4,878 results on '"Marriner, A."'
Search Results
2. Distributable, metabolic PET reporting of tuberculosis
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Khan, R. M. Naseer, Ahn, Yong-Mo, Marriner, Gwendolyn A., Via, Laura E., D’Hooge, Francois, Seo Lee, Seung, Yang, Nan, Basuli, Falguni, White, Alexander G., Tomko, Jaime A., Frye, L. James, Scanga, Charles A., Weiner, Danielle M., Sutphen, Michelle L., Schimel, Daniel M., Dayao, Emmanuel, Piazza, Michaela K., Gomez, Felipe, Dieckmann, William, Herscovitch, Peter, Mason, N. Scott, Swenson, Rolf, Kiesewetter, Dale O., Backus, Keriann M., Geng, Yiqun, Raj, Ritu, Anthony, Daniel C., Flynn, JoAnne L., Barry, III, Clifton E., and Davis, Benjamin G.
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- 2024
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3. The Effects of the Local Environment on a Compact Radio Interferometer I: Cross-coupling in the Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array
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Kwak, Juhun, Podczerwinski, John, Timbie, Peter, Ansari, Réza, Marriner, John, Stebbins, Albert, Wu, Fengquan, Cao, Haotian, Chen, Xuelei, He, Kai, Li, Jixia, Sun, Shijie, and Zhu, Jiacong
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The visibilities measured by radio astronomical interferometers include non-astronomical correlated signals that arise from the local environment of the array. These correlated signals are especially important in compact arrays such as those under development for 21\,cm intensity mapping. The amplitudes of the contaminated visibilities can exceed the expected 21\,cm signal and represent a significant systematic effect. We study the receiver noise radiated by antennas in compact arrays and develop a model for how it couples to other antennas. We apply the model to the Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array (TDPA), a compact array of 16, 6-m dish antennas. The coupling model includes electromagnetic simulations, measurements with a network analyzer, and measurements of the noise of the receivers. We compare the model to drift-scan observations with the array and set requirements on the level of antenna cross-coupling for 21\,cm intensity mapping instruments. We find that for the TDPA, cross-coupling would have to be reduced by TBD orders of magnitude in order to contribute negligibly to the visibilities., Comment: 20 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication by JAI
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- 2023
4. Distribution and environmental drivers of macrofaunal nematode communities across gradients of methane seepage at cold seeps on Hikurangi Margin (New Zealand) and potential implications of disturbance from gas hydrate extraction
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Daniel Leduc, Ashley A. Rowden, Sarah Seabrook, David A. Bowden, Andrew R. Thurber, Jane Halliday, Cliff S. Law, Olivia S. Pereira, Bethany G. Whitten, and Andrew Marriner
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macrofauna ,infauna ,community ecology ,continental slope ,nematode species ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Cold seeps are areas characterised by specialized biological communities that rely on chemosynthesis for their nutrition. To date, research conducted on New Zealand’s Hikurangi Margin seep communities has focused on communities at 650-1200 m water depth. Here, we characterize the macrofaunal nematode communities of New Zealand cold seeps for the first time, and at deeper (> 1200 m) seep locations (Maungaroa, Glendhu and Urutī South). There were no significant difference in nematode abundance, species richness, diversity and evenness among the seep areas, which may reflect the lack of difference in most sediment variables. However, a consistent spatial pattern in nematode abundance was observed within all the seep areas on the Hikurangi Margin: abundance was highest at or near the seep centre, decreased steeply away from the centre and was low in the periphery. These spatially consistent patterns reflect the influence of methane seepage, which appears limited to the inner 150-200 m radius of each area, on nematode abundance via input of chemosynthetic food sources. We found significant differences in nematode community structure among all three areas, with most of the heterogeneity in community structure between the shallow Urutī South area and deeper Maungaroa and Glendhu areas, and differences among nematode communities of high, medium and low abundance associated with site-specific gradients in methane seepage. Within area variability in nematode community structure was mainly correlated with food availability and sediment grain size. Consistent with previous investigations of seep nematodes, we did not find evidence of seep endemics. Although deposit feeders were generally the most abundant feeding group, there were differences in the relative abundances of different feeding groups such as microvores and epigrowth feeders among the seep areas, and as a function of distance from the centre of the seep areas. Impact on seep communities from gas hydrate extraction processes may occur via reduction or potentially cessation of free-gas methane supply to the seafloor, ‘sand’ production at the seafloor due to the physical degradation of the substrate structure, or alteration of the structural integrity of the seafloor substrate. Any spatial management options considered for managing these impacts should reflect the differences in benthic community structure between depths and locations on the Hikurangi Margin.
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- 2025
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5. In-flight radiometric calibration of the ExoMars TGO Colour and Stereo Surface Imaging System
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Pommerol, Antoine, Thomas, Nicolas, Almeida, Miguel, Read, Mattew, Becerra, Patricio, Cesar, Camila, Valantinas, Adomas, Simioni, Emanuele, McEwen, Alfred S., Perry, Jason, Marriner, Charlotte, Munaretto, Giovanni, Pajola, Maurizio, Tornabene, Livio L., Mège, Daniel, Da Deppo, Vania, Re, Cristina, and Cremonese, Gabriele
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Colour and Stereo Surface Science Imaging System (CaSSIS) of the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter returns on average twenty images per day of the Martian surface, most of them in 3 or 4 colours and some of them in stereo. CaSSIS uses a push-frame approach to acquire colour images, with four bandpass filters deposited directly above the sensor and an imaging cadence synchronized with the ground track velocity to cover the imaged area with tens of small, partially overlapping images. These "framelets" are later map-projected and mosaicked to build the final image. This approach offers both advantages and challenges in terms of radiometric calibration. While the collection of dark and flatfield frames is considerably enhanced by the frequent and fast acquisition of tens of successive images, mosaics assembled from the adjacent framelets highlight the straylight and changes in the bias of the detector. Both issues have been identified on CaSSIS images, with low intensities overall (up to a few percents), but sufficient to generate prominent artefacts on the final assembled colour images. We have therefore developed methods to correct these artefacts that are now included into the radiometric calibration pipeline. We detail here the different steps of the calibration procedure and the generation of the products used for calibration, and discuss the efficacy of the corrections. The relative uncertainties on the bias and flatfield frames are low, of the order of 0.2 and 0.1 percents, respectively. The uncertainty on the absolute radiometric calibration is of 3 percents, which is quite low for such an instrument. The straylight adds an estimated about 1 percent error to the absolute calibration. The residuals after corrections of the straylight and bias offsets are of the order of a few DNs to tens of DNs.
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- 2022
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6. Nursing Competencies: Evaluation and Outcome Measures in Psychotherapy
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Woloschuk Gassanova, Sophia, Brulotte, Kaitlin Marriner, Roles, Stacey, editor, and Kalia, Kamini, editor
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- 2024
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7. What Are the Latest Recommendations for Safe Infant Sleep and the Prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome?
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Marriner, Jennifer A., primary
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- 2024
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8. How Can I Promote Sleep Hygiene in My Practice?
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Marriner, Jennifer A., primary
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- 2024
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9. Reconstructing Holocene hydroclimate variability and coastal dynamics of the Nile Delta: A diatom perspective
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Wang, Yanna, Zhou, Jinqing, Zhao, Xiaoshuang, Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Salem, Alaa, Chen, Jing, and Chen, Zhongyuan
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- 2024
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10. The Tianlai dish array low-z surveys forecasts
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Perdereau, Olivier, Ansari, Réza, Stebbins, Albert, Timbie, Peter T., Chen, Xuelei, Wu, Fengquan, Li, Jixia, Marriner, John P., Tucker, Gregory S., Cong, Yanping, Das, Santanu, Li, Yichao, Liu, Yingfeng, Magneville, Christophe, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Phan, Anh, Robinthal, Lily, Sun, Shijie, Wang, Yougang, Wu, Yanlin, Xu, Yidong, Yu, Kaifeng, Yu, Zijie, Zhang, Jiao, Zhang, Juyong, and Zuo, Shifan
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the science case for surveys with the Tianlai dish array interferometer tuned to the $\left[ 1300, 1400 \right] \mathrm{MHz}$ frequency range. Starting from a realistic generation of mock visibility data according to the survey strategy, we reconstruct a map of the sky and perform a foreground subtraction. We show that a survey of the North Celestial Polar cap during a year of observing time and covering an area of $150 \, \mathrm{deg^2}$ would reach a sensitivity of $ 1.5-2 \, \mathrm{mK} $ per $1 \, \mathrm{MHz} \times 0.25^2 \, \mathrm{deg^2 }$ voxel and be marginally impacted by mode-mixing. Tianlai would be able to detect a handful $(\sim 10)$ of nearby massive \HI clumps as well as a very strong cross-correlation signal of 21\,cm intensity maps with the North Celestial Cap Survey optical galaxies. We have also studied the performance of a mid-latitude survey, covering $\sim 1500 \, \mathrm{deg^2}$ centered on a declination of $\delta=55^\circ$, which overlaps the Sloan Digital Sky Survey footprint. Despite a higher noise level for the mid-latitude survey, as well as significant distortions due to mode mixing, Tianlai would be able to detect a highly significant cross-correlation between the 21\,cm signal and the Sloan spectroscopic galaxy sample. Using the extragalactic signals from either or both of these surveys, it will be possible to assess the impact of calibration uncertainties, antenna pattern uncertainties, sources of noise, and mode mixing for future surveys requiring higher sensitivity., Comment: 20 pages, 22 figures. Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2022
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11. Come rain or come shine, the species richness will decline in the Moroccan mountains
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Rachid Cheddadi, David Kaniewski, Nick Marriner, Avner Bar-Hen, and Matthew D. Hurteau
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Plant species richness ,Drought ,Protected areas ,Climate change ,Conservation ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Plant species richness in mountainous regions generally follows a unimodal distribution with lower values at both low and high altitudes in relation to precipitation. In the Atlas mountains, Morocco, plant species richness is currently highest at 800–1200 m elevation, but the extent and altitudinal limits of this species-rich belt have shifted in the past with climate change.Here, we trace the evolution of pollen taxonomic richness (PTR) as a proxy for plant species richness, with the aim of understanding the relationship with climatic changes over the past 19,000 years, and make some assumptions about future changes in species richness. Past PTR was inferred through an analogy with an extensive modern pollen dataset, and past climatic variables were reconstructed from a fossil record collected in the Middle Atlas, Morocco.We found that the current PTR distribution in Morocco is more closely associated with precipitation than with temperature. During the last glacial period, both PTR and annual precipitation were low, and the analogs were located at lower altitudes than the altitude of the fossil record. During the early Holocene, the PTR increased by approximately 15%, and the modern analogs were found approximately 600–800 m higher than the analogs of the last glacial period. After 6000 years BP, we observe a steady decline in annual precipitation of approximately 30%, resulting in a species richness loss of approximately 18% and a retreat of the upper boundary of the species-rich belt.Climate projections suggest that annual precipitation in Northwest Africa will decrease by 20–30% over the next 50 years, an annual amount comparable to that of the last glacial period, but under much warmer conditions and in a significantly shorter time. Such a decline in precipitation could result in an unprecedented loss of plant species richness of approximately 15% in just a few decades and put 35% of the protected areas at risk. The forested mountains above 1600 m could then resemble the treeless and less diverse steppes found at higher altitudes above today's tree line.
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- 2024
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12. SOAR/Goodman Spectroscopic Assessment of Candidate Counterparts of the LIGO-Virgo Event GW190814
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Tucker, Douglas, Wiesner, Matthew, Allam, Sahar, Soares-Santos, Marcelle, de Bom, Clecio, Butner, Melissa, Garcia, Alyssa, Morgan, Robert, Olivares, Felipe, Palmese, Antonella, Santana-Silva, Luidhy, Shrivastava, Anushka, Annis, James, Garcia-Bellido, Juan, Gill, Mandeep, Herner, Kenneth, Kilpatrick, Charles, Makler, Martin, Sherman, Nora, Amara, Adam, Lin, Huan, Smith, Mathew, Swann, Elizabeth, Arcavi, Iair, Bachmann, Tristan, Bechtol, Keith, Berlfein, Federico, Briceno, Cesar, Brout, Dillon, Butler, Bobby, Cartier, Regis, Casares, Jorge, Chen, Hsin-Yu, Conselice, Christopher, Contreras, Carlos, Cook, E., Cooke, Jeff, Dage, Kristen, D'Andrea, Chris, Davis, Tamara, de Carvalho, Reinaldo, Diehl, Tom, Dietrich, Joerg, Doctor, Zoheyr, Drlica-Wagner, Alex, Drout, Maria, Farr, Ben, Finley, David, Fishbach, Maya, Foley, Ryan, Foerster-Buron, Francisco, Fosalba, Pablo, Friedel, Douglas, Frieman, Josh, Frohmaier, Christopher, Gruendl, Robert, Hartley, Will, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Holz, Daniel, Howell, Andy, Kawash, Adam, Kessler, Richard, Kuropatkin, Nikolay, Lahav, Ofer, Lundgren, Andrew, Lundquist, Michael, Malik, Umang, Mann, Andrew, Marriner, John, Marshall, Jennifer, Martinez-Vazquez, Clara, McCully, Curtis, Menanteau, Felipe, Meza, Nico, Narayan, Gautham, Neilsen, Eric, Nicolaou, Constantina, Nichol, Bob, Paz-Chinchon, Francisco, Pereira, Maria, Pineda, Jonathan, Points, Sean, Quirola-Vasquez, Jonathan, Rembold, Sandro, Rest, Armin, Rodriguez, Osmar, Romer, Kathy, Sako, Masao, Salim, Samir, Scolnic, Daniel, Smith, J. Allyn, Strader, Jay, Sullivan, Mark, Swanson, Molly, Thomas, Daniel, Valenti, Stefano, Varga, Tamas Norbert, Walker, Alistair, Weller, Jochen, Wood, Mackenna, Yanny, Brian, Zenteno, Alfredo, Aguena, Michel, Andrade-Oliveira, Felipe, Bertin, Emmanuel, Brooks, David, Burke, David, Rosell, Aurelio Carnero, Kind, Matias Carrasco, Carretero, Jorge, Costanzi, Matteo, da Costa, Luiz, De Vicente, Juan, Desai, Shantanu, Everett, Spencer, Ferrero, Ismael, Flaugher, Brenna, Gaztanaga, Enrique, Gerdes, David, Gruen, Daniel, Gschwend, Julia, Gutierrez, Gaston, Hinton, Samuel, Hollowood, Devon L., Honscheid, Klaus, James, David, Kuehn, Kyler, Lima, Marcos, Maia, Marcio, Miquel, Ramon, Ogando, Ricardo, Pieres, Adriano, Malagon, Andres Plazas, Rodriguez-Monroy, Martin, Sanchez, Eusebio, Scarpine, Vic, Schubnell, Michael, Serrano, Santiago, Sevilla-Noarbe, Ignacio, Suchyta, Eric, Tarle, Gregory, To, Chun-Hao, and Zhang, Yuanyuan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
On 2019 August 14 at 21:10:39 UTC, the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration (LVC) detected a possible neutron star-black hole merger (NSBH), the first ever identified. An extensive search for an optical counterpart of this event, designated GW190814, was undertaken using the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) on the 4m Victor M. Blanco Telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. Target of Opportunity interrupts were issued on 8 separate nights to observe 11 candidates using the 4.1m Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope's Goodman High Throughput Spectrograph in order to assess whether any of these transients was likely to be an optical counterpart of the possible NSBH merger. Here, we describe the process of observing with SOAR, the analysis of our spectra, our spectroscopic typing methodology, and our resultant conclusion that none of the candidates corresponded to the gravitational wave merger event but were all instead other transients. Finally, we describe the lessons learned from this effort. Application of these lessons will be critical for a successful community spectroscopic follow-up program for LVC observing run 4 (O4) and beyond., Comment: 32 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication by ApJ
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- 2021
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13. Holocene Sea-level impacts on Venice Lagoon's coastal wetlands
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Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Vacchi, Matteo, Camuffo, Dario, Bivolaru, Alexandra, Sarti, Giovanni, Bertoni, Duccio, Diatta, Luc, Markakis, Nirefs, Martella, Amedeo, Otto, Thierry, Luce, Frédéric, Calaon, Diego, Cottica, Daniela, and Morhange, Christophe
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- 2024
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14. Holocene palaeoecological archives of Eastern Mediterranean plant diversity: Past, present and future trends
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Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Terral, Jean-Frédéric, Morhange, Christophe, Chen, Zhongyuan, Wang, Yanna, Otto, Thierry, Luce, Frédéric, and Cheddadi, Rachid
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- 2024
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15. Guillermo O’Donnell y su contribución a la teoría de la democracia
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NIÑO, PAOLA MONTILLA, primary and MARRINER, KAREN, additional
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- 2023
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16. Dispersion and fate of methane emissions from cold seeps on Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand
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Cliff S. Law, Charine Collins, A. Marriner, Sarah J. Bury, Julie C. S. Brown, and Graham Rickard
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methane ,hydrates ,hydrodynamic model ,methane oxidation ,continental shelf ,New Zealand ,Science - Abstract
The influence of cold seep methane on the surrounding benthos is well-documented but the fate of dissolved methane and its impact on water column biogeochemistry remains less understood. To address this, the distribution of dissolved methane was determined around three seeps on the south-east Hikurangi Margin, south-east of New Zealand, by combining data from discrete water column sampling and a towed methane sensor. Integrating this with bottom water current flow data in a dynamic Gerris model determined an annual methane flux of 3 x 105 kg at the main seep. This source was then applied in a Regional Ocean Modelling System (ROMS) simulation to visualize lateral transport of the dissolved methane plume, which dispersed over ∼100 km in bottom water within 1 year. Extrapolation of this approach to four other regional seeps identified a combined plume volume of 3,500 km3 and annual methane emission of 0.4–3.2 x 106 kg CH4 y-1. This suggests a regional methane flux of 1.1–10.9 x 107 kg CH4 y-1 for the entire Hikurangi Margin, which is lower than previous hydroacoustic estimates. Carbon stable isotope values in dissolved methane indicated that lateral mixing was the primary determinant of methane in bottom water, with potential methane oxidation rates orders of magnitude lower than the dilution rate. Calculations indicate that oxidation of the annual total methane emitted from the five seeps would not significantly alter bottom water dissolved carbon dioxide, oxygen or pH; however, superimposition of methane plumes from different seeps, which was evident in the ROMS simulation, may have localized impacts. These findings highlight the value of characterizing methane release from multiple seeps within a hydrodynamic model framework to determine the biogeochemical impact, climate feedbacks and connectivity of cold seeps on continental shelf margins.
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- 2024
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17. The Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array: design, operation and performance of a prototype transit radio interferometer
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Wu, Fengquan, Li, Jixia, Zuo, Shifan, Chen, Xuelei, Das, Santanu, Marriner, John P., Oxholm, Trevor M., Phan, Anh, Stebbins, Albert, Timbie, Peter T., Ansari, Reza, Campagne, Jean-Eric, Chen, Zhiping, Cong, Yanping, Huang, Qizhi, Li, Yichao, Liu, Tao, Liu, Yingfeng, Niu, Chenhui, Osinga, Calvin, Perdereau, Olivier, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Shi, Huli, Siebert, Gage, Sun, Shijie, Tian, Haijun, Tucker, Gregory S., Wang, Qunxiong, Wang, Rongli, Wang, Yougang, Wu, Yanlin, Xu, Yidong, Yu, Kaifeng, Yu, Zijie, Zhang, Jiao, Zhang, Juyong, and Zhu, Jialu
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array is a radio interferometer designed to test techniques for 21~cm intensity mapping in the post-reionization universe as a means for measuring large-scale cosmic structure. It performs drift scans of the sky at constant declination. We describe the design, calibration, noise level, and stability of this instrument based on the analysis of about $\sim 5 \%$ of 6,200 hours of on-sky observations through October, 2019. Beam pattern determinations using drones and the transit of bright sources are in good agreement, and compatible with electromagnetic simulations. Combining all the baselines, we make maps around bright sources and show that the array behaves as expected. A few hundred hours of observations at different declinations have been used to study the array geometry and pointing imperfections, as well as the instrument noise behaviour. We show that the system temperature is below 80~K for most feed antennas, and that noise fluctuations decrease as expected with integration time, at least up to a few hundred seconds. Analysis of long integrations, from 10 nights of observations of the North Celestial Pole, yielded visibilities with amplitudes of 20-30~mK, consistent with the expected signal from the NCP radio sky with $<10\,$mK precision for $1 ~\mathrm{MHz} \times 1~ \mathrm{min}$ binning. Hi-pass filtering the spectra to remove smooth spectrum signal yields a residual consistent with zero signal at the $0.5\,$mK level., Comment: 30 pages, 38 figures
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- 2020
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18. Constraints on the Physical Properties of GW190814 through Simulations based on DECam Follow-up Observations by the Dark Energy Survey
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Morgan, R., Soares-Santos, M., Annis, J., Herner, K., Garcia, A., Palmese, A., Drlica-Wagner, A., Kessler, R., Garcia-Bellido, J., Sherman, T. G. Bachmann N., Allam, S., Bechtol, K., Bom, C. R., Brout, D., Butler, R. E., Butner, M., Cartier, R., Chen, H., Conselice, C., Cook, E., Davis, T. M., Doctor, Z., Farr, B., Figueiredo, A. L., Finley, D. A., Foley, R. J., Galarza, J. Y., Gill, M. S. S., Gruendl, R. A., Holz, D. E., Kuropatkin, N., Lidman, C., Lin, H., Malik, U., Mann, A. W., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martinez-Vazquez, C. E., Meza, N., Neilsen, E., Nicolaou, C., E., F. Olivares, Paz-Chinchon, F., Points, S., Quirola, J., Rodriguez, O., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sobreira, F., Tucker, D. L., Vivas, A. K., Wiesner, M., Wood, M. L., Yanny, B., Zenteno, A., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Avila, S., Bertin, E., Bhargava, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Costanzi, M., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Eifler, T. F., Everett, S., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Gruen, D., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., March, M., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Plazas, A. A., Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., and Tarle, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
On 14 August 2019, the LIGO and Virgo Collaborations detected gravitational waves from a black hole and a 2.6 solar mass compact object, possibly the first neutron star -- black hole (NSBH) merger. In search of an optical counterpart, the Dark Energy Survey (DES) obtained deep imaging of the entire 90 percent confidence level localization area with Blanco/DECam 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, and 16 nights after the merger. Objects with varying brightness were detected by the DES Pipeline and we systematically reduced the candidate counterparts through catalog matching, light curve properties, host-galaxy photometric redshifts, SOAR spectroscopic follow-up observations, and machine-learning-based photometric classification. All candidates were rejected as counterparts to the merger. To quantify the sensitivity of our search, we applied our selection criteria to full light curve simulations of supernovae and kilonovae as they would appear in the DECam observations. Since the source class of the merger was uncertain, we utilized an agnostic, three-component kilonova model based on tidally-disrupted NS ejecta properties to quantify our detection efficiency of a counterpart if the merger included a NS. We find that if a kilonova occurred during this merger, configurations where the ejected matter is greater than 0.07 solar masses, has lanthanide abundance less than $10^{-8.56}$, and has a velocity between $0.18c$ and $0.21c$ are disfavored at the $2\sigma$ level. Furthermore, we estimate that our background reduction methods are capable of associating gravitational wave signals with a detected electromagnetic counterpart at the $4\sigma$ level in $95\%$ of future follow-up observations., Comment: Published in ApJ
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- 2020
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19. The Tianlai Cylinder Pathfinder Array: System Functions and Basic Performance Analysis
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Li, Jixia, Zuo, Shifan, Wu, Fengquan, Wang, Yougang, Zhang, Juyong, Sun, Shijie, Xu, Yidong, Yu, Zijie, Ansari, Reza, Li, Yichao, Stebbins, Albert, Timbie, Peter, Cong, Yanping, Geng, Jingchao, Hao, Jie, Huang, Qizhi, Li, Jianbin, Li, Rui, Liu, Donghao, Liu, Yingfeng, Liu, Tao, Marriner, John P., Niu, Chenhui, Pen, Ue-Li, Peterson, Jeffery B., Shi, Huli, Shu, Lin, Song, Yafang, Tian, Haijun, Wang, Guisong, Wang, Qunxiong, Wang, Rongli, Wang, Weixia, Yu, Kaifeng, Zhang, Jiao, Zhu, Boqin, Zhu, Jialu, and Chen, Xuelei
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The Tianlai Cylinder Pathfinder is a radio interferometer array designed to test techniques for 21 cm intensity mapping in the post-reionization Universe, with the ultimate aim of mapping the large scale structure and measuring cosmological parameters such as the dark energy equation of state. Each of its three parallel cylinder reflectors is oriented in the north-south direction, and the array has a large field of view. As the Earth rotates, the northern sky is observed by drift scanning. The array is located in Hongliuxia, a radio-quiet site in Xinjiang, and saw its first light in September 2016. In this first data analysis paper for the Tianlai cylinder array, we discuss the sub-system qualification tests, and present basic system performance obtained from preliminary analysis of the commissioning observations during 2016-2018. We show typical interferometric visibility data, from which we derive the actual beam profile in the east-west direction and the frequency band-pass response. We describe also the calibration process to determine the complex gains for the array elements, either using bright astronomical point sources, or an artificial on site calibrator source, and discuss the instrument response stability, crucial for transit interferometry. Based on this analysis, we find a system temperature of about 90 K, and we also estimate the sensitivity of the array., Comment: 28 pages, 30 figures
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- 2020
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20. Health- and Vision-Related Quality of Life in a Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Methotrexate and Mycophenolate Mofetil for Uveitis
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Kelly, Nicole K, Chattopadhyay, Aheli, Rathinam, SR, Gonzales, John A, Thundikandy, Radhika, Kanakath, Anuradha, Murugan, S Bala, Vedhanayaki, R, Cugley, Dean, Lim, Lyndell L, Suhler, Eric B, Al-Dhibi, Hassan A, Ebert, Caleb D, Berlinberg, Elyse J, Porco, Travis C, Acharya, Nisha R, Subramanian, AL Sivarama, Jeyakohila, G, Evangelin, Gracy, Azhagupandi, AM, Praba, CV, Bharati, S, Gomathi, S, Nirmaladevi, NJ, Siddiq, Mohammed, Vijayakumar, B, Devi, SR, Saravanan, VR, Babu, Upendra, Srija, R, Dhanalakshmi, S, Sakthimari, RR, Keerthana, PS, Mallika, AM, Vasanthi, C, Mariselvi, PB, Pandeeswari, P, Sudarvanitha, SM, Prema, R, Baskaran, Prabu, Madanagopalan, S, Nagesha, Chokkahalli K, Thilagavathi, R, Krishnakumari, Chitra, P, Irudhaya Raj, Saravanan, S, Mary, Grace, Nagarasi, S, Gnansi, Kiruba, Arellanes-Garcia, Lourdes, del Rio, Luz Elena Concha, Kalb, Rashel Cheja, Fernández, Nancy, Burgoa, Yoko, Hernández, Hilda, Cuello, Roberto Fabela, Garcia, Lorenzo Agustín Martínez, Rodríguez, Ricardo Montoya, del Carmen Preciado, Maria, Arreola, Andrea, Stone, Donald, Al-Shamrani, Mohammed, Al-Nuwaysir, Sara, Al-Hommadi, Abdulrahman, Al-Omran, Abdullah, Al-Nasser, Saleh, Al-Zahrani, Gahram, Mashan, Eman, Al-Ghamdi, Mizher, Al-Tuwejri, Ayshah, Goldstein, Debra A, Castro-Malek, Anna Liza, Dela Rosa, Gemma, Skelly, Marriner, Suhler, Eric, Rosenbaum, James, Lin, Phoebe, Salek, Sherveen, Biggee, Kristin, Shifera, Amde, Kopplin, Laura, Mount, George, Giles, Tracy, Nolte, Susan, Lundquist, Ann, Liesegang, Teresa, Romo, Albert, Howell, Chris, Pickell, Scott, Steinkemp, Peter, Ryan, Dawn, Barth, Jordan, Hui, Jocelyn, and Ukachukwu, Chiedozie
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Clinical Research ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Administration ,Oral ,Adult ,Aged ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Female ,Health ,Health Status ,Humans ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Male ,Methotrexate ,Middle Aged ,Mycophenolic Acid ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Sickness Impact Profile ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Uveitis ,Vision ,Ocular ,Antimetabolites ,uveitis ,Quality of life ,FAST Research Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Ophthalmology and optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo evaluate changes in health-related and vision-related quality of life (VRQoL) among patients with noninfectious uveitis who were treated with antimetabolites.DesignSecondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial.ParticipantsPatients with noninfectious uveitis from India, the United States, Australia, Saudi Arabia, and Mexico.MethodsFrom 2013 through 2017, 216 participants were randomized to receive 25 mg weekly oral methotrexate or 1.5 g twice daily oral mycophenolate mofetil. Median changes in quality of life (QoL) were measured using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, and differences between treatment groups were measured using linear mixed models, adjusting for baseline QoL score, age, gender, and site. Among Indian patients, VRQoL scores from a general scale (the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire [NEI-VFQ]) and a culturally specific scale (the Indian Visual Function Questionnaire [IND-VFQ]) were compared using Pearson correlation tests.Main outcome measuresVision-related QoL (NEI-VFQ and IND-VFQ) and health-related QoL (HRQoL; physical component score [PCS] and mental component score [MCS] of the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form Survey [SF-36v2]) were measured at baseline, the primary end point (6 months or treatment failure before 6 months), and the secondary end point (12 months or treatment failure between 6 and 12 months).ResultsAmong 193 participants who reached the primary end point, VRQoL increased from baseline by a median of 12.0 points (interquartile range [IQR], 1.0-26.1, NEI-VFQ scale), physical HRQoL increased by a median of 3.6 points (IQR, -1.4 to 14.9, PCS SF-36v2), and mental HRQoL increased by a median of 3.0 points (IQR, -3.7 to 11.9, MCS SF-36v2). These improvements in NEI-VFQ, SF-36v2 PCS, and SF-36v2 MCS scores all were significant (P < 0.01). The linear mixed models showed that QoL did not differ between treatment groups for each QoL assessment (NEI-VFQ, IND-VFQ, PCS SF-36v2, and MCS SF-36v2; P > 0.05 for all). The NEI-VFQ and IND-VFQ scores for Indian participants were correlated highly at baseline and the primary and secondary end points (correlation coefficients, 0.87, 0.80, and 0.90, respectively).ConclusionsAmong patients treated with methotrexate or mycophenolate mofetil for uveitis, VRQoL and HRQoL improved significantly over the course of 1 year and did not differ by treatment allocation. These findings suggest that antimetabolites could improve overall patient well-being and daily functioning.
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- 2021
21. Nile waterscapes facilitated the construction of the Giza pyramids during the 3rd millennium BCE
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Sheisha, Hader, Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Djamali, Morteza, Younes, Gamal, Chen, Zhongyuan, El-Qady, Gad, Saleem, Amr, Véron, Alain, and Morhange, Christophe
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- 2022
22. The pyramid builders' waterways: Reconstructing the ancient topography of Khufu’s Pharaonic Harbour at Giza, Egypt
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Younes, Gamal, Marriner, Nick, Kaniewski, David, Sheisha, Hader, Chen, Zhongyuan, Salama, Asem, El-Qady, Gad, and Morhange, Christophe
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- 2024
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23. Mental health stigma in young people : the effectiveness of anti-stigma interventions and experiences of living with Borderline Personality Disorder
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Marriner, Leah Jane
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BF Psychology - Abstract
This thesis presents the research component of the degree and consists of three papers: a meta-analysis exploring the effectiveness of school-based anti-stigma interventions on reducing the public-stigma of mental health in children and adolescents; a qualitative research study exploring how young people and their parents experience living with, and receiving a diagnosis of, Borderline Personality Disorder; and a press release, which provides a summary of the previous two papers in a manner suitable for dissemination.
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- 2021
24. Distribution of insulin in primate brain following nose‐to‐brain transport
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Kylie Smith, Jinda Fan, Gwendolyn A. Marriner, John Gerdes, Robert Kessler, and Kurt R. Zinn
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Alzheimer's disease ,cranial nerves ,cribriform plate ,dementia ,dynamic imaging ,image‐guided delivery ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Nose‐to‐brain (N2B) insulin delivery has potential for Alzheimer's disease (AD) therapy. However, clinical implementation has been challenging without methods to follow N2B delivery non‐invasively. Positron emission tomography (PET) was applied to measure F‐18‐labeled insulin ([18F]FB‐insulin) from intranasal dosing to brain uptake in non‐human primates following N2B delivery. Methods [18F]FB‐insulin was prepared by reacting A1,B29‐di(tert‐butyloxycarbonyl)insulin with [18F]‐N‐succinimidyl‐4‐fluorobenzoate. Three methods of N2B delivery for [18F]FB‐insulin were compared – delivery as aerosol via tubing (rhesus macaque, n = 2), as aerosol via preplaced catheter (rhesus macaque, n = 3), and as solution via preplaced catheter (cynomolgus macaque, n = 3). Following dosing, dynamic PET imaging (120 min) quantified delivery efficiency to the nasal cavity and whole brain. Area under the time‐activity curve was calculated for 46 regions of the cynomolgus macaque brain to determine regional [18F]FB‐insulin levels. Results Liquid instillation of [18F]FB‐insulin by catheter outperformed aerosol methods for delivery to the subject (39.89% injected dose vs 10.03% for aerosol via tubing, 0.17% for aerosol by catheter) and subsequently to brain (0.34% injected dose vs 0.00020% for aerosol via tubing, 0.05% for aerosol by catheter). [18F]FB‐insulin was rapidly transferred across the cribriform plate to limbic and frontotemporal areas responsible for emotional and memory processing. [18F]FB‐insulin half‐life was longer in olfactory nerve projection sites with high insulin receptor density compared to the whole brain. Discussion The catheter‐based liquid delivery approach combined with PET imaging successfully tracked the fate of N2B [18F]FB‐insulin and is thought to be broadly applicable for assessments of other therapeutic agents. This method can be rapidly applied in humans to advance clinical evaluation of N2B insulin as an AD therapeutic. Highlights for [18F]FB‐insulin passage across the cribriform plate was detected by PET. Intranasal [18F]FB‐insulin reached the brain within 13 min. [18F]FB‐insulin activity was highest in emotional and memory processing regions. Aerosol delivery was less efficient than liquid instillation by preplaced catheter. Insulin delivery to the cribriform plate was critical for arrival in the brain.
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- 2024
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25. Optical follow-up of gravitational wave triggers with DECam during the first two LIGO/VIRGO observing runs
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Herner, K., Annis, J., Brout, D., Soares-Santos, M., Kessler, R., Sako, M., Butler, R., Doctor, Z., Palmese, A., Allam, S., Tucker, D. L., Sobreira, F., Yanny, B., Diehl, H. T., Frieman, J., Glaeser, N., Garcia, A., Sherman, N. F., Bechtol, K., Berger, E., Chen, H. Y., Conselice, C. J., Cook, E., Cowperthwaite, P. S., Davis, T. M., Drlica-Wagner, A., Farr, B., Finley, D., Foley, R. J., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gill, M. S. S., Gruendl, R. A., Holz, D. E., Kuropatkin, N., Lin, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Matheson, T., Neilsen, E., Paz-Chinchón, F., Sauseda, M., Scolnic, D., Williams, P. K. G., Avila, S., Bertin, E., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carrasco-Kind, M., Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Doel, P., Eifler, T. F., Everett, S., Fosalba, P., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Li, T. S., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., March, M., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Plazas, A. A., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Wester, W., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Gravitational wave (GW) events detectable by LIGO and Virgo have several possible progenitors, including black hole mergers, neutron star mergers, black hole--neutron star mergers, supernovae, and cosmic string cusps. A subset of GW events are expected to produce electromagnetic (EM) emission that, once detected, will provide complementary information about their astrophysical context. To that end, the LIGO--Virgo Collaboration (LVC) sends GW candidate alerts to the astronomical community so that searches for their EM counterparts can be pursued. The DESGW group, consisting of members of the Dark Energy Survey (DES), the LVC, and other members of the astronomical community, uses the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) to perform a search and discovery program for optical signatures of LVC GW events. DESGW aims to use a sample of GW events as standard sirens for cosmology. Due to the short decay timescale of the expected EM counterparts and the need to quickly eliminate survey areas with no counterpart candidates, it is critical to complete the initial analysis of each night's images as quickly as possible. We discuss our search area determination, imaging pipeline, and candidate selection processes. We review results from the DESGW program during the first two LIGO--Virgo observing campaigns and introduce other science applications that our pipeline enables., Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted in Astronomy and Computing, matches accepted version
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- 2020
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26. Climate change threatens olive oil production in the Levant
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Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Morhange, Christophe, Khater, Carla, Terral, Jean-Frédéric, Besnard, Guillaume, Otto, Thierry, Luce, Frédéric, Couillebault, Quentin, Tsitsou, Labrini, Pourkerman, Majid, and Cheddadi, Rachid
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- 2023
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27. Driving processes of relative sea-level change in the Adriatic during the past two millennia: From local tectonic movements in the Dubrovnik archipelago (Jakljan and Šipan islands) to global mean sea level contributions (Central Mediterranean)
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Faivre, Sanja, Bakran-Petricioli, Tatjana, Kaniewski, David, Marriner, Nick, Tomljenović, Bruno, Sečanj, Marin, Horvatić, Davor, Barešić, Jadranka, Morhange, Christophe, and Drysdale, Russell N.
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- 2023
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28. Targeting and image acquisition of Martian surface features with TGO/CaSSIS
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Almeida, M., Read, M., Thomas, N., Cremonese, G., Becerra, P., Borrini, G., Byrne, S., Gruber, M., Heyd, R., Marriner, C.M., McArthur, G., McEwen, A.S., Pommerol, A., Perry, J., and Schaller, C.
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- 2023
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29. Forecasted weakening of Atlantic overturning circulation could amplify future relative sea-level rise in the Mediterranean: A review of climate and tide-gauge data links
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Marriner, Nick, Kaniewski, David, Pourkerman, Majid, Vacchi, Matteo, Melini, Daniele, Seeliger, Martin, Morhange, Christophe, and Spada, Giorgio
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- 2023
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30. Dimethyl sulfide cycling in the sea surface microlayer in the southwestern Pacific – Part 1: Enrichment potential determined using a novel sampler
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A. D. Saint-Macary, A. Marriner, T. Barthelmeß, S. Deppeler, K. Safi, R. Costa Santana, M. Harvey, and C. S. Law
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Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Elevated dimethyl sulfide (DMS) concentrations in the sea surface microlayer (SML) have been previously related to DMS air–sea flux anomalies in the southwestern Pacific. To further address this, DMS, its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), and ancillary variables were sampled in the SML and also subsurface water at 0.5 m depth (SSW) in different water masses east of New Zealand. Despite high phytoplankton biomass at some stations, the SML chlorophyll a enrichment factor (EF) was low (< 1.06), and DMSP was enriched at one station with DMSP EF ranging from 0.81 to 1.25. DMS in the SML was determined using a novel gas-permeable tube technique which measured consistently higher concentrations than with the traditional glass plate technique; however, significant DMS enrichment was present at only one station, with the EF ranging from 0.40 to 1.22. SML DMSP and DMS were influenced by phytoplankton community composition, with correlations with dinoflagellate and Gymnodinium biomass, respectively. DMSP and DMS concentrations were also correlated between the SML and SSW, with the difference in ratio attributable to greater DMS loss to the atmosphere from the SML. In the absence of significant enrichment, DMS in the SML did not influence DMS emissions, with the calculated air–sea DMS flux of 2.28 to 11.0 µmol m−2 d−1 consistent with climatological estimates for the region. These results confirm previous regional observations that DMS is associated with dinoflagellate abundance but indicate that additional factors are required to support significant enrichment in the SML.
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- 2023
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31. The impacts of Persian Gulf water and ocean-atmosphere interactions on tropical cyclone intensification in the Arabian Sea
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Pourkerman, Majid, Marriner, Nick, Amjadi, Sedigheh, Lak, Razyeh, Hamzeh, Mohammadali, Mohammadpor, Gholamreza, Lahijani, Hamid, Tavakoli, Morteza, Morhange, Christophe, and Shah-Hosseini, Majid
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- 2023
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32. Assessing achievements in place-based initiatives - developing a tailor-made tool
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O'Connor, Patricia M, Clune, Eleanor, Marriner, Tracey, Sheshgir, Shantanu, and Waddell, Jill
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- 2022
33. Hidden Potential of Wastewater
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Marriner, Martha, Jacobsen, Tanya Gottlieb, and Brears, Robert C., editor
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- 2022
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34. First Cosmology Results Using Type Ia Supernovae From the Dark Energy Survey: Analysis, Systematic Uncertainties, and Validation
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Brout, D., Scolnic, D., Kessler, R., D'Andrea, C. B., Davis, T. M., Gupta, R. R., Hinton, S. R., Kim, A. G., Lasker, J., Lidman, C., Macaulay, E., Möller, A., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Zhang, B., Andersen, P., Asorey, J., Avelino, A., Bassett, B. A., Brown, P., Calcino, J., Carollo, D., Challis, P., Childress, M., Clocchiatti, A., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Hoormann, J. K., Kasai, E., Kirshner, R. P., Kuehn, K., Kuhlmann, S., Lewis, G. F., Mandel, K. S., March, M., Miranda, V., Morganson, E., Muthukrishna, D., Nugent, P., Palmese, A., Pan, Y. -C., Sharp, R., Sommer, N. E., Swann, E., Thomas, R. C., Tucker, B. E., Uddin, S. A., Wester, W., Abbott, T. M. C., Allam, S., Annis, J., Avila, S., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cunha, C. E., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., De Vicente, J., DePoy, D. L., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eifler, T. F., Estrada, J., Fernandez, E., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Hoyle, B., James, D. J., Jarvis, M., Jeltema, T., Krause, E., Lahav, O., Li, T. S., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Plazas, A. A., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rykoff, E. S., Sanchez, E., Santiago, B., Scarpine, V., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, R. C., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis underpinning the measurement of cosmological parameters from 207 spectroscopically classified type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the first three years of the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN), spanning a redshift range of 0.017<$z$<0.849. We combine the DES-SN sample with an external sample of 122 low-redshift ($z$<0.1) SNe Ia, resulting in a "DES-SN3YR" sample of 329 SNe Ia. Our cosmological analyses are blinded: after combining our DES-SN3YR distances with constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB; Planck Collaboration 2016), our uncertainties in the measurement of the dark energy equation-of-state parameter, $w$, are .042 (stat) and .059 (stat+syst) at 68% confidence. We provide a detailed systematic uncertainty budget, which has nearly equal contributions from photometric calibration, astrophysical bias corrections, and instrumental bias corrections. We also include several new sources of systematic uncertainty. While our sample is <1/3 the size of the Pantheon sample, our constraints on $w$ are only larger by 1.4$\times$, showing the impact of the DES SN Ia light curve quality. We find that the traditional stretch and color standardization parameters of the DES SNe Ia are in agreement with earlier SN Ia samples such as Pan-STARRS1 and the Supernova Legacy Survey. However, we find smaller intrinsic scatter about the Hubble diagram (0.077 mag). Interestingly, we find no evidence for a Hubble residual step ( 0.007 $\pm$ 0.018 mag) as a function of host galaxy mass for the DES subset, in 2.4$\sigma$ tension with previous measurements. We also present novel validation methods of our sample using simulated SNe Ia inserted in DECam images and using large catalog-level simulations to test for biases in our analysis pipelines., Comment: 30 Pages, 18 Figures, 12 Tables. Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcome
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- 2018
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35. First Cosmology Results using Type Ia Supernovae from the Dark Energy Survey: Constraints on Cosmological Parameters
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Abbott, T. M. C., Allam, S., Andersen, P., Angus, C., Asorey, J., Avelino, A., Avila, S., Bassett, B. A., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Brown, P., Burke, D. L., Calcino, J., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Casas, R., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Challis, P., Childress, M., Clocchiatti, A., Cunha, C. E., D'Andrea, C. B., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., DePoy, D. L., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eifler, T. F., Evrard, A. E., Fernandez, E., Filippenko, A. V., Finley, D. A., Flaugher, B., Foley, R. J., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., Galbany, L., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannantonio, T., Glazebrook, K., Goldstein, D. A., Gonzalez-Gaitan, S., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gupta, R. R., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Hoormann, J. K., Hoyle, B., James, D. J., Jeltema, T., Johnson, M. W. G., Johnson, M. D., Kasai, E., Kent, S., Kessler, R., Kim, A. G., Kirshner, R. P., Kovacs, E., Krause, E., Kron, R., Kuehn, K., Kuhlmann, S., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lasker, J., Lewis, G. F., Li, T. S., Lidman, C., Lima, M., Lin, H., Macaulay, E., Maia, M. A. G., Mandel, K. S., March, M., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Miranda, V., Mohr, J. J., Morganson, E., Muthukrishna, D., Möller, A., Neilsen, E., Nichol, R. C., Nord, B., Nugent, P., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pan, Y. -C., Plazas, A. A., Pursiainen, M., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rozo, E., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schindler, R., Schubnell, M., Scolnic, D., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sharp, R., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Sommer, N. E., Spinka, H., Suchyta, E., Sullivan, M., Swann, E., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Thomas, R. C., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, B. E., Uddin, S. A., Walker, A. R., Wester, W., Wiseman, P., Wolf, R. C., Yanny, B., Zhang, B., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first cosmological parameter constraints using measurements of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN). The analysis uses a subsample of 207 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia from the first three years of DES-SN, combined with a low-redshift sample of 122 SNe from the literature. Our "DES-SN3YR" result from these 329 SNe Ia is based on a series of companion analyses and improvements covering SN Ia discovery, spectroscopic selection, photometry, calibration, distance bias corrections, and evaluation of systematic uncertainties. For a flat LCDM model we find a matter density Omega_m = 0.331 +_ 0.038. For a flat wCDM model, and combining our SN Ia constraints with those from the cosmic microwave background (CMB), we find a dark energy equation of state w = -0.978 +_ 0.059, and Omega_m = 0.321 +_ 0.018. For a flat w0waCDM model, and combining probes from SN Ia, CMB and baryon acoustic oscillations, we find w0 = -0.885 +_ 0.114 and wa = -0.387 +_ 0.430. These results are in agreement with a cosmological constant and with previous constraints using SNe Ia (Pantheon, JLA).
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- 2018
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36. Cosmological Constraints from Multiple Probes in the Dark Energy Survey
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DES Collaboration, Abbott, T. M. C., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Andersen, P., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Asorey, J., Avelino, A., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Banik, N., Bassett, B. A., Baxter, E., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Bridle, S. L., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Burke, D. L., Calcino, J., Camacho, H., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Challis, P., Chan, K. C., Chang, C., Childress, M., Clocchiatti, A., Crocce, M., Cunha, C. E., D'Andrea, C. B., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., DePoy, D. L., DeRose, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dietrich, J. P., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eifler, T. F., Elvin-Poole, J., Estrada, J., Evrard, A. E., Fernandez, E., Filippenko, A. V., Flaugher, B., Foley, R. J., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., Galbany, L., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Giannantonio, T., Glazebrook, K., Goldstein, D. A., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Hoormann, J. K., Hoyle, B., Huterer, D., Jain, B., James, D. J., Jarvis, M., Jeltema, T., Kasai, E., Kent, S., Kessler, R., Kim, A. G., Kirshner, R. P., Kokron, N., Krause, E., Kron, R., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lasker, J., Lemos, P., Lewis, G. F., Li, T. S., Lidman, C., Lima, M., Lin, H., Macaulay, E., MacCrann, N., Maia, M. A. G., Mandel, K. S., March, M., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., McMahon, R. G., Melchior, P., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Morganson, E., Muir, J., Möller, A., Neilsen, E., Nichol, R. C., Nord, B., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pan, Y. -C., Peiris, H. V., Percival, W. J., Plazas, A. A., Porredon, A., Prat, J., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rosenfeld, R., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Samuroff, S., Sánchez, C., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schindler, R., Schubnell, M., Scolnic, D., Secco, L. F., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sharp, R., Sheldon, E., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Sommer, N. E., Swann, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Thomas, R. C., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, B. E., Uddin, S. A., Vielzeuf, P., Walker, A. R., Wang, M., Weaverdyck, N., Wechsler, R. H., Weller, J., Yanny, B., Zhang, B., Zhang, Y., and Zuntz, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The combination of multiple observational probes has long been advocated as a powerful technique to constrain cosmological parameters, in particular dark energy. The Dark Energy Survey has measured 207 spectroscopically--confirmed Type Ia supernova lightcurves; the baryon acoustic oscillation feature; weak gravitational lensing; and galaxy clustering. Here we present combined results from these probes, deriving constraints on the equation of state, $w$, of dark energy and its energy density in the Universe. Independently of other experiments, such as those that measure the cosmic microwave background, the probes from this single photometric survey rule out a Universe with no dark energy, finding $w=-0.80^{+0.09}_{-0.11}$. The geometry is shown to be consistent with a spatially flat Universe, and we obtain a constraint on the baryon density of $\Omega_b=0.069^{+0.009}_{-0.012}$ that is independent of early Universe measurements. These results demonstrate the potential power of large multi-probe photometric surveys and pave the way for order of magnitude advances in our constraints on properties of dark energy and cosmology over the next decade., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; v3 matches version accepted by PRL
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- 2018
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37. Progress in the Construction and Testing of the Tianlai Radio Interferometers
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Das, Santanu, Anderson, Christopher J., Ansari, Reza, Campagne, Jean-Eric, Charlet, Daniel, Chen, Xuelei, Chen, Zhiping, Cianciara, Aleksander J., Colom, Pierre, Cong, Yanping, Gayley, Kevin G., Geng, Jingchao, Hao, Jie, Huang, Qizhi, Keith, Celeste S., Li, Chao, Li, Jixia, Li, Yichao, Liu, Chao, Liu, Tao, Magneville, Christophe, Marriner, John P., Martin, Jean-Michel, Moniez, Marc, Oxholm, Trevor M., Pen, Ue-Li, Perdereau, Olivier, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Shi, Huli, Shu, Lin, Stebbins, Albert, Sun, Shijie, Timbie, Peter T., Torchinsky, Steve, Tucker, Gregory S., Wang, Guisong, Wang, Rongli, Wang, Xin, Wang, Yougang, Wu, Fengquan, Xu, Yidong, Yu, Kaifeng, Zhang, Jiao, Zhang, Juyong, Zhang, Le, Zhu, Jialu, and Zuo, Shifan
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Tianlai Pathfinder is designed to demonstrate the feasibility of using a wide field of view radio interferometers to map the density of neutral hydrogen in the Universe after the Epoch of Reionizaton. This approach, called 21~cm intensity-mapping, promises an inexpensive means for surveying the large-scale structure of the cosmos. The Tianlai Pathfinder presently consists of an array of three, 15~m $\times$ 40~m cylinder telescopes and an array of sixteen, 6~m diameter dish antennas located in a radio-quiet part of western China. The two types of arrays were chosen to determine the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. The primary goal of the Pathfinder is to make 3D maps by surveying neutral hydrogen over large areas of the sky %$20,000 {\rm deg}^2$ in two different redshift ranges: first at $1.03 > z > 0.78$ ($700 - 800$~MHz) and later at $0.21 > z > 0.12$ ($1170 - 1270$~MHz). The most significant challenge to $21$~cm intensity-mapping is the removal of strong foreground radiation that dwarfs the cosmological signal. It requires exquisite knowledge of the instrumental response, i.e. calibration. In this paper, we provide an overview of the status of the Pathfinder and discuss the details of some of the analysis that we have carried out to measure the beam function of both arrays. We compare electromagnetic simulations of the arrays to measurements, discuss measurements of the gain and phase stability of the instrument, and provide a brief overview of the data processing pipeline., Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures
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- 2018
38. Harbors and Ports, Ancient
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Marriner, Nick, primary, Morhange, Christophe, additional, Flaux, Clément, additional, Carayon, Nicolas, additional, and Kaniewski, David, additional
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- 2023
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39. First Cosmology Results Using SNe Ia from the Dark Energy Survey: Analysis, Systematic Uncertainties, and Validation
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Brout, D, Scolnic, D, Kessler, R, D’Andrea, CB, Davis, TM, Gupta, RR, Hinton, SR, Kim, AG, Lasker, J, Lidman, C, Macaulay, E, Möller, A, Nichol, RC, Sako, M, Smith, M, Sullivan, M, Zhang, B, Andersen, P, Asorey, J, Avelino, A, Bassett, BA, Brown, P, Calcino, J, Carollo, D, Challis, P, Childress, M, Clocchiatti, A, Filippenko, AV, Foley, RJ, Galbany, L, Glazebrook, K, Hoormann, JK, Kasai, E, Kirshner, RP, Kuehn, K, Kuhlmann, S, Lewis, GF, Mandel, KS, March, M, Miranda, V, Morganson, E, Muthukrishna, D, Nugent, P, Palmese, A, Pan, Y-C, Sharp, R, Sommer, NE, Swann, E, Thomas, RC, Tucker, BE, Uddin, SA, Wester, W, Abbott, TMC, Allam, S, Annis, J, Avila, S, Bechtol, K, Bernstein, GM, Bertin, E, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Cunha, CE, da Costa, LN, Davis, C, De Vicente, J, DePoy, DL, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Doel, P, Drlica-Wagner, A, Eifler, TF, Estrada, J, Fernandez, E, Flaugher, B, Fosalba, P, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gutierrez, G, Hartley, WG, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Hoyle, B, James, DJ, Jarvis, M, Jeltema, T, Krause, E, Lahav, O, Li, TS, Lima, M, Maia, MAG, Marriner, J, Marshall, JL, Martini, P, and Menanteau, F
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Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,cosmological parameters ,dark energy ,supernovae: general ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We present the analysis underpinning the measurement of cosmological parameters from 207 spectroscopically classified SNe Ia from the first 3 years of the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN), spanning a redshift range of 0.017 < z < 0.849. We combine the DES-SN sample with an external sample of 122 low-redshift (z < 0.1) SNe Ia, resulting in a "DES-SN3YR" sample of 329 SNe Ia. Our cosmological analyses are blinded: after combining our DES-SN3YR distances with constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background, our uncertainties in the measurement of the dark energy equation-of-state parameter, w, are 0.042 (stat) and 0.059 (stat+syst) at 68% confidence. We provide a detailed systematic uncertainty budget, which has nearly equal contributions from photometric calibration, astrophysical bias corrections, and instrumental bias corrections. We also include several new sources of systematic uncertainty. While our sample is less than one-third the size of the Pantheon sample, our constraints on w are only larger by 1.4×, showing the impact of the DES-SN Ia light-curve quality. We find that the traditional stretch and color standardization parameters of the DES-SNe Ia are in agreement with earlier SN Ia samples such as Pan-STARRS1 and the Supernova Legacy Survey. However, we find smaller intrinsic scatter about the Hubble diagram (0.077 mag). Interestingly, we find no evidence for a Hubble residual step (0.007 ± 0.018 mag) as a function of host-galaxy mass for the DES subset, in 2.4σ tension with previous measurements. We also present novel validation methods of our sample using simulated SNe Ia inserted in DECam images and using large catalog-level simulations to test for biases in our analysis pipelines.
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- 2019
40. Dimethyl sulfide cycling in the sea surface microlayer in the southwestern Pacific – Part 2: Processes and rates
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A. D. Saint-Macary, A. Marriner, S. Deppeler, K. A. Safi, and C. S. Law
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Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
As the sea surface microlayer (SML) is the uppermost oceanic layer and differs in biogeochemical composition to the underlying subsurface water (SSW), it is important to determine whether processes in the SML modulate gas exchange, particularly for climate active gases. Enrichment of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) has been reported in the SML, but it remains unclear how this is maintained whilst DMS is lost to the atmosphere. To examine this, a comprehensive study of DMS source and sink processes, including production, consumption, and net response to irradiance, was carried out in deck-board incubations of SML water at five locations in different water masses in the southwestern Pacific east of New Zealand. Net consumption of DMSP and production of DMS in the light and dark occurred at all sites. The net response of DMS and DMSP to irradiance varied between stations but was always lower than conversion of DMSP to DMS in the dark. In addition, DMS photolytic turnover was slower than reported elsewhere, which was unexpected given the high light exposure in the SML incubations. Although no relationships were apparent between DMS process rates and biogeochemical variables, including chlorophyll a, bacteria, and phytoplankton groups, net bacterial DMSP consumption was correlated with DMSP and DMS concentrations and also dinoflagellate and Gymnodinium spp. biomass, supporting the findings of a companion study that dinoflagellates play an important role in DMS cycling in the SML. However, net DMS production rates and accumulation were low relative to regional air–sea DMS loss, indicating that DMS cycling within the SML is unlikely to influence regional DMS emissions.
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- 2022
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41. Climatic control on the formation of marine-notches in microtidal settings: New data from the northwestern Mediterranean Sea
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Vacchi, Matteo, Gatti, Giulia, Kulling, Benjamin, Morhange, Christophe, and Marriner, Nick
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- 2022
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42. Has the Anthropocene affected the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones? Evidence from Mascarene Islands historical records (southwestern Indian Ocean)
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Marriner, Nick, Kaniewski, David, Garnier, Emmanuel, Pourkerman, Majid, Giaime, Matthieu, Vacchi, Matteo, and Morhange, Christophe
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- 2022
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43. Removal of straylight from ExoMars NOMAD-UVIS observations
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Mason, Jonathon P., Patel, Manish R., Leese, Mark R., Hathi, Brijen G., Willame, Yannick, Thomas, Ian R., Wolff, Michael J., Depiesse, Cédric, Holmes, James A., Sellers, Graham, Marriner, Charlotte, Ristic, Bojan, Daerden, Frank, Lopez-Moreno, Jose Juan, Bellucci, Giancarlo, and Vandaele, Ann Carine
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- 2022
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44. Socioeconomic impacts of environmental risks in the western Makran zone (Chabahar, Iran)
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Pourkerman, Majid, Marriner, Nick, Hamzeh, Mohammad-Ali, Lahijani, Hamid, Morhange, Christophe, Amjadi, Sedigheh, Vacchi, Matteo, Maghsoudi, Mehran, Shah-Hosseini, Majid, and Afarin, Mohammad
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- 2022
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45. The Dark Energy Survey Image Processing Pipeline
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Morganson, E., Gruendl, R. A., Menanteau, F., Kind, M. Carrasco, Chen, Y. -C., Daues, G., Drlica-Wagner, A., Friedel, D. N., Gower, M., Johnson, M. W. G., Johnson, M. D., Kessler, R., Paz-Chinchón, F., Petravick, D., Pond, C., Yanny, B., Allam, S., Armstrong, R., Barkhouse, W., Bechtol, K., Benoit-Lévy, A., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Buckley-Geer, E., Covarrubias, R., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Goldstein, D. A., Gruen, D., Li, T. S., Lin, H., Marriner, J., Mohr, J. J., Neilsen, E., Ngeow, C. -C., Paech, K., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Sobreira, F., Tucker, D. L., and Wester, W.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Dark Energy Survey (DES) is a five-year optical imaging campaign with the goal of understanding the origin of cosmic acceleration. DES performs a 5000 square degree survey of the southern sky in five optical bands (g,r,i,z,Y) to a depth of ~24th magnitude. Contemporaneously, DES performs a deep, time-domain survey in four optical bands (g,r,i,z) over 27 square degrees. DES exposures are processed nightly with an evolving data reduction pipeline and evaluated for image quality to determine if they need to be retaken. Difference imaging and transient source detection are also performed in the time domain component nightly. On a bi-annual basis, DES exposures are reprocessed with a refined pipeline and coadded to maximize imaging depth. Here we describe the DES image processing pipeline in support of DES science, as a reference for users of archival DES data, and as a guide for future astronomical surveys.
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- 2018
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46. The Dark Energy Survey Data Release 1
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Abbott, T. M. C., Abdalla, F. B., Allam, S., Amara, A., Annis, J., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Ballester, O., Banerji, M., Barkhouse, W., Baruah, L., Baumer, M., Bechtol, K., Becker, M . R., Benoit-Lévy, A., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Busti, V., Campisano, R., Cardiel-Sas, L., Rosell, A. C arnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, X., Conselice, C., Costa, G., Crocce, M., Cunha, C. E., D'Andrea, C. B., da Costa, L. N., Das, R., Daues, G., Davis, T. M., Davis, C., De Vicente, J., DePoy, D. L., DeRose, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dietrich, J. P., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eifler, T. F., Elliott, A. E., Evrard, A. E., Farahi, A., Neto, A. Fausti, Fernandez, E., Finley, D. A., Fitzpatrick, M., Flaugher, B., Foley, R. J., Fosalba, P., Friedel, D. N., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., tanaga, E. Gaz, Gerdes, D. W., Giannantonio, T., Gill, M. S. S., Glazebrook, K., Goldstein, D. A., Gower, M., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gupta, R. R., Gutierrez, G., Hamilton, S., Hartley, W. G., Hinton, S. R., Hislop, J. M., Hollowood, D., Honscheid, K., Hoyle, B., Huterer, D., Jain, B., James, D. J., Jeltema, T., Johnson, M. W. G., Johnson, M. D., Juneau, S., Kacprzak, T., Kent, S., Khullar, G., Klein, M., Kovacs, A., Koziol, A. M. G., Krause, E., Kremin, A., Kron, R., Kuehn, K., Kuhlmann, S., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lasker, J., Li, T. S., Li, R. T., Liddle, A. R., Lima, M., Lin, H., López-Reyes, P., MacCrann, N., Maia, M. A. G., Maloney, J. D., Manera, M., March, M., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., McClintock, T., McKay, T., McMahon, R . G., Melchior, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Morganson, E., Mould, J., Neilsen, E., Nichol, R. C., Nidever, D., Nikutta, R., Nogueira, F., Nord, B., Nugent, P., Nunes, L., Ogando, R. L. C., Old, L., Olsen, K., Pace, A. B., Palmese, A., Paz-Chinchón, F., Peiris, H. V., Percival, W. J., Petravick, D., Plazas, A. A., Poh, J., Pond, C., redon, A. Por, Pujol, A., Refregier, A., Reil, K., Ricker, P. M., Rollins, R. P., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rooney, P., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Sanchez, M. L., Santiago, B., Saro, A., Scarpine, V., Scolnic, D., Scott, A., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shipp, N., Silveira, M. L., Smith, R. C., Smith, J. A., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., ira, F. Sobre, Song, J., Stebbins, A., Suchyta, E., Sullivan, M., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thaler, J., Thomas, D., Thomas, R. C., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Vivas, A. K., ker, A. R. Wal, Wechsler, R. H., Weller, J., Wester, W., Wolf, R. C., Wu, H., Yanny, B., Zenteno, A., Zhang, Y., and Zuntz, J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the first public data release of the Dark Energy Survey, DES DR1, consisting of reduced single epoch images, coadded images, coadded source catalogs, and associated products and services assembled over the first three years of DES science operations. DES DR1 is based on optical/near-infrared imaging from 345 distinct nights (August 2013 to February 2016) by the Dark Energy Camera mounted on the 4-m Blanco telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. We release data from the DES wide-area survey covering ~5,000 sq. deg. of the southern Galactic cap in five broad photometric bands, grizY. DES DR1 has a median delivered point-spread function of g = 1.12, r = 0.96, i = 0.88, z = 0.84, and Y = 0.90 arcsec FWHM, a photometric precision of < 1% in all bands, and an astrometric precision of 151 mas. The median coadded catalog depth for a 1.95" diameter aperture at S/N = 10 is g = 24.33, r = 24.08, i = 23.44, z = 22.69, and Y = 21.44 mag. DES DR1 includes nearly 400M distinct astronomical objects detected in ~10,000 coadd tiles of size 0.534 sq. deg. produced from ~39,000 individual exposures. Benchmark galaxy and stellar samples contain ~310M and ~ 80M objects, respectively, following a basic object quality selection. These data are accessible through a range of interfaces, including query web clients, image cutout servers, jupyter notebooks, and an interactive coadd image visualization tool. DES DR1 constitutes the largest photometric data set to date at the achieved depth and photometric precision., Comment: 30 pages, 20 Figures. Release page found at this url https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/dr1
- Published
- 2018
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47. Distribution and environmental drivers of macrofaunal nematode communities across gradients of methane seepage at cold seeps on Hikurangi Margin (New Zealand) and potential implications of disturbance from gas hydrate extraction.
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Leduc, Daniel, Rowden, Ashley A., Seabrook, Sarah, Bowden, David A., Thurber, Andrew R., Halliday, Jane, Law, Cliff S., Pereira, Olivia S., Whitten, Bethany G., and Marriner, Andrew
- Abstract
Cold seeps are areas characterised by specialized biological communities that rely on chemosynthesis for their nutrition. To date, research conducted on New Zealand's Hikurangi Margin seep communities has focused on communities at 650-1200 m water depth. Here, we characterize the macrofaunal nematode communities of New Zealand cold seeps for the first time, and at deeper (> 1200 m) seep locations (Maungaroa, Glendhu and Urutī South). There were no significant difference in nematode abundance, species richness, diversity and evenness among the seep areas, which may reflect the lack of difference in most sediment variables. However, a consistent spatial pattern in nematode abundance was observed within all the seep areas on the Hikurangi Margin: abundance was highest at or near the seep centre, decreased steeply away from the centre and was low in the periphery. These spatially consistent patterns reflect the influence of methane seepage, which appears limited to the inner 150-200 m radius of each area, on nematode abundance via input of chemosynthetic food sources. We found significant differences in nematode community structure among all three areas, with most of the heterogeneity in community structure between the shallow Urutī South area and deeper Maungaroa and Glendhu areas, and differences among nematode communities of high, medium and low abundance associated with site-specific gradients in methane seepage. Within area variability in nematode community structure was mainly correlated with food availability and sediment grain size. Consistent with previous investigations of seep nematodes, we did not find evidence of seep endemics. Although deposit feeders were generally the most abundant feeding group, there were differences in the relative abundances of different feeding groups such as microvores and epigrowth feeders among the seep areas, and as a function of distance from the centre of the seep areas. Impact on seep communities from gas hydrate extraction processes may occur via reduction or potentially cessation of free-gas methane supply to the seafloor, 'sand' production at the seafloor due to the physical degradation of the substrate structure, or alteration of the structural integrity of the seafloor substrate. Any spatial management options considered for managing these impacts should reflect the differences in benthic community structure between depths and locations on the Hikurangi Margin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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48. Dark Energy Survey Year 1 Results: Measurement of the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation scale in the distribution of galaxies to redshift 1
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The Dark Energy Survey Collaboration, Abbott, T. M. C., Abdalla, F. B., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Avila, S., Banerji, M., Banik, N., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Bernstein, R. A., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Camacho, H., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chan, K. C., Crocce, M., Cunha, C. E., D'Andrea, C. B., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., De Vicente, J., DePoy, D. L., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eifler, T. F., Elvin-Poole, J., Estrada, J., Evrard, A. E., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Giannantonio, T., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D., Honscheid, K., Hoyle, B., Jain, B., James, D. J., Jeltema, T., Johnson, M. D., Kent, S., Kokron, N., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Kuhlmann, S., Kuropatkin, N., Lacasa, F., Lahav, O., Lima, M., Lin, H., Maia, M. A. G., Manera, M., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Melchior, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Neilsen, E., Percival, W. J., Plazas, A. A., Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rosenfeld, R., Ross, A. J., Rozo, E., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Santiago, B., Scarpine, V., Schindler, R., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Smith, R. C., Smith, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., Wechsler, R. H., Weller, J., Yanny, B., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present angular diameter distance measurements obtained by locating the BAO scale in the distribution of galaxies selected from the first year of Dark Energy Survey data. We consider a sample of over 1.3 million galaxies distributed over a footprint of 1318 deg$^2$ with $0.6 < z_{\rm photo} < 1$ and a typical redshift uncertainty of $0.03(1+z)$. This sample was selected, as fully described in a companion paper, using a color/magnitude selection that optimizes trade-offs between number density and redshift uncertainty. We investigate the BAO signal in the projected clustering using three conventions, the angular separation, the co-moving transverse separation, and spherical harmonics. Further, we compare results obtained from template based and machine learning photometric redshift determinations. We use 1800 simulations that approximate our sample in order to produce covariance matrices and allow us to validate our distance scale measurement methodology. We measure the angular diameter distance, $D_A$, at the effective redshift of our sample divided by the true physical scale of the BAO feature, $r_{\rm d}$. We obtain close to a 4 per cent distance measurement of $D_A(z_{\rm eff}=0.81)/r_{\rm d} = 10.75\pm 0.43 $. These results are consistent with the flat $\Lambda$CDM concordance cosmological model supported by numerous other recent experimental results. All data products are publicly available here: https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/y1a1/bao, Comment: accepted by MNRAS; main results unchanged, some restructuring, clarifications, and robustness tests added based on referee's comments; all data products are publicly available here: https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/y1a1/bao
- Published
- 2017
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49. Studying the Ultraviolet Spectrum of the First Spectroscopically Confirmed Supernova at redshift two
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Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Nichol, R. C., Galbany, L., D'Andrea, C. B., Inserra, C., Lidman, C., Rest, A., Schirmer, M., Filippenko, A. V., Zheng, W., Cenko, S. Bradley, Angus, C. R., Brown, P. J., Davis, T. M., Finley, D. A., Gonzalez-Gaitan, S., Gutierrez, C. P., Kessler, R., Kuhlmann, S., Marriner, J., Moller, A., Nugent, P. E., Prajs, S., Thomas, R., Wolf, R., Zenteno, A., Abbott, T. M. C., Abdalla, F. B., Allam, S., Annis, J., Bechtol, K., Benoit-Levy, A., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Crocce, M., Cunha, C. E., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Eifler, T. F., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Goldstein, D. A., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Johnson, M. W. G., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Li, T. S., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miguel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Petravick, D., Plazas, A. A., Romer, A. K., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schindler, R., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, R. C., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., and Walker, A. R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of DES16C2nm, the first spectroscopically confirmed hydrogen-free superluminous supernova (SLSN-I) at redshift z~2. DES16C2nm was discovered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program, with follow-up photometric data from the Hubble Space Telescope, Gemini, and the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope supplementing the DES data. Spectroscopic observations confirm DES16C2nm to be at z=1.998, and spectroscopically similar to Gaia16apd (a SLSN-I at z=0.102), with a peak absolute magnitude of U=-22.26$\pm$0.06. The high redshift of DES16C2nm provides a unique opportunity to study the ultraviolet (UV) properties of SLSNe-I. Combining DES16C2nm with ten similar events from the literature, we show that there exists a homogeneous class of SLSNe-I in the UV (~2500A), with peak luminosities in the (rest-frame) U band, and increasing absorption to shorter wavelengths. There is no evidence that the mean photometric and spectroscopic properties of SLSNe-I differ between low (z<1) and high redshift (z>1), but there is clear evidence of diversity in the spectrum at <2000A, possibly caused by the variations in temperature between events. No significant correlations are observed between spectral line velocities and photometric luminosity. Using these data, we estimate that SLSNe-I can be discovered to z=3.8 by DES. While SLSNe-I are typically identified from their blue observed colors at low redshift (z<1), we highlight that at z>2 these events appear optically red, peaking in the observer-frame z-band. Such characteristics are critical to identify these objects with future facilities such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, Euclid, and the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope, which should detect such SLSNe-I to z=3.5, 3.7, and 6.6, respectively., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2017
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50. CASTAway: An Asteroid Main Belt Tour and Survey
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Bowles, N. E., Snodgrass, C., Gibbings, A, Sanchez, J. P., Arnold, J. A., Eccleston, P., Andert, T., Probst, A., Naletto, G., Vandaele, A. C., de Leon, J., Nathues, A., Thomas, I. R., Thomas, N., Jorda, L., Da Deppo, V., Haack, H., Green, S. F., Carry, B., Hanna, K. L. Donaldson, Jorgensen, J. Leif, Kereszturi, A., DeMeo, F. E., Patel, M. R., Davies, J. K., Clarke, F., Kinch, K., Guilbert-Lepoutre, A., Agarwal, J., Rivkin, A. S., Pravec, P., Fornasier, S., Granvik, M., Jones, R. H., Murdoch, N., Joy, K. H., Pascale, E., Tecza, M., Barnes, J. M., Licandro, J., Greenhagen, B. T., Calcutt, S. B., Marriner, C. M., Warren, T., and Tosh, I.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
CASTAway is a mission concept to explore our Solar System's main asteroid belt. Asteroids and comets provide a window into the formation and evolution of our Solar System and the composition of these objects can be inferred from space-based remote sensing using spectroscopic techniques. Variations in composition across the asteroid populations provide a tracer for the dynamical evolution of the Solar System. The mission combines a long-range (point source) telescopic survey of over 10,000 objects, targeted close encounters with 10 to 20 asteroids and serendipitous searches to constrain the distribution of smaller (e.g. 10 m) size objects into a single concept. With a carefully targeted trajectory that loops through the asteroid belt, CASTAway would provide a comprehensive survey of the main belt at multiple scales. The scientific payload comprises a 50 cm diameter telescope that includes an integrated low-resolution (R = 30 to 100) spectrometer and visible context imager, a thermal (e.g. 6 to 16 microns) imager for use during the flybys, and modified star tracker cameras to detect small (approx. 10 m) asteroids. The CASTAway spacecraft and payload have high levels of technology readiness and are designed to fit within the programmatic and cost caps for a European Space Agency medium class mission, whilst delivering a significant increase in knowledge of our Solar System., Comment: 40 pages, accepted by Advances in Space Research October 2017
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- 2017
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