517 results on '"Nelson, Nicholas A."'
Search Results
2. The Puzzling Structure of Solar Convection: Window into the Dynamo
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Featherstone, Nicholas A., Augustson, Kyle C., Aurnou, Jonathan M., Blume, Catherine, Brown, Benjamin P., Brummell, Nicholas, Burns, Keaton J., Calkins, Michael A., Camisassa, Maria, Dikpati, Mausumi, Fan, Yuhong, Fuentes, J. R., Guerrero, Gustavo, Hindman, Bradley W., Julien, Keith, Kitiashvili, Irina N., Korre, Lydia, Lecoanet, Daniel, Manek, Bhishek, Matilsky, Loren, Miesch, Mark, Nelson, Nicholas J., Oishi, Jeffrey S., Powers, Whitney T., Rempel, Matthias, Soderlund, Krista, Stejko, Andrey M., and Vasil, Geoffrey M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The operation of the solar dynamo, with all of its remarkable spatio-temporal ordering, remains an outstanding problem of modern solar physics. A number of mechanisms that might plausibly contribute to its operation have been proposed, but the relative role played by each remains unclear. This uncertainty stems from continuing questions concerning the speed and structure of deep-seated convective flows. Those flows are in-turn thought to sustain both the Sun's turbulent EMF and the large-scale flows of differential rotation and meridional circulation suspected of influencing the dynamo's organization and timing. Continued progress in this area is complicated by (i) inconsistencies between helioseismic measurements of convective and meridional flow made with different techniques and instruments, and (ii) a lack of high-latitude data for convection, differential rotation, and meridional flow. We suggest that the path forward to resolving these difficulties is twofold. First, the acquisition of long-term helioseismic and emissivity measurements obtained from a polar vantage point is vital to complete our picture of the Sun's outer convection zone. Second, sustained and expanded investment in theory-oriented and combined theory/observational research initiatives will be crucial to fully exploit these new observations and to resolve inconsistencies between existing measurements., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics 2024-2033. 7 pages; 4 figures
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- 2023
3. The EN-TEx resource of multi-tissue personal epigenomes & variant-impact models.
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Rozowsky, Joel, Gao, Jiahao, Borsari, Beatrice, Yang, Yucheng, Galeev, Timur, Gürsoy, Gamze, Epstein, Charles, Xiong, Kun, Xu, Jinrui, Li, Tianxiao, Liu, Jason, Yu, Keyang, Berthel, Ana, Chen, Zhanlin, Navarro, Fabio, Sun, Maxwell, Wright, James, Chang, Justin, Cameron, Christopher, Shoresh, Noam, Gaskell, Elizabeth, Drenkow, Jorg, Adrian, Jessika, Aganezov, Sergey, Aguet, François, Balderrama-Gutierrez, Gabriela, Banskota, Samridhi, Corona, Guillermo, Chee, Sora, Chhetri, Surya, Cortez Martins, Gabriel, Danyko, Cassidy, Davis, Carrie, Farid, Daniel, Farrell, Nina, Gabdank, Idan, Gofin, Yoel, Gorkin, David, Gu, Mengting, Hecht, Vivian, Hitz, Benjamin, Issner, Robbyn, Jiang, Yunzhe, Kirsche, Melanie, Kong, Xiangmeng, Lam, Bonita, Li, Shantao, Li, Bian, Li, Xiqi, Lin, Khine, Luo, Ruibang, Mackiewicz, Mark, Meng, Ran, Moore, Jill, Mudge, Jonathan, Nelson, Nicholas, Nusbaum, Chad, Popov, Ioann, Pratt, Henry, Qiu, Yunjiang, Ramakrishnan, Srividya, Raymond, Joe, Salichos, Leonidas, Scavelli, Alexandra, Schreiber, Jacob, Sedlazeck, Fritz, See, Lei, Sherman, Rachel, Shi, Xu, Shi, Minyi, Sloan, Cricket, Strattan, J, Tan, Zhen, Tanaka, Forrest, Vlasova, Anna, Wang, Jun, Werner, Jonathan, Williams, Brian, Xu, Min, Yan, Chengfei, Yu, Lu, Zaleski, Christopher, Zhang, Jing, Ardlie, Kristin, Cherry, J, Mendenhall, Eric, Noble, William, Weng, Zhiping, Levine, Morgan, Dobin, Alexander, Wold, Barbara, Mortazavi, Ali, Ren, Bing, Gillis, Jesse, Myers, Richard, Choudhary, Jyoti, Milosavljevic, Aleksandar, Schatz, Michael, Bernstein, Bradley, and Guigó, Roderic
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ENCODE ,GTEx ,allele-specific activity ,eQTLs ,functional epigenomes ,functional genomics ,genome annotations ,personal genome ,predictive models ,structural variants ,tissue specificity ,transformer model ,Epigenome ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genomics ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide - Abstract
Understanding how genetic variants impact molecular phenotypes is a key goal of functional genomics, currently hindered by reliance on a single haploid reference genome. Here, we present the EN-TEx resource of 1,635 open-access datasets from four donors (∼30 tissues × ∼15 assays). The datasets are mapped to matched, diploid genomes with long-read phasing and structural variants, instantiating a catalog of >1 million allele-specific loci. These loci exhibit coordinated activity along haplotypes and are less conserved than corresponding, non-allele-specific ones. Surprisingly, a deep-learning transformer model can predict the allele-specific activity based only on local nucleotide-sequence context, highlighting the importance of transcription-factor-binding motifs particularly sensitive to variants. Furthermore, combining EN-TEx with existing genome annotations reveals strong associations between allele-specific and GWAS loci. It also enables models for transferring known eQTLs to difficult-to-profile tissues (e.g., from skin to heart). Overall, EN-TEx provides rich data and generalizable models for more accurate personal functional genomics.
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- 2023
4. Evaluating the Need for Competency-Based Pharmacy Education (CBPE): The Report of the 2023–2024 Academic Affairs Standing Committee
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Rhoney, Denise H., Thornby, Krisy-Ann, Brock, Tina, Churchwell, Mariann D., Daugherty, Kimberly K., Kleppinger, Erika L., Nelson, Nicholas R., Parker, Dennis, Sibicky, Stephanie, Stowe, Cindy D., Jahjah, Kabas Abou, Ragucci, Kelly, and Chen, Aleda M.H.
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- 2024
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5. Student Pharmacists Provide Similar Quality Clinical Reasoning Feedback as Resident Teaching Assistants
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Shabanowitz, Nicholas, Nelson, Nicholas R., Rodgers, Jo Ellen, and Rhoney, Denise H.
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- 2024
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6. Multiplex translaminar imaging in the spinal cord of behaving mice
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Shekhtmeyster, Pavel, Carey, Erin M., Duarte, Daniela, Ngo, Alexander, Gao, Grace, Nelson, Nicholas A., Clark, Charles L., and Nimmerjahn, Axel
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- 2023
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7. 1345: SCOPING REVIEW OF BETA-LACTAM DRUG DOSING IN SUSTAINED LOW-EFFICIENCY DIALYSIS
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Nelson, Nicholas, Quinn, Nicholas, Marsolek, Legacy, Bills, Stephanie, Dellabella, Alexander, Gregar, Sarah, Lear, Alyssa, Mounce, Crystal, and Tobin, Morgan
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- 2024
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8. 1346: SCOPING REVIEW OF NON-BETA-LACTAM ANTIBIOTIC DOSING IN SUSTAINED LOW-EFFICIENCY DIALYSIS
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Quinn, Nicholas, Nelson, Nicholas, Marsolek, Legacy, Lear, Alyssa, Gregar, Sarah, Dellabella, Alexander, Tobin, Morgan, Mounce, Crystal, and Bills, Stephanie
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- 2024
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9. Dynamical Chaos in a Simple Model of a Knuckleball
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Nelson, Nicholas J. and Strauss, Eric
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Physics - Popular Physics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
The knuckleball is perhaps the most enigmatic pitch in baseball. Relying on the presence of raised seams on the surface of the ball to create asymmetric flow, a knuckleball's trajectory has proven very challenging to predict compared to other baseball pitches, such as fastballs or curveballs. Previous experimental tracking of large numbers of knuckleballs has shown that they can move in essentially any direction relative to what would be expected from a drag-only trajectory. This has led to speculation that knuckleballs exhibit chaotic motion. Here we develop a relatively simple model of a knuckleball that includes quadratic drag and lift from asymmetric flow which is taken from experimental measurements of slowly rotating baseballs. Our models can indeed exhibit dynamical chaos as long In contrast, models that omit torques on the ball in flight do not show chaotic behavior. Uncertainties in the phase space position of the knuckleball are shown to grow by factors as large as $10^6$ over the flight of the ball from the pitcher to home plate. We quantify the impact of our model parameters on the chaos realized in our models, specifically showing that maximum Lyapunov exponent is roughly proportional to the square root of the effective lever arm of the torque, and also roughly proportional to the initial velocity of the pitch. We demonstrate the existence of bifurcations that can produce changes in the location of the ball when it reaches the plate of as much as 1.2 m for specific initial conditions similar to those used by professional knuckleball pitchers. As we introduce additional complexity in the form of more faithful representations of the empirical asymmetry force measurements, we find that a larger fraction of the possible initial conditions result in dynamical chaos., Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in "Applied Mathematics and Computation"
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- 2020
10. Temperature Control in Hypoxic-Ischemic Brain Injury—a Focused Update
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Wasserstrom, Briana E., and Maciel, Carolina B.
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- 2022
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11. Astro2020 APC White Paper: The Early Career Perspective on the Coming Decade, Astrophysics Career Paths, and the Decadal Survey Process
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Moravec, Emily, Czekala, Ian, Follette, Kate, Ahmed, Zeeshan, Alpaslan, Mehmet, Amon, Alexandra, Armentrout, Will, Arney, Giada, Barron, Darcy, Bellm, Eric, Bender, Amy, Bridge, Joanna, Colon, Knicole, Datta, Rahul, DeRoo, Casey, Feng, Wanda, Florian, Michael, Gabriel, Travis, Hall, Kirsten, Hamden, Erika, Hathi, Nimish, Hawkins, Keith, Hoadley, Keri, Jensen-Clem, Rebecca, Kao, Melodie, Kara, Erin, Karkare, Kirit, Kiessling, Alina, Kimball, Amy, Kirkpatrick, Allison, La Plante, Paul, Leisenring, Jarron, Li, Miao, Lomax, Jamie, Lund, Michael B., McCleary, Jacqueline, Mills, Elisabeth, Montiel, Edward, Nelson, Nicholas, Nevin, Rebecca, Norris, Ryan, Ntampaka, Michelle, O'Donnell, Christine, Peretz, Eliad, Malagon, Andres Plazas, Prescod-Weinstein, Chanda, Pullen, Anthony, Rice, Jared, Roettenbacher, Rachael, Sanderson, Robyn, Simon, Jospeh, Smith, Krista Lynne, Stevenson, Kevin, Veach, Todd, Wetzel, Andrew, and Youngblood, Allison
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In response to the need for the Astro2020 Decadal Survey to explicitly engage early career astronomers, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine hosted the Early Career Astronomer and Astrophysicist Focus Session (ECFS) on October 8-9, 2018 under the auspices of Committee of Astronomy and Astrophysics. The meeting was attended by fifty six pre-tenure faculty, research scientists, postdoctoral scholars, and senior graduate students, as well as eight former decadal survey committee members, who acted as facilitators. The event was designed to educate early career astronomers about the decadal survey process, to solicit their feedback on the role that early career astronomers should play in Astro2020, and to provide a forum for the discussion of a wide range of topics regarding the astrophysics career path. This white paper presents highlights and themes that emerged during two days of discussion. In Section 1, we discuss concerns that emerged regarding the coming decade and the astrophysics career path, as well as specific recommendations from participants regarding how to address them. We have organized these concerns and suggestions into five broad themes. These include (sequentially): (1) adequately training astronomers in the statistical and computational techniques necessary in an era of "big data", (2) responses to the growth of collaborations and telescopes, (3) concerns about the adequacy of graduate and postdoctoral training, (4) the need for improvements in equity and inclusion in astronomy, and (5) smoothing and facilitating transitions between early career stages. Section 2 is focused on ideas regarding the decadal survey itself, including: incorporating early career voices, ensuring diverse input from a variety of stakeholders, and successfully and broadly disseminating the results of the survey., Comment: 9 pages; Astro2020 APC White Paper: State of the Profession Consideration
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- 2019
12. Analysis of Expert Feedback to Determine Intellectual Standards for Student Pharmacist Clinical Reasoning Development
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Nelson, Nicholas R. and Rhoney, Denise H.
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- 2023
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13. Structural Competency: Curriculum for Medical Students, Residents, and Interprofessional Teams on the Structural Factors That Produce Health Disparities.
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McGuinness, Cara, Duncan, Laura, Saxena, Nimish, Harvey, Michael, Langford, Alice, Carey-Simms, Katiana, Minahan, Sara, Satterwhite, Shannon, Ruppel, Caitlin, Lee, Sonia, Walkover, Lillian, De Avila, Jorge, Lewis, Brett, Matthews, Jenifer, Nelson, Nicholas, Strong, Shirley, Holmes, Seth, Knight, Kelly, Neff, Joshua, and Thompson-lastad, Ariana
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Cultural Competency ,Cultural Humility ,Diversity ,Health Disparities ,Health Equity ,Inclusion ,Racism ,Social Determinants of Health ,Structural Competency ,Structural Determinants of Health ,Structural Violence ,Curriculum ,Health Occupations ,Health Personnel ,Humans ,San Francisco ,Students ,Medical - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Research on disparities in health and health care has demonstrated that social, economic, and political factors are key drivers of poor health outcomes. Yet the role of such structural forces on health and health care has been incorporated unevenly into medical training. The framework of structural competency offers a paradigm for training health professionals to recognize and respond to the impact of upstream, structural factors on patient health and health care. METHODS: We report on a brief, interprofessional structural competency curriculum implemented in 32 distinct instances between 2015 and 2017 throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. In consultation with medical and interprofessional education experts, we developed open-ended, written-response surveys to qualitatively evaluate this curriculums impact on participants. Qualitative data from 15 iterations were analyzed via directed thematic analysis, coding language, and concepts to identify key themes. RESULTS: Three core themes emerged from analysis of participants comments. First, participants valued the curriculums focus on the application of the structural competency framework in real-world clinical, community, and policy contexts. Second, participants with clinical experience (residents, fellows, and faculty) reported that the curriculum helped them reframe how they thought about patients. Third, participants reported feeling reconnected to their original motivations for entering the health professions. DISCUSSION: This structural competency curriculum fills a gap in health professional education by equipping learners to understand and respond to the role that social, economic, and political structural factors play in patient and community health.
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- 2020
14. Structural Competency: Curriculum for Medical Students, Residents, and Interprofessional Teams on the Structural Factors That Produce Health Disparities.
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Neff, Joshua, Holmes, Seth M, Knight, Kelly R, Strong, Shirley, Thompson-Lastad, Ariana, McGuinness, Cara, Duncan, Laura, Saxena, Nimish, Harvey, Michael J, Langford, Alice, Carey-Simms, Katiana L, Minahan, Sara N, Satterwhite, Shannon, Ruppel, Caitlin, Lee, Sonia, Walkover, Lillian, De Avila, Jorge, Lewis, Brett, Matthews, Jenifer, and Nelson, Nicholas
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Humans ,Health Occupations ,Curriculum ,Students ,Medical ,Health Personnel ,San Francisco ,Cultural Competency ,Cultural Humility ,Diversity ,Health Disparities ,Health Equity ,Inclusion ,Racism ,Social Determinants of Health ,Structural Competency ,Structural Determinants of Health ,Structural Violence ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Generic health relevance - Abstract
IntroductionResearch on disparities in health and health care has demonstrated that social, economic, and political factors are key drivers of poor health outcomes. Yet the role of such structural forces on health and health care has been incorporated unevenly into medical training. The framework of structural competency offers a paradigm for training health professionals to recognize and respond to the impact of upstream, structural factors on patient health and health care.MethodsWe report on a brief, interprofessional structural competency curriculum implemented in 32 distinct instances between 2015 and 2017 throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. In consultation with medical and interprofessional education experts, we developed open-ended, written-response surveys to qualitatively evaluate this curriculum's impact on participants. Qualitative data from 15 iterations were analyzed via directed thematic analysis, coding language, and concepts to identify key themes.ResultsThree core themes emerged from analysis of participants' comments. First, participants valued the curriculum's focus on the application of the structural competency framework in real-world clinical, community, and policy contexts. Second, participants with clinical experience (residents, fellows, and faculty) reported that the curriculum helped them reframe how they thought about patients. Third, participants reported feeling reconnected to their original motivations for entering the health professions.DiscussionThis structural competency curriculum fills a gap in health professional education by equipping learners to understand and respond to the role that social, economic, and political structural factors play in patient and community health.
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- 2020
15. Pediatric Readiness in Emergency Medical Services Systems
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Moore, Brian, Shah, Manish I, Owusu-Ansah, Sylvia, Gross, Toni, Brown, Kathleen, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, Remick, Katherine, Adelgais, Kathleen, Lyng, John, Rappaport, Lara, Snow, Sally, Wright-Johnson, Cynthia, Leonard, Julie C, ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Section on Emergency Medicine EMS Subcommittee AMERICAN, Wright, Joseph, Adirim, Terry, Agus, Michael SD, Callahan, James, Lane, Natalie, Lee, Lois, Mazor, Suzan, Mahajan, Prashant, Timm, Nathan, PHYSICIANS, Emergency Medical Services Committee AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY, Goodloe, Jeffrey, Abell, Becky, Alson, Roy, Bachista, Kerry, Bowman, Lynthia, Boynton, Heather, Brown, Sara Ann, Chang, Allen, Copeland, Darby, De Lorenzo, Robert, Douglas, Derek, Fowler, Raymond, Gallagher, John, Gilliam, Sheaffer, Guyette, Frank, Holland, Dustin, Jarvis, Jeffrey, Kalan, Clinton, Keeperman, Jacob, Kupas, Douglas, Lairet, Julio, Levy, Michael, Lyon, Kristopher, Manifold, Craig, McCabe-Kline, Kristin, Mell, Howard, Miller, Brian, Millin, Michael, Rosen, Brett, Ross, Jared, Ryan, Kevin, Sanko, Stephen, Schlesinger, Shira, Sheppard, Charles, Sibold, Harry, Smith, Sullivan, Spigner, Michael, Stracuzzi, Vincent, Tanski, Christopher, Tennyson, Joseph, White, Chelsea, Wilcocks, David, Yee, Allen, ASSOCIATION, Pediatric Committee EMERGENCY NURSES, Young, Tiffany, Foresman-Capuzzi, Joyce, Johnson, Rose, Martin, Heather, Milici, Justin, Brandt, Cam, Nelson, Nicholas, PHYSICIANS, Standards and Clinical Practice Committee NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES, TECHNICIANS, Emergency Pediatric Care Committee NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL, Watson, Shannon, Dietrich, Ann, Bates, Kyle, Flake, Frank, Flores, Gustavo, Systems, Pediatric Readiness in Emergency Medical Services, STATEMENT, POLICY, and Children, Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and or Improve the Health of All
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Child ,Emergencies ,Emergency Medical Services ,Humans ,Pediatric Emergency Medicine ,AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS ,Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Section on Emergency Medicine EMS Subcommittee ,AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS ,Emergency Medical Services Committee ,EMERGENCY NURSES ASSOCIATION ,Pediatric Committee ,NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES PHYSICIANS ,Standards and Clinical Practice Committee ,NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIANS ,Emergency Pediatric Care Committee ,Pediatric Readiness in Emergency Medical Services Systems ,POLICY STATEMENT ,Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and/or Improve the Health of All Children ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Published
- 2020
16. Driving Solar Giant Cells through the Self-Organization of Near-Surface Plumes
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Featherstone, Nicholas A., Miesch, Mark S., and Toomre, Juri
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Global 3D simulations of solar giant-cell convection have provided significant insight into the processes which yield the Sun's observed differential rotation and cyclic dynamo action. However, as we move to higher resolution simulations a variety of codes have encountered what has been termed the convection conundrum. As these simulations increase in resolution and hence the level of turbulence achieved, they tend to produce weak or even anti-solar differential rotation patterns associated with a weak rotational influence (high Rossby number) due to large convective velocities. One potential culprit for this convection conundrum is the upper boundary condition applied in most simulations which is generally impenetrable. Here we present an alternative stochastic plume boundary condition which imposes small-scale convective plumes designed to mimic near-surface convective downflows, thus allowing convection to carry the majority of the outward solar energy flux up to and through our simulated upper boundary. The use of a plume boundary condition leads to significant changes in the convective driving realized in the simulated domain and thus to the convective energy transport, the dominant scale of the convective enthalpy flux, and the relative strength of the strongest downflows, the downflow network, and the convective upflows. These changes are present even far from the upper boundary layer. Additionally, we demonstrate that in spite of significant changes, giant cell morphology in the convective patterns is still achieved with self-organization of the imposed boundary plumes into downflow lanes, cellular patterns, and even rotationally-aligned banana cells in equatorial regions. This plume boundary presents an alternative pathway for 3D global convection simulations where driving is non-local and may provide a new approach towards addressing the convection conundrum., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 21 pages w/ 14 figures
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- 2018
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17. Selective catalytic reduction of NOx with NH3 over Ce-Mn oxide and Cu-SSZ-13 composite catalysts – Low temperature enhancement
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Andana, Tahrizi, Rappé, Kenneth G., Nelson, Nicholas C., Gao, Feng, and Wang, Yong
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- 2022
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18. Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency Department
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Remick, Katherine, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, Joseph, Madeline M, Brown, Kathleen, Snow, Sally K, Wright, Joseph L, AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Wright, Joseph, Adirim, Terry, Agus, Michael SD, Callahan, James, Gross, Toni, Lane, Natalie, Lee, Lois, Mazor, Suzan, Mahajan, Prashant, Timm, Nathan, PHYSICIANS, Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY, Alade, Kiyetta, Amato, Christopher, Avarello, Jahn T, Baldwin, Steven, Barata, Isabel A, Benjamin, Lee S, Berg, Kathleen, Bullard-Berent, Jeffrey, Dietrich, Ann Marie, Friesen, Phillip, Gerardi, Michael, Heins, Alan, Holtzman, Doug K, Homme, Jeffrey, Horeczko, Timothy, Ishimine, Paul, Lam, Samuel, Long, Katharine, Mayz, Kurtis, Mehta, Sanjay, Mellick, Larry, Ojo, Aderonke, Paul, Audrey Z, Pauze, Denis R, Pearson, Nadia M, Perina, Debra, Petrack, Emory, Rayburn, David, Rose, Emily, Russell, W Scott, Ruttan, Timothy, Saidinejad, Mohsen, Sanders, Brian, Simpson, Joelle, Solari, Patrick, Stoner, Michael, Valente, Jonathan H, Wall, Jessica, Wallin, Dina, Waseem, Muhammad, Whiteman, Paula J, Woolridge, Dale, ASSOCIATION, Pediatric Committee EMERGENCY NURSES, Young, Tiffany, Foresman-Capuzzi, Joyce, Johnson, Rose, Martin, Heather, Milici, Justin, Brandt, Cam, Nelson, Nicholas, Department, Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency, STATEMENT, POLICY, and Children, Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and or Improve the Health of All
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Child ,Emergency Medical Services ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Emergency Treatment ,Evidence-Based Emergency Medicine ,Humans ,Organizational Policy ,Pediatrics ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Quality Improvement ,Quality Indicators ,Health Care ,United States ,AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS ,Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine ,Section on Surgery ,AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS ,Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee ,EMERGENCY NURSES ASSOCIATION ,Pediatric Committee ,Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency Department ,POLICY STATEMENT ,Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and/or Improve the Health of All Children ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Published
- 2018
19. Use of journal clubs and book clubs in pharmacy education: A scoping review
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Jones, Emily P., Nelson, Nicholas R., Thorpe, Carolyn T., Rodgers, Philip T., and Carlson, Rebecca B.
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- 2022
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20. The Astropy Problem
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Muna, Demitri, Alexander, Michael, Allen, Alice, Ashley, Richard, Asmus, Daniel, Azzollini, Ruyman, Bannister, Michele, Beaton, Rachael, Benson, Andrew, Berriman, G. Bruce, Bilicki, Maciej, Boyce, Peter, Bridge, Joanna, Cami, Jan, Cangi, Eryn, Chen, Xian, Christiny, Nicholas, Clark, Christopher, Collins, Michelle, Comparat, Johan, Cook, Neil, Croton, Darren, Davids, Isak Delberth, Depagne, Éric, Donor, John, Santos, Leonardo A. dos, Douglas, Stephanie, Du, Alan, Durbin, Meredith, Erb, Dawn, Faes, Daniel, Fernández-Trincado, J. G., Foley, Anthony, Fotopoulou, Sotiria, Frimann, Søren, Frinchaboy, Peter, Garcia-Dias, Rafael, Gawryszczak, Artur, George, Elizabeth, Gonzalez, Sebastian, Gordon, Karl, Gorgone, Nicholas, Gosmeyer, Catherine, Grasha, Katie, Greenfield, Perry, Grellmann, Rebekka, Guillochon, James, Gurwell, Mark, Haas, Marcel, Hagen, Alex, Haggard, Daryl, Haines, Tim, Hall, Patrick, Hellwing, Wojciech, Herenz, Edmund Christian, Hinton, Samuel, Hlozek, Renee, Hoffman, John, Holman, Derek, Holwerda, Benne Willem, Horton, Anthony, Hummels, Cameron, Jacobs, Daniel, Jensen, Jens Juel, Jones, David, Karick, Arna, Kelley, Luke, Kenworthy, Matthew, Kitchener, Ben, Klaes, Dominik, Kohn, Saul, Konorski, Piotr, Krawczyk, Coleman, Kuehn, Kyler, Kuutma, Teet, Lam, Michael T., Lane, Richard, Liske, Jochen, Lopez-Camara, Diego, Mack, Katherine, Mangham, Sam, Mao, Qingqing, Marsh, David J. E., Mateu, Cecilia, Maurin, Loïc, McCormac, James, Momcheva, Ivelina, Monteiro, Hektor, Mueller, Michael, Munoz, Roberto, Naidu, Rohan, Nelson, Nicholas, Nitschelm, Christian, North, Chris, Nunez-Iglesias, Juan, Ogaz, Sara, Owen, Russell, Parejko, John, Patrício, Vera, Pepper, Joshua, Perrin, Marshall, Pickering, Timothy, Piscionere, Jennifer, Pogge, Richard, Poleski, Radek, Pourtsidou, Alkistis, Price-Whelan, Adrian M., Rawls, Meredith L., Read, Shaun, Rees, Glen, Rein, Hanno, Rice, Thomas, Riemer-Sørensen, Signe, Rusomarov, Naum, Sanchez, Sebastian F., Santander-García, Miguel, Sarid, Gal, Schoenell, William, Scholz, Aleks, Schuhmann, Robert L., Schuster, William, Scicluna, Peter, Seidel, Marja, Shao, Lijing, Sharma, Pranav, Shulevski, Aleksandar, Shupe, David, Sifón, Cristóbal, Simmons, Brooke, Sinha, Manodeep, Skillen, Ian, Soergel, Bjoern, Spriggs, Thomas, Srinivasan, Sundar, Stevens, Abigail, Streicher, Ole, Suchyta, Eric, Tan, Joshua, Telford, O. Grace, Thomas, Romain, Tonini, Chiara, Tremblay, Grant, Tuttle, Sarah, Urrutia, Tanya, Vaughan, Sam, Verdugo, Miguel, Wagner, Alexander, Walawender, Josh, Wetzel, Andrew, Willett, Kyle, Williams, Peter K. G., Yang, Guang, Zhu, Guangtun, and Zonca, Andrea
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
The Astropy Project (http://astropy.org) is, in its own words, "a community effort to develop a single core package for Astronomy in Python and foster interoperability between Python astronomy packages." For five years this project has been managed, written, and operated as a grassroots, self-organized, almost entirely volunteer effort while the software is used by the majority of the astronomical community. Despite this, the project has always been and remains to this day effectively unfunded. Further, contributors receive little or no formal recognition for creating and supporting what is now critical software. This paper explores the problem in detail, outlines possible solutions to correct this, and presents a few suggestions on how to address the sustainability of general purpose astronomical software.
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- 2016
21. Pediatric Medication Safety in the Emergency Department
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Benjamin, Lee, Frush, Karen, Shaw, Kathy, Shook, Joan E, Snow, Sally K, ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine AMERICAN, Wright, Joseph, Adirim, Terry, Agus, Michael SD, Callahan, James, Gross, Toni, Lane, Natalie, Lee, Lois, Mazor, Suzan, Mahajan, Prashant, Timm, Nathan, PHYSICIANS, Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY, Joseph, Madeline, Alade, Kiyetta, Amato, Christopher, Avarello, Jahn T, Baldwin, Steven, Barata, Isabel A, Benjamin, Lee S, Berg, Kathleen, Brown, Kathleen, Bullard-Berent, Jeffrey, Dietrich, Ann M, Friesen, Phillip, Gerardi, Michael, Heins, Alan, Holtzman, Doug K, Homme, Jeffrey, Horeczko, Timothy, Ishimine, Paul, Lam, Samuel, Long, Katharine, Mayz, Kurtis, Mehta, Sanjay, Mellick, Larry, Ojo, Aderonke, Paul, Audrey Z, Pauze, Denis R, Pearson, Nadia M, Perina, Debra, Petrack, Emory, Rayburn, David, Rose, Emily, Russell, W Scott, Ruttan, Timothy, Saidinejad, Mohsen, Sanders, Brian, Simpson, Joelle, Solari, Patrick, Stoner, Michael, Valente, Jonathan H, Wall, Jessica, Wallin, Dina, Waseem, Muhammad, Whiteman, Paula J, Woolridge, Dale, ASSOCIATION, Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee EMERGENCY NURSES, Young, Tiffany, Foresman-Capuzzi, Joyce, Johnson, Rose, Martin, Heather, Milici, Justin, Brandt, Cam, Nelson, Nicholas, Statement, Policy, and Children, Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and Improve the Health of All
- Subjects
Child ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Patient Safety ,Risk Factors ,AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS ,Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine ,AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS ,Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee ,EMERGENCY NURSES ASSOCIATION ,Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee ,Policy Statement ,Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and Improve the Health of All Children ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Published
- 2018
22. Isolated Myeloid Sarcoma Masquerading as Scattered Abscesses in a Septic Patient: A Case Report and Literature Review
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Nelson, Nicholas, primary, Masih, Durva, additional, Sabri, Ahmed, additional, Monika, Fnu, additional, and Mirza, Muazzam, additional
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- 2024
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23. Utilization of a national database to characterize renal function in patients admitted with COVID19 infection
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Nelson, Nicholas R., primary, Farina, Nicholas, additional, and Rhoney, Denise H., additional
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- 2024
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24. A Scoping Review of the Pharmacy Curriculum Outcomes Assessment Literature
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Nelson, Nicholas R., Anderson, Sarah M., Zeeman, Jacqueline M., and Rhoney, Denise H.
- Published
- 2021
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25. Remineralization and Stabilization of Desalinated Water
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Nelson, Nicholas, primary and De Luca, Antonella, additional
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- 2021
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26. Dynamical chaos in a simple model of a knuckleball
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Nelson, Nicholas J. and Strauss, Eric
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- 2021
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27. Effects of Initial Condition Spectral Content on Shock Driven Turbulent Mixing
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Nelson, Nicholas J. and Grinstein, Fernando F.
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The mixing of materials due to the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability and the ensuing turbulent behavior is of intense interest in a variety of physical systems including inertial confinement fusion, combustion, and the final stages of stellar evolution. Extensive numerical and laboratory studies of shock-driven mixing have demonstrated the rich behavior associated with the onset of turbulence due to the shocks. Here we report on progress in understanding shock-driven mixing at interfaces between fluids of differing densities through 3D numerical simulations using the RAGE code in the implicit large eddy simulation context. We consider a shock tube configuration with a band of high density gas (SF$_6$) embedded in low density gas (air). Shocks with a Mach number of 1.26 are passed through SF$_6$ bands, resulting in transition to turbulence driven by the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability. The system is followed as a rarefaction wave and a reflected secondary shock from the back wall pass through the SF$_6$ band. We apply a variety of initial perturbations to the interfaces between the two fluids in which the physical standard deviation, wave number range, and the spectral slope of the perturbations are held constant, but the number of modes initially present is varied. By thus decreasing the density of initial spectral modes of the interface, we find that we can achieve as much as 25\% less total mixing at late times. This has potential direct implications for the treatment of initial conditions applied to material interfaces in both 3D and reduced dimensionality simulation models., Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication Physical Review E
- Published
- 2015
28. Clinical signs of nitrous oxide use: case report and review of the literature.
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Nelson,, Nicholas, Diaz,, Alejandro, Bouzarif,, Ghita, Chen,, Jenna, Doshi,, Nirmita, Mortimer,, Adam, and Subramanian,, Indhu
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- *
NITROUS oxide , *LITERATURE reviews , *SYMPTOMS , *ANESTHETICS , *VITAMIN B12 - Abstract
AbstractNitrous oxide is used medically as an anesthetic agent; in the food industry as a propellant for condiments; and recreationally for its euphoric and dissociative effects. We report three cases of nitrous oxide misuse causing severe, symptomatic cobalamin (vitamin B12) deficiency in which signs of nitrous oxide use per se, as well as signs of toxicity, were observed, including characteristic palmar calluses over the metacarpal heads, and frostbite. These signs may assist clinicians in the recognition of nitrous oxide use and the timely diagnosis of nitrous oxide toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. 1346: SCOPING REVIEW OF NON-BETA-LACTAM ANTIBIOTIC DOSING IN SUSTAINED LOW-EFFICIENCY DIALYSIS
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Quinn, Nicholas, primary, Nelson, Nicholas, additional, Marsolek, Legacy, additional, Lear, Alyssa, additional, Gregar, Sarah, additional, Dellabella, Alexander, additional, Tobin, Morgan, additional, Mounce, Crystal, additional, and Bills, Stephanie, additional
- Published
- 2023
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30. 1345: SCOPING REVIEW OF BETA-LACTAM DRUG DOSING IN SUSTAINED LOW-EFFICIENCY DIALYSIS
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Nelson, Nicholas, primary, Quinn, Nicholas, additional, Marsolek, Legacy, additional, Bills, Stephanie, additional, Dellabella, Alexander, additional, Gregar, Sarah, additional, Lear, Alyssa, additional, Mounce, Crystal, additional, and Tobin, Morgan, additional
- Published
- 2023
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31. Integration and dosimetric validation of a dynamic collimation system for pencil beam scanning proton therapy
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Nelson, Nicholas P, primary, Culberson, Wesley S, additional, Hyer, Daniel E, additional, Geoghegan, Theodore J, additional, Patwardhan, Kaustubh A, additional, Smith, Blake R, additional, Flynn, Ryan T, additional, Gutiérrez, Alonso N, additional, Boland, Thibault, additional, and Hill, Patrick M, additional
- Published
- 2023
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32. S2131 Rare Case of Synchronous Association of Adenocarcinoma of the Ampulla of Vater With Sporadic Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oropharynx
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Masih, Durva, primary, Asghar, Noureen, additional, Nelson, Nicholas, additional, Green, Jennifer, additional, Silberstein, Peter, additional, and Sidhu, Suhail, additional
- Published
- 2023
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33. Response to “A Call to Action to Remove ACPE Limits on Non-Patient Care Elective Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences”
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Nelson, Nicholas R., primary, Darst, Emily C., additional, and Rhoney, Denise H., additional
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- 2023
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34. S3007 Pernicious Pouch of Problems: A Challenging Case of Massive Hemorrhage Secondary to Jejunal Diverticular Bleeding
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Reed, Tyler, primary, Bush, Allison, additional, and Nelson, Nicholas, additional
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- 2023
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35. Generating buoyant magnetic flux ropes in solar-like convective dynamos
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Nelson, Nicholas J. and Miesch, Mark S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Our Sun exhibits strong convective dynamo action which results in magnetic flux bundles emerging through the stellar surface as magnetic spots. Global-scale dynamo action is believed to generate large-scale magnetic structures in the deep solar interior through the interplay of convection, rotation, and shear. Portions of these large-scale magnetic structures are then believed to rise through the convective layer, forming magnetic loops which then pierce the photosphere as sunspot pairs. Previous global simulations of 3D MHD convection in rotating spherical shells have demonstrated mechanisms whereby large-scale magnetic wreaths can be generated in the bulk of the convection zone. Our recent simulations have achieved sufficiently high levels of turbulence to permit portions of these wreaths to become magnetically buoyant and rise through the simulated convective layer through a combination of magnetic buoyancy and advection by convective giant cells. These buoyant magnetic loops are created in the bulk of the convective layer as strong Lorentz force feedback in the cores of the magnetic wreaths dampen small-scale convective motions, permitting the amplification of local magnetic energies to over 100 times the local kinetic energy. While the magnetic wreaths are largely generated the shearing of axisymmetric poloidal magnetic fields by axisymmetric rotational shear (the $\Omega$-effect), the loops are amplified to their peak field strengths before beginning to rise by non-axisymmetric processes. This further extends and enhances a new paradigm for the generation of emergent magnetic flux bundles, which we term turbulence-enabled magnetic buoyancy., Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion special issue "Self-Organization in Magnetic Flux Ropes"
- Published
- 2014
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36. Augmented Renal Clearance: An Under-Recognized Phenomenon Associated With COVID-19
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Rhoney, Denise H., Brooks, Ashley B., and Nelson, Nicholas R.
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- 2022
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37. 930: IMPACT OF CATECHOLAMINE USE ON PULMONARY ARTERY PRESSURES IN PATIENTS WITH PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
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Nelson, Nicholas, Adie, Sarah, and Farina, Nicholas
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- 2022
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38. 250: A RAPID REVIEW OF AUGMENTED RENAL CLEARANCE IN PATIENTS WITH COVID-19
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Nelson, Nicholas, Brooks, Ashley, and Rhoney, Denise
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- 2022
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39. The life-cycle of merge conflicts: processes, barriers, and strategies
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Nelson, Nicholas, Brindescu, Caius, McKee, Shane, Sarma, Anita, and Dig, Danny
- Published
- 2019
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40. Carboxyl intermediate formation via an in situ-generated metastable active site during water-gas shift catalysis
- Author
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Nelson, Nicholas C., Nguyen, Manh-Thuong, Glezakou, Vassiliki-Alexandra, Rousseau, Roger, and Szanyi, János
- Published
- 2019
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41. Buoyant Magnetic Loops Generated by Global Convective Dynamo Action
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Brown, Benjamin P., Brun, A. Sacha, Miesch, Mark S., and Toomre, Juri
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Our global 3D simulations of convection and dynamo action in a Sun-like star reveal that persistent wreaths of strong magnetism can be built within the bulk of the convention zone. Here we examine the characteristics of buoyant magnetic structures that are self-consistently created by dynamo action and turbulent convective motions in a simulation with solar stratification but rotating at three times the current solar rate. These buoyant loops originate within sections of the magnetic wreaths in which turbulent flows amplify the fields to much larger values than is possible through laminar processes. These amplified portions can rise through the convective layer by a combination of magnetic buoyancy and advection by convective giant cells, forming buoyant loops. We measure statistical trends in the polarity, twist, and tilt of these loops. Loops are shown to preferentially arise in longitudinal patches somewhat reminiscent of active longitudes in the Sun, although broader in extent. We show that the strength of the axisymmetric toroidal field is not a good predictor of the production rate for buoyant loops or the amount of magnetic flux in the loops that are produced., Comment: Solar Physics format, 22 pages, accepted by Solar Physics for topical issue related NSO Workshop #26: Solar Origins of Space Weather and Space Climate
- Published
- 2012
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42. Magnetic Wreaths and Cycles in Convective Dynamos
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Brown, Benjamin P., Brun, A. Sacha, Miesch, Mark S., and Toomre, Juri
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
Solar-type stars exhibit a rich variety of magnetic activity. Seeking to explore the convective origins of this activity, we have carried out a series of global 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations with the anelastic spherical harmonic (ASH) code. Here we report on the dynamo mechanisms achieved as the effects of artificial diffusion are systematically decreased. The simulations are carried out at a nominal rotation rate of three times the solar value (3$\Omega_\odot$), but similar dynamics may also apply to the Sun. Our previous simulations demonstrated that convective dynamos can build persistent toroidal flux structures (magnetic wreaths) in the midst of a turbulent convection zone and that high rotation rates promote the cyclic reversal of these wreaths. Here we demonstrate that magnetic cycles can also be achieved by reducing the diffusion, thus increasing the Reynolds and magnetic Reynolds numbers. In these more turbulent models, diffusive processes no longer play a significant role in the key dynamical balances that establish and maintain the differential rotation and magnetic wreaths. Magnetic reversals are attributed to an imbalance in the poloidal magnetic induction by convective motions that is stabilized at higher diffusion levels. Additionally, the enhanced levels of turbulence lead to greater intermittency in the toroidal magnetic wreaths, promoting the generation of buoyant magnetic loops that rise from the deep interior to the upper regions of our simulated domain. The implications of such turbulence-induced magnetic buoyancy for solar and stellar flux emergence are also discussed., Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2012
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43. Use of a clinical reasoning scaffolding document improves student performance
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Nelson, Nicholas R. and Rhoney, Denise H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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44. Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency Department
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Wright, Joseph, Adirim, Terry, Agus, Michael S.D., Callahan, James, Gross, Toni, Lane, Natalie, Lee, Lois, Mazor, Suzan, Mahajan, Prashant, Timm, Nathan, Joseph, Madeline M., Alade, Kiyetta, Amato, Christopher, Avarello, Jahn T., Baldwin, Steven, Barata, Isabel A., Benjamin, Lee S., Berg, Kathleen, Brown, Kathleen, Bullard-Berent, Jeffrey, Dietrich, Ann Marie, Friesen, Phillip, Gerardi, Michael, Heins, Alan, Holtzman, Doug K., Homme, Jeffrey, Horeczko, Timothy, Ishimine, Paul, Lam, Samuel, Long, Katharine, Mayz, Kurtis, Mehta, Sanjay, Mellick, Larry, Ojo, Aderonke, Paul, Audrey Z., Pauze, Denis R., Pearson, Nadia M., Perina, Debra, Petrack, Emory, Rayburn, David, Rose, Emily, Russell, W. Scott, Ruttan, Timothy, Saidinejad, Mohsen, Sanders, Brian, Simpson, Joelle, Solari, Patrick, Stoner, Michael, Valente, Jonathan H., Wall, Jessica, Wallin, Dina, Waseem, Muhammad, Whiteman, Paula J., Woolridge, Dale, Young, Tiffany, Foresman-Capuzzi, Joyce, Johnson, Rose, Martin, Heather, Milici, Justin, Brandt, Cam, Nelson, Nicholas, Remick, Katherine, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, Snow, Sally K., and Wright, Joseph L.
- Published
- 2019
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45. Buoyant Magnetic Loops in a Global Dynamo Simulation of a Young Sun
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Brown, Benjamin P., Brun, Allan Sacha, Miesch, Mark S., and Toomre, Juri
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The current dynamo paradigm for the Sun and sun-like stars places the generation site for strong toroidal magnetic structures deep in the solar interior. Sunspots and star-spots on sun-like stars are believed to arise when sections of these magnetic structures become buoyantly unstable and rise from the deep interior to the photosphere. Here we present the first 3-D global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulation in which turbulent convection, stratification, and rotation combine to yield a dynamo that self-consistently generates buoyant magnetic loops. We simulate stellar convection and dynamo action in a spherical shell with solar stratification, but rotating three times faster than the current solar rate. Strong wreaths of toroidal magnetic field are realized by dynamo action in the convection zone. By turning to a dynamic Smagorinsky model for subgrid-scale turbulence, we here attain considerably reduced diffusion in our simulation. This permits the regions of strongest magnetic field in these wreaths to rise toward the top of the convection zone via a combination of magnetic buoyancy instabilities and advection by convective giant cells. Such a global simulation yielding buoyant loops represents a significant step forward in combining numerical models of dynamo action and flux emergence., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted in ApJ Letters
- Published
- 2011
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46. Global magnetic cycles in rapidly rotating younger suns
- Author
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Nelson, Nicholas J., Brown, Benjamin P., Browning, Matthew K., Brun, Allan Sacha, Miesch, Mark S., and Toomre, Juri
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of sun-like stars rotating faster than our current sun tend to exhibit increased magnetic activity as well as magnetic cycles spanning multiple years. Using global simulations in spherical shells to study the coupling of large-scale convection, rotation, and magnetism in a younger sun, we have probed effects of rotation on stellar dynamos and the nature of magnetic cycles. Major 3-D MHD simulations carried out at three times the current solar rotation rate reveal hydromagnetic dynamo action that yields wreaths of strong toroidal magnetic field at low latitudes, often with opposite polarity in the two hemispheres. Our recent simulations have explored behavior in systems with considerably lower diffusivities, achieved with sub-grid scale models including a dynamic Smagorinsky treatment of unresolved turbulence. The lower diffusion promotes the generation of magnetic wreaths that undergo prominent temporal variations in field strength, exhibiting global magnetic cycles that involve polarity reversals. In our least diffusive simulation, we find that magnetic buoyancy coupled with advection by convective giant cells can lead to the rise of coherent loops of magnetic field toward the top of the simulated domain., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, from IAU 273: The Physics of Sun and Star Spots
- Published
- 2010
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47. The Management of Children and Youth With Pediatric Mental and Behavioral Health Emergencies
- Author
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Saidinejad, Mohsen, primary, Duffy, Susan, additional, Wallin, Dina, additional, Hoffmann, Jennifer A., additional, Joseph, Madeline, additional, Schieferle Uhlenbrock, Jennifer, additional, Brown, Kathleen, additional, Waseem, Muhammad, additional, Snow, Sally K., additional, Andrew, Madeline, additional, Kuo, Alice A., additional, Sulton, Carmen, additional, Chun, Thomas, additional, Lee, Lois K., additional, Conners, Gregory P., additional, Callahan, James, additional, Gross, Toni, additional, Lee, Lois, additional, Mack, Elizabeth, additional, Marin, Jennifer, additional, Mazor, Suzan, additional, Paul, Ronald, additional, Timm, Nathan, additional, Dietrich, Ann M., additional, Alade, Kiyetta H., additional, Amato, Christopher S., additional, Atanelov, Zaza, additional, Auerbach, Marc, additional, Barata, Isabel A., additional, Benjamin, Lee S., additional, Berg, Kathleen T., additional, Chang, Cindy, additional, Chow, Jessica, additional, Chumpitazi, Corrie E., additional, Claudius, Ilene A., additional, Easter, Joshua, additional, Foster, Ashley, additional, Fox, Sean M., additional, Gausche-Hill, Marianne, additional, Gerardi, Michael J., additional, Goodloe, Jeffrey M., additional, Heniff, Melanie, additional, Homme, James (Jim) L., additional, Ishimine, Paul T., additional, John, Susan D., additional, Joseph, Madeline M., additional, Lam, Samuel Hiu-Fung, additional, Lawson, Simone L., additional, Lee, Moon O., additional, Li, Joyce, additional, Lin, Sophia D., additional, Martini, Dyllon Ivy, additional, Mellick, Larry Bruce, additional, Mendez, Donna, additional, Petrack, Emory M., additional, Rice, Lauren, additional, Rose, Emily A., additional, Ruttan, Timothy, additional, Saidinejad, Mohsen, additional, Santillanes, Genevieve, additional, Simpson, Joelle N., additional, Sivasankar, Shyam M., additional, Slubowski, Daniel, additional, Sorrentino, Annalise, additional, Stoner, Michael J., additional, Sulton, Carmen D., additional, Valente, Jonathan H., additional, Vora, Samreen, additional, Wall, Jessica J., additional, Walls, Theresa A., additional, Woolridge, Dale P., additional, Brandt, Cam, additional, Kult, Krisi M., additional, Milici, Justin J., additional, Nelson, Nicholas A., additional, Redlo, Michele A., additional, Curtis Cooper, Maureen R., additional, Redlo, Michele, additional, Kult, Krisi, additional, Logee, Katherine, additional, Bryant, Dixie Elizabeth, additional, Cooper, Maureen Curtis, additional, and Cline, Kristen, additional
- Published
- 2023
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48. BRCA1 and NORE1A Form a Her2/Ras Regulated Tumor Suppressor Complex Modulating Senescence
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Nelson, Nicholas, primary, Jigo, Raphael, additional, and Clark, Geoffrey J., additional
- Published
- 2023
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49. The Puzzling Structure of Solar Convection: Window into the Dynamo
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Featherstone, Nicholas, primary, Anders, Evan H., additional, Augustson, Kyle C., additional, Aurnou, Jonathan, additional, Blume, Catherine, additional, Brown, Benjamin P., additional, Brummell, Nicholas, additional, Burns, Keaton J., additional, Calkins, Michael A., additional, Camisassa, Maria, additional, Dikpati, Mausumi, additional, Fan, Yuhong, additional, Fuentes, J. R., additional, Guerrero, Gustavo, additional, Hindman, Bradley W., additional, Julien, Keith, additional, Kitiashvili, Irina N., additional, Korre, Lydia, additional, Lecoanet, Daniel, additional, Manek, Bhishek, additional, Matilsky, Loren, additional, Nelson, Nicholas J., additional, Oishi, Jeffrey S., additional, Powers, Whitney T., additional, Rempel, Matthias, additional, Soderlund, Krista, additional, Vasil, Geoffrey M., additional, Stejko, Andrey M., additional, and Miesch, Mark, additional
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
50. Strong Dynamo Action in Rapidly Rotating Suns
- Author
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Brown, Benjamin P., Browning, Matthew K., Brun, Allan Sacha, Miesch, Mark S., Nelson, Nicholas J., and Toomre, Juri
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Stellar dynamos are driven by complex couplings between rotation and turbulent convection, which drive global-scale flows and build and rebuild stellar magnetic fields. When stars like our sun are young, they rotate much more rapidly than the current solar rate. Observations generally indicate that more rapid rotation is correlated with stronger magnetic activity and perhaps more effective dynamo action. Here we examine the effects of more rapid rotation on dynamo action in a star like our sun. We find that vigorous dynamo action is realized, with magnetic field generated throughout the bulk of the convection zone. These simulations do not possess a penetrative tachocline of shear where global-scale fields are thought to be organized in our sun, but despite this we find strikingly ordered fields, much like sea-snakes of toroidal field, which are organized on global scales. We believe this to be a novel finding., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figs. Published in conference proceedings "Unsolved Problems in Stellar Physics", held July 2-6 2007 Cambridge, England
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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