko, I. L., Avgustinovich, D. F., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Anhedonia is one of the key symptoms of depression in humans. Consumption of 1% sucrose solution supplemented with 0.2% vanillin was studied in two experimental contexts in male mice living under chronic social stress induced by daily experience of defeats in agonistic interactions and leading to development of depression. In the first experiment, vanillin sucrose solution was made available as an option of water during 10 days to mice living in group home cages. Then the mice were subjected to social defeat stress and during stress exposure they were provided with both vanillin sucrose solution and water using a free two bottles choice paradigm. In the other experiment, vanillin sucrose solution were first offered to mice after 8 days of exposure to social defeat stress. Males familiar with vanillin sucrose solution showed vanillin sucrose preference while experiencing defeat stress: consumption of vanillin sucrose solution was about 70% of total liquid consumption. However, the consumption of vanillin sucrose solution per gram of body weight in mice imposed to social stress during 20 days was significantly lower than in control males. In the second experiment, males after 8 days of social defeat stress were found to consume significantly less vanillin sucrose solution as compared with control males. On average during two weeks of measurements, vanillin sucrose solution intake was less than 20% of total liquid consumption in males with symptoms of depression and anxiety. Consumption per gram of body weight also appeared to be significantly lower than in control group. Influence of the experimental context on the development of anhedonia, which was measured by the reduction in sucrose solution intake by chronically stressed male mice, has been discussed., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2007
36. The Be/X-ray transient 4U 0115+63/V635 Cassiopeiae. III. Quasi-cyclic variability
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Reig, P., Larionov, V., Negueruela, I., Arkharov, A. A., and Kudryavtseva, N. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
4u 0115+63 is one of the most active and best studied Be/X-ray transients. Previous studies of 4u0115+63 have led to the suggestion that it undergoes relatively fast quasi-cyclic activity. However, due to the lack of good coverage of the observations, the variability time scales are uncertain. Our objective is to investigate the long-term behaviour of 4u 0115+63 to confirm its quasi-cyclic nature and to explain its correlated optical/IR and X-ray variability. We have performed optical/IR photometric observations and optical spectroscopic observations of 4u 0115+63 over the last decade with unprecedented coverage. We have focused on the Halpha line variability and the long-term changes of the photometric magnitudes and colours and investigated these changes in correlation with the X-ray activity of the source. results The optical and infrared emission is characterised by cyclic changes with a period of ~ 5 years. This long-term variability is attributed to the state of the circumstellar disc around the Be star companion. Each cycle involves a low state when the disc is very weak or absent and the associated low amplitude variability is orbitally modulated and a high state when a perturbed disc precesses, giving rise to fast and large amplitude photometric changes. X-ray outbursts in 4u 0115+63 come in pairs, i.e., two in every cycle. However, sometimes the second outburst is missing. Our results can be explained within the framework of the decretion disc model. The neutron star acts as the perturbing body, truncating and distorting the disc. The first outburst would occur before the disc is strongly perturbed. The second outburst leads to the dispersal of the disc and marks the end of the perturbed phase., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Tables 2 and 3 in electronic form only
- Published
- 2006
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37. The Kinematics of S5 1803+784
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Kudryavtseva, N. A., Britzen, S., Witzel, A., Ros, E., Aller, M. F., Aller, H. D., Campbell, R. M., Zensus, J. A., Eckart, A., Roland, J., and Mehta, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a multi-frequency analysis of the structural variability in the parsec-scale jet of the blazar S5 1803+784. More than 90 epochs of observations at 6 frequencies from 1.6 GHz up to 22 GHz have been combined and analyzed. We discuss an alternative jet model for the source. In contrast to previously discussed motion scenarios for S5 1803+784, we find that the jet structure within 12 mas of the core can most easily be described by seven "oscillating" jet features. We find that the parameters of jet features, such as core separation, position angle and flux density, change in a periodic way with a timescale of about 4 years. We also find evidence for a correlation between these parameters and the total flux density variability. We suggest a scenario incorporating a periodic form of motion (e.g. rotation, precession), with a non-negligible geometrical contribution to explain the observational results., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 8th EVN Symposium, Torun September 26-29, 2006
- Published
- 2006
38. Frequency-dependent time delays for strong outbursts in four blazars from the Metsahovi and UMRAO monitoring databases
- Author
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Pyatunina, T. B., Kudryavtseva, N. A., Gabuzda, D. C., Jorstad, S. G., Aller, M. F., Aller, H. D., and Terasranta, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The combined data of the University of Michigan Radio Astronomy Observatory and Metsahovi Radio Observatory provide us with radio light curves for Active Galactic Nuclei monitored by both observatories from 4.8 to 37 GHz covering time intervals up to ~25 years. We consider here such composite light curves for four gamma-ray blazars that have been nearly continuously monitored at both observatories: 0458-020, 0528+134, 1730-130 and 2230+114. We have decomposed the most prominent outbursts in the light curves of these four blazars into individual components using Gaussian model fitting, and estimated the epochs, amplitudes, and half-widths of these components as functions of frequency. We attempt to distinguish "core outbursts", which show frequency-dependent time delays and are associated with brightening of the core, from "jet outbursts", which appear nearly synchronously at all frequencies and are accompanied by the emergence of new jet components and their subsequent evolution. Available 43 GHz VLBA images allow us to identify only one pure core outburst (in 2230+114) and one pure jet outburst (0458-020). Most of the outbursts analyzed are mixed, in the sense that they display frequency-dependent time delays (i.e., they are optically thick) and are associated with the eventual emergence of new jet components. The maxima of the jet and mixed outbursts probably correspond to epochs when newly ejected components become fully optically thin. These epochs are also marked by a significant increase in the angular velocities of the ejected components. There is evidence that the outbursts in 2230+114 repeat every 8.0+-0.3 years, with the positions of individual sub-outbursts being preserved from one quasi-periodic eight-year cycle to another, even though their amplitudes vary by more than a factor of two., Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2006
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39. A search for periodicity in the light curves of selected blazars
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Kudryavtseva, N. A. and Pyatunina, T. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of multifrequency light curves of the sources 2223-052 (3C 446), 2230+114 (CTA 102), and 2251+158 (3C 454.3), which had shown evidence of quasi-periodic activity. The analysis made use of data from the University of Michican Radio Astronomy Observatory (USA) at 4.8, 8, and 14.5 GHz, as well as the Metsahovi Radio Astronomy Observatory (Finland) at 22 and 37 GHz. Application of two different methods (the discrete autocorrelation function and the method of Jurkevich) both revealed evidence for periodicity in the flux variations of these sources at essentially all frequencies. The periods derived for at least two of the sources -- 2223-052 and 2251+158-- are in good agreement with the time interval between the appearance of successive VLBI components. The derived periods for 2251+158 (P = 12.4 yr and 2223-052 (P = 5.8 yr) coincide with the periods found earlier by other authors based on optical light curves., Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy Reports
- Published
- 2005
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40. Analysis of Strong Outbursts in Selected Blazars from the Metsahovi and UMRAO Monitoring Databases
- Author
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Pyatunina, T. B., Kudryavtseva, N. A., Gabuzda, D. C., Jorstad, S. G., Aller, M. F., Aller, H. D., and Terasranta, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Frequency-dependent time lags for strong outbursts in four gamma-blazars are determined. The time lags for two adjacent outbursts in 2230+114 are correlated with the outburst amplitudes. There is evidence that bright outbursts in 2230+114 appear with a quasi-period of (8.0 +- 0.3) yr., Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, to appear in "Future Directions in High Resolution Astronomy: The 10th Anniversary of the VLBA" J.D. Romney & M.J. Reid (eds.)
- Published
- 2005
41. Immunopathology of Mixed Anxiety/Depression Disorders: An Experimental Approach to Studies of Immunodeficiency States (review)
- Author
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Kudryavtseva, N. N., Shurlygina, A. V., Galyamina, A. G., Smagin, D. A., Kovalenko, I. L., Popova, N. A., Nikolin, V. P., Ilnitskaya, S. I., Melnikova, E. V., and Trufakin, V. A.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. ON THE CONVERGENCE OF MAPPINGS WITH k-FINITE DISTORTION.
- Author
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Kudryavtseva N . A . and Vodopyanov S . K .
- Subjects
mapping with k-finite distortion ,distortion coefficient ,passing to the limit ,differential form ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
We prove that a locally uniform limit of a sequence of homeomorphisms with finite k-distortion is also a mapping with finite k-distortion. We obtain also an estimation for the distortion coefficient of the limit mapping.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Interaction of Depression and Anxiety in the Development of Mixed Anxiety/Depression Disorder. Experimental Studies of the Mechanisms of Comorbidity (review)
- Author
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Galyamina, A. G., Kovalenko, I. L., Smagin, D. A., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Serotonergic genes in the development of anxiety/depression-like state and pathology of aggressive behavior in male mice: RNA-seq data
- Author
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Kudryavtseva, N. N., Smagin, D. A., Kovalenko, I. L., Galyamina, A. G., Vishnivetskaya, G. B., Babenko, V. N., and Orlov, Yu. L.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Assessment of digitalization and technological development of VTB Bank (PJSC) in the form of an ecosystem
- Author
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Popov, A. V., primary, Kudryavtseva, N. N., additional, Pakhomova, J. V., additional, and Duvanova, J. N., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Role of proteolytic enzymes in the interaction of phytopathogenic microorganisms with plants
- Author
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Valueva, T. A., Zaichik, B. Ts., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Changes in the Social Behavior of Male CBA/Lac Mice in Response to Agonistic Interactions
- Author
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Kovalenko, I. L. and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Simulation of the investment multiplier mechanism
- Author
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Kudryavtseva, N. N., primary, Pakhomova, Y. V., additional, and Duvanova, Y. N., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effects of Roncoleukin on Measures of Immunity and the Anxious-Depressive State Induced by Chronic Social Stress in Male Mice
- Author
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Shurlygina, A. V., Galyamina, A. G., Mel’nikova, E. V., Panteleeva, N. G., Tenditnik, M. V., Trufakin, V. A., and Kudryavtseva, N. N.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Aggressive behavior: Genetic and physiological mechanisms
- Author
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Kudryavtseva, N. N., Markel, A. L., and Orlov, Yu. L.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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