4,433 results on '"Lynch, M."'
Search Results
2. Correction: Palliative care for persons with late-stage Alzheimer’s and related dementias and their caregivers: protocol for a randomized clinical trial
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Toles, M., Kistler, C., Lin, F. C., Lynch, M., Wessell, K., Mitchell, S. L., and Hanson, L. C.
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- 2024
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3. Prospects for precise predictions of $a_\mu$ in the Standard Model
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Colangelo, G., Davier, M., El-Khadra, A. X., Hoferichter, M., Lehner, C., Lellouch, L., Mibe, T., Roberts, B. L., Teubner, T., Wittig, H., Ananthanarayan, B., Bashir, A., Bijnens, J., Blum, T., Boyle, P., Bray-Ali, N., Caprini, I., Calame, C. M. Carloni, Catà, O., Cè, M., Charles, J., Christ, N. H., Curciarello, F., Danilkin, I., Das, D., Deineka, O., Della Morte, M., Denig, A., DeTar, C. E., Dominguez, C. A., Eichmann, G., Fischer, C. S., Gérardin, A., Giusti, D., Golterman, M., Gottlieb, Steven, Gülpers, V., Hagelstein, F., Hayakawa, M., Hermansson-Truedsson, N., Hoid, B. -L., Holz, S., Izubuchi, T., Jüttner, A., Keshavarzi, A., Knecht, M., Kronfeld, A. S., Kubis, B., Kupść, A., Lahert, S., Liu, K. F., Lüdtke, J., Lynch, M., Malaescu, B., Maltman, K., Marciano, W., Marinković, M. K., Masjuan, P., Meyer, H. B., Müller, S. E., Neil, E. T., Passera, M., Pepe, M., Peris, S., Petrov, A. A., Procura, M., Raya, K., Rebhan, A., Risch, A., Rodríguez-Sánchez, A., Roig, P., Sánchez-Puertas, P., Simula, S., Stoffer, P., Stokes, F. M., Sugar, R., Tsang, J. T., van de Water, R. S., Avilés-Casco, A. Vaquero, Venanzoni, G., von Hippel, G. M., and Zhang, Z.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Lattice ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We discuss the prospects for improving the precision on the hadronic corrections to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, and the plans of the Muon $g-2$ Theory Initiative to update the Standard Model prediction., Comment: Contribution to the US Community Study on the Future of Particle Physics (Snowmass 2021)
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- 2022
4. Could the Influence of Monitor Farm Programmes on Practice Change Be BETTER? Lessons from Sheep Farmers and Advisors in Ireland
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Mulkerrins, M. J., Gottstein, M., Gorman, M., Russell, T., Ryan, M., and Lynch, M. B.
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Purpose: To examine the influence of monitor farm programmes on practice change using the Irish BETTER farm sheep programme as a case study. Methodology: A mixed methods approach combining 16 semi-structured and 69 structured interviews with benchmarking data analysis. Findings: Provision of intensive, tailored advice helped support practice change on the participating monitor farms. They increased productivity through changes in management practices, which positively impacted on financial performance. Monitor farmers also positively influenced members of their associated discussion groups to make practice changes. Practical Implications: Practical recommendations for similar programmes are discussed such as the need for different and additional extension approaches to influence and support the adoption of more complex practices and the potential for greater input from farmers into the design and implementation of extension programmes. Theoretical Implications: From a practice change perspective evaluating the influence of a more structured participatory extension programme (PEP) on a participating farmer is easier than the evaluation of the influence of the PEP on the wider farming community, particularly when the evaluation is not incorporated into the original programme design. Originality: Adding to the relatively small number of PEP evaluations in developed countries, the influence of monitor farm programmes on both the monitor farmer and their associated discussion group peers is examined for a wide range of practices using a mixed methods approach.
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- 2023
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5. Palliative care for persons with late-stage Alzheimer’s and related dementias and their caregivers: protocol for a randomized clinical trial
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Toles, M., Kistler, C., Lin, F. C., Lynch, M., Wessell, K., Mitchell, S. L., and Hanson, L. C.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Evolution of a minimal cell
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Moger-Reischer, R. Z., Glass, J. I., Wise, K. S., Sun, L., Bittencourt, D. M. C., Lehmkuhl, B. K., Schoolmaster, Jr, D. R., Lynch, M., and Lennon, J. T.
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- 2023
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7. Capacity Value of Solar Power and Other Variable Generation
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Awara, S., Lynch, M., Pfenninger, S., Schell, K., Sioshansi, R., Staffell, I., Samaan, N., Tindemans, S. H., Wilson, A. L., Zachary, S., Zareipour, H., and Dent, C. J.
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Statistics - Applications - Abstract
This paper reviews methods that are used for adequacy risk assessment considering solar power and for assessment of the capacity value of solar power. The properties of solar power are described as seen from the perspective of the power-system operator, comparing differences in energy availability and capacity factors with those of wind power. Methodologies for risk calculations considering variable generation are surveyed, including the probability background, statistical-estimation approaches, and capacity-value metrics. Issues in incorporating variable generation in capacity markets are described, followed by a review of applied studies considering solar power. Finally, recommendations for further research are presented., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to IEEE TPS
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- 2020
8. Neutron Induced Fission Fragment Angular Distributions, Anisotropy, and Linear Momentum Transfer Measured with the NIFFTE Fission Time Projection Chamber
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Hensle, D., Barker, J. T., Barrett, J. S., Bowden, N. S., Brewster, K. J., Bundgaard, J., Case, Z. Q., Casperson, R. J., Cebra, D. A., Classen, T., Duke, D. L., Fotiadis, N., Gearhart, J, Geppert-Kleinrath, V., Greife, U., Guardincerri, E., Hagmann, C., Heffner, M., Hicks, C. R., Higgins, D., Isenhower, L. D., Kazkaz, K., Kemnitz, A., Kiesling, K. J., King, J., Klay, J. L., Latta, J., Leal, E., Loveland, W., Lynch, M., Magee, J. A., Manning, B., Mendenhall, M. P., Monterial, M., Mosby, S., Oman, G., Prokop, C., Sangiorgio, S., Schmitt, K. T., Seilhan, B., Snyder, L., Tovesson, F., Towell, C. L., Towell, R. S., Towell, T. R., Walsh, N., Watson, T. S., Yao, L., and Younes, W.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The Neutron Induced Fission Fragment Tracking Experiment (NIFFTE) collaboration has performed measurements with a fission time projection chamber (fissionTPC) to study the fission process by reconstructing full three-dimensional tracks of fission fragments and other ionizing radiation. The amount of linear momentum imparted to the fissioning nucleus by the incident neutron can be inferred by measuring the opening angle between the fission fragments. Using this measured linear momentum, fission fragment angular distributions can be converted to the center-of-mass frame for anisotropy measurements. Angular anisotropy is an important experimental observable for understanding the quantum mechanical state of the fissioning nucleus and vital to determining detection efficiency for cross section measurements. Neutron linear momentum transfer to fissioning $^{235}$U, $^{238}$U, and $^{239}$Pu and fission fragment angular anisotropy of $^{235}$U and $^{238}$U as a function of neutron energies in the range 130 keV--250 MeV are presented.
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- 2020
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9. Clinical psychologists' accounts of personal distress experienced within the profession : a discourse analysis
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Lynch, M.
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362.19689 ,Distress ,NHS ,Clinical Psychologists ,mental health professionals ,mental health ,stigma ,help-seekin ,resilience ,Burnout ,continuum model ,othering ,us-and-them - Abstract
This study is concerned with ways that clinical psychologists construct the clinical psychologist's experience of distress, in relation to their professional identity, and the implications these constructions have for their social practices in relation to personal distress. Nine qualified clinical psychologists in practice in the NHS were interviewed using a semi-structured interview approach. Data from these interviews was analysed using a discourse-informed approach to Thematic Analysis. Three overarching themes were formed: psychologist's distress is constructed as part of the human condition, work with distress as a difficult and skilled practice, negotiating dilemmas of professional identity and role. These themes are discussed with reference to the socio-cultural and historical context of the profession of Clinical Psychology. In dialogue with literature and research pertaining to clinical psychologist's distress and help-seeking, and broader aspects of the institutional and professional context. Findings supported the view that the ways contemporary clinical psychologists in the NHS are positioned by language, social practices, and institutions can function to constrain clinical psychologists from talking about personal distress and accessing support. However, findings also indicated that there is scope in the contemporary clinical psychologist professional identity for resistance to discourses and practices that limit space for clinical psychologists to acknowledge their own vulnerability. Implications for Clinical Psychology practice and further research are considered. In conclusion, it is suggested that the acknowledgement of a human vulnerability by clinical psychologists can create the conditions for individual and collective action to respond to distress experienced by clinical psychologists, and their colleagues, in the NHS.
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- 2021
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10. Studies on the novel effects of electron beam treated pollen on colony reproductive output in commercially-reared bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) for mass pollination applications
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Eakins, J., Lynch, M., Carolan, J.C., and Rowan, N.J.
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- 2023
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11. Measurement of the normalized $^{238}$U(n,f)/$^{235}$U(n,f) cross section ratio from threshold to 30 MeV with the fission Time Projection Chamber
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Casperson, R. J., Asner, D. M., Baker, J., Baker, R. G., Barrett, J. S., Bowden, N. S., Brune, C., Bundgaard, J., Burgett, E., Cebra, D. A., Classen, T., Cunningham, M., Deaven, J., Duke, D. L., Ferguson, I., Gearhart, J., Geppert-Kleinrath, V., Greife, U., Grimes, S., Guardincerri, E., Hager, U., Hagmann, C., Heffner, M., Hensle, D., Hertel, N., Higgins, D., Hill, T., Isenhower, L. D., King, J., Klay, J. L., Kornilov, N., Kudo, R., Laptev, A. B., Loveland, W., Lynch, M., Lynn, W. S., Magee, J. A., Manning, B., Massey, T. N., McGrath, C., Meharchand, R., Mendenhall, M. P., Montoya, L., Pickle, N. T., Qu, H., Ruz, J., Sangiorgio, S., Schmitt, K. T., Seilhan, B., Sharma, S., Snyder, L., Stave, S., Tate, A. C., Tatishvili, G., Thornton, R. T., Tovesson, F., Towell, D. E., Towell, R. S., Walsh, N., Watson, S., Wendt, B., Wood, L., Yao, L., and Younes, W.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The normalized $^{238}$U(n,f)/$^{235}$U(n,f) cross section ratio has been measured using the NIFFTE fission Time Projection Chamber from the reaction threshold to $30$~MeV. The fissionTPC is a two-volume MICROMEGAS time projection chamber that allows for full three-dimensional reconstruction of fission-fragment ionization profiles from neutron-induced fission. The measurement was performed at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, where the neutron energy is determined from neutron time-of-flight. The $^{238}$U(n,f)/$^{235}$U(n,f) ratio reported here is the first cross section measurement made with the fissionTPC, and will provide new experimental data for evaluation of the $^{238}$U(n,f) cross section, an important standard used in neutron-flux measurements. Use of a development target in this work prevented the determination of an absolute normalization, to be addressed in future measurements. Instead, the measured cross section ratio has been normalized to ENDF/B-VIII.$\beta$5 at 14.5 MeV.
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- 2018
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12. Remote eye care screening for rural veterans with Technology-based Eye Care Services: A quality improvement project
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Maa, A Y, Wojciechowski, B, Hunt, K, Dismuke, C, Janjua, R, and Lynch, M G
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- 2017
13. Early detection and intervention for young children with early developmental disabilities in Western Uganda: a mixed-methods evaluation
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Sadoo, S., Nalugya, R., Lassman, R., Kohli-Lynch, M., Chariot, G., Davies, H. G., Katuutu, E., Clee, M., Seeley, J., Webb, E. L., Mutoni Vedastine, R., Beckerlegge, F., and Tann, C. J.
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- 2022
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14. Genome-wide surveillance of transcription errors in response to genotoxic stress
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Fritsch, C., Gout, J.-F., Haroon, S., Towheed, A., Chung, C., LaGosh, J., McGann, E., Zhang, X., Song, Y., Simpson, S., Danthi, P. S., Benayoun, B. A., Wallace, D., Thomas, K., Lynch, M., and Vermulst, M.
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- 2021
15. Publisher Correction: Evolution of a minimal cell
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Moger-Reischer, R. Z., Glass, J. I., Wise, K. S., Sun, L., Bittencourt, D. M. C., Lehmkuhl, B. K., Schoolmaster, Jr, D. R., Lynch, M., and Lennon, J. T.
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- 2023
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16. First Season MWA EoR Power Spectrum Results at Redshift 7
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Beardsley, A. P., Hazelton, B. J., Sullivan, I. S., Carroll, P., Barry, N., Rahimi, M., Pindor, B., Trott, C. M., Line, J., Jacobs, Daniel C., Morales, M. F., Pober, J. C., Bernardi, G., Bowman, Judd D., Busch, M. P., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Dillon, Joshua S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, H. S., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, Shiv K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) has collected hundreds of hours of Epoch of Reionization (EoR) data and now faces the challenge of overcoming foreground and systematic contamination to reduce the data to a cosmological measurement. We introduce several novel analysis techniques such as cable reflection calibration, hyper-resolution gridding kernels, diffuse foreground model subtraction, and quality control methods. Each change to the analysis pipeline is tested against a two dimensional power spectrum figure of merit to demonstrate improvement. We incorporate the new techniques into a deep integration of 32 hours of MWA data. This data set is used to place a systematic-limited upper limit on the cosmological power spectrum of $\Delta^2 \leq 2.7 \times 10^4$ mK$^2$ at $k=0.27$ h~Mpc$^{-1}$ and $z=7.1$, consistent with other published limits, and a modest improvement (factor of 1.4) over previous MWA results. From this deep analysis we have identified a list of improvements to be made to our EoR data analysis strategies. These improvements will be implemented in the future and detailed in upcoming publications., Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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17. Low frequency observations of linearly polarized structures in the interstellar medium near the south Galactic pole
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Lenc, Emil, Gaensler, B. M., Sun, X. H., Sadler, E. M., Willis, A. G., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bell, M. E., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Callingham, J. R., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Deshpande, A. A., Dillon, J. S., Dwarkanath, K. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., For, B. -Q., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hancock, P., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jacobs, D. C., Kapinska, A. D., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, H. -S., Kratzenberg, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Morgan, J., Murphy, T., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, S. K., Srivani, K. S., Staveley-Smith, L., Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., Wyithe, J. S. B., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep polarimetric observations at 154 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA), covering 625 deg^2 centered on RA=0 h, Dec=-27 deg. The sensitivity available in our deep observations allows an in-band, frequency-dependent analysis of polarized structure for the first time at long wavelengths. Our analysis suggests that the polarized structures are dominated by intrinsic emission but may also have a foreground Faraday screen component. At these wavelengths, the compactness of the MWA baseline distribution provides excellent snapshot sensitivity to large-scale structure. The observations are sensitive to diffuse polarized emission at ~54' resolution with a sensitivity of 5.9 mJy beam^-1 and compact polarized sources at ~2.4' resolution with a sensitivity of 2.3 mJy beam^-1 for a subset (400 deg^2) of this field. The sensitivity allows the effect of ionospheric Faraday rotation to be spatially and temporally measured directly from the diffuse polarized background. Our observations reveal large-scale structures (~1 deg - 8 deg in extent) in linear polarization clearly detectable in ~2 minute snapshots, which would remain undetectable by interferometers with minimum baseline lengths >110 m at 154 MHz. The brightness temperature of these structures is on average 4 K in polarized intensity, peaking at 11 K. Rotation measure synthesis reveals that the structures have Faraday depths ranging from -2 rad m^-2 to 10 rad m^-2 with a large fraction peaking at ~+1 rad m^-2. We estimate a distance of 51+/-20 pc to the polarized emission based on measurements of the in-field pulsar J2330-2005. We detect four extragalactic linearly polarized point sources within the field in our compact source survey. Based on the known polarized source population at 1.4 GHz and non-detections at 154 MHz, we estimate an upper limit on the depolarization ratio of 0.08 from 1.4 GHz to 154 MHz., Comment: 32 pages, 20 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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18. A High Reliability Survey of Discrete Epoch of Reionization Foreground Sources in the MWA EoR0 Field
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Carroll, P. A., Line, J., Morales, M. F., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Hazelton, B. J., Jacobs, D. C., Pober, J. C., Sullivan, I. S., Webster, R. L., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Dillon, J. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, HS., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., 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, S., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, S. K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Detection of the Epoch of Reionization HI signal requires a precise understanding of the intervening galaxies and AGN, both for instrumental calibration and foreground removal. We present a catalogue of 7394 extragalactic sources at 182 MHz detected in the RA=0 field of the Murchison Widefield Array Epoch of Reionization observation programme. Motivated by unprecedented requirements for precision and reliability we develop new methods for source finding and selection. We apply machine learning methods to self-consistently classify the relative reliability of 9490 source candidates. A subset of 7466 are selected based on reliability class and signal-to-noise ratio criteria. These are statistically cross-matched to four other radio surveys using both position and flux density information. We find 7369 sources to have confident matches, including 90 partially resolved sources that split into a total of 192 sub-components. An additional 25 unmatched sources are included as new radio detections. The catalogue sources have a median spectral index of -0.85. Spectral flattening is seen toward lower frequencies with a median of -0.71 predicted at 182 MHz. The astrometric error is 7 arcsec. compared to a 2.3 arcmin. beam FWHM. The resulting catalogue covers approximately 1400 sq. deg. and is complete to approximately 80 mJy within half beam power. This provides the most reliable discrete source sky model available to date in the MWA EoR0 field for precision foreground subtraction., Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journal on June 30, 2016
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- 2016
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19. The Murchison Widefield Array 21 cm Power Spectrum Analysis Methodology
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Jacobs, Daniel C., Hazelton, B. J., Trott, C. M., Dillon, Joshua S., Pindor, B., Sullivan, I. S., Pober, J. C., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bernardi, G., Bowman, Judd D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, H. S., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Thyagarajan, N., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, Shiv K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the 21 cm power spectrum analysis approach of the Murchison Widefield Array Epoch of Reionization project. In this paper, we compare the outputs of multiple pipelines for the purpose of validating statistical limits cosmological hydrogen at redshifts between 6 and 12. Multiple, independent, data calibration and reduction pipelines are used to make power spectrum limits on a fiducial night of data. Comparing the outputs of imaging and power spectrum stages highlights differences in calibration, foreground subtraction and power spectrum calculation. The power spectra found using these different methods span a space defined by the various tradeoffs between speed, accuracy, and systematic control. Lessons learned from comparing the pipelines range from the algorithmic to the prosaically mundane; all demonstrate the many pitfalls of neglecting reproducibility. We briefly discuss the way these different methods attempt to handle the question of evaluating a significant detection in the presence of foregrounds., Comment: accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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20. First Limits on the 21 cm Power Spectrum during the Epoch of X-ray heating
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Ewall-Wice, A., Dillon, Joshua S., Hewitt, J. N., Loeb, A., Mesinger, A., Neben, A. R., Offringa, A. R., Tegmark, M., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bernardi, G., Bowman, Judd D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Emrich, D., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jacobs, Daniel C., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, HS, Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Line, J, Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, Shiv K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present first results from radio observations with the Murchison Widefield Array seeking to constrain the power spectrum of 21 cm brightness temperature fluctuations between the redshifts of 11.6 and 17.9 (113 and 75 MHz). Three hours of observations were conducted over two nights with significantly different levels of ionospheric activity. We use these data to assess the impact of systematic errors at low frequency, including the ionosphere and radio-frequency interference, on a power spectrum measurement. We find that after the 1-3 hours of integration presented here, our measurements at the Murchison Radio Observatory are not limited by RFI, even within the FM band, and that the ionosphere does not appear to affect the level of power in the modes that we expect to be sensitive to cosmology. Power spectrum detections, inconsistent with noise, due to fine spectral structure imprinted on the foregrounds by reflections in the signal-chain, occupy the spatial Fourier modes where we would otherwise be most sensitive to the cosmological signal. We are able to reduce this contamination using calibration solutions derived from autocorrelations so that we achieve an sensitivity of $10^4$ mK on comoving scales $k\lesssim 0.5 h$Mpc$^{-1}$. This represents the first upper limits on the $21$ cm power spectrum fluctuations at redshifts $12\lesssim z \lesssim 18$ but is still limited by calibration systematics. While calibration improvements may allow us to further remove this contamination, our results emphasize that future experiments should consider carefully the existence of and their ability to calibrate out any spectral structure within the EoR window., Comment: 31 pages, 23 figures, corrected spelling errors in metadata
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- 2016
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21. High-energy sources at low radio frequency: the Murchison Widefield Array view of Fermi blazars
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Giroletti, M., Massaro, F., D'Abrusco, R., Lico, R., Burlon, D., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Morgan, J., Pavlidou, V., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Ewall-Rice, A., Emrich, D., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hindson, L., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Feng, L., Jacobs, D., Kurdryavtseva, 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. R., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., 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 - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Low-frequency radio arrays are opening a new window for the study of the sky, both to study new phenomena and to better characterize known source classes. Being flat-spectrum sources, blazars are so far poorly studied at low radio frequencies. We characterize the spectral properties of the blazar population at low radio frequency compare the radio and high-energy properties of the gamma-ray blazar population, and search for radio counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources. We cross-correlated the 6,100 deg^2 Murchison Widefield Array Commissioning Survey catalogue with the Roma blazar catalogue, the third catalogue of active galactic nuclei detected by Fermi-LAT, and the unidentified members of the entire third catalogue of gamma-ray sources detected by \fermilat. When available, we also added high-frequency radio data from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz catalogue. We find low-frequency counterparts for 186 out of 517 (36%) blazars, 79 out of 174 (45%) gamma-ray blazars, and 8 out of 73 (11%) gamma-ray blazar candidates. The mean low-frequency (120--180 MHz) blazar spectral index is $\langle \alpha_\mathrm{low} \rangle=0.57\pm0.02$: blazar spectra are flatter than the rest of the population of low-frequency sources, but are steeper than at $\sim$GHz frequencies. Low-frequency radio flux density and gamma-ray energy flux display a mildly significant and broadly scattered correlation. Ten unidentified gamma-ray sources have a (probably fortuitous) positional match with low radio frequency sources. Low-frequency radio astronomy provides important information about sources with a flat radio spectrum and high energy. However, the relatively low sensitivity of the present surveys still misses a significant fraction of these objects. Upcoming deeper surveys, such as the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-Sky MWA (GLEAM) survey, will provide further insight into this population., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2016
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22. 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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23. Mitigation policies, community mobility, and COVID-19 case counts in Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, and Singapore
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Hakim, A.J., Victory, K.R., Chevinsky, J.R., Hast, M.A., Weikum, D., Kazazian, L., Mirza, S., Bhatkoti, R., Schmitz, M.M., Lynch, M., and Marston, B.J.
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- 2021
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24. Nature-based social prescribing programmes: opportunities, challenges, and facilitators for implementation
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de Bell, S, Alejandre, J.C., Menzel, C, Sousa-Silva, R, Straka, T, Berzborn, S, Bürck-Gemassmer, M, Dallimer, Martin, Dayson, C, Fisher, Jessica C., Haywood, A, Herrmann, A, Immich, G, Keßler, C.S., Köhler, K, Lynch, M, Marx, V, Michalsen, A, Mudu, P, Napierala, H, Nawrath, M, Pfleger, S, Quitmann, C, Reeves, J.P., Rozario, K, Straff, W, Straff, K, Wendelboe-Nelson, C, Marselle, M., Oh, R.R.Y., Bonn, A, de Bell, S, Alejandre, J.C., Menzel, C, Sousa-Silva, R, Straka, T, Berzborn, S, Bürck-Gemassmer, M, Dallimer, Martin, Dayson, C, Fisher, Jessica C., Haywood, A, Herrmann, A, Immich, G, Keßler, C.S., Köhler, K, Lynch, M, Marx, V, Michalsen, A, Mudu, P, Napierala, H, Nawrath, M, Pfleger, S, Quitmann, C, Reeves, J.P., Rozario, K, Straff, W, Straff, K, Wendelboe-Nelson, C, Marselle, M., Oh, R.R.Y., and Bonn, A
- Abstract
Evidence on the health benefits of spending time in nature has highlighted the importance of provision of blue and green spaces where people live. The potential for health benefits offered by nature exposure, however, extends beyond health promotion to health treatment. Social prescribing links people with health or social care needs to community-based, non-clinical health and social care interventions to improve health and wellbeing. Nature-based social prescribing (NBSP) is a variant that uses the health-promoting benefits of activities carried out in natural environments, such as gardening and walking. Much current NBSP practice has been developed in the UK, and there is increasing global interest in its implementation. This requires interventions to be adapted for different contexts, considering the needs of populations and the structure of healthcare systems. This paper presents results from an expert group participatory workshop involving 29 practitioners, researchers, and policymakers from the UK and Germany's health and environmental sectors. Using the UK and Germany, two countries with different healthcare systems and in different developmental stages of NBSP practice, as case studies, we analysed opportunities, challenges, and facilitators for the development and implementation of NBSP. We identified five overarching themes for developing, implementing, and evaluating NBSP: Capacity Building; Accessibility and Acceptability; Networks and Collaborations; Standardised Implementation and Evaluation; and Sustainability. We also discuss key strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats for each overarching theme to understand how they could be developed to support NBSP implementation. NBSP could offer significant public health benefits using available blue and green spaces. We offer guidance on how NBSP implementation, from wider policy support to the design and evaluation of individual programmes, could be adapted to different contexts. This research could
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- 2024
25. Nature-based social prescribing programmes: opportunities, challenges, and facilitators for implementation
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de Bell, S., Alejandre, J.C., Menzel, C., Sousa-Silva, R., Straka, T.M., Berzborn, S., Bürck-Gemassmer, M., Dallimer, M., Dayson, C., Fisher, J.C., Haywood, A., Herrmann, A., Immich, G., Keßler, C.S., Köhler, K., Lynch, M., Marx, V., Michalsen, A., Mudu, P., Napierala, H., Nawrath, M., Pfleger, S., Quitmann, C., Reeves, J.P., Rozario, Kevin, Straff, W., Walter, K., Wendelboe-Nelson, C., Marselle, M.R., Oh, Rui Ying Rachel, Bonn, Aletta, de Bell, S., Alejandre, J.C., Menzel, C., Sousa-Silva, R., Straka, T.M., Berzborn, S., Bürck-Gemassmer, M., Dallimer, M., Dayson, C., Fisher, J.C., Haywood, A., Herrmann, A., Immich, G., Keßler, C.S., Köhler, K., Lynch, M., Marx, V., Michalsen, A., Mudu, P., Napierala, H., Nawrath, M., Pfleger, S., Quitmann, C., Reeves, J.P., Rozario, Kevin, Straff, W., Walter, K., Wendelboe-Nelson, C., Marselle, M.R., Oh, Rui Ying Rachel, and Bonn, Aletta
- Abstract
Background:Evidence on the health benefits of spending time in nature has highlighted the importance of provision of blue and green spaces where people live. The potential for health benefits offered by nature exposure, however, extends beyond health promotion to health treatment. Social prescribing links people with health or social care needs to community-based, non-clinical health and social care interventions to improve health and wellbeing. Nature-based social prescribing (NBSP) is a variant that uses the health-promoting benefits of activities carried out in natural environments, such as gardening and walking. Much current NBSP practice has been developed in the UK, and there is increasing global interest in its implementation. This requires interventions to be adapted for different contexts, considering the needs of populations and the structure of healthcare systems.Methods:This paper presents results from an expert group participatory workshop involving 29 practitioners, researchers, and policymakers from the UK and Germany’s health and environmental sectors. Using the UK and Germany, two countries with different healthcare systems and in different developmental stages of NBSP practice, as case studies, we analysed opportunities, challenges, and facilitators for the development and implementation of NBSP.Results:We identified five overarching themes for developing, implementing, and evaluating NBSPCapacity Building; Accessibility and Acceptability; Networks and Collaborations; Standardised Implementation and Evaluation; and Sustainability. We also discuss key strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats for each overarching theme to understand how they could be developed to support NBSP implementation.Conclusions:NBSP could offer significant public health benefits using available blue and green spaces. We offer guidance on how NBSP implementation, from wider policy support to the design and evaluation of individual programmes, could be adapted to diffe
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- 2024
26. Quantifying ionospheric effects on time-domain astrophysics with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Loi, Shyeh Tjing, Murphy, Tara, Bell, Martin E., Kaplan, David L., Lenc, Emil, Offringa, Andre R., Hurley-Walker, Natasha, 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 - Abstract
Refraction and diffraction of incoming radio waves by the ionosphere induce time variability in the angular positions, peak amplitudes and shapes of radio sources, potentially complicating the automated cross-matching and identification of transient and variable radio sources. In this work, we empirically assess the effects of the ionosphere on data taken by the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) radio telescope. We directly examine 51 hours of data observed over 10 nights under quiet geomagnetic conditions (global storm index Kp < 2), analysing the behaviour of short-timescale angular position and peak flux density variations of around ten thousand unresolved sources. We find that while much of the variation in angular position can be attributed to ionospheric refraction, the characteristic displacements (10-20 arcsec) at 154 MHz are small enough that search radii of 1-2 arcmin should be sufficient for cross-matching under typical conditions. By examining bulk trends in amplitude variability, we place upper limits on the modulation index associated with ionospheric scintillation of 1-3% for the various nights. For sources fainter than ~1 Jy, this variation is below the image noise at typical MWA sensitivities. Our results demonstrate that the ionosphere is not a significant impediment to the goals of time-domain science with the MWA at 154 MHz., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2015
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27. 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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28. 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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29. An analysis of the halo and relic radio emission from Abell 3376 from Murchison Widefield Array observations
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George, Lijo T., Dwarakanath, K. S., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Hurley-Walker, N., Hindson, L., Kapińska, A. D., Tingay, S. J., Bell, M., Callingham, J. R., For, Bi-Qing, Hancock, P. J., Lenc, E., McKinley, B., Morgan, J., Offringa, A., Procopio, P., Staveley-Smith, L., Wayth, R. B., Wu, Chen, Zheng, Q., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Kaplan, D. L., 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., Waterson, M., Whitney, R. L. Webster A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have carried out multiwavelength observations of the near-by ($z=0.046$) rich, merging galaxy cluster Abell 3376 with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). As a part of the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA survey (GLEAM), this cluster was observed at 88, 118, 154, 188 and 215 MHz. The known radio relics, towards the eastern and western peripheries of the cluster, were detected at all the frequencies. The relics, with a linear extent of $\sim$ 1 Mpc each, are separated by $\sim$ 2 Mpc. Combining the current observations with those in the literature, we have obtained the spectra of these relics over the frequency range 80 -- 1400 MHz. The spectra follow power laws, with $\alpha$ = $-1.17\pm0.06$ and $-1.37\pm0.08$ for the west and east relics, respectively ($S \propto \nu^{\alpha}$). Assuming the break frequency to be near the lower end of the spectrum we estimate the age of the relics to be $\sim$ 0.4 Gyr. No diffuse radio emission from the central regions of the cluster (halo) was detected. The upper limit on the radio power of any possible halo that might be present in the cluster is a factor of 35 lower than that expected from the radio power and X-ray luminosity correlation for cluster halos. From this we conclude that the cluster halo is very extended ($>$ 500 kpc) and/or most of the radio emission from the halo has decayed. The current limit on the halo radio power is a factor of ten lower than the existing upper limits with possible implications for models of halo formation., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
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- 2015
30. GLEAM: The GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA survey
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Wayth, R. B., Lenc, E., Bell, M. E., Callingham, J. R., Dwarakanath, K. S., Franzen, T. M. O., For, B. -Q., Gaensler, B., Hancock, P., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, N., Jackson, C. A., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kapinska, A. D., McKinley, B., Morgan, J., Offringa, A. R., Procopio, P., Staveley-Smith, L., Wu, C., Zheng, Q., Trott, C. M., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Kaplan, D. L., 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., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
GLEAM, the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA survey, is a survey of the entire radio sky south of declination +25 deg at frequencies between 72 and 231 MHz, made with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) using a drift scan method that makes efficient use of the MWA's very large field-of-view. We present the observation details, imaging strategies and theoretical sensitivity for GLEAM. The survey ran for two years, the first year using 40 kHz frequency resolution and 0.5 s time resolution; the second year using 10 kHz frequency resolution and 2 s time resolution. The resulting image resolution and sensitivity depends on observing frequency, sky pointing and image weighting scheme. At 154 MHz the image resolution is approximately 2.5 x 2.2/cos(DEC+26.7) arcmin with sensitivity to structures up to ~10 deg in angular size. We provide tables to calculate the expected thermal noise for GLEAM mosaics depending on pointing and frequency and discuss limitations to achieving theoretical noise in Stokes I images. We discuss challenges, and their solutions, that arise for GLEAM including ionospheric effects on source positions and linearly polarised emission, and the instrumental polarisation effects inherent to the MWA's primary beam., Comment: 17 pages, 7 Figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia (PASA)
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- 2015
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31. Foregrounds in Wide-Field Redshifted 21 cm Power Spectra
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Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Jacobs, Daniel C., Bowman, Judd D., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bernardi, G., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Dillon, Joshua S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, Han-Seek, Kittiwisit, P., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, Sourabh, Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, Shiv K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tegmark, M., Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Detection of 21~cm emission of HI from the epoch of reionization, at redshifts z>6, is limited primarily by foreground emission. We investigate the signatures of wide-field measurements and an all-sky foreground model using the delay spectrum technique that maps the measurements to foreground object locations through signal delays between antenna pairs. We demonstrate interferometric measurements are inherently sensitive to all scales, including the largest angular scales, owing to the nature of wide-field measurements. These wide-field effects are generic to all observations but antenna shapes impact their amplitudes substantially. A dish-shaped antenna yields the most desirable features from a foreground contamination viewpoint, relative to a dipole or a phased array. Comparing data from recent Murchison Widefield Array observations, we demonstrate that the foreground signatures that have the largest impact on the HI signal arise from power received far away from the primary field of view. We identify diffuse emission near the horizon as a significant contributing factor, even on wide antenna spacings that usually represent structures on small scales. For signals entering through the primary field of view, compact emission dominates the foreground contamination. These two mechanisms imprint a characteristic "pitchfork" signature on the "foreground wedge" in Fourier delay space. Based on these results, we propose that selective down-weighting of data based on antenna spacing and time can mitigate foreground contamination substantially by a factor ~100 with negligible loss of sensitivity., Comment: Published in ApJ
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- 2015
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32. An Upgrade Proposal from the PHENIX Collaboration
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Adare, A., Afanasiev, S., Aidala, C., Ajitanand, N. N., Akiba, Y., Akimoto, R., Alexander, J., Aoki, K., Apadula, N., Asano, H., Atomssa, E. T., Awes, T. C., Azmoun, B., Babintsev, V., Bai, M., Bai, X., Bandara, N., Bannier, B., Barish, K. N., Baron, O., Bassalleck, B., Bathe, S., Baublis, V., Baumgart, S., Bazilevsky, A., Beaumier, M., Beckman, S., Belmont, R., Benjamin, G., Berdnikov, A., Berdnikov, Y., Blackburn, J., Blau, D. S., Bobrek, M., Bok, J., Boose, S., Boyle, K., Britton, Jr., C. L., Brooks, M. L., Bryslawskyj, J., Bumazhnov, V., Butler, C., Butsyk, S., Campbell, S., Carollo, A., Chai, J. -S., Chen, C. -H., Chernichenko, S., Chi, C. Y., Chiu, M., Choi, I. J., Choi, J. B., Choi, S., Chollet, S., Christiansen, P., Chujo, T., Cianciolo, V., Citron, Z., Cole, B. A., Cronin, N., Crossett, N., Csanád, M., D'Orazio, L., Dairaku, S., Danley, D., Datta, A., Daugherity, M. S., David, G., DeBlasio, K., Debraine, A., Dehmelt, K., Denisov, A., Deshpande, A., Desmond, E. J., Dietzsch, O., Ding, L., Dion, A., Diss, P. B., Do, J. H., Donadelli, M., Drapier, O., Drees, A., Drees, K. A., Durham, J. M., Durum, A., Eberle, L., Efremenko, Y. V., Engelmore, T., Enokizono, A., Esumi, S., Eyser, K. O., Fadem, B., Feege, N., Fields, D. E., Finger, M., FingerJr., M., Fleuret, F., Fokin, S. L., Frantz, J. E., Franz, A., Frawley, A. D., Fukao, Y., Fusayasu, T., Gainey, K., Gal, C., Gallus, P., Garg, P., Garishvili, A., Garishvili, I., Gastaldi, F., Ge, H., Giannotti, P., Giordarno, F., Glenn, A., Gong, X., Gonin, M., Goto, Y., de Cassagnac, R. Granier, Grau, N., Greene, S. V., Perdekamp, M. Grosse, Gu, Y., Gunji, T., Guragain, H., Hachiya, T., Haggerty, J. S., Hahn, K. I., Hamagaki, H., Hamilton, H. F., Han, S. Y., Hanks, J., Hasegawa, S., Haseler, T. O. S., Hashimoto, K., Hayano, R., Hayashi, S., He, X., Hemmick, T. K., Hester, T., Hill, J. C., Hoefferkamp, M., Hollis, R. S., Homma, K., Hong, B., Hori, Y., Hoshino, T., Huang, J., Huang, S., Hutchins, J. R., Ichihara, T., Ikeda, Y., Imai, K., Imazu, Y., Imrek, J., Inaba, M., Iordanova, A., Isenhower, D., Isinhue, A., Isupov, A., Ivanischev, D., Ivanov, V., Jacak, B. V., Jeon, S. J., Jezghani, M., Jia, J., Jiang, X., Johnson, B. M., Joo, K. S., Jouan, D., Jumper, D. S., Kamin, J., Kanda, S., Kang, B. H., Kang, J. H., Kang, J. S., Kapustinsky, J., Karatsu, K., Kawall, D., Kazantsev, A. V., Kehayias, H. -J., Key, J. A., Khachatryan, V., Khandai, P. K., Khanzadeev, A., Kijima, K. M., Kim, C., Kim, D. H., Kim, D. J., Kim, E. -J., Kim, H. J., Kim, K. -B., Kim, M., Kim, Y. -J., Kim, Y. K., Kimelman, B., Kiss, Á., Kistenev, E., Kitamura, R., Klatsky, J., Kleinjan, D., Kline, P., Koblesky, T., Kochenda, L., Kofarago, M., Komatsu, Y., Komkov, B., Koster, J., Kotchetkov, D., Kotov, D., Kravtsov, P., Krizek, F., Kurita, K., Kuriyama, M., Kurosawa, M., Kwon, Y., Lacey, R., Lai, Y. S., Lajoie, J. G., Lebedev, A., Lee, G. H., Lee, J., Lee, K. B., Lee, K. S., Lee, S., Lee, S. H., Lefferts, R., Leitch, M. J., Leite, M. A. L., Leitgab, M., Lewis, B., Li, X., Lim, S. H., Lipski, A., Litvinenko, A., Liu, M. X., Love, B., Lynch, D., Lynch, M., Maguire, C. F., Makdisi, Y. I., Makek, M., Malakhov, A., Manion, A., Manko, V. I., Mannel, E., Maruyama, T., Masumoto, S., McCumber, M., McGaughey, P. L., McGlinchey, D., McKay, R., McKinney, C., Meles, A., Mendoza, M., Menegasso, R., Meredith, B., Miake, Y., Mibe, T., Mignerey, A. C., Milov, A., Mishra, D. K., Mitchell, J. T., Miyasaka, S., Mizuno, S., Mohanty, A. K., Montuenga, P., Moon, T., Morrison, D. P., Moskowitz, M., Motschwiller, S., Moukhanova, T. V., Murakami, T., Murata, J., Mwai, A., Nagae, T., Nagamiya, S., Nagashima, K., Nagle, J. L., Nagy, M. I., Nakagawa, I., Nakagomi, H., Nakamiya, Y., Nakamura, K. R., Nakamura, T., Nakano, K., Nattrass, C., Nederlof, A., Netrakanti, P. K., Nihashi, M., Niida, T., Ninomiya, K., Nishimura, S., Northacker, D., Nouicer, R., Novak, T., Novitzky, N., Nukariya, A., Nyanin, A. S., O'Brien, E., Ogilvie, C. A., Oide, H., Okada, K., Koop, J. D. Orjuela, Osborn, J. D., Oskarsson, A., Österman, L., Ozawa, K., Pancake, C., Pantuev, V., Papavassiliou, V., Park, I. H., Park, J. S., Park, S., Park, S. K., Pate, S. F., Patel, L., Patel, M., Peng, J. -C., Perepelitsa, D., Perera, G. D. N., Peresedov, V., Peressounko, D. Yu., Perry, J., Petti, R., Pinkenburg, C., Pinson, R., Pisani, R. P., Popule, J., Purschke, M. L., Qu, H., Radhakrishnan, S., Rak, J., Ramson, B. J., Ravinovich, I., Read, K. F., Reynolds, D., Reynolds, R., Riabov, V., Riabov, Y., Richardson, E., Rinn, T., Riveli, N., Roach, D., Rolnick, S. D., Rosati, M., Roschin, E., Rowan, Z., Rubin, J. G., Rukoyatkin, P., Ryu, M. S., Safonov, A., Sahlmueller, B., Saito, N., Sakaguchi, T., Sako, H., Samsonov, V., Sano, M., Sarsour, M., Sato, S., Sawada, S., Schaefer, B., Schmoll, B. K., Sedgwick, K., Seele, J., Seidl, R., Sekiguchi, Y., Sen, A., Seto, R., Sett, P., Sexton, A., Shafto, E., Sharma, D., Shaver, A., Shein, I., Shibata, T. -A., Shigaki, K., Shimomura, M., Shoji, K., Shukla, P., Sicho, P., Sickles, A., Silva, C. L., Silvermyr, D., Singh, B. K., Singh, C. P., Singh, V., Sippach, F. W., Skolnik, M., Snowball, M., Solano, S., Soldatov, A., Soltz, R. A., Sondheim, W. E., Sorensen, S. P., Soumya, M., Sourikova, I. V., Stankus, P. W., Steinberg, P., Stenlund, E., Stepanov, M., Ster, A., Stevens, L., Stoll, S. P., Stone, M. R., Sugitate, T., Sukhanov, A., Sumita, T., Sun, J., Sziklai, J., Takagui, E. M., Takahara, A., Taketani, A., Tanaka, Y., Tanida, K., Tannenbaum, M. J., Tarafdar, S., Taranenko, A., Tarján, P., Tate, A., Tennant, E., Thorsland, E., Tieulent, R., Timilsina, A., Todoroki, T., Torii, H., Towell, C., Towell, R., Towell, R. S., Trofimov, V., Tserruya, I., Tsuji, T., Tullo, A., van Hecke, H. W., Vargyas, M., Vazquez-Zambrano, E., Veicht, A., Velkovska, J., Vértesi, R., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Vznuzdaev, E., Wang, X. R., Watanabe, D., Watanabe, K., Watanabe, Y., Watanabe, Y. S., Watson, T. S., Wei, F., Wei, R., Whitaker, S., White, A. S., Winter, D., Wolin, S., Woody, C. L., Wysocki, M., Xia, B., Xue, L., Yalcin, S., Yamaguchi, Y. L., Yang, R., Yanovich, A., Yokkaichi, S., Yoo, J. H., Yoon, I., Young, M., Younus, I., Yu, H., Yushmanov, I. E., Zajc, W. A., Zarndt, E., Zelenski, A., Zhang, L., Zhou, S., Zolin, L., Zou, L., and Zumberge, C.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
In this document the PHENIX collaboration proposes a major upgrade to the PHENIX detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. This upgrade, sPHENIX, enables an extremely rich jet and beauty quarkonia physics program addressing fundamental questions about the nature of the strongly coupled quark-gluon plasma (QGP), discovered experimentally at RHIC to be a perfect fluid. The startling dynamics of the QGP on fluid-like length scales is an emergent property of quantum chromodynamics (QCD), seemingly implicit in the Lagrangian but stubbornly hidden from view. QCD is an asymptotically free theory, but how QCD manifests as a strongly coupled fluid with specific shear viscosity near $T_C$, as low as allowed by the uncertainty principle, is as fundamental an issue as that of how confinement itself arises., Comment: 476 authors, 237 pages, lists of figures and tables, 219 references
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- 2015
33. 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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34. The High Time and Frequency Resolution Capabilities of the Murchison Widefield Array
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Tremblay, S. E., Ord, S. M., Bhat, N. D. R., Tingay, S. J., Crosse, B., Pallot, D., Oronsaye, S. I., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Prabu, T., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., 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 - Abstract
The science cases for incorporating high time resolution capabilities into modern radio telescopes are as numerous as they are compelling. Science targets range from exotic sources such as pulsars, to our Sun, to recently detected possible extragalactic bursts of radio emission, the so-called fast radio bursts (FRBs). Originally conceived purely as an imaging telescope, the initial design of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) did not include the ability to access high time and frequency resolution voltage data. However, the flexibility of the MWA's software correlator allowed an off-the-shelf solution for adding this capability. This paper describes the system that records the 100 micro-second and 10 kHz resolution voltage data from the MWA. Example science applications, where this capability is critical, are presented, as well as accompanying commissioning results from this mode to demonstrate verification., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2015
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35. The Spectral Variability of the GHz-Peaked Spectrum Radio Source PKS 1718-649 and a Comparison of Absorption Models
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Tingay, S. J., Macquart, J. -P., Collier, J. D., Rees, G., Callingham, J. R., Stevens, J., Carretti, E., Wayth, R. B., Wong, G. F., Trott, C. M., McKinley, B., 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., Kaplan, D. L., 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., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Using the new wideband capabilities of the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), we obtain spectra for PKS 1718-649, a well-known gigahertz-peaked spectrum radio source. The observations, between approximately 1 and 10 GHz over three epochs spanning approximately 21 months, reveal variability both above the spectral peak at ~3 GHz and below the peak. The combination of the low and high frequency variability cannot be easily explained using a single absorption mechanism, such as free-free absorption or synchrotron self-absorption. We find that the PKS 1718-649 spectrum and its variability are best explained by variations in the free-free optical depth on our line-of-sight to the radio source at low frequencies (below the spectral peak) and the adiabatic expansion of the radio source itself at high frequencies (above the spectral peak). The optical depth variations are found to be plausible when X-ray continuum absorption variability seen in samples of Active Galactic Nuclei is considered. We find that the cause of the peaked spectrum in PKS 1718-649 is most likely due to free-free absorption. In agreement with previous studies, we find that the spectrum at each epoch of observation is best fit by a free-free absorption model characterised by a power-law distribution of free-free absorbing clouds. This agreement is extended to frequencies below the 1 GHz lower limit of the ATCA by considering new observations with Parkes at 725 MHz and 199 MHz observations with the newly operational Murchison Widefield Array. These lower frequency observations argue against families of absorption models (both free-free and synchrotron self-absorption) that are based on simple homogenous structures., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal
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- 2014
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36. The prevalence of Human polyomavirus 2 (HPyV2) antibody positivity in psoriasis patients
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Molloy, OE, Malara, A, Hassan, J, Lynch, M, Clowry, J, Hedman, K, De Gascun, CF, and Kirby, B
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- 2020
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37. 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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38. Limits on low frequency radio emission from southern exoplanets with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Murphy, Tara, Bell, Martin E., Kaplan, David L., Gaensler, B. M., Offringa, Andre R., Lenc, Emil, Hurley-Walker, Natasha, Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., 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, D. 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 - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a survey for low frequency radio emission from 17 known exoplanetary systems with the Murchison Widefield Array. This sample includes 13 systems that have not previously been targeted with radio observations. We detected no radio emission at 154 MHz, and put 3 sigma upper limits in the range 15.2-112.5 mJy on this emission. We also searched for circularly polarised emission and made no detections, obtaining 3 sigma upper limits in the range 3.4-49.9 mJy. These are comparable with the best low frequency radio limits in the existing literature and translate to luminosity limits of between 1.2 x 10^14 W and 1.4 x 10^17 W if the emission is assumed to be 100% circularly polarised. These are the first results from a larger program to systematically search for exoplanetary emission with the MWA., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Updated author list from last revision
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- 2014
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39. 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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40. 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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41. The low-frequency characteristics of PSR J0437-4715 observed with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Bhat, N. D. Ramesh, Ord, S. M., Tremblay, S. E., Tingay, S. J., Deshpande, Avinash, van Straten, W., Oronsaye, S., Bernardi, G., Bowman, Judd, Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, Brian, Emerich, D., Goeke, R, Greenhill, Lincoln, Hazelton, Bryna, Hewitt, Jacqueline N., Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie, Kaplan, David, Kasper, Justin, Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, Miguel, Morgan, Edward H., Oberoi, Divya, Prabu, Thayagaraja, Rogers, Alan E. E., Roshi, D. A., Udayashankar, N., Srivani, K. S., Subramanyan, R., Waterson, M., Wayth, Randall, Webster, Rachel, Whitney, Alan, Williams, A., and Wiliams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the detection of the millisecond pulsar PSR J0437-4715 with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) at a frequency of 192 MHz. Our observations show rapid modulations of pulse intensity in time and frequency that arise from diffractive scintillation effects in the interstellar medium (ISM), as well as prominent drifts of intensity maxima in the time-frequency plane that arise from refractive effects. Our analysis suggests that the scattering screen is located at a distance of $\sim$80-120 pc from the Sun, in disagreement with a recent claim that the screen is closer ($\sim$10 pc). Comparisons with higher frequency data from Parkes reveals a dramatic evolution of the pulse profile with frequency, with the outer conal emission becoming comparable in strength to that from the core and inner conal regions. As well as demonstrating high time resolution science capabilities currently possible with the MWA, our observations underscore the potential to conduct low-frequency investigations of timing-array millisecond pulsars, which may lead to increased sensitivity for the detection of nanoHertz gravitational waves via the accurate characterisation of ISM effects., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2014
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42. 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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43. Observing the Sun with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Oberoi, D., Sharma, R., Bhatnagar, S., Lonsdale, C. J., Matthews, L. D., Cairns, I. H., Tingay, S. J., Benkevitch, L., Donea, A., White, S. M., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A., Emrich, D., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Salah, J. E., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., William, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Sun has remained a difficult source to image for radio telescopes, especially at the low radio frequencies. Its morphologically complex emission features span a large range of angular scales, emission mechanisms involved and brightness temperatures. In addition, time and frequency synthesis, the key tool used by most radio interferometers to build up information about the source being imaged is not effective for solar imaging, because many of the features of interest are short lived and change dramatically over small fractional bandwidths. Building on the advances in radio frequency technology, digital signal processing and computing, the kind of instruments needed to simultaneously capture the evolution of solar emission in time, frequency, morphology and polarization over a large spectral span with the requisite imaging fidelity, and time and frequency resolution have only recently begun to appear. Of this class of instruments, the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is best suited for solar observations. The MWA has now entered a routine observing phase and here we present some early examples from MWA observations., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted for the 31st URSI General Assembly and Scientific Symposium, to be held in Bejing, China from 16-23, August, 2014
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- 2014
44. Collaborative wildlife disease outbreak investigation and response at Bells Swamp Victoria, February 2023.
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McKimmie, M, Morrow, HJ, Hawes, MC, Robins, A, Lynch, M, Bodley, K, Ryan, F, Cox‐Witton, K, Death, C, and Whiteley, P
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WILDLIFE diseases ,SYMPTOMS ,WILDLIFE rehabilitation ,REPORTING of diseases ,DISEASE outbreaks - Abstract
In February 2023, a report of morbidity and mortality in waterbirds triggered a collaborative regional wildlife disease outbreak investigation and response, led by Parks Victoria. Triage, rehabilitation and diagnosis of sick and dead birds were undertaken by Zoos Victoria (ZV), Agriculture Victoria, Vets for Compassion, Wildlife Victoria and Melbourne Veterinary School (MVS). The field response focused on collection of sick and dead birds for wildlife welfare, for diagnosis, and to reduce environmental contamination. Botulism was suspected, based on clinical signs and lack of significant gross pathology, and this diagnosis was confirmed by PCR testing. Low pathogenicity avian influenza (LPAI) viruses non H5 or H7 were detected in two birds and ruled out in all in others tested. These incidental, non‐clinical LPAI detections are considered part of the natural wild bird virus community in Australia. A number of elements contributed to the collaborative effort. Regional individuals had the necessary connections for reporting, collecting and transporting birds. There was rapid determination by the Victorian Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) that Parks Victoria, as the land managers, should lead the response. Zoos Victoria provided capacity and expertise in wildlife triage and rehabilitation, and Agriculture Victoria, ZV and MVS were responsible for veterinary management of the response and diagnosis. Field investigation and response were conducted by Parks Victoria, Agriculture Victoria, MVS and veterinary teams from Vets for Compassion and Wildlife Victoria. Wildlife Health Australia (WHA) provided guidance and information, approved National Significant Disease Investigation Program funding and captured the event in the national wildlife health information database. Communication and media were important for community understanding of the event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Genome dependent Cas9/gRNA search time underlies sequence dependent gRNA activity
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Moreb, E. A. and Lynch, M. D.
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- 2021
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46. A survey for transients and variables with the Murchison Widefield Array 32-tile prototype at 154 MHz
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Bell, M. E., Murphy, T., Kaplan, D. L., Hancock, P., Gaensler, B. M., Banyer, J., Bannister, K., Trott, C., Hurley-Walker, N., Wayth, R. B., Macquart, J. -P., Arcus, W., Barnes, D., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Bunton, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A., deSouza, L., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Herne, D., Hewitt, J. N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kasper, J. C., Kincaid, B. B., Koenig, R., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pathikulangara, J., Prabu, T., Remillard, R. A., 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 - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a search for transient and variable radio sources at 154 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array 32-tile prototype. Fifty-one images were obtained that cover a field of view of 1430 deg^2 centred on Hydra A. The observations were obtained over three days in 2010 March and three days in 2011 April and May. The mean cadence of the observations was 26 minutes and there was additional temporal information on day and year timescales. We explore the variability of a sample of 105 low frequency radio sources within the field. Four bright (S > 6 Jy) candidate variable radio sources were identified that displayed low levels of short timescale variability (26 minutes). We conclude that this variability is likely caused by simplifications in the calibration strategy or ionospheric effects. On the timescale of one year we find two sources that show significant variability. We attribute this variability to either refractive scintillation or intrinsic variability. No radio transients were identified and we place an upper limit on the surface density of sources rho < 7.5 x 10^-5 deg^-2 with flux densities > 5.5 Jy, and characteristic timescales of both 26 minutes and one year., Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures
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- 2013
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47. The giant lobes of Centaurus A observed at 118 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array
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McKinley, B., Briggs, F., Gaensler, B. M., Feain, I. J., Bernardi, G., Wayth, R. B., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Offringa, A. R., Arcus, W., Barnes, D. G., Bowman, J. D., Bunton, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A., deSouza, L., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Herne, D., Hewitt, J. N., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kincaid, B. B., Koenig, R., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Pathikulangara, J., Prabu, T., Remillard, R. A., 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 - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new wide-field observations of Centaurus A (Cen A) and the surrounding region at 118 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) 32-tile prototype, with which we investigate the spectral-index distribution of Cen A's giant radio lobes. We compare our images to 1.4 GHz maps of Cen A and compute spectral indices using temperature-temperature plots and spectral tomography. We find that the morphologies at 118 MHz and 1.4 GHz match very closely apart from an extra peak in the southern lobe at 118 MHz, which provides tentative evidence for the existence of a southern counterpart to the northern middle lobe of Cen A. Our spatially-averaged spectral indices for both the northern and southern lobes are consistent with previous analyses, however we find significant spatial variation of the spectra across the extent of each lobe. Both the spectral-index distribution and the morphology at low radio frequencies support a scenario of multiple outbursts of activity from the central engine. Our results are consistent with inverse-Compton modelling of radio and gamma-ray data that supports a value for the lobe age of between 10 and 80 Myr., Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2013
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48. 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
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- 2013
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49. A 189 MHz, 2400 square degree polarization survey with the Murchison Widefield Array 32-element prototype
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Bernardi, G., Greenhill, L. J., Mitchell, D. A., Ord, S. M., Hazelton, B. J., Gaensler, B. M., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Morales, M. F., Shankar, N. Udaya, Subrahmanyan, R., Wayth, R. B., Lenc, E., Williams, C. L., Arcus, W., Arora, S. B., Barnes, D. G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F. H., Bunton, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A., deSouza, L., Emrich, D., Goeke, R., Herne, D., Hewitt, J. N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D., Kasper, J. C., Kincaid, B. B., Koenig, R., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Pathikulangara, J., Prabu, T., Remillard, R. A., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Salah, J. E., Sault, R. J., Srivani, K. S., Stevens, J., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a Stokes I, Q and U survey at 189 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array 32-element prototype covering 2400 square degrees. The survey has a 15.6 arcmin angular resolution and achieves a noise level of 15 mJy/beam. We demonstrate a novel interferometric data analysis that involves calibration of drift scan data, integration through the co-addition of warped snapshot images and deconvolution of the point spread function through forward modeling. We present a point source catalogue down to a flux limit of 4 Jy. We detect polarization from only one of the sources, PMN J0351-2744, at a level of 1.8 \pm 0.4%, whereas the remaining sources have a polarization fraction below 2%. Compared to a reported average value of 7% at 1.4 GHz, the polarization fraction of compact sources significantly decreases at low frequencies. We find a wealth of diffuse polarized emission across a large area of the survey with a maximum peak of ~13 K, primarily with positive rotation measure values smaller than +10 rad/m^2. The small values observed indicate that the emission is likely to have a local origin (closer than a few hundred parsecs). There is a large sky area at 2^h30^m where the diffuse polarized emission rms is fainter than 1 K. Within this area of low Galactic polarization we characterize the foreground properties in a cold sky patch at $(\alpha,\delta) = (4^h,-27^\circ.6)$ in terms of three dimensional power spectra, Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. A version with high resolution figures is available at http://www.astro.rug.nl/~bernardi/32T_survey/32T_survey.pdf
- Published
- 2013
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50. The Murchison Widefield Array: solar science with the low frequency SKA Precursor
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Tingay, S. J., Oberoi, D., Cairns, I., Donea, A., Duffin, R., Arcus, W., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Bunton, J. D., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A., deSouza, L., Emrich, D., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Herne, D., Hewitt, J. N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kennewell, J. A., Kincaid, B. B., Koenig, R., Kratzenberg, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Ord, S. M., Pathikulangara, J., Prabu, T., Remillard, R. A, Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Salah, J. E., Sault, R. J., Udaya-Shankar, N., Srivani, K. S., Stevens, J., Subrahmanyan, R., 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 - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array is a low frequency (80 - 300 MHz) SKA Precursor, comprising 128 aperture array elements (known as tiles) distributed over an area of 3 km diameter. The MWA is located at the extraordinarily radio quiet Murchison Radioastronomy Observatory in the mid-west of Western Australia, the selected home for the Phase 1 and Phase 2 SKA low frequency arrays. The MWA science goals include: 1) detection of fluctuations in the brightness temperature of the diffuse redshifted 21 cm line of neutral hydrogen from the epoch of reionisation; 2) studies of Galactic and extragalactic processes based on deep, confusion-limited surveys of the full sky visible to the array; 3) time domain astrophysics through exploration of the variable radio sky; and 4) solar imaging and characterisation of the heliosphere and ionosphere via propagation effects on background radio source emission. This paper concentrates on the capabilities of the MWA for solar science and summarises some of the solar science results to date, in advance of the initial operation of the final instrument in 2013., Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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