4,430 results on '"Nordheim A"'
Search Results
2. Records reveal the vast historical extent of European oyster reef ecosystems
- Author
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Thurstan, Ruth H., McCormick, Hannah, Preston, Joanne, Ashton, Elizabeth C., Bennema, Floris P., Cetinić, Ana Bratoš, Brown, Janet H., Cameron, Tom C., da Costa, Fiz, Donnan, David W., Ewers, Christine, Fortibuoni, Tomaso, Galimany, Eve, Giovanardi, Otello, Grancher, Romain, Grech, Daniele, Hayden-Hughes, Maria, Helmer, Luke, Jensen, K. Thomas, Juanes, José A., Latchford, Janie, Moore, Alec B. M., Moutopoulos, Dimitrios K., Nielsen, Pernille, von Nordheim, Henning, Ondiviela, Bárbara, Peter, Corina, Pogoda, Bernadette, Poulsen, Bo, Pouvreau, Stéphane, Roberts, Callum M., Scherer, Cordula, Smaal, Aad C., Smyth, David, Strand, Åsa, Theodorou, John A., and zu Ermgassen, Philine S. E.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. Revealing Callisto's carbon-rich surface and CO2 atmosphere with JWST
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Cartwright, Richard J., Villanueva, Geronimo L., Holler, Bryan J., Camarca, Maria, Faggi, Sara, Neveu, Marc, Roth, Lorenz, Raut, Ujjwal, Glein, Christopher R., Castillo-Rogez, Julie C., Malaska, Michael J., Bockelee-Morvan, Dominique, Nordheim, Tom A., Hand, Kevin P., Strazzulla, Giovanni, Pendleton, Yvonne J., de Kleer, Katherine, Beddingfield, Chloe B., de Pater, Imke, Cruikshank, Dale P., and Protopapa, Silvia
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyzed spectral cubes of Callisto's leading and trailing hemispheres, collected with the NIRSpec Integrated Field Unit (G395H) on the James Webb Space Telescope. These spatially resolved data show strong 4.25-micron absorption bands resulting from solid-state 12CO2, with the strongest spectral features at low latitudes near the center of its trailing hemisphere, consistent with radiolytic production spurred by magnetospheric plasma interacting with native H2O mixed with carbonaceous compounds. We detected CO2 rovibrational emission lines between 4.2 and 4.3 microns over both hemispheres, confirming the global presence of CO2 gas in Callisto's tenuous atmosphere. These results represent the first detection of CO2 gas over Callisto's trailing side. The distribution of CO2 gas is offset from the subsolar region on either hemisphere, suggesting that sputtering, radiolysis, and geologic processes help sustain Callisto's atmosphere. We detected a 4.38-micron absorption band that likely results from solid-state 13CO2. A prominent 4.57-micron absorption band that might result from CN-bearing organics is present and significantly stronger on Callisto's leading hemisphere, unlike 12CO2, suggesting these two spectral features are spatially anti-associated. The distribution of the 4.57-micron band is more consistent with a native origin and/or accumulation of dust from Jupiter's irregular satellites. Other, more subtle absorption features could result from CH-bearing organics, CO, carbonyl sulfide (OCS), and Na-bearing minerals. These results highlight the need for preparatory laboratory work and improved surface-atmosphere interaction models to better understand carbon chemistry on the icy Galilean moons before the arrival of NASA's Europa Clipper and ESA's JUICE spacecraft., Comment: Accepted in AAS Planetary Science Journal, January 2024
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- 2024
4. Landscape-scale drivers of spatial dynamics and genetic diversity in an emerging wildlife pathogen
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Saenz, Veronica, Byrne, Allison Q., Ohmer, Michel E. B., Hammond, Talisin T., Brannelly, Laura A., Altman, Karie A., Kosowsky, Miranda, Nordheim, Caitlin L., Rosenblum, Erica Bree, and Richards-Zawacki, Corinne L.
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- 2025
- Full Text
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5. „Gegen alles Obszöne, Politische auf der Bühne!“
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Nordheim, Julius, primary
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Few-shot learning for automated content analysis: Efficient coding of arguments and claims in the debate on arms deliveries to Ukraine
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Rieger, Jonas, Yanchenko, Kostiantyn, Ruckdeschel, Mattes, von Nordheim, Gerret, Königslöw, Katharina Kleinen-von, and Wiedemann, Gregor
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Pre-trained language models (PLM) based on transformer neural networks developed in the field of natural language processing (NLP) offer great opportunities to improve automatic content analysis in communication science, especially for the coding of complex semantic categories in large datasets via supervised machine learning. However, three characteristics so far impeded the widespread adoption of the methods in the applying disciplines: the dominance of English language models in NLP research, the necessary computing resources, and the effort required to produce training data to fine-tune PLMs. In this study, we address these challenges by using a multilingual transformer model in combination with the adapter extension to transformers, and few-shot learning methods. We test our approach on a realistic use case from communication science to automatically detect claims and arguments together with their stance in the German news debate on arms deliveries to Ukraine. In three experiments, we evaluate (1) data preprocessing strategies and model variants for this task, (2) the performance of different few-shot learning methods, and (3) how well the best setup performs on varying training set sizes in terms of validity, reliability, replicability and reproducibility of the results. We find that our proposed combination of transformer adapters with pattern exploiting training provides a parameter-efficient and easily shareable alternative to fully fine-tuning PLMs. It performs on par in terms of validity, while overall, provides better properties for application in communication studies. The results also show that pre-fine-tuning for a task on a near-domain dataset leads to substantial improvement, in particular in the few-shot setting. Further, the results indicate that it is useful to bias the dataset away from the viewpoints of specific prominent individuals., Comment: Accepted for Studies in Communication and Media
- Published
- 2023
7. Endothelial LATS2 is a suppressor of bone marrow fibrosis
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Sivaraj, Kishor K., Majev, Paul-Georg, Dharmalingam, Backialakshmi, Schröder, Silke, Banjanin, Bella, Stehling, Martin, Zeuschner, Dagmar, Nordheim, Alfred, Schneider, Rebekka K., and Adams, Ralf H.
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- 2024
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8. Historical dataset details the distribution, extent and form of lost Ostrea edulis reef ecosystems
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Ruth H. Thurstan, Hannah McCormick, Joanne Preston, Elizabeth C. Ashton, Floris P. Bennema, Ana Bratoš Cetinić, Janet H. Brown, Tom C. Cameron, Fiz da Costa, David W. Donnan, Christine Ewers, Tomaso Fortibuoni, Eve Galimany, Otello Giovanardi, Romain Grancher, Daniele Grech, Maria Hayden-Hughes, Luke Helmer, K. Thomas Jensen, José A. Juanes, Janie Latchford, Alec B. M. Moore, Dimitrios K. Moutopoulos, Pernille Nielsen, Henning von Nordheim, Bárbara Ondiviela, Corina Peter, Bernadette Pogoda, Bo Poulsen, Stéphane Pouvreau, Cordula Scherer, Aad C. Smaal, David Smyth, Åsa Strand, John A. Theodorou, and Philine S. E. zu Ermgassen
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Ocean ecosystems have been subjected to anthropogenic influences for centuries, but the scale of past ecosystem changes is often unknown. For centuries, the European flat oyster (Ostrea edulis), an ecosystem engineer providing biogenic reef habitats, was a culturally and economically significant source of food and trade. These reef habitats are now functionally extinct, and almost no memory of where or at what scales this ecosystem once existed, or its past form, remains. The described datasets present qualitative and quantitative extracts from written records published between 1524 and 2022. These show: (1) locations of past flat oyster fisheries and/or oyster reef habitat described across its biogeographical range, with associated levels of confidence; (2) reported extent of past oyster reef habitats, and; (3) species associated with these habitats. These datasets will be of use to inform accelerating flat oyster restoration activities, to establish reference models for anchoring adaptive management of restoration action, and in contributing to global efforts to recover records on the hidden history of anthropogenic-driven ocean ecosystem degradation.
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- 2024
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9. The Implementation Process Assessment Tool: translation, contextualization, and psychometric evaluation of a Swedish version in a municipal elderly care context
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Kaltenbrunner, Monica, Hagerman, Heidi, Fagerström, Cecilia, Hartveit, Miriam, Nordheim, Espen, and Ekstedt, Mirjam
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- 2024
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10. Environmental Conditions and Husbandry Approach Affect the Survival and Physiology of the California Blackworm ('Lumbriculus Variegatus')
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Daoud, Abdel, Nordheim, Erik V., McGee, Seth A., and Harris, Michelle A.
- Abstract
The California Blackworm ("Lumbriculus variegatus") is a freshwater segmented worm species that has been used by biology instructors as a model system for inquiry-based student investigations. The blackworm dorsal blood vessel pulsation rate is easily quantified. Moreover, this species can facilitate the study of neuromuscular functioning via its photosensitive escape behavior which can be quantified as a segmental reflex rate. Both of these variables can be used to examine the physiological response of the "L. variegatus" circulatory and neuromuscular systems to environmental changes. Because knowledge about this species and its optimal environmental conditions is limited, we studied dorsal vessel pulsation and segmental reflexes of "L. variegatus" maintained at differing lighting, temperature and water cleaning frequency conditions. Our data strongly indicate that "L. variegatus" circulatory and motor functions are significantly affected by environmental conditions. We provide evidence-based recommendations for the careful control of environmental conditions that will allow instructors, students and researchers to collect robust data on "L. variegatus" and better utilize this model organism in their investigations.
- Published
- 2022
11. Feasibility of Passive Sounding of Uranian Moons using Uranian Kilometric Radiation
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Romero-Wolf, Andrew, Steinbruegge, Gregor, Castillo-Rogez, Julie, Cochrane, Corey J., Nordheim, Tom A., Mitchell, Karl L., Wolfenbarger, Natalie S., Schroeder, Dustin M., and Peters, Sean T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a feasibility study for passive sounding of Uranian icy moons using Uranian Kilometric Radio (UKR) emissions in the 100 - 900 kHz band. We provide a summary description of the observation geometry, the UKR characteristics, and estimate the sensitivity for an instrument analogous to the Cassini Radio Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) but with a modified receiver digitizer and signal processing chain. We show that the concept has the potential to directly and unambiguously detect cold oceans within Uranian satellites and provide strong constraints on the interior structure in the presence of warm or no oceans. As part of a geophysical payload, the concept could therefore have a key role in the detection of oceans within the Uranian satellites. The main limitation of the concept is coherence losses attributed to the extended source size of the UKR and dependence on the illumination geometry. These factors represent constraints on the tour design of a future Uranus mission in terms of flyby altitudes and encounter timing.
- Published
- 2023
12. Exploring Fundamental Particle Acceleration and Loss Processes in Heliophysics through an Orbiting X-ray Instrument in the Jovian System
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Dunn, W., Berland, G., Roussos, E., Clark, G., Kollmann, P., Turner, D., Feldman, C., Stallard, T., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Woodfield, E. E., Rae, I. J., Ray, L. C., Carter, J. A., Lindsay, S. T., Yao, Z., Marshall, R., A., A. N. Jaynes, Ezoe, Y., Numazawa, M., Hospodarsky, G. B., Wu, X., Weigt, D. M., Jackman, C. M., Mori, K., Nénon, Q., Desai, R. T, Blum, L. W., Nordheim, T. A., Ness, J. U., Bodewits, D., Kimura, T., Li, W., Smith, H. T., Millas, D., Wibisono, A. D., Achilleos, N., Koutroumpa, D., McEntee, S. C., Collier, H., Bhardwaj, A., Martindale, A., Wolk, S. J., Badman, S. V., and Kraft, R. P.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Jupiter's magnetosphere is considered to be the most powerful particle accelerator in the Solar System, accelerating electrons from eV to 70 MeV and ions to GeV energies. How electromagnetic processes drive energy and particle flows, producing and removing energetic particles, is at the heart of Heliophysics. Particularly, the 2013 Decadal Strategy for Solar and Space Physics was to "Discover and characterize fundamental processes that occur both within the heliosphere and throughout the universe". The Jovian system offers an ideal natural laboratory to investigate all of the universal processes highlighted in the previous Decadal. The X-ray waveband has been widely used to remotely study plasma across astrophysical systems. The majority of astrophysical emissions can be grouped into 5 X-ray processes: fluorescence, thermal/coronal, scattering, charge exchange and particle acceleration. The Jovian system offers perhaps the only system that presents a rich catalog of all of these X-ray emission processes and can also be visited in-situ, affording the special possibility to directly link fundamental plasma processes with their resulting X-ray signatures. This offers invaluable ground-truths for astrophysical objects beyond the reach of in-situ exploration (e.g. brown dwarfs, magnetars or galaxy clusters that map the cosmos). Here, we show how coupling in-situ measurements with in-orbit X-ray observations of Jupiter's radiation belts, Galilean satellites, Io Torus, and atmosphere addresses fundamental heliophysics questions with wide-reaching impact across helio- and astrophysics. New developments like miniaturized X-ray optics and radiation-tolerant detectors, provide compact, lightweight, wide-field X-ray instruments perfectly suited to the Jupiter system, enabling this exciting new possibility., Comment: A White Paper for the 2024-2033 Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) Decadal Survey
- Published
- 2023
13. Detection of HCN and diverse redox chemistry in the plume of Enceladus
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Peter, Jonah S., Nordheim, Tom A., and Hand, Kevin P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Cassini spacecraft observed that Saturn's moon Enceladus possesses a series of jets erupting from its South Polar Terrain. Previous studies of in situ data collected by Cassini's Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS) have identified H$_2$O, CO$_2$, CH$_4$, NH$_3$, and H$_2$ within the plume of ejected material. Identification of minor species in the plume remains an ongoing challenge, owing to the large number of possible combinations that can be used to fit the INMS data. Here, we present the detection of several new compounds of strong importance to the habitability of Enceladus, including HCN, C$_2$H$_2$, C$_3$H$_6$, and C$_2$H$_6$. Our analyses of the low velocity INMS data, coupled with our detailed statistical framework, enable discrimination between previously ambiguous species in the plume by alleviating the effects of high dimensional model fitting. Together with plausible mineralogical catalysts and redox gradients derived from surface radiolysis, these compounds could potentially support extant microbial communities or drive complex organic synthesis leading to the origin of life., Comment: revised manuscript
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- 2023
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14. SPOTLIGHT : Excluded Identity Retention in STEM: A Roadmap for Inclusive Undergraduate Research Symposia
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Heard, Madison P., Nordheim, Caitlin L., McKinley, Cheyenne, Zilz, Zoe L., Jones, Victoria A., Vincent, Bridget A., and Caves, Eleanor M.
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- 2023
15. Salts and organics on Ganymede’s surface observed by the JIRAM spectrometer onboard Juno
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Tosi, Federico, Mura, Alessandro, Cofano, Alessandra, Zambon, Francesca, Glein, Christopher R., Ciarniello, Mauro, Lunine, Jonathan I., Piccioni, Giuseppe, Plainaki, Christina, Sordini, Roberto, Adriani, Alberto, Bolton, Scott J., Hansen, Candice J., Nordheim, Tom A., Moirano, Alessandro, Agostini, Livio, Altieri, Francesca, Brooks, Shawn M., Cicchetti, Andrea, Dinelli, Bianca Maria, Grassi, Davide, Migliorini, Alessandra, Moriconi, Maria Luisa, Noschese, Raffaella, Scarica, Pietro, Sindoni, Giuseppe, Stefani, Stefania, and Turrini, Diego
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- 2024
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16. A systematic review and proposed framework for sustainable learning healthcare systems
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Golburean, Olga, Nordheim, Espen Solbakken, Faxvaag, Arild, Pedersen, Rune, Lintvedt, Ove, and Marco-Ruiz, Luis
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- 2024
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17. Hypotheses for Triton's Plumes: New Analyses and Future Remote Sensing Tests
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Hofgartner, Jason D., Birch, Samuel P. D., Castillo, Julie, Grundy, Will M., Hansen, Candice J., Hayes, Alexander G., Howett, Carly J. A., Hurford, Terry A., Martin, Emily S., Mitchell, Karl L., Nordheim, Tom A., Poston, Michael J., Prockter, Louise M., Quick, Lynnae C., Schenk, Paul, Schindhelm, Rebecca N., and Umurhan, Orkan M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
At least two active plumes were observed on Neptune's moon Triton during the Voyager 2 flyby in 1989. Models for Triton's plumes have previously been grouped into five hypotheses, two of which are primarily atmospheric phenomena and are generally considered unlikely, and three of which include eruptive processes and are plausible. These hypotheses are compared, including new arguments, such as comparisons based on current understanding of Mars, Enceladus, and Pluto. An eruption model based on a solar-powered, solid-state greenhouse effect was previously considered the leading hypothesis for Triton's plumes, in part due to the proximity of the plumes to the subsolar latitude during the Voyager 2 flyby and the distribution of Triton's fans that are putatively deposits from former plumes. The other two eruption hypotheses are powered by internal heat, not solar insolation. Based on new analyses of the ostensible relation between the latitude of the subsolar point on Triton and the geographic locations of the plumes and fans, we argue that neither the locations of the plumes nor fans are strong evidence in favor of the solar-powered hypothesis. We conclude that all three eruption hypotheses should be considered further. Five tests are presented that could be implemented with remote sensing observations from future spacecraft to confidently distinguish among the eruption hypotheses for Triton's plumes. The five tests are based on the: (1) composition and thickness of Triton's southern hemisphere terrains, (2) composition of fan deposits, (3) distribution of active plumes, (4) distribution of fans, and (5) surface temperature at the locations of plumes and/or fans. The tests are independent, but complementary, and implementable with a single flyby mission such as the Trident mission concept. We note that, in the case of the solar-driven hypothesis, the 2030s and 2040s may be the last ..., Comment: Accepted for publication in Icarus
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- 2021
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18. A CO2 cycle on Ariel? Radiolytic production and migration to low latitude cold traps
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Cartwright, Richard J., Nordheim, Tom A., DeColibus, David, Grundy, William M., Holler, Bryan J., Beddingfield, Chloe B., Sori, Michael M., Lucas, Michael P., Elder, Catherine M., Regoli, Leonardo H., Cruikshank, Dale P., Emery, Joshua P., Leonard, Erin J., and Cochrane, Corey J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
CO2 ice is present on the trailing hemisphere of Ariel but is mostly absent from its leading hemisphere. The leading/trailing hemispherical asymmetry in the distribution of CO2 ice is consistent with radiolytic production of CO2, formed by charged particle bombardment of H2O ice and carbonaceous material in Ariel's regolith. This longitudinal distribution of CO2 on Ariel was previously characterized using 13 near-infrared reflectance spectra collected at 'low' sub-observer latitudes between 30S to 30N. Here, we investigated the distribution of CO2 ice on Ariel using 18 new spectra: two collected over low sub-observer latitudes, five collected at 'mid' sub-observer latitudes (31 - 44N), and eleven collected over 'high' sub-observer latitudes (45 - 51N). Analysis of these data indicates that CO2 ice is primarily concentrated on Ariel's trailing hemisphere. However, CO2 ice band strengths are diminished in the spectra collected over mid and high sub-observer latitudes. This sub-observer latitudinal trend may result from radiolytic production of CO2 molecules at high latitudes and subsequent migration of this constituent to low latitude cold traps. We detected a subtle feature near 2.13 microns in two spectra collected over high sub-observer latitudes, which might result from a 'forbidden' transition mode of CO2 ice that is substantially stronger in well mixed substrates composed of CO2 and H2O ice, consistent with regolith-mixed CO2 ice grains formed by radiolysis. Additionally, we detected a 2.35-micron feature in some low sub-observer latitude spectra, which might result from CO formed as part of a CO2 radiolytic production cycle., Comment: Accepted in Planetary Science Journal
- Published
- 2021
19. Few-shot learning for automated content analysis: Efficient coding of arguments and claims in the debate on arms deliveries to Ukraine
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Jonas Rieger, Kostiantyn Yanchenko, Mattes Ruckdeschel, Gerret von Nordheim, Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw, and Gregor Wiedemann
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Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 - Abstract
Pre-trained language models (PLM) based on transformer neural networks developed in the field of natural language processing (NLP) offer great opportunities to improve automatic content analysis in communication science, especially for the coding of complex semantic categories in large datasets via supervised machine learning. However, three characteristics so far impeded the widespread adoption of the methods in the applying disciplines: the dominance of English language models in NLP research, the necessary computing resources, and the effort required to produce training data to fine-tune PLMs. In this study, we address these challenges by using a multilingual transformer model in combination with the adapter extension to transformers, and few-shot learning methods. We test our approach on a realistic use case from communication science to automatically detect claims and arguments together with their stance in the German news debate on arms deliveries to Ukraine. In three experiments, we evaluate (1) data preprocessing strategies and model variants for this task, (2) the performance of different few-shot learning methods, and (3) how well the best setup performs on varying training set sizes in terms of validity, reliability, replicability and reproducibility of the results. We find that our proposed combination of transformer adapters with pattern exploiting training provides a parameter-efficient and easily shareable alternative to fully fine-tuning PLMs. It performs on par in terms of validity, while overall, provides better properties for application in communication studies. The results also show that pre-fine-tuning for a task on a near-domain dataset leads to substantial improvement, in particular in the few-shot setting. Further, the results indicate that it is useful to bias the dataset away from the viewpoints of specific prominent individuals.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. My, my, hey, hey, is the budget here to stay?
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Berg, Terje, Arntsen, Elida, and Nordheim, Bente
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- 2023
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21. Autobús 666
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Colin Thibert, Sylvie Nordheim
- Published
- 2024
22. In Search of Subsurface Oceans within the Uranian Moons
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Cochrane, C. J., Vance, S. D., Nordheim, T. A., Styczinski, M., Masters, A., and Regoli, L. H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Geophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The Galileo mission to Jupiter discovered magnetic signatures associated with hidden sub-surface oceans at the moons Europa and Callisto using the phenomenon of magnetic induction. These induced magnetic fields originate from electrically conductive layers within the moons and are driven by Jupiter's strong time-varying magnetic field. The ice giants and their moons are also ideal laboratories for magnetic induction studies. Both Uranus and Neptune have a strongly tilted magnetic axis with respect to their spin axis, creating a dynamic and strongly variable magnetic field environment at the orbits of their major moons. Although Voyager 2 visited the ice giants in the 1980s, it did not pass close enough to any of the moons to detect magnetic induction signatures. However, Voyager 2 revealed that some of these moons exhibit surface features that hint at recent geologically activity, possibly associated with sub-surface oceans. Future missions to the ice giants may therefore be capable of discovering sub-surface oceans, thereby adding to the family of known ocean worlds in our solar system. Here, we assess magnetic induction as a technique for investigating sub-surface oceans within the major moons of Uranus. Furthermore, we establish the ability to distinguish induction responses created by different interior characteristics that tie into the induction response: ocean thickness, conductivity, and depth, and ionospheric conductance. The results reported here demonstrate the possibility of single-pass ocean detection and constrained characterization within the moons of Miranda, Ariel, and Umbriel, and provide guidance for magnetometer selection and trajectory design for future missions to Uranus.
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- 2021
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23. The science case for spacecraft exploration of the Uranian satellites: Candidate ocean worlds in an ice giant system
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Cartwright, Richard J., Beddingfield, Chloe B., Nordheim, Tom A., Elder, Catherine M., Castillo-Rogez, Julie C., Neveu, Marc, Bramson, Ali M., Sori, Michael M., Buratti, Bonnie J., Pappalardo, Robert T., Roser, Joseph E., Cohen, Ian J., Leonard, Erin J., Ermakov, Anton I., Showalter, Mark R., Grundy, William M., Turtle, Elizabeth P., and Hofstadter, Mark D.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The 27 satellites of Uranus are enigmatic, with dark surfaces coated by material that could be rich in organics. Voyager 2 imaged the southern hemispheres of Uranus' five largest 'classical' moons Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, and Oberon, as well as the largest ring moon Puck, but their northern hemispheres were largely unobservable at the time of the flyby and were not imaged. Additionally, no spatially resolved datasets exist for the other 21 known moons, and their surface properties are essentially unknown. Because Voyager 2 was not equipped with a near-infrared mapping spectrometer, our knowledge of the Uranian moons' surface compositions, and the processes that modify them, is limited to disk-integrated datasets collected by ground- and space-based telescopes. Nevertheless, images collected by the Imaging Science System on Voyager 2 and reflectance spectra collected by telescope facilities indicate that the five classical moons are candidate ocean worlds that might currently have, or had, liquid subsurface layers beneath their icy surfaces. To determine whether these moons are ocean worlds, and investigate Uranus' ring moons and irregular satellites, close-up observations and measurements made by instruments onboard a Uranus orbiter are needed., Comment: Accepted in AAS Planetary Science Journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2007.07284
- Published
- 2021
24. Chronic fatigue syndromes: real illnesses that people can recover from
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Tomas Nordheim Alme, Anna Andreasson, Tarjei Tørre Asprusten, Anne Karen Bakken, Michael BJ Beadsworth, Birgitte Boye, Per Alf Brodal, Elias Myrstad Brodwall, Kjetil Gundro Brurberg, Ingrid Bugge, Trudie Chalder, Reidar Due, Hege Randi Eriksen, Per Klausen Fink, Signe Agnes Flottorp, Egil Andreas Fors, Bård Fossli Jensen, Hans Petter Fundingsrud, Paul Garner, Lise Beier Havdal, Helene Helgeland, Henrik Børsting Jacobsen, Georg Espolin Johnson, Martin Jonsjö, Hans Knoop, Live Landmark, Gunvor Launes, Mats Lekander, Hannah Linnros, Elin Lindsäter, Helena Liira, Lina Linnestad, Jon Håvard Loge, Peter Solvoll Lyby, Sadaf Malik, Ulrik Fredrik Malt, Trygve Moe, Anna-Karin Norlin, Maria Pedersen, Siv Elin Pignatiello, Charlotte Ulrikka Rask, Silje Endresen Reme, Gisle Roksund, Markku Sainio, Michael Sharpe, Ruth Foseide Thorkildsen, Betty van Roy, Per Olav Vandvik, Henrik Vogt, Hedda Bratholm Wyller, and Vegard Bruun Bratholm Wyller
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Chronic fatigue syndrome ,Myalgic encephalomyelitis ,Long Covid ,Chronic illness narrative ,Multidimensional explanations ,Rehabilitation strategies ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
AbstractThe ‘Oslo Chronic Fatigue Consortium’ consists of researchers and clinicians who question the current narrative that chronic fatigue syndromes, including post-covid conditions, are incurable diseases. Instead, we propose an alternative view, based on research, which offers more hope to patients. Whilst we regard the symptoms of these conditions as real, we propose that they are more likely to reflect the brain's response to a range of biological, psychological, and social factors, rather than a specific disease process. Possible causes include persistent activation of the neurobiological stress response, accompanied by associated changes in immunological, hormonal, cognitive and behavioural domains. We further propose that the symptoms are more likely to persist if they are perceived as threatening, and all activities that are perceived to worsen them are avoided. We also question the idea that the best way to cope with the illness is by prolonged rest, social isolation, and sensory deprivation.Instead, we propose that recovery is often possible if patients are helped to adopt a less threatening understanding of their symptoms and are supported in a gradual return to normal activities. Finally, we call for a much more open and constructive dialogue about these conditions. This dialogue should include a wider range of views, including those of patients who have recovered from them.
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
25. Evidence for sulfur-bearing species on Callisto's leading hemisphere: Sourced from Jupiter's irregular satellites or Io?
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Cartwright, Richard J., Nordheim, Tom A., Cruikshank, Dale P., Hand, Kevin P., Roser, Joseph E., Grundy, William M., Beddingfield, Chloe B., and Emery, Joshua P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigated whether sulfur-bearing species are present on the icy Galilean moon Callisto by analyzing eight near-infrared reflectance spectra collected over a wide range of sub-observer longitudes. We measured the band areas and depths of a 4-micron feature in these spectra, which has been attributed to sulfur dioxide (SO2), as well as carbonates, in previously collected datasets of this moon. All eight spectra we collected display the 4-micron band. The four spectra collected over Callisto's leading hemisphere display significantly stronger 4-micron bands compared to the four trailing hemisphere spectra (> 3-sigma difference). We compared the central wavelength position and shape of Callisto's 4-micron band to laboratory spectra of various sulfur-bearing species and carbonates. Our comparison demonstrates that Callisto's 4-micron band has a spectral signature similar to thermally-altered sulfur, as well as a 4.025 micron feature attributed to disulfanide (HS2). Our analysis therefore supports the presence of S-bearing species on Callisto but is not consistent with the presence of SO2. The significantly stronger 4-micron band detected on Callisto's leading hemisphere could result from collisions with H2S-rich dust grains that originate on Jupiter's retrograde irregular satellites or implantation of magnetospheric S ions that originate from volcanic activity on Io. Alternatively, S-bearing species could be native to Callisto and are exposed by dust collisions and larger impacts that drive regolith overturn, primarily on its leading side.
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- 2020
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26. The Science Case for Spacecraft Exploration of the Uranian Satellites
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Cartwright, Richard J., Beddingfield, Chloe B., Nordheim, Tom, Elder, Catherine, Grundy, Will, Bramson, Ali, Sori, Michael, Pappalardo, Robert, Neveu, Marc, Burr, Devon, Ermakov, Anton, Roser, Joe, Castillo-Rogez, Julie, Showalter, Mark, Cohen, Ian, Turtle, Zibi, and Hofstadter, Mark
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The five classical Uranian moons are possible ocean worlds that exhibit bizarre geologic landforms, hinting at recent surface-interior communication. However, Uranus' classical moons, as well as its ring moons and irregular satellites, remain poorly understood. We assert that a Flagship-class orbiter is needed to explore the Uranian satellites.
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- 2020
27. Evidence for ammonia-bearing species on the Uranian satellite Ariel supports recent geologic activity
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Cartwright, Richard J., Beddingfield, Chloe B., Nordheim, Tom A., Roser, Joe, Grundy, William M., Hand, Kevin P., Emery, Joshua P., Cruikshank, Dale P., and Scipioni, Francesca
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigated whether ammonia-rich constituents are present on the surface of the Uranian moon Ariel by analyzing 32 near-infrared reflectance spectra collected over a wide range of sub-observer longitudes and latitudes. We measured the band areas and depths of a 2.2-{\micron} feature in these spectra, which has been attributed to ammonia-bearing species on other icy bodies. Ten spectra display prominent 2.2-{\micron} features with band areas and depths > 2{\sigma}. We determined the longitudinal distribution of the 2.2-{\micron} band, finding no statistically meaningful differences between Ariel's leading and trailing hemispheres, indicating that this band is distributed across Ariel's surface. We compared the band centers and shapes of the five Ariel spectra displaying the strongest 2.2-{\micron} bands to laboratory spectra of various ammonia-bearing and ammonium-bearing species, finding that the spectral signatures of the Ariel spectra are best matched by ammonia-hydrates and flash frozen ammonia-water solutions. Our analysis also revealed that four Ariel spectra display 2.24-{\micron} bands (> 2{\sigma} band areas and depths), with band centers and shapes that are best matched by ammonia ice. Because ammonia should be efficiently removed over short timescales by ultraviolet photons, cosmic rays, and charged particles trapped in Uranus' magnetosphere, the possible presence of this constituent supports geologic activity in the recent past, such as emplacement of ammonia-rich cryolavas and exposure of ammonia-rich deposits by tectonism, impact events, and mass wasting.
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- 2020
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28. The Knowledge of Implementation Strategies: Impact of the Installed Base.
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Rune Pedersen, Espen Solbakken Nordheim, Ove Lintvedt, Asbjørn Johansen Fagerlund, Gro-Hilde Severinsen, and Kristian Malm-Nicolaisen
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. CodeAnno: Extending WebAnno with Hierarchical Document Level Annotation and Automation.
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Florian Schneider 0001, Seid Muhie Yimam, Fynn Petersen-Frey, Gerret von Nordheim, Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw, and Chris Biemann
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
30. Identification of a novel Plasmopara halstedii elicitor protein combining de novo peptide sequencing algorithms and RACE-PCR
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Madlung Johannes, Braendle Frank, Fladerer Claudia, Jung Stephan, Spring Otmar, and Nordheim Alfred
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Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Background Often high-quality MS/MS spectra of tryptic peptides do not match to any database entry because of only partially sequenced genomes and therefore, protein identification requires de novo peptide sequencing. To achieve protein identification of the economically important but still unsequenced plant pathogenic oomycete Plasmopara halstedii, we first evaluated the performance of three different de novo peptide sequencing algorithms applied to a protein digests of standard proteins using a quadrupole TOF (QStar Pulsar i). Results The performance order of the algorithms was PEAKS online > PepNovo > CompNovo. In summary, PEAKS online correctly predicted 45% of measured peptides for a protein test data set. All three de novo peptide sequencing algorithms were used to identify MS/MS spectra of tryptic peptides of an unknown 57 kDa protein of P. halstedii. We found ten de novo sequenced peptides that showed homology to a Phytophthora infestans protein, a closely related organism of P. halstedii. Employing a second complementary approach, verification of peptide prediction and protein identification was performed by creation of degenerate primers for RACE-PCR and led to an ORF of 1,589 bp for a hypothetical phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Conclusions Our study demonstrated that identification of proteins within minute amounts of sample material improved significantly by combining sensitive LC-MS methods with different de novo peptide sequencing algorithms. In addition, this is the first study that verified protein prediction from MS data by also employing a second complementary approach, in which RACE-PCR led to identification of a novel elicitor protein in P. halstedii.
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- 2010
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31. The effects of manipulated exposure to different types of television-style food advertising and young children's food intake
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von Nordheim, Laura, Buckland, Nicola, Blades, Mark, and Oates, Caroline
- Abstract
Childhood presents as a particularly potent time for food preferences to develop and eating habits to establish via exposure to food cues and eating norms in the environment, including media and advertising (Lioret et al., 2020). A healthy balanced diet is essential for physical and psychological well-being (Firth, Gangwisch, Borisini, Wootton & Mayer, 2020; Shan et al., 2020), but is rarely promoted in digital food advertising (Naderer, 2021). Research investigating the effects of different types of food advertising on children's food intake to assess media-based preventions and interventions for improving children's diets is lacking (Folkvord, 2020). This thesis includes four studies investigating the effects of specifically-designed, television-style food advertisements on children's food intake. The advertisements included (1) a healthy food advertisement, (2) an advertisement promoting foods high in sugar, salt and fat (HSSF), (3) an advertisement discouraging the intake of HSSF foods and (4) a non-food toy control advertisement. Studies 1 - 3 were longitudinal studies ranging from a total study duration of nine weeks in Study 1 to seventeen weeks in Studies 2 and 3. Studies 1, 2 and 4 included two conditions, whereby children were exposed to either healthy food advertising exposure or toy control advertising. Study 3 included four conditions, whereby children were either exposed to healthy food advertising, anti-HSSF food advertising, HSSF food advertising or control advertising. Following advertising exposure, children selected and ate foods and drinks from a buffet. In Studies 1 - 3, children selected from a 16-item buffet offering equal numbers of healthy and HSSF food and drink options. Study 4 was a pre-test/post-test design conducted over two weeks. In Study 4, children selected from a 7-item buffet offering exclusively healthy foods, which were fruit, vegetables and whole grain bread. Studies 1 - 3 found no changes in children's food intake in response to advertising exposure. Study 4 found increases in children's healthy food intake following healthy food advertising exposure. Children who viewed control advertising in Study 4 decreased their healthy food intake. Findings from Studies 1 - 4 suggest that increasing children's healthy food intake relies on a combined approach of exclusively healthy food options and healthy food advertising. Parents, caretakers and childcare settings may wish to explore the benefit of providing children with exclusively healthy food options whilst being aware that encouragement, in this case, through media-based healthy food promotion, is required for children to eat the available healthy foods.
- Published
- 2021
32. Once a reservoir, always a reservoir? Seasonality affects the pathogen maintenance potential of amphibian hosts
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Wilber, Mark Q., Ohmer, Michel E. B., Altman, Karie A., Brannelly, Laura A., LaBumbard, Brandon C., Le Sage, Emily H., McDonnell, Nina B., Torres, Aura Y. Muñiz, Nordheim, Caitlin L., Pfab, Ferdinand, Richards-Zawacki, Corinne L., Rollins-Smith, Louise A., Saenz, Veronica, Voyles, Jamie, Wetzel, Daniel P., Woodhams, Douglas C., and Briggs, Cheryl J.
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- 2022
33. Science return of probing magnetospheric systems of ice giants
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Xin Cao, Xiangning Chu, Hsiang-Wen Hsu, Hao Cao, Weijie Sun, Lucas Liuzzo, Jasper Halekas, Carol Paty, Feng Chu, Omakshi Agiwal, Lauren Blum, Frank Crary, Ian J. Cohen, Peter Delamere, Mark Hofstadter, George Hospodarsky, Cooper John, Peter Kollmann, Elena Kronberg, William Kurth, Laurent Lamy, Dong Lin, Wen Li, Xuanye Ma, David Malaspina, Michiko Morooka, Tom Nordheim, Frank Postberg, Andrew Poppe, Cartwright Richard, Suranga Ruhunusiri, Krista Soderlund, James O'Donoghue, and Ferdinand Plaschke
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ice giant magnetospheres ,future mission ,Uranus magnetosphere ,Neptune magnetosphere ,Uranus ,Neptune ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
The magnetospheric systems of ice giants, as the ideal and the unique template of a typical class of exoplanets, have not been sufficiently studied in the past decade. The complexity of these asymmetric and extremely dynamic magnetospheres provides us a great chance to systematically investigate the general mechanism of driving the magnetospheres of such common exoplanets in the Universe, and the key factors of influencing the global and local magnetospheric structures of this type of planets. In this paper, we discuss the science return of probing magnetospheric systems of ice giants for the future missions, throughout different magnetospheric regions, across from the interaction with upstream solar wind to the downstream region of the magnetotail. We emphasize the importance of detecting the magnetospheric systems of ice giants in the next decades, which enables us to deeply understand the space enviroNMent and habitability of not only the ice giants themselves but also the analogous exoplanets which are widely distributed in the Universe.
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- 2024
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34. Feasibility of Passive Sounding of Uranian Moons Using Uranian Kilometric Radiation
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A. Romero‐Wolf, G. Steinbrügge, J. Castillo‐Rogez, C. J. Cochrane, T. A. Nordheim, K. L. Mitchell, N. S. Wolfenbarger, D. M. Schroeder, and S. Peters
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Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Abstract We present a feasibility study for passive sounding of Uranian icy moons using Uranian Kilometric Radio (UKR) emissions in the 100–900 kHz band. We provide a summary description of the observation geometry, the UKR characteristics, and estimate the sensitivity for an instrument analogous to the Cassini Radio Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) but with a modified receiver digitizer and signal processing chain. We show that the concept has the potential to directly and unambiguously detect cold oceans within Uranian satellites and provide strong constraints on the interior structure in the presence of warm or no oceans. As part of a geophysical payload, the concept could therefore have a key role in the detection of oceans within the Uranian satellites. The main limitation of the concept is coherence losses attributed to the extended source size of the UKR and dependence on the illumination geometry. These factors represent constraints on the tour design of a future Uranus mission in terms of flyby altitudes and encounter timing.
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- 2024
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35. Surface Charging of Jupiter’s Moon Europa
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Sachin A. Reddy, Tom A. Nordheim, and Camilla D. K. Harris
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Europa ,Planetary science ,Surface ices ,Space plasmas ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
Europa’s surface is exposed to a constant flow of plasma from its ionosphere and Jupiter’s magnetosphere. As these particles flow onto the surface, an electrostatic surface potential forms. We investigate the electrostatic charging of Europa’s surface using 3D particle-in-cell simulations. We find that surface potentials on Europa vary from −14 to −52 V. The predicted surface potentials vary as a function of location on Europa, illumination conditions, plasma environment, and surface properties. We reveal that the ionosphere has a significant “dampening effect,” limiting the formation of large negative surface potentials. Furthermore, we find that secondary emission is a key factor in determining the surface charge on Europa. We discuss how such potentials may be remotely detected by upcoming missions, such as Europa Clipper and JUICE. Our results may also be of use in the design of future missions to Europa’s surface, such as landers and other robotic explorers.
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- 2024
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36. JWST Reveals CO Ice, Concentrated CO2 Deposits, and Evidence for Carbonates Potentially Sourced from Ariel’s Interior
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Richard J. Cartwright, Bryan J. Holler, William M. Grundy, Stephen C. Tegler, Marc Neveu, Ujjwal Raut, Christopher R. Glein, Tom A. Nordheim, Joshua P. Emery, Julie C. Castillo-Rogez, Eric Quirico, Silvia Protopapa, Chloe B. Beddingfield, Matthew M. Hedman, Katherine de Kleer, Riley A. DeColibus, Anastasia N. Morgan, Ryan Wochner, Kevin P. Hand, Geronimo L. Villanueva, Sara Faggi, Noemi Pinilla-Alonso, David E. Trilling, and Michael M. Mueller
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Carbon dioxide ,Ice spectroscopy ,Surface ices ,Surface processes ,Surface composition ,James Webb Space Telescope ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
The Uranian moon Ariel exhibits a diversity of geologically young landforms, with a surface composition rich in CO _2 ice. The origin of CO _2 and other species, however, remains uncertain. We report observations of Ariel’s leading and trailing hemispheres, collected with NIRSpec (2.87–5.10 μ m) on the James Webb Space Telescope. These data shed new light on Ariel's spectral properties, revealing a double-lobed CO _2 ice scattering peak centered near 4.20 and 4.25 μ m, with the 4.25 μ m lobe possibly representing the largest CO _2 Fresnel peak yet observed in the solar system. A prominent 4.38 μ m ^13 CO _2 ice feature is also present, as is a 4.90 μ m band that results from ^12 CO _2 ice. The spectra reveal a 4.67 μ m ^12 CO ice band and a broad 4.02 μ m band that might result from carbonate minerals. The data confirm that features associated with CO _2 and CO are notably stronger on Ariel’s trailing hemisphere compared to its leading hemisphere. We compared the detected CO _2 features to synthetic spectra of CO _2 ice and mixtures of CO _2 with CO, H _2 O, and amorphous carbon, finding that CO _2 could be concentrated in deposits thicker than ∼10 mm on Ariel’s trailing hemisphere. Comparison to laboratory data indicates that CO is likely mixed with CO _2 . The evidence for thick CO _2 ice deposits and the possible presence of carbonates on both hemispheres suggests that some carbon oxides could be sourced from Ariel’s interior, with their surface distributions modified by charged particle bombardment, sublimation, and seasonal migration of CO and CO _2 from high to low latitudes.
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- 2024
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37. Bolometric Bond Albedo and Thermal Inertia Maps of Mimas
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Howett, Carly, Spencer, John, and Nordheim, Tom
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We use data from Cassini's Composite Infrared Spectrometer CIRS to map Mimas' surface temperatures and its thermophysical properties. This provides a dramatic improvement on the work in Howett et al. (2011), where the values were determined at only two regions on Mimas (one inside, and another outside of the anomalous region). We use all spatially-resolved scans made by CIRS' focal plane 3 (FP3, 600 to 1100 cm-1) of Mimas' surface, which are largely daytime observations but do include one nighttime one. The resulting temperature maps confirm the presence and location of Mimas' previously discovered thermally anomalous region. No other thermally anomalous regions were discovered, although we note that the surface coverage is incomplete on Mimas' leading and anti-Saturn hemisphere. The thermal inertia map confirms that the anomalous region has a notably higher thermal inertia than its surroundings: 98 +/- 42 J m-2 K-1 s-1/2 inside of the anomaly, compared to 34 +/- 32 J m-2 K-1 s-1/2 outside. The albedo inside and outside of the anomalous region agrees within their uncertainty: 0.45+/-0.08 inside compared to 0.41 +/- 0.07 outside the anomaly. Interestingly the albedo appears brighter inside the anomaly region, which may not be surprising given this region does appear brighter at some UV wavelengths (0.338 microns, see Schenk et al., 2011). However, this result should be treated with caution because, as previously stated, statistically the albedo of these two regions is the same when their uncertainties are considered. These thermal inertia and albedo values determined here are consistent with those found by Howett et al. (2011), who determined the thermal inertia inside the anomaly to be 66 +/- 23 J m-2 K-1 s-1/2 and less than 16 J m-2 K-1 s-1/2 outside, with albedos that varied from 0.49 to 0.70.
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- 2020
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38. Revisiting the cosmic-ray induced Venusian radiation dose in the context of habitability
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Herbst, Konstantin, Banjac, Saša, Atri, Dimitra, and Nordheim, Tom A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The Atmospheric Radiation Interaction Simulator (AtRIS) was used to model the altitude-dependent Venusian absorbed dose and the Venusian dose equivalent. For the first time, we modeled the dose rates for different shape-, size-, and composition-mimicking detectors (phantoms): a CO$_2$-based phantom, a water-based microbial cell, and a phantom mimicking human tissue. Based on a new model approach, we give a reliable estimate of the altitude-dependent Venusian radiation dose in water-based microorganisms here for the first time. These microorganisms are representative of known terrestrial life. We also present a detailed analysis of the influence of the strongest ground-level enhancements measured at the Earth's surface, and of the impact of two historic extreme solar events on the Venusian radiation dose. Our study shows that because a phantom based on Venusian air was used, and because furthermore, the quality factors of different radiation types were not taken into account, previous model efforts have underestimated the radiation hazard for any putative Venusian cloud-based life by up to a factor of five. However, because we furthermore show that even the strongest events would not have had a hazardous effect on putative microorganisms within the potentially habitable zone (51 km - 62 km), these differences may play only a minor role.
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- 2019
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39. Surface composition and properties of Ganymede: Updates from ground-based observations with the near-infrared imaging spectrometer SINFONI/VLT/ESO
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Ligier, N., Paranicas, C., Carter, J., Poulet, F., Calvin, W. M., Nordheim, T. A., Snodgrass, C., and Ferellec, L.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Ganymede's surface exhibits great geological diversity, with old dark terrains, expressed through the surface composition, which is known to be dominated by two constituents: H2O-ice and an unidentified darkening agent. In this paper, new investigations of the composition of Ganymede's surface at global scale are presented. The analyses are derived from the linear spectral modeling of a high spectral resolution dataset, acquired with the near-infrared ground-based integral field spectrometer SINFONI of the VLT. We find that the Oren-Nayar (1994) model, generalizing the Lambert's law for rough surfaces, produces excellent photometric corrections. Modeling confirms that Ganymede's surface composition is dominated by H2O-ice, mostly crystalline, as well as a darkening agent, but it also highlights the necessity of secondary species to better fit the measurements: sulfuric acid hydrate and salts. A latitudinal gradient and a hemispherical dichotomy are the strongest spatial patterns observed for the darkening agent, the H2O-ice, and the sulfuric acid: the darkening agent is the major compound at the equator and mid-latitudes, especially on the trailing hemisphere, while the H2O-ice and the sulfuric acid are mostly located at high latitudes and on the leading hemisphere. This anti-correlation is likely a consequence of the bombardment of the constituents in the Jovian magnetosphere which are more intense at higher latitudes. Furthermore, the modeling confirms that polar caps are enriched in small, fresh, H2O-ice grains while equatorial regions are composed of larger grains. Finally, the spatial distribution of the salts is neither related to the Jovian magnetospheric bombardment nor the craters. These species are mostly detected on bright grooved terrains surrounding darker areas. Endogenous processes, such as freezing of upwelling fluids in the ice shell, may explain this distribution.
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- 2019
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40. The in-situ exploration of Jupiter's radiation belts (A White Paper submitted in response to ESA's Voyage 2050 Call)
- Author
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Roussos, Elias, Allanson, Oliver, André, Nicolas, Bertucci, Bruna, Branduardi-Raymont, Graziella, Clark, George, Dialynas, Kostantinos, Dandouras, Iannis, Desai, Ravindra, Futaana, Yoshifumi, Gkioulidou, Matina, Jones, Geraint, Kollmann, Peter, Kotova, Anna, Kronberg, Elena, Krupp, Norbert, Murakami, Go, Nénon, Quentin, Nordheim, Tom, Palmaerts, Benjamin, Plainaki, Christina, Rae, Jonathan, Santos-Costa, Daniel, Sarris, Theodore, Shprits, Yuri, Sulaiman, Ali, Woodfield, Emma, Wu, Xin, and Yao, Zhonghua
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Jupiter has the most energetic and complex radiation belts in our solar system. Their hazardous environment is the reason why so many spacecraft avoid rather than investigate them, and explains how they have kept many of their secrets so well hidden, despite having been studied for decades. In this White Paper we argue why these secrets are worth unveiling. Jupiter's radiation belts and the vast magnetosphere that encloses them constitute an unprecedented physical laboratory, suitable for both interdisciplinary and novel scientific investigations: from studying fundamental high energy plasma physics processes which operate throughout the universe, such as adiabatic charged particle acceleration and nonlinear wave-particle interactions; to exploiting the astrobiological consequences of energetic particle radiation. The in-situ exploration of the uninviting environment of Jupiter's radiation belts present us with many challenges in mission design, science planning, instrumentation and technology development. We address these challenges by reviewing the different options that exist for direct and indirect observation of this unique system. We stress the need for new instruments, the value of synergistic Earth and Jupiter-based remote sensing and in-situ investigations, and the vital importance of multi-spacecraft, in-situ measurements. While simultaneous, multi-point in-situ observations have long become the standard for exploring electromagnetic interactions in the inner solar system, they have never taken place at Jupiter or any strongly magnetized planet besides Earth. We conclude that a dedicated multi-spacecraft mission to Jupiter's radiation belts is an essential and obvious way forward and deserves to be given a high priority in ESA's Voyage 2050 programme., Comment: 28 pages, 3 Tables, 11 Figures
- Published
- 2019
41. Atmospheric Electricity at the Ice Giants
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Aplin, K. L., Fischer, G., Nordheim, T. A., Konovalenko, A., Zakharenko, V., and Zarka, P.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Lightning was detected by Voyager 2 at Uranus and Neptune, and weaker electrical processes also occur throughout planetary atmospheres from galactic cosmic ray (GCR) ionisation. Lightning is an indicator of convection, whereas electrical processes away from storms modulate cloud formation and chemistry, particularly if there is little insolation to drive other mechanisms. The ice giants appear to be unique in the Solar System in that they are distant enough from the Sun for GCR-related mechanisms to be significant for clouds and climate, yet also convective enough for lightning to occur. This paper reviews observations (both from Voyager 2 and Earth), data analysis and modelling, and considers options for future missions. Radio, energetic particle and magnetic instruments are recommended for future orbiters, and Huygens-like atmospheric electricity sensors for in situ observations. Uranian lightning is also expected to be detectable from terrestrial radio telescopes., Comment: Revised version for Space Science Reviews
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- 2019
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42. The oncogenic fusion protein RUNX1-CBFA2T1 supports proliferation and inhibits senescence in t(8;21)-positive leukaemic cells
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Nordheim Alfred, Heil Gerhard, Ganser Arnold, Vornlocher Hans-Peter, Cullmann Claire, Riehle Heidemarie, Drescher Bettina, Martinez Natalia, Krauter Jürgen, and Heidenreich Olaf
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The fusion protein RUNX1-CBFA2T1 associated with t(8;21)-positive acute myeloid leukaemia is a potent inhibitor of haematopoetic differentiation. The role of RUNX1-CBFA2T1 in leukaemic cell proliferation is less clear. We examined the consequences of siRNA-mediated RUNX1-CBFA2T1 depletion regarding proliferation and clonogenicity of t(8;21)-positive cell lines. Methods The t(8;21)-positive cell line Kasumi-1 was electroporated with RUNX1-CBFA2T1 or control siRNAs followed by analysis of proliferation, colony formation, cell cycle distribution, apoptosis and senescence. Results Electroporation of Kasumi-1 cells with RUNX1-CBFA2T1 siRNAs, but not with control siRNAs, resulted in RUNX1-CBFA2T1 suppression which lasted for at least 5 days. A single electroporation with RUNX1-CBFA2T1 siRNA severely diminished the clonogenicity of Kasumi-1 cells. Prolonged RUNX1-CBFA2T1 depletion inhibited proliferation in suspension culture and G1-S transition during the cell cycle, diminished the number of apoptotic cells, but induced cellular senescence. The addition of haematopoetic growth factors could not rescue RUNX1-CBFA2T1-depleted cells from senescence, and could only partially restore their clonogenicity. Conclusions RUNX1-CBFA2T1 supports the proliferation and expansion of t(8;21)-positive leukaemic cells by preventing cellular senescence. These findings suggest a central role of RUNX1-CBFA2T1 in the maintenance of the leukaemia. Therefore, RUNX1-CBFA2T1 is a promising and leukaemia-specific target for molecularly defined therapeutic approaches.
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- 2004
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43. Patient safety and sense of security when telemonitoring chronic conditions at home: the views of patients and healthcare professionals - a qualitative study
- Author
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Ekstedt, Mirjam, Nordheim, Espen S., Hellström, Amanda, Strandberg, Susanna, and Hagerman, Heidi
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- 2023
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44. Investigating Europa’s Radiation Environment with the Europa Clipper Radiation Monitor
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Meitzler, Richard, Jun, Insoo, Blase, Ryan, Cassidy, Timothy, Clark, Roger, Cochrane, Corey, Fix, Sam, Gladstone, Randy, Goldsten, John, Gudipati, Murthy, Hand, Kevin, Henderson, Bryana, Jia, Xianzhe, Kammer, Joshua, Kollmann, Peter, McEwen, Alfred, Meyer, Heather, Nordheim, Tom, Paranicas, Chris, Paty, Carol, Retherford, Kurt, Roussos, Elias, Rymer, Abigail, Smith, Todd, Westlake, Joe, and Yokley, Zach
- Published
- 2023
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45. Interfering with TGFβ-induced Smad3 nuclear accumulation differentially affects TGFβ-dependent gene expression
- Author
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Dittmer Jürgen, Nordheim Alfred, and Lindemann Ralph K
- Subjects
breast tumor ,invasiveness ,Ets factors ,PTHrP ,Smad3 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) plays an important role in late-stage carcinogenesis by stimulating invasive behavior of cancer cells, promoting neo-angiogenesis and by helping cancer cells to escape surveillance by the immune system. It also supports colonization of the bone by metastatic breast cancer cells by increasing expression of osteolytic parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP). Interfering with TGFβ signalling may thus weaken the malignant properties of cancer cells. We investigated to what extent two inhibitors, SB-202190 and SB-203580, interfere with TGFβ-signalling in invasive MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. These compounds, formerly used as p38-MAPK-specific inhibitors, were recently also demonstrated to inhibit TGFβ type I receptor kinase. Results Our results show that these inhibitors delay the onset of TGFβ-induced nuclear accumulation of Smad3 and reduces its amplitude. This effect was accompanied by a strong reduction in TGFβ-responsivess of the slow-responder genes pthrp, pai-1 and upa, while the reactivity of the fast-responder gene smad7 to TGFβ remained almost unchanged. Neither was the TGFβ response of the fast-responder ese-1/esx gene, whose expression we found to be strongly downregulated by TGFβ, affected by the inhibitors. Conclusion The data show that SB-202190 and SB-203580 suppress TGFβ-dependent activation of genes that are important for the acquisition of invasive behavior, while having no effect on the expression of the natural TGFβ inhibitor Smad7. This suggests that these compounds are potent inhibitors of malignant behavior of cancer cells.
- Published
- 2003
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46. Caught in the middle: bottom-up and top-down processes impacting recruitment in a small pelagic fish
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Moyano, Marta, Illing, Björn, Akimova, Anna, Alter, Katharina, Bartolino, Valerio, Börner, Gregor, Clemmesen, Catriona, Finke, Annegret, Gröhsler, Tomas, Kotterba, Paul, Livdane, Lina, Mittermayer, Felix, Moll, Dorothee, von Nordheim, Lena, Peck, Myron A., Schaber, Matthias, and Polte, Patrick
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- 2023
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47. Diabetes distress in a Medicaid sample: The role of psychosocial and health-related factors
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Verdecias, Niko, McQueen, Amy, Von Nordheim, David A., Broussard, Darrell J., Jr, Smith, Rachel E., and Kreuter, Matthew W.
- Published
- 2023
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48. The Knowledge of Implementation Strategies: Impact of the Installed Base
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Pedersen, Rune, primary, Nordheim, Espen Solbakken, additional, Lintvedt, Ove, additional, Fagerlund, Asbjørn Johansen, additional, Severinsen, Gro-Hilde, additional, and Malm-Nicolaisen, Kristian, additional
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- 2023
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49. Constraints on the composition and thermal structure of Ariel's icy crust as inferred from its largest observed impact crater
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Bland, Michael T., Beddingfield, Chloe B., Nordheim, Tom A., Patthoff, Donald A., and Vance, Steven D.
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- 2023
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50. Energetic Electrons Near Europa From Juno JEDI Data
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C. Paranicas, B. H. Mauk, G. Clark, P. Kollmann, J. Westlake, K. Hibbitts, T. Nordheim, K. Hand, M. Brennan, J. E. P. Connerney, and S. Bolton
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electron weathering ,energy spectra ,Europa ,albedo ,magnetosphere ,radiation ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract Optical remote sensing observations have suggested that the top layer of Europa's icy surface is heavily affected by external weathering agents. To model and understand these effects, it is necessary to characterize the environment as fully as possible. In this paper, we focus on one agent in the environment (energetic electrons). We show Juno electron data from its 2022 Europa flyby and other time periods. While the Juno sensor used here (Jupiter Energetic Particle Detector Instrument) was not designed to obtain high quality electron data in an intense radiation environment, it is possible to extract information such as how Europa blocks energetic particles from accessing some of the surrounding space. The decrease in charged particle flux in Europa's wake provides an upper limit on the precipitation fluxes of the same particles. We also report that electron pitch angle distributions near Europa for the single energy channel considered here are time variable and not isotropic.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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