51,621 results on '"Thomas, N"'
Search Results
2. CHEOPS in-flight performance: A comprehensive look at the first 3.5 years of operations
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Fortier, A., Simon, A. E., Broeg, C., Olofsson, G., Deline, A., Wilson, T. G., Maxted, P. F. L., Brandeker, A., Cameron, A. Collier, Beck, M., Bekkelien, A., Billot, N., Bonfanti, A., Bruno, G., Cabrera, J., Delrez, L., Demory, B. -O., Futyan, D., Florén, H. -G., Günther, M. N., Heitzmann, A., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Sousa, S. G., Stalport, M., Turin, A., Verhoeve, P., Akinsanmi, B., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Bánhidi, D., Bárczy, T., Barrado, D., Barros, S. C., Baumjohann, W., Baycroft, T., Beck, T., Benz, W., Bíró, B. I., Bódi, A., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Charnoz, S., Cseh, B., Csizmadia, Sz., Csányi, I., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Davis, Y. T., Deleuil, M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Derekas, A., Dransfield, G., Ducrot, E., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fariña, C., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Garai, Z., Garcia, L., Gillon, M., Chew, Y. Gómez Maqueo, Gómez-Muñoz, M. A., Granata, V., Güdel, M., Guterman, P., Hegedüs, T., Helling, Ch., Jehin, E., Kalup, Cs., Kilkenny, D., Kiss, L., Kriskovics, L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Pina, A. Lopez, Luntzer, A., Magrin, D., Miller, N. J., Contreras, D. Modrego, Mordasini, C., Munari, M., Murray, C. A., Nascimbeni, V., Ottacher, H., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pál, A., Pallé, E., Pasetti, A., Pedersen, P., Peter, G., Petrucci, R., Piotto, G., Pizarro-Rubio, A., Pollacco, D., Pribulla, T., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Sabin, L., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Schanche, N., Schroffenegger, U., Scutt, O. J., Sebastian, D., Ségransan, D., Seli, B., Smith, A. M. S., Southworth, R., Standing, M. R., Szabó, M. Gy., Szakáts, R., Thomas, N., Timmermans, M., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Udry, S., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., Villaver, E., Vinkó, J., Walton, N. A., Wells, R., and Wolter, D.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
CHEOPS is a space telescope specifically designed to monitor transiting exoplanets orbiting bright stars. In September 2023, CHEOPS completed its nominal mission and remains in excellent operational conditions. The mission has been extended until the end of 2026. Scientific and instrumental data have been collected throughout in-orbit commissioning and nominal operations, enabling a comprehensive analysis of the mission's performance. In this article, we present the results of this analysis with a twofold goal. First, we aim to inform the scientific community about the present status of the mission and what can be expected as the instrument ages. Secondly, we intend for this publication to serve as a legacy document for future missions, providing insights and lessons learned from the successful operation of CHEOPS. To evaluate the instrument performance in flight, we developed a comprehensive monitoring and characterisation programme. It consists of dedicated observations that allow us to characterise the instrument's response. In addition to the standard collection of nominal science and housekeeping data, these observations provide input for detecting, modelling, and correcting instrument systematics, discovering and addressing anomalies, and comparing the instrument's actual performance with expectations. The precision of the CHEOPS measurements has enabled the mission objectives to be met and exceeded. Careful modelling of the instrumental systematics allows the data quality to be significantly improved during the light curve analysis phase, resulting in more precise scientific measurements. CHEOPS is compliant with the driving scientific requirements of the mission. Although visible, the ageing of the instrument has not affected the mission's performance., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2024
3. Classroom-Based Extensive Reading: A Review of Recent Research
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Thomas N. Robb and Doreen Ewert
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This survey of recent research on extensive reading (ER) for language learners focuses on ER in the classroom. While early adopters of ER imagined the quick emergence of an intrinsically motivated independent reader, the reality of much classroom-based language learning is that without considerable teacher guidance and supportive transitional activities, students are not likely to reach self-motivated independent ER either in or out of the classroom. Many of the studies included here, mostly non-experimental and classroom-based, reflect this reality. These studies confirm previous research on the general efficacy of ER in promoting motivation, vocabulary, and fluency development, but they also provide evidence for a variety of ways to support reluctant and grade-focused students who are only willing to engage with the target language in the classroom. This review also considers the many impediments that restrict the implementation of ER with language learners in school contexts. Separate sections discuss ER motivation and attitudes, ER and vocabulary, the effects of ER on reading fluency, as well as speculation on the relationship between "time on task" and progress in the various reading subskills. Each major section concludes with a table summarizing the research that has been discussed and suggestions for future investigation.
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- 2024
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4. Characterisation of the TOI-421 planetary system using CHEOPS, TESS, and archival radial velocity data
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Krenn, A. F., Kubyshkina, D., Fossati, L., Egger, J. A., Bonfanti, A., Deline, A., Ehrenreich, D., Beck, M., Benz, W., Cabrera, J., Wilson, T. G., Leleu, A., Sousa, S. G., Adibekyan, V., Correira, A. C. M., Alibert, Y., Delrez, L., Lendl, M., Patel, J. A., Venturini, J., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, T., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Brandeker, A., Broeg, C., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Hasiba, J., Heitzmann, A., Helling, C., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lovis, C., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Rieder, M., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Stalport, M., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van Grootel, V., Villaver, E., Viotto, V., Walton, N. A., and Zingales, T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The TOI-421 planetary system contains two sub-Neptune-type planets and is a prime target to study the formation and evolution of planets and their atmospheres. The inner planet is especially interesting as the existence of a hydrogen-dominated atmosphere at its orbital separation cannot be explained by current formation models without previous orbital migration. We jointly analysed photometric data of three TESS sectors and six CHEOPS visits as well as 156 radial velocity data points to retrieve improved planetary parameters. We also searched for TTVs and modelled the interior structure of the planets. Finally, we simulated the evolution of the primordial H-He atmospheres of the planets using two different modelling frameworks. We determine the planetary radii and masses of TOI-421 b and c to be $R_{\rm b} = 2.64 \pm 0.08 \, R_{\oplus}$, $M_{\rm b} = 6.7 \pm 0.6 \, M_{\oplus}$, $R_{\rm c} = 5.09 \pm 0.07 \, R_{\oplus}$, and $M_{\rm c} = 14.1 \pm 1.4 \, M_{\oplus}$. We do not detect any statistically significant TTV signals. Assuming the presence of a hydrogen-dominated atmosphere, the interior structure modelling results in both planets having extensive envelopes. While the modelling of the atmospheric evolution predicts for TOI-421 b to have lost any primordial atmosphere that it could have accreted at its current orbital position, TOI-421 c could have started out with an initial atmospheric mass fraction somewhere between 10 and 35%. We conclude that the low observed mean density of TOI-421 b can only be explained by either a bias in the measured planetary parameters (e.g. driven by high-altitude clouds) and/or in the context of orbital migration. We also find that the results of atmospheric evolution models are strongly dependent on the employed planetary structure model., Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
5. Detailed cool star flare morphology with CHEOPS and TESS
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Bruno, G., Pagano, I., Scandariato, G., Florén, H. -G., Brandeker, A., Olofsson, G., Maxted, P. F. L., Fortier, A., Sousa, S. G., Sulis, S., Van Grootel, V., Garai, Z., Boldog, A., Kriskovics, L., Szabó, M. Gy., Gandolfi, D., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Farinato, J., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Heitzmann, A., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Magrin, D., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Ottensamer, R., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Ratti, F., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Sarajlic, M., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Singh, V., Smith, A. M. S., Stalport, M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Venturini, J., Villaver, E., Walton, N. A., and Wilson, T. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. White-light stellar flares are proxies for some of the most energetic types of flares, but their triggering mechanism is still poorly understood. As they are associated with strong X and UV emission, their study is particularly relevant to estimate the amount of high-energy irradiation onto the atmospheres of exoplanets, especially those in their stars' habitable zone. Aims. We used the high-cadence, high-photometric capabilities of the CHEOPS and TESS space telescopes to study the detailed morphology of white-light flares occurring in a sample of 130 late-K and M stars, and compared our findings with results obtained at a lower cadence. We developed dedicated software for this purpose. Results. Multi-peak flares represent a significant percentage ($\gtrsim 30$\%) of the detected outburst events. Our findings suggest that high-impulse flares are more frequent than suspected from lower-cadence data, so that the most impactful flux levels that hit close-in exoplanets might be more time-limited than expected. We found significant differences in the duration distributions of single-peak and complex flare components, but not in their peak luminosity. A statistical analysis of the flare parameter distributions provides marginal support for their description with a log-normal instead of a power-law function, leaving the door open to several flare formation scenarios. We tentatively confirmed previous results about quasi-periodic pulsations in high-cadence photometry, report the possible detection of a pre-flare dip, and did not find hints of photometric variability due to an undetected flare background. Conclusions. The high-cadence study of stellar hosts might be crucial to evaluate the impact of their flares on close-in exoplanets, as their impulsive phase emission might otherwise be incorrectly estimated. Future telescopes such as PLATO and Ariel will help in this respect., Comment: 28 pages, 25 figures, 4 tables, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2024
6. Precise characterisation of HD 15337 with CHEOPS: a laboratory for planet formation and evolution
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Rosário, N. M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Barros, S. C. C., Gandolfi, D., Egger, J. A., Serrano, L. M., Osborn, H. P., Beck, M., Benz, W., Florén, H. -G., Guterman, P., Wilson, T. G., Alibert, Y., Fossati, L., Hooton, M. J., Delrez, L., Santos, N. C., Sousa, S. G., Bonfanti, A., Salmon, S., Adibekyan, V., Nigioni, A., Venturini, J., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barragán, O., Baumjohann, W., Beck, T., Billot, N., Biondi, F., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Brandeker, A., Broeg, C., Cessa, V., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Esposito, M., Fortier, A., Fridlund, M., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Luntzer, A., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Osborne, H. L. M., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Stalport, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Van Eylen, V., Van Grootel, V., Villaver, E., Walter, I., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We aim to constrain the internal structure and composition of HD 15337 b and c, two short-period planets situated on opposite sides of the radius valley, using new transit photometry and radial velocity data. We acquire 6 new transit visits with the CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) and 32 new radial velocity measurements from the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) to improve the accuracy of the mass and radius estimates for both planets. We reanalyse light curves from TESS sectors 3 and 4 and analyse new data from sector 30, correcting for long-term stellar activity. Subsequently, we perform a joint fit of the TESS and CHEOPS light curves, and all available RV data from HARPS and the Planet Finder Spectrograph (PFS). Our model fits the planetary signals, the stellar activity signal and the instrumental decorrelation model for the CHEOPS data simultaneously. The stellar activity was modelled using a Gaussian-process regression on both the RV and activity indicators. We finally employ a Bayesian retrieval code to determine the internal composition and structure of the planets. We derive updated and highly precise parameters for the HD 15337 system. Our improved precision on the planetary parameters makes HD 15337 b one of the most precisely characterised rocky exoplanets, with radius and mass measurements achieving a precision better than 2\% and 7\%, respectively. We are able to improve the precision of the radius measurement of HD 15337 c to 3\%. Our results imply that the composition of HD 15337 b is predominantly rocky, while HD 15337 c exhibits a gas envelope with a mass of at least $0.01\ M_\oplus$.Our results lay the groundwork for future studies, which can further unravel the atmospheric evolution of these exoplanets and give new insights into their composition and formation history and the causes behind the radius gap., Comment: 17 pages, including appendix
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- 2024
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7. Mass supply from Io to Jupiter's magnetosphere
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Roth, L., Blöcker, A., de Kleer, K., Goldstein, D., Lellouch, E., Saur, J., Schmidt, C., Strobel, D. F., Tao, C., Tsuchiya, F., Dols, V., Huybrighs, H., Mura, A., Szalay, J. R., Badman, S. V., de Pater, I., Dott, A. -C., Kagitani, M., Klaiber, L., Koga, R., McEwen, A., Milby, Z., Retherford, K. D., Schlegel, S., Thomas, N., Tseng, W. L., and Vorburger, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Since the Voyager mission flybys in 1979, we have known the moon Io to be extremely volcanically active as well as to be the main source of plasma in the vast magnetosphere of Jupiter. Material lost from Io forms neutral clouds, the Io plasma torus and ultimately the extended plasma sheet. This material is supplied from the upper atmosphere and atmospheric loss is likely driven by plasma-interaction effects with possible contributions from thermal escape and photochemistry-driven escape. Direct volcanic escape is negligible. The supply of material to maintain the plasma torus was estimated from various methods at roughly one ton per second. Most of the time the magnetospheric plasma environment of Io is stable on timescales from days to months. Similarly, Io's atmosphere was found to have a stable average density on the dayside, although it exhibits lateral, diurnal and seasonal variations. There is a potential positive feedback in the Io torus supply: collisions of torus plasma with atmospheric neutrals likely are a significant loss process, which increases with torus density. The stability of the torus environment might be maintained by limiting mechanisms of either torus supply from Io or the loss from the torus by centrifugal interchange in the middle magnetosphere. Various observations suggest that occasionally the plasma torus undergoes major transient changes over a period of several weeks, apparently overcoming possible stabilizing mechanisms. Such events (and more frequent minor changes) are commonly explained by some kind of change in volcanic activity that triggers a chain of reactions which modify the plasma torus state via a net increase in supply of new mass. However, it remains unknown what kind of volcanic event can trigger torus events, whether Io's atmosphere undergoes a change before or during such magnetospheric events, and what processes could enable such a change.
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- 2024
8. Investigating the Soft X-ray Spectra of Solar Flare Onsets
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Telikicherla, Anant, Woods, Thomas N., and Schwab, Bennet D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In this study we present the analysis of six solar flare events that occurred in 2022, using new data from the third-generation Miniature X-Ray Solar Spectrometer (MinXSS), also known as the Dual-zone Aperture X-ray Solar Spectrometer (DAXSS). The primary focus of this study is on the flare's "onset phase", which is characterized by elevated soft X-ray emissions even before the flare's impulsive phase. We analyze the temporal evolution of plasma temperature, emission measure, and elemental abundance factors during the flare onset phase, by fitting the DAXSS spectra with the Astrophysical Plasma Emission Code (APEC) model. The model fitting results indicate that the flaring-plasma is already at a high temperature (10-15 MK) during the onset period. The temperature rises during the onset phase, followed by a decrease and subsequent increase during the impulsive phase. Elemental abundance factors show a trend of falling below pre-flare values during the onset phase, with some recovery before the impulsive phase. During the impulsive phase, the abundance factors decrease from elevated coronal values to about photospheric values. We also analyze images from the 193 Angstrom channel of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA), highlighting the formation or brightening of coronal loop structures during the onset phase. Two distinct onset loop configurations are observed which are referred to as 1-loop and 2-loop onsets. Both DAXSS and AIA observations indicate that the flare onset phase exhibits similar hot coronal plasma properties as the impulsive phase, suggesting that the onset phase may act as a preconditioning effect for some flares., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
9. X-ray polarization measurement of the gold standard of radio-quiet active galactic nuclei : NGC 1068
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Marin, F., Marinucci, A., Laurenti, M., Kim, D. E., Barnouin, T., Di Marco, A., Ursini, F., Bianchi, S., Ravi, S., Marshall, H. L., Matt, G., Chen, C. -T., Gianolli, V. E., Ingram, A., Maksym, W. P., Panagiotou, C., Podgorny, J., Puccetti, S., Ratheesh, A., Tombesi, F., Agudo, I., Antonelli, L. A., Bachetti, M., Baldini, L., Baumgartner, W., Bellazzini, R., Bongiorno, S., Bonino, R., Brez, A., Bucciantini, N., Capitanio, F., Castellano, S., Cavazzuti, E., Ciprini, S., Costa, E., De Rosa, A., Del Monte, E., Di Gesu, L., Di Lalla, N., Donnarumma, I., Doroshenko, V., Dovciak, M., Ehlert, S., Enoto, T., Evangelista, Y., Fabiani, S., Ferrazzoli, R., Garcia, J., Gunji, S., Heyl, J., Iwakiri, W., Jorstad, S., Kaaret, P., Karas, V., Kislat, F., Kitaguchi, T., Kolodziejczak, J., Krawczynski, H., La Monaca, F., Latronico, L., Liodakis, I., Madejski, G., Maldera, S., Manfreda, A., Marscher, A., Massaro, F., Mitsuishi, I., Mizuno, T., Muleri, F., Negro, M., Ng, S., O'Dell, S., Omodei, N., Oppedisano, C., Papitto, A., Pavlov, G., Perri, M., Pesce-Rollins, M., Petrucci, P. -O., Pilia, M., Possenti, A., Poutanen, J., Ramsey, B., Rankin, J., Roberts, O., Romani, R., Sgro, C., Slane, P., Soffitta, P., Spandre, G., Swartz, D., Tamagawa, T., Tavecchio, F., Taverna, R., Tawara, Y., Tennant, A., Thomas, N., Trois, A., Tsygankov, S., Turolla, R., Vink, J., Weisskopf, M., Wu, K., Xie, F., and Zane, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,J.2.3 ,J.2.9 - Abstract
We used the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) satellite to measure, for the first time, the 2-8 keV polarization of NGC 1068. We pointed IXPE for a net exposure time of 1.15 Ms on the target, in addition to two ~ 10 ks each Chandra snapshots in order to account for the potential impact of several ultraluminous X-ray source (ULXs) within IXPE's field-of-view. We measured a 2 - 8 keV polarization degree of 12.4% +/- 3.6% and an electric vector polarization angle of 101{\deg} +/- 8{\deg} at 68% confidence level. If we exclude the spectral region containing the bright Fe K lines and other soft X-ray lines where depolarization occurs, the polarization fraction rises up to 21.3% +/- 6.7% in the 3.5 - 6.0 keV band, with a similar polarization angle. The observed polarization angle is found to be perpendicular to the parsec scale radio jet. Using a combined Chandra and IXPE analysis plus multi-wavelength constraints, we estimated that the circumnuclear "torus" may sustain a half-opening angle of 50{\deg} - 55{\deg} (from the vertical axis of the system). Thanks to IXPE, we have measured the X-ray polarization of NGC 1068 and found comparable results, both in terms of polarization angle orientation with respect to the radio-jet and torus half-opening angle, to the X-ray polarimetric measurement achieved for the other archetypal Compton-thick AGN : the Circinus galaxy. Probing the geometric arrangement of parsec-scale matter in extragalactic object is now feasible thanks to X-ray polarimetry., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, submited to A&A
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- 2024
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10. Porphyry copper formation driven by water-fluxed crustal melting during flat-slab subduction
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Lamont, Thomas N., Loader, Matthew A., Roberts, Nick M. W., Cooper, Frances J., Wilkinson, Jamie J., Bevan, Dan, Gorecki, Adam, Kemp, Anthony, Elliott, Tim, Gardiner, Nicholas J., and Tapster, Simon
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- 2024
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11. An Orai1 gain-of-function tubular aggregate myopathy mouse model phenocopies key features of the human disease
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Zhao, Nan, Michelucci, Antonio, Pietrangelo, Laura, Malik, Sundeep, Groom, Linda, Leigh, Jennifer, O’Connor, Thomas N, Takano, Takahiro, Kingsley, Paul D, Palis, James, Boncompagni, Simona, Protasi, Feliciano, and Dirksen, Robert T
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- 2024
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12. A chemical probe to modulate human GID4 Pro/N-degron interactions
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Owens, Dominic D. G., Maitland, Matthew E. R., Khalili Yazdi, Aliakbar, Song, Xiaosheng, Reber, Viviane, Schwalm, Martin P., Machado, Raquel A. C., Bauer, Nicolas, Wang, Xu, Szewczyk, Magdalena M., Dong, Cheng, Dong, Aiping, Loppnau, Peter, Calabrese, Matthew F., Dowling, Matthew S., Lee, Jisun, Montgomery, Justin I., O’Connell, Thomas N., Subramanyam, Chakrapani, Wang, Feng, Adamson, Ella C., Schapira, Matthieu, Gstaiger, Matthias, Knapp, Stefan, Vedadi, Masoud, Min, Jinrong, Lajoie, Gilles A., Barsyte-Lovejoy, Dalia, Owen, Dafydd R., Schild-Poulter, Caroline, and Arrowsmith, Cheryl H.
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- 2024
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13. Analysis of single-cell transcriptome data from a mouse model implicates protein synthesis dysfunction in schizophrenia
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Weller, Andrew E., Ferraro, Thomas N., Doyle, Glenn A., Reiner, Benjamin C., Berrettini, Wade H., and Crist, Richard C.
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- 2024
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14. How does the radio enhancement of broad absorption line quasars relate to colour and accretion rate?
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Petley, J. W., Morabito, L. K., Rankine, A. L., Richards, G. T., Thomas, N. L., Alexander, D. M., Fawcett, V. A., Rivera, G. Calistro, Prandoni, I., Best, P. N., and Kolwa, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The origin of radio emission in different populations of radio-quiet quasars is relatively unknown, but recent work has uncovered various drivers of increased radio-detection fraction. In this work, we pull together three known factors: optical colour ($g-i$), \CIV Distance (a proxy for $L/L_{Edd}$) and whether or not the quasar contains broad absorption lines (BALQSOs) which signify an outflow. We use SDSS DR14 spectra along with the LOFAR Two Metre Sky Survey Data Release 2 and find that each of these properties have an independent effect. BALQSOs are marginally more likely to be radio-detected than non-BALQSOs at similar colours and $L/L_{Edd}$, moderate reddening significantly increases the radio-detection fraction and the radio-detection increases with $L/L_{Edd}$ above a threshold for all populations. We test a widely used simple model for radio wind shock emission and calculate energetic efficiencies that would be required to reproduce the observed radio properties. We discuss interpretations of these results concerning radio-quiet quasars more generally. We suggest that radio emission in BALQSOs is connected to a different physical origin than the general quasar population since they show different radio properties independent of colour and \CIV distance., Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
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15. Attosecond X-ray Chronoscopy of Core-level Photoemission
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Ji, Jia-Bao, Guo, Zhaoheng, Driver, Taran, Trevisan, Cynthia S., Cesar, David, Cheng, Xinxin, Duris, Joseph, Franz, Paris L., Glownia, James, Gong, Xiaochun, Hammerland, Daniel, Han, Meng, Heck, Saijoscha, Hoffmann, Matthias, Kamalov, Andrei, Larsen, Kirk A., Li, Xiang, Lin, Ming-Fu, Liu, Yuchen, McCurdy, C. William, Obaid, Razib, ONeal, Jordan T., Rescigno, Thomas N., Robles, River R., Sudar, Nicholas, Walter, Peter, Wang, Anna L., Wang, Jun, Wolf, Thomas J. A., Zhang, Zhen, Ueda, Kiyoshi, Lucchese, Robert R., Marinelli, Agostino, Cryan, James P., and Wörner, Hans Jakob
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Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
Attosecond photoemission or photoionization delays are a unique probe of the structure and the electronic dynamics of matter. However, spectral congestion and spatial delocalization of valence electron wave functions set fundamental limits to the complexity of systems that can be studied and the information that can be retrieved, respectively. Using attosecond X-ray pulses from LCLS, we demonstrate the key advantages of measuring core-level delays: the photoelectron spectra remain atom-like, the measurements become element specific and the observed scattering dynamics originate from a point-like source. We exploit these unique features to reveal the effects of electronegativity and symmetry on attosecond scattering dynamics by measuring the photoionization delays between N-1s and C-1s core shells of a series of aromatic azabenzene molecules. Remarkably, the delays systematically increase with the number of nitrogen atoms in the molecule and reveal multiple resonances. We identify two previously unknown mechanisms regulating the associated attosecond dynamics, namely the enhanced confinement of the trapped wavefunction with increasing electronegativity of the atoms and the decrease of the coupling strength among the photoemitted partial waves with increasing symmetry. This study demonstrates the unique opportunities opened by measurements of core-level photoionization delays for unravelling attosecond electron dynamics in complex matter.
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- 2024
16. The tidal deformation and atmosphere of WASP-12b from its phase curve
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Akinsanmi, B., Barros, S. C. C., Lendl, M., Carone, L., Cubillos, P. E., Bekkelien, A., Fortier, A., Florén, H. -G., Cameron, A. Collier, Boué, G., Bruno, G., Demory, B. -O., Brandeker, A., Sousa, S. G., Wilson, T. G., Deline, A., Bonfanti, A., Scandariato, G., Hooton, M. J., Correia, A. C. M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Smith, A. M. S., Singh, V., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, Ch., Buder, M., Charnoz, S., Csizmadia, Sz., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Delrez, L., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Farinato, J., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Heitzmann, A., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mecina, M., Mordasini, Ch., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piazza, D., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Stalport, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., Villaver, E., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Ultra-hot Jupiters present a unique opportunity to understand the physics and chemistry of planets at extreme conditions. WASP-12b stands out as an archetype of this class of exoplanets. We performed comprehensive analyses of the transits, occultations, and phase curves of WASP-12b by combining new CHEOPS observations with previous TESS and Spitzer data to measure the planet's tidal deformation, atmospheric properties, and orbital decay rate. The planet was modeled as a triaxial ellipsoid parameterized by the second-order fluid Love number, $h_2$, which quantifies its radial deformation and provides insight into the interior structure. We measured the tidal deformation of WASP-12b and estimated a Love number of $h_2=1.55_{-0.49}^{+0.45}$ (at 3.2$\sigma$) from its phase curve. We measured occultation depths of $333\pm24$ppm and $493\pm29$ppm in the CHEOPS and TESS bands, respectively, while the dayside emission spectrum indicates that CHEOPS and TESS probe similar pressure levels in the atmosphere at a temperature of 2900K. We also estimated low geometric albedos of $0.086\pm0.017$ and $0.01\pm0.023$ in the CHEOPS and TESS passbands, respectively, suggesting the absence of reflective clouds in the dayside of the WASP-12b. The CHEOPS occultations do not show strong evidence for variability in the dayside atmosphere of the planet. Finally, we refine the orbital decay rate by 12% to a value of -30.23$\pm$0.82 ms/yr. WASP-12b becomes the second exoplanet, after WASP-103b, for which the Love number has been measured (at 3$sigma$) from the effect of tidal deformation in the light curve. However, constraining the core mass fraction of the planet requires measuring $h_2$ with a higher precision. This can be achieved with high signal-to-noise observations with JWST since the phase curve amplitude, and consequently the induced tidal deformation effect, is higher in the infrared., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
17. Identifying predictors of translocation success in rare plant species
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Bellis, Joe, Osazuwa‐Peters, Oyomoare, Maschinski, Joyce, Keir, Matthew J, Parsons, Elliott W, Kaye, Thomas N, Kunz, Michael, Possley, Jennifer, Menges, Eric, Smith, Stacy A, Roth, Daniela, Brewer, Debbie, Brumback, William, Lange, James J, Niederer, Christal, Turner‐Skoff, Jessica B, Bontrager, Megan, Braham, Richard, Coppoletta, Michelle, Holl, Karen D, Williamson, Paula, Bell, Timothy, Jonas, Jayne L, McEachern, Kathryn, Robertson, Kathy L, Birnbaum, Sandra J, Dattilo, Adam, Dollard, John J, Fant, Jeremie, Kishida, Wendy, Lesica, Peter, Link, Steven O, Pavlovic, Noel B, Poole, Jackie, Reemts, Charlotte M, Stiling, Peter, Taylor, David D, Titus, Jonathan H, Titus, Priscilla J, Adkins, Edith D, Chambers, Timothy, Paschke, Mark W, Heineman, Katherine D, and Albrecht, Matthew A
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Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Ecological Applications ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Environmental Sciences ,Life on Land ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Plants ,Reproduction ,Seeds ,Ecosystem ,endangered species ,population restoration ,reintroduction ,seedling recruitment ,species recovery ,threatened species ,especie amenazada ,especie en peligro ,reclutamiento de plántulas ,recuperación de especie ,reintroducción ,restauración poblacional ,出苗 ,受威胁物种 ,濒危物种 ,物种恢复 ,种群恢复 ,重引入 ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Zoology ,Environmental management - Abstract
The fundamental goal of a rare plant translocation is to create self-sustaining populations with the evolutionary resilience to persist in the long term. Yet, most plant translocation syntheses focus on a few factors influencing short-term benchmarks of success (e.g., survival and reproduction). Short-term benchmarks can be misleading when trying to infer future growth and viability because the factors that promote establishment may differ from those required for long-term persistence. We assembled a large (n = 275) and broadly representative data set of well-documented and monitored (7.9 years on average) at-risk plant translocations to identify the most important site attributes, management techniques, and species' traits for six life-cycle benchmarks and population metrics of translocation success. We used the random forest algorithm to quantify the relative importance of 29 predictor variables for each metric of success. Drivers of translocation outcomes varied across time frames and success metrics. Management techniques had the greatest relative influence on the attainment of life-cycle benchmarks and short-term population trends, whereas site attributes and species' traits were more important for population persistence and long-term trends. Specifically, large founder sizes increased the potential for reproduction and recruitment into the next generation, whereas declining habitat quality and the outplanting of species with low seed production led to increased extinction risks and a reduction in potential reproductive output in the long-term, respectively. We also detected novel interactions between some of the most important drivers, such as an increased probability of next-generation recruitment in species with greater seed production rates, but only when coupled with large founder sizes. Because most significant barriers to plant translocation success can be overcome by improving techniques or resolving site-level issues through early intervention and management, we suggest that by combining long-term monitoring with adaptive management, translocation programs can enhance the prospects of achieving long-term success.
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- 2024
18. The EBLM Project XI. Mass, radius and effective temperature measurements for 23 M-dwarf companions to solar-type stars observed with CHEOPS
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Swayne, M. I., Maxted, P. F. L., Triaud, A. H. M. J., Sousa, S. G., Deline, A., Ehrenreich, D., Hoyer, S., Olofsson, G., Boisse, I., Duck, A., Gill, S., Martin, D., McCormac, J., Persson, C. M., Santerne, A., Sebastian, D., Standing, M. R., Acuña, L., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Baycroft, T. A., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Bourrier, V., Brandeker, A., Broeg, C., Carmona, A., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Cortés-Zuleta, P., Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Delfosse, X., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Dransfield, G., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Forveille, T., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Hara, N., Hébrard, G., Heidari, N., Hellier, C., Helling, Ch., Isaak, K. G., Kerschbaum, F., Kiefer, F., Kiss, L. L., Kunovac, V., Lalitha, S., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Magrin, D., Marafatto, L., Martioli, E., Miller, N. J., Mordasini, C., Moutou, C., Nascimbeni, V., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piazza, D., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Southworth, R., Stalport, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., Walton, N. A., Willett, E., and Wilson, T. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of low-mass stars have frequently shown a disagreement between observed stellar radii and radii predicted by theoretical stellar structure models. This ``radius inflation'' problem could have an impact on both stellar and exoplanetary science. We present the final results of our observation programme with the CHEOPS satellite to obtain high-precision light curves of eclipsing binaries with low mass stellar companions (EBLMs). Combined with the spectroscopic orbits of the solar-type companion, we can derive the masses, radii and effective temperatures of 23 M-dwarf stars. We use the PYCHEOPS data analysis software to analyse their primary and secondary occultations. For all but one target, we also perform analyses with TESS light curves for comparison. We have assessed the impact of starspot-induced variation on our derived parameters and account for this in our radius and effective temperature uncertainties using simulated light curves. We observe trends for inflation with both metallicity and orbital separation. We also observe a strong trend in the difference between theoretical and observational effective temperatures with metallicity. There is no such trend with orbital separation. These results are not consistent with the idea that observed inflation in stellar radius combines with lower effective temperature to preserve the luminosity predicted by low-mass stellar models. Our EBLM systems are high-quality and homogeneous measurements that can be used in further studies into radius inflation., Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, Supplementary material provided as ancillary files
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- 2023
19. Could Cytoplasmic Lipid Droplets be Linked to Inefficient Oxidative Phosphorylation in Cancer?
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Seyfried, Thomas N., Ta, Nathan L., Duraj, Tomas, Lee, Derek C., Kiebish, Michael A., Chinopoulos, Christos, and Arismendi-Morillo, Gabriel
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- 2024
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20. Multi-omics bioactivity profile-based chemical grouping and read-across: a case study with Daphnia magna and azo dyes
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Gruszczynska, Hanna, Barnett, Rosemary E., Lloyd, Gavin R., Weber, Ralf J. M., Lawson, Thomas N., Zhou, Jiarui, Sostare, Elena, Colbourne, John K., and Viant, Mark R.
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- 2024
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21. Evidence for transient morning water frost deposits on the Tharsis volcanoes of Mars
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Valantinas, A., Thomas, N., Pommerol, A., Karatekin, O., Ruiz Lozano, L., Senel, C. B., Temel, O., Hauber, E., Tirsch, D., Bickel, V. T., Munaretto, G., Pajola, M., Oliva, F., Schmidt, F., Thomas, I., McEwen, A. S., Almeida, M., Read, M., Rangarajan, V. G., El-Maarry, M. R., Re, C., Carrozzo, F. G., D’Aversa, E., Daerden, F., Ristic, B., Patel, M. R., Bellucci, G., Lopez-Moreno, J. J., Vandaele, A. C., and Cremonese, G.
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- 2024
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22. Guiding principles on the education and practice of theranostics
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Pascual, Thomas N. B., Paez, Diana, Iagaru, Andrei, Gnanasegaran, Gopi, Lee, Sze Ting, Sathekge, Mike, Buatti, John M., Giammarile, Francesco, Al-Ibraheem, Akram, Pardo, Manuela Arevalo, Baum, Richard P., De Bari, Berardino, Ben-Haim, Simona, Blay, Jean-Yves, Brink, Anita, Estrada-Lobato, Enrique, Fanti, Stefano, Golubic, Anja Tea, Hatazawa, Jun, Israel, Ora, Kiess, Ana, Knoll, Peter, Louw, Lizette, Mariani, Giuliano, Mirzaei, Siroos, Orellana, Pilar, Prior, John O., Urbain, Jean-Luc, Vichare, Shrikant, Vinjamuri, Sobhan, Virgolini, Irene, and Scott, Andrew M.
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- 2024
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23. Capture tolerance: A neglected third component of aposematism?
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Sherratt, Thomas N. and Stefan, Amanda
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- 2024
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24. Characterising TOI-732 b and c: new insights on the M-dwarf radius and density valley
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Bonfanti, A., Brady, M., Wilson, T. G., Venturini, J., Egger, J. A., Brandeker, A., Sousa, S. G., Lendl, M., Simon, A. E., Queloz, D., Olofsson, G., Adibekyan, V., Alibert, Y., Fossati, L., Hooton, M. J., Kubyshkina, D., Luque, R., Murgas, F., Mustill, A. J., Santos, N. C., Van Grootel, V., Alonso, R., Asquier, J., Bandy, T., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Bean, J., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Bergomi, M., Billot, N., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Heitzmann, A., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kasper, D., Kiss, L. L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Seifahrt, A., Smith, A. M. S., Stalport, M., Stefánsson, G., Steinberger, M., Stürmer, J., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Villaver, E., Walton, N. A., Westerdorff, K., and Zingales, T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
TOI-732 is an M dwarf hosting two transiting planets, which are located on the two opposite sides of the radius valley. By doubling the number of available space-based observations and increasing the number of radial velocity (RV) measurements, we aim at refining the parameters of TOI-732 b and c. We also aim at using the results to study the slope of both the radius valley and the density valley for a well characterised sample of M dwarf exoplanets. We performed a global MCMC analysis by jointly modelling ground-based light curves, CHEOPS and TESS observations, along with RV time series both taken from the literature and obtained with the MAROON-X spectrograph. The slopes of the M dwarf valleys were quantified via a Support Vector Machine (SVM) procedure. TOI-732 b is an ultra short period planet ($P\sim0.77$ d) with a radius $R_b=1.325_{-0.058}^{+0.057}$ $R_{\oplus}$ and a mass $M_b=2.46\pm0.19$ $M_{\oplus}$ (mean density $\rho_b=5.8_{-0.8}^{+1.0}$ g cm$^{-3}$), while the outer planet at $P\sim12.25$ d has $R_c=2.39_{-0.11}^{+0.10}$ $R_{\oplus}$, $M_c=8.04_{-0.48}^{+0.50}$ $M_{\oplus}$, and thus $\rho_c=3.24_{-0.43}^{+0.55}$ g cm$^{-3}$. Also considering our interior structure calculations TOI-732 b is a super-Earth and TOI-732 c is a mini-Neptune. Following the SVM approach, we quantified $\mathrm{d}\log{R_{p,{\mathrm{valley}}}}/\mathrm{d}\log{P}=-0.065_{-0.013}^{+0.024}$, which is flatter than for Sun-like stars. In line with former analyses, we noted a more filled radius valley for M-planets and we further quantified the density valley slope as $\mathrm{d}\log{\hat{\rho}_{\mathrm{valley}}}/\mathrm{d}\log{P}=-0.02_{-0.04}^{+0.12}$. Compared to FGK stars, the weaker dependence of the position of the radius valley with orbital period might indicate a heavier influence of formation relative to evolution mechanisms in shaping the radius valley around M-dwarfs., Comment: 28 pages (17 in the main text), 18 figures (9 in the main text), 11 tables (7 in the main text). Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
25. CHEOPS observations of KELT-20 b/MASCARA-2 b: an aligned orbit and signs of variability from a reflective dayside
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Singh, V., Scandariato, G., Smith, A. M. S., Cubillos, P. E., Lendl, M., Billot, N., Fortier, A., Queloz, D., Sousa, S. G., Csizmadia, Sz., Brandeker, A., Carone, L., Wilson, T. G., Akinsanmi, B., Patel, J. A., Krenn, A., Demangeon, O. D. S., Bruno, G., Pagano, I., Hooton, M. J., Cabrera, J., Santos, N. C., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Bergomi, M., Bonfanti, A., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Harre, J. -V., Heitzmann, A., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mischler, H., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Salmon, S., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Stalport, M., Steinberger, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., Villaver, E., Walton, N. A., and Zingales, T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Occultations are windows of opportunity to indirectly peek into the dayside atmosphere of exoplanets. High-precision transit events provide information on the spin-orbit alignment of exoplanets around fast-rotating hosts. We aim to precisely measure the planetary radius and geometric albedo of the ultra-hot Jupiter (UHJ) KELT-20 b as well as the system's spin-orbit alignment. We obtained optical high-precision transits and occultations of KELT-20 b using CHEOPS observations in conjunction with the simultaneous TESS observations. We interpret the occultation measurements together with archival infrared observations to measure the planetary geometric albedo and dayside temperatures. We further use the host star's gravity-darkened nature to measure the system's obliquity. We present time-averaged precise occultation depth of 82(6) ppm measured with seven CHEOPS visits and 131(+8/-7) ppm from the analysis of all available TESS photometry. Using these measurements, we precisely constrain the geometric albedo of KELT-20 b to 0.26(0.04) and the brightness temperature of the dayside hemisphere to 2566(+77/-80) K. Assuming Lambertian scattering law, we constrain the Bond albedo to 0.36(+0.04/-0.05) along with a minimal heat transfer to the nightside. Furthermore, using five transit observations we provide stricter constraints of 3.9(1.1) degrees on the sky-projected obliquity of the system. The aligned orbit of KELT-20 b is in contrast to previous CHEOPS studies that have found strongly inclined orbits for planets orbiting other A-type stars. KELT-20 b's comparably high planetary geometric albedo corroborates a known trend of strongly irradiated planets being more reflective. Finally, we tentatively detect signs of temporal variability in the occultation depths, which might indicate variable cloud cover advecting onto the planetary dayside., Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2023
26. IXPE observation confirms a high spin in the accreting black hole 4U 1957+115
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Marra, L., Brigitte, M., Cavero, N. Rodriguez, Chun, S., Steiner, J. F., Dovčiak, M., Nowak, M., Bianchi, S., Capitanio, F., Ingram, A., Matt, G., Muleri, F., Podgorný, J., Poutanen, J., Svoboda, J., Taverna, R., Ursini, F., Veledina, A., De Rosa, A., Garcia, J. A., Lutovinov, A. A., Mereminskiy, I. A., Farinelli, R., Gunji, S., Kaaret, P., Kallman, T., Krawczynski, H., Kan, Y., Hu, K., Marinucci, A., Mastroserio, G., Mikušincová, R., Parra, M., Petrucci, P. O., Ratheesh, A., Soffitta, P., Tombesi, F., Zane, S., Agudo, I., Antonelli, L. A., Bachetti, M., Baldini, L., Baumgartner, W. H., Bellazzini, R., Bongiorno, S. D., Bonino, R., Brez, A., Bucciantini, N., Castellano, S., Cavazzuti, E., Chen, C., Ciprini, S., Costa, E., Del Monte, E., Di Gesu, L., Di Lalla, N., Di Marco, A., Donnarumma, I., Doroshenko, V., Ehlert, S. R., Enoto, T., Evangelista, Y., Fabiani, S., Ferrazzoli, R., Hayashida, K., Heyl, J., Iwakiri, W., Jorstad, S. G., Karas, V., Kislat, F., Kitaguchi, T., Kolodziejczak, J. J., La Monaca, F., Latronico, L., Liodakis, I., Maldera, S., Manfreda, A., Marin, F., Marscher, A. P., Marshall, H. L., Massaro, F., Mitsuishi, I., Mizuno, T., Negro, M., Ng, C. Y., O'Dell, S. L., Omodei, N., Oppedisano, C., Papitto, A., Pavlov, G. G., Peirson, A. L., Perri, M., Pesce-Rollins, M., Pilia, M., Possenti, A., Puccetti, S., Ramsey, B. D., Rankin, J., Roberts, O. J., Romani, R. W., Sgro, C., Slane, P., Spandre, G., Swartz, D. A., Tamagawa, T., Tavecchio, F., Tawara, Y., Tennant, A. F., Thomas, N. E., Trois, A., Tsygankov, S. S., Turolla, R., Vink, J., Weisskopf, M. C., Wu, K., and Xie, F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results of the first X-ray polarimetric observation of the low-mass X-ray binary 4U 1957+115, performed with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer in May 2023. The binary system has been in a high-soft spectral state since its discovery and is thought to host a black hole. The $\sim$571 ks observation reveals a linear polarisation degree of $1.9\% \pm 0.6\%$ and a polarisation angle of $-41^\circ.8 \pm 7^\circ.9$ in the 2-8 keV energy range. Spectral modelling is consistent with the dominant contribution coming from the standard accretion disc, while polarimetric data suggest a significant role of returning radiation: photons that are bent by strong gravity effects and forced to return to the disc surface, where they can be reflected before eventually reaching the observer. In this setting, we find that models with a black hole spin lower than 0.96 and an inclination lower than $50^\circ$ are disfavoured., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
27. No random transits in CHEOPS observations of HD 139139
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Alonso, R., Hoyer, S., Deleuil, M., Simon, A. E., Beck, M., Benz, W., Florén, H. -G., Guterman, P., Borsato, L., Brandeker, A., Gandolfi, D., Wilson, T. G., Zingales, T., Alibert, Y., Anglada, G., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, T., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Broeg, Ch., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, van Damme, C. Corral, Sz., Csizmadia, Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D, Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Heitzmann, A., Helling, Ch., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Kopp, E., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, Ch., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Smith, A. M. S., Sousa, S. G., Stalport, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van grootel, V., Venturini, J., Verrecchia, F., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
HD 139139 (a.k.a. 'The Random Transiter') is a star that exhibited enigmatic transit-like features with no apparent periodicity in K2 data. The shallow depth of the events ($\sim$200 ppm -- equivalent to transiting objects with radii of $\sim$1.5 R$_\oplus$ in front of a Sun-like star), and their non-periodicity, constitutes a challenge for the photometric follow-up of this star. The goal of this study is to confirm with independent measurements the presence of shallow, non-periodic transit-like features on this object. We performed observations with CHEOPS, for a total accumulated time of 12.75 d, distributed in visits of roughly 20 h in two observing campaigns in years 2021 and 2022. The precision of the data is sufficient to detect 150 ppm features with durations longer than 1.5 h. We use the duration and times of the events seen in the K2 curve to estimate how many should have been detected in our campaigns, under the assumption that their behaviour during the CHEOPS observations would be the same as in the K2 data of 2017. We do not detect events with depths larger than 150 ppm in our data set. If the frequency, depth, and duration of the events were the same as in the K2 campaign, we estimate the probability of having missed all events due to our limited observing window would be 4.8 %. We suggest three different scenarios to explain our results: 1) Our observing window was not long enough, and the events were missed with the estimated 4.8 % probability. 2) The events recorded in the K2 observations were time critical, and the mechanism producing them was either not active in the 2021 and 2022 campaigns or created shallower events under our detectability level. 3) The enigmatic events in the K2 data are the result of an unidentified and infrequent instrumental noise in the original data set or its data treatment., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Language-corrected version
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- 2023
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28. Constraining the reflective properties of WASP-178b using Cheops photometry
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Pagano, I., Scandariato, G., Singh, V., Lendl, M., Queloz, D., Simon, A. E., Sousa, S. G., Brandeker, A., Cameron, A. Collier, Sulis, S., Van Grootel, V., Wilson, T. G., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Bruno, G., Carone, L., Charnoz, S., van Damme, C. Corral, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Helling, Ch., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Kopp, E., Lam, K. W. F., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Munari, M., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Reimers, C., Ribas, I., Rieder, M., Santos, N. C., Ségransan, D., Smith, A. M. S., Stalport, M., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Venturini, J., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Multiwavelength photometry of the secondary eclipses of extrasolar planets is able to disentangle the reflected and thermally emitted light radiated from the planetary dayside. This leads to the measurement of the planetary geometric albedo $A_g$, which is an indicator of the presence of clouds in the atmosphere, and the recirculation efficiency $\epsilon$, which quantifies the energy transport within the atmosphere. In this work we aim to measure $A_g$ and $\epsilon$ for the planet WASP-178 b, a highly irradiated giant planet with an estimated equilibrium temperature of 2450 K.} We analyzed archival spectra and the light curves collected by Cheops and Tess to characterize the host WASP-178, refine the ephemeris of the system and measure the eclipse depth in the passbands of the two respective telescopes. We measured a marginally significant eclipse depth of 70$\pm$40 ppm in the Tess passband and statistically significant depth of 70$\pm$20 ppm in the Cheops passband. Combining the eclipse depth measurement in the Cheops (lambda_eff=6300 AA) and Tess (lambda_eff=8000 AA) passbands we constrained the dayside brightness temperature of WASP-178 b in the 2250-2800 K interval. The geometric albedo 0.1<$\rm A_g$<0.35 is in general agreement with the picture of poorly reflective giant planets, while the recirculation efficiency $\epsilon>$0.7 makes WASP-178 b an interesting laboratory to test the current heat recirculation models., Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics on 31/08/2023
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- 2023
29. Evaluation of forecasts by a global data-driven weather model with and without probabilistic post-processing at Norwegian stations
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Bremnes, John Bjørnar, Nipen, Thomas N., and Seierstad, Ivar A.
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
During the last two years, tremendous progress in global data-driven weather models trained on numerical weather prediction (NWP) re-analysis data has been made. The most recent models trained on the ERA5 at 0.25{\deg} resolution demonstrate forecast quality on par with ECMWF's high-resolution model with respect to a wide selection of verification metrics. In this study, one of these models, the Pangu-Weather, is compared to several NWP models with and without probabilistic post-processing for 2-meter temperature and 10-meter wind speed forecasting at 183 Norwegian SYNOP stations up to +60 hours ahead. The NWP models included are the ECMWF HRES, ECMWF ENS and the Harmonie-AROME ensemble model MEPS with 2.5 km spatial resolution. Results show that the performances of the global models are on the same level with Pangu-Weather being slightly better than the ECMWF models for temperature and slightly worse for wind speed. The MEPS model clearly provided the best forecasts for both parameters. The post-processing improved the forecast quality considerably for all models, but to a larger extent for the coarse-resolution global models due to stronger systematic deficiencies in these. Apart from this, the main characteristics in the scores were more or less the same with and without post-processing. Our results thus confirm the conclusions from other studies that global data-driven models are promising for operational weather forecasting., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures
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- 2023
30. Azithromycin in severe malaria bacterial co-infection in African children (TABS-PKPD): a phase II randomised controlled trial
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Roisin Connon, Peter Olupot-Olupot, Arthur M. A. Pistorius, William Okiror, Tonny Ssenyondo, Rita Muhindo, Sophie Uyoga, Ayub Mpoya, Thomas N. Williams, Diana M. Gibb, A. Sarah Walker, Rob ter Heine, Elizabeth C. George, and Kathryn Maitland
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Severe malaria ,African children ,Bacterial infection ,Pharmacokinetics ,Clinical trial ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background African children with severe malaria are at increased risk of non-typhoidal salmonellae co-infection. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are recommended by guidelines but the optimal class and dose have not been established. We investigated the optimal dose of oral dispersible azithromycin and whether simple clinical criteria and point-of-care biomarkers could target antibiotics to those at greatest risk of bacterial co-infection. Methods We conducted a phase I/II trial in Ugandan children with severe malaria comparing a 5-day course of azithromycin: 10, 15 and 20 mg/kg of azithromycin (prescribed by weight bands) spanning the dose-range effective for other salmonellae infection. We generated relevant pharmacokinetic (PK) data by sparse sampling during dosing intervals and investigated associations between azithromycin exposure and potential mechanisms (PK-pharmacodynamics) using change in C-reactive protein (CRP), a putative marker of sepsis, at 72 h (continuous) and microbiological cure (7-day) (binary), alone and as a composite with 7-day and 90-day survival. To assess whether clinical or biomarkers could identify those at risk of sepsis, a non-severe malaria control was concurrently enrolled. Results Between January 2020 and January 2022, 105 cases were randomised azithromycin doses: 35 to 10 mg/kg, 35 to 15 mg/kg and 35 to 20 mg/kg. Fifty non-severe malaria controls were concurrently enrolled. CRP reduced in all arms by 72 h with a mean reduction of 65.8 mg/L (95% CI 57.1, 74.5) in the 10 mg/kg arm, 64.8 mg/L (95% CI 56.5, 73.1; p = 0.87) in the 20 mg/kg arm and a smaller reduction 51.2 mg/L (95% CI 42.9, 59.5; p = 0.02) in the 15 mg/kg arm. Microbiological cure alone outcome was not analysed as only one pathogen was found among cases. Three events contributed to the composite outcome of 7-day survival and microbiological cure, with no events in the 15 mg/kg arm. The odds ratio comparing 20 vs 10 mg/kg was 0.50 (95% CI 0.04, 5.79); p = 0.58. Due to the low number of pathogens identified, it was not possible to identify better methods for targeting antibiotics including both the cases and controls. Conclusions We found no evidence for an association between systemic azithromycin exposure and reduction in CRP. Further work is needed to better identify children at highest risk from bacterial co-infection. Trial registration ISRCTN49726849 (registered on 27th October 2017).
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- 2024
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31. Refining the properties of the TOI-178 system with CHEOPS and TESS
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Delrez, L., Leleu, A., Brandeker, A., Gillon, M., Hooton, M. J., Cameron, A. Collier, Deline, A., Fortier, A., Queloz, D., Bonfanti, A., Van Grootel, V., Wilson, T. G., Egger, J. A., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Buder, M., Cabrera, J., Cessa, V., Charnoz, S., Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Güdel, M., Hasiba, J., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Jenkins, J. M., Kiss, L. L., Laskar, J., Latham, D. W., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lendl, M., Lovis, C., Luque, R., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Ricker, G., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Seager, S., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Sousa, S. G., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Vanderspek, R., Venturini, J., Viotto, V., Walton, N. A., and Winn, J. N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The TOI-178 system consists of a nearby late K-dwarf transited by six planets in the super-Earth to mini-Neptune regime, with orbital periods between 1.9 and 20.7 days. All planets but the innermost one form a chain of Laplace resonances. Mass estimates derived from a preliminary radial velocity (RV) dataset suggest that the planetary densities do not decrease in a monotonic way with the orbital distance to the star, contrary to what one would expect based on simple formation and evolution models. To improve the characterisation of this key system and prepare for future studies (in particular with JWST), we perform a detailed photometric study based on 40 new CHEOPS visits, one new TESS sector, as well as previously published CHEOPS, TESS, and NGTS data. First we perform a global analysis of the 100 transits contained in our data to refine the transit parameters of the six planets and study their transit timing variations (TTVs). We then use our extensive dataset to place constraints on the radii and orbital periods of potential additional transiting planets in the system. Our analysis significantly refines the transit parameters of the six planets, most notably their radii, for which we now obtain relative precisions $\lesssim$3%, with the exception of the smallest planet $b$ for which the precision is 5.1%. Combined with the RV mass estimates, the measured TTVs allow us to constrain the eccentricities of planets $c$ to $g$, which are found to be all below 0.02, as expected from stability requirements. Taken alone, the TTVs also suggest a higher mass for planet $d$ than the one estimated from the RVs, which had been found to yield a surprisingly low density for this planet. However, the masses derived from the current TTV dataset are very prior-dependent and further observations, over a longer temporal baseline, are needed to deepen our understanding of this iconic planetary system., Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 9 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
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32. CHEOPS and TESS view of the ultra-short period super-Earth TOI-561 b
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Patel, J. A., Egger, J. A., Wilson, T. G., Bourrier, V., Carone, L., Beck, M., Ehrenreich, D., Sousa, S. G., Benz, W., Brandeker, A., Deline, A., Alibert, Y., Lam, K. W. F., Lendl, M., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Bárczy, T., Barrado, D., Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, T., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Broeg, C., Busch, M. -D., Cabrera, J., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Heng, K., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Kopp, E., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lovis, C., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Ratti, F., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van Grootel, V., Viotto, V., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Ultra-short period planets (USPs) are a unique class of super-Earths with an orbital period of less than a day and hence subject to intense radiation from their host star. While most of them are consistent with bare rocks, some show evidence of a heavyweight envelope, which could be a water layer or a secondary metal-rich atmosphere sustained by an outgassing surface. Much remains to be learned about the nature of USPs. The prime goal of the present work is to study the bulk planetary properties and atmosphere of TOI-561b, through the study of its transits and occultations. We obtained ultra-precise transit photometry of TOI-561b with CHEOPS and performed a joint analysis of this data with four TESS sectors. Our analysis of TOI-561b transit photometry put strong constraints on its properties, especially on its radius, Rp=1.42 +/- 0.02 R_Earth (at ~2% error). The internal structure modelling of the planet shows that the observations are consistent with negligible H/He atmosphere, however requiring other lighter materials, in addition to pure iron core and silicate mantle to explain the observed density. We find that this can be explained by the inclusion of a water layer in our model. We searched for variability in the measured Rp/R* over time to trace changes in the structure of the planetary envelope but none found within the data precision. In addition to the transit event, we tentatively detect occultation signal in the TESS data with an eclipse depth of ~27 +/- 11 ppm. Using the models of outgassed atmospheres from the literature we find that the thermal emission from the planet can mostly explain the observation. Based on this, we predict that NIR/MIR observations with JWST should be able to detect silicate species in the atmosphere of the planet. This could also reveal important clues about the planetary interior and help disentangle planet formation and evolution models., Comment: 17 pages, 10 + 3 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&A (abstract abbreviated)
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- 2023
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33. IXPE and XMM-Newton observations of the Soft Gamma Repeater SGR 1806-20
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Turolla, Roberto, Taverna, Roberto, Israel, Gian Luca, Muleri, Fabio, Zane, Silvia, Bachetti, Matteo, Heyl, Jeremy, Di Marco, Alessandro, Gau, Ephraim, Krawczynski, Henric, Ng, Mason, Possenti, Andrea, Poutanen, Juri, Baldini, Luca, Matt, Giorgio, Negro, Michela, Agudo, Ivan, Antonelli, Lucio Angelo, Baumgartner, Wayne H., Bellazzini, Ronaldo, Bianchi, Stefano, Bongiorno, Stephen D., Bonino, Raffaella, Brez, Alessandro, Bucciantini, Niccolo', Capitanio, Fiamma, Castellano, Simone, Cavazzuti, Elisabetta, Chen, Chien-Ting J., Ciprini, Stefano, Costa, Enrico, De Rosa, Alessandra, Del Monte, Ettore, Di Gesu, Laura, Di Lalla, Niccolo', Donnarumma, Immacolata, Doroshenko, Victor, Doviak, Michal, Ehlert, Steven R., Enoto, Teruaki, Evangelista, Yuri, Fabiani, Sergio, Ferrazzoli, Riccardo, Garcia, Javier A., Gunji, Shuichi, Hayashida, Kiyoshi, Iwakiri, Wataru, Jorstad, Svetlana G., Kaaret, Philip, Karas, Vladimir, Kislat, Fabian, Kitaguchi, Takao, Kolodziejczak, Jeffrey, La Monaca, Fabio, Latronico, Luca, Liodakis, Ioannis, Maldera, Simone, Manfreda, Alberto, Marin, Frederic, Marinucci, Andrea, Marscher, Alan P., Marshall, Herman L., Massaro, Francesco, Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki, Mizuno, Tsunefumi, Ng, Stephen Chi-Yung, O'Dell, Stephen L., Omodei, Nicola, Oppedisano, Chiara, Papitto, Alessandro, Pavlov, George G., Peirson, Abel L., Perri, Matteo, Pesce-Rollins, Melissa, Petrucci, Pierre-Olivier, Pilia, Maura, Puccetti, Simonetta, Ramsey, Brian, Rankin, John, Ratheesh, Ajay, Roberts, Oliver J., Romani, Roger W., Sgro', Carmelo, Slane, Patrick, Soffitta, Paolo, Spandre, Gloria, Swartz, Douglas A., Tamagawa, Toru, Tavecchio, Fabrizio, Tawara, Yuzuru, Tennant, Allyn F., Thomas, N., Tombesi, Francesco, Trois, Alessio, Tsygankov, Sergey S., Vink, Jacco, Weisskopf, Martin C., Wu, Kinwah, and Xie, Fei
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent observations with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) of two anomalous X-ray pulsars provided evidence that X-ray emission from magnetar sources is strongly polarized. Here we report on the joint IXPE and XMM-Newton observations of the soft {\gamma}-repeater SGR 1806-20. The spectral and timing properties of SGR 1806-20 derived from XMM-Newton data are in broad agreement with previous measurements; however, we found the source at an all-time-low persistent flux level. No significant polarization was measured apart from the 4-5 keV energy range, where a probable detection with PD=31.6\pm 10.5% and PA=-17.6\pm 15 deg was obtained. The resulting polarization signal, together with the upper limits we derive at lower and higher energies 2-4 and 5-8 keV, respectively) is compatible with a picture in which thermal radiation from the condensed star surface is reprocessed by resonant Compton scattering in the magnetosphere, similar to what proposed for the bright magnetar 4U 0142+61., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
34. Investigating the visible phase-curve variability of 55 Cnc e
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Valdés, E. A. Meier, Morris, B. M., Demory, B. -O., Brandeker, A., Kitzmann, D., Benz, W., Deline, A., Florén, H. -G., Sousa, S. G., Bourrier, V., Singh, V., Heng, K., Strugarek, A., Bower, D. J., Jäggi, N., Carone, L., Lendl, M., Jones, K., Oza, A. V., Demangeon, O. D. S., Alibert, Y., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Asquier, J., Bárczy, T., Navascues, D. Barrado, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Cabrera, J., Charnoz, S., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Delrez, L., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fossati, L., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Gillon, M., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lovis, C., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Sarajlic, M., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Sicilia, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Ulmer, B., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., Walton, N. A., Wilson, T. G., and Wolter, D.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
55 Cnc e is an ultra-short period super-Earth transiting a Sun-like star. Previous observations in the optical range detected a time-variable flux modulation that is phased with the planetary orbital period, whose amplitude is too large to be explained by reflected light and thermal emission alone. The goal of the study is to investigate the origin of the variability and timescale of the phase-curve modulation in 55 Cnc e. To this end, we used the CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS), whose exquisite photometric precision provides an opportunity to characterise minute changes in the phase curve from one orbit to the next. CHEOPS observed 29 individual visits of 55 Cnc e between March 2020 and February 2022. Based on these observations, we investigated the different processes that could be at the origin of the observed modulation. In particular, we built a toy model to assess whether a circumstellar torus of dust driven by radiation pressure and gravity might match the observed flux variability timescale. We find that the phase-curve amplitude and peak offset of 55 Cnc e do vary between visits. The sublimation timescales of selected dust species reveal that silicates expected in an Earth-like mantle would not survive long enough to explain the observed phase-curve modulation. We find that silicon carbide, quartz, and graphite are plausible candidates for the circumstellar torus composition because their sublimation timescales are long. The extensive CHEOPS observations confirm that the phase-curve amplitude and offset vary in time.We find that dust could provide the grey opacity source required to match the observations. However, the data at hand do not provide evidence that circumstellar material with a variable grain mass per unit area causes the observed variability. Future observations with the James Webb Space Telescope promise exciting insights into this iconic super-Earth., Comment: 27 pages, 22 figures. Accepted for publication on A&A
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- 2023
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35. First Results for Solar Soft X-ray Irradiance Measurements from the Third Generation Miniature X-Ray Solar Spectrometer
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Woods, Thomas N., Schwab, Bennet, Sewell, Robert, Kandala, Anant Kumar Telikicherla, Mason, James Paul, Caspi, Amir, Eden, Thomas, Chandran, Amal, Chamberlin, Phillip C., Jones, Andrew R., Kohnert, Richard, Moore, Christopher S., Solomon, Stanley C., and Warren, Harry
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Three generations of the Miniature X-ray Solar Spectrometer (MinXSS) have flown on small satellites with the goal "to explore the energy distribution of soft X-ray (SXR) emissions from the quiescent Sun, active regions, and during solar flares, and to model the impact on Earth's ionosphere and thermosphere". The primary science instrument is the Amptek X123 X-ray spectrometer that has improved with each generation of the MinXSS experiment. This third generation MinXSS-3 has higher energy resolution and larger effective area than its predecessors and is also known as the Dual-zone Aperture X-ray Solar Spectrometer (DAXSS). It was launched on the INSPIRESat-1 satellite on 2022 February 14, and INSPIRESat-1 has successfully completed its 6-month prime mission. The INSPIRESat-1 is in a dawn-dusk, Sun-Synchronous Orbit (SSO) and therefore has 24-hour coverage of the Sun during most of its mission so far. The rise of Solar Cycle 25 (SC-25) has been observed by DAXSS. This paper introduces the INSPIRESat-1 DAXSS solar SXR observations, and we focus the science results here on a solar occultation experiment and multiple flares on 2022 April 24. One key flare result is that the reduction of elemental abundances is greatest during the flare impulsive phase and thus highlighting the important role of chromospheric evaporation during flares to inject warmer plasma into the coronal loops. Furthermore, these results are suggestive that the amount of chromospheric evaporation is related to flare temperature and intensity., Comment: 44 pages including 19-page Appendix A, 8 figures, 7 tables
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- 2023
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36. Cosmic evolution of radio-AGN feedback: confronting models with data
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Kondapally, R., Best, P. N., Raouf, M., Thomas, N. L., Davé, R., Shabala, S. S., Röttgering, H. J. A., Hardcastle, M. J., Bonato, M., Cochrane, R. K., Małek, K., Morabito, L. K., Prandoni, I., and Smith, D. J. B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Radio-mode feedback is a key ingredient in galaxy formation and evolution models, required to reproduce the observed properties of massive galaxies in the local Universe. We study the cosmic evolution of radio-AGN feedback out to $z\sim2.5$ using a sample of 9485 radio-excess AGN. We combine the evolving radio luminosity functions with a radio luminosity scaling relationship to estimate AGN jet kinetic powers and derive the cosmic evolution of the kinetic luminosity density, $\Omega_{\rm{kin}}$ (i.e. the volume-averaged heating output). Compared to all radio-AGN, low-excitation radio galaxies (LERGs) dominate the feedback activity out to $z\sim2.5$, with both these populations showing a constant heating output of $\Omega_{\rm{kin}} \approx 4-5 \times 10^{32}\,\rm{W\,Mpc^{-3}}$ across $0.5 < z < 2.5$. We compare our observations to predictions from semi-analytical and hydrodynamical simulations, which broadly match the observed evolution in $\Omega_{\rm{kin}}$, although their absolute normalisation varies. Comparison to the Semi-Analytic Galaxy Evolution (SAGE) model suggests that radio-AGN may provide sufficient heating to offset radiative cooling losses, providing evidence for a self-regulated AGN feedback cycle. We integrate the kinetic luminosity density across cosmic time to obtain the kinetic energy density output from AGN jets throughout cosmic history to be $\sim 10^{50}\,\rm{J\,Mpc^{-3}}$. Compared to AGN winds, the kinetic energy density from AGN jets dominates the energy budget at $z \lesssim 2$; this suggests that AGN jets play an important role in AGN feedback across most of cosmic history., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2023
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37. Fundamentals of impulsive energy release in the corona
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Shih, Albert Y., Glesener, Lindsay, Krucker, Säm, Guidoni, Silvina, Christe, Steven, Reeves, Katharine K., Gburek, Szymon, Caspi, Amir, Alaoui, Meriem, Allred, Joel, Battaglia, Marina, Baumgartner, Wayne, Dennis, Brian, Drake, James, Goetz, Keith, Golub, Leon, Hannah, Iain, Hayes, Laura, Holman, Gordon, Inglis, Andrew, Ireland, Jack, Kerr, Graham, Klimchuk, James, McKenzie, David, Moore, Christopher S., Musset, Sophie, Reep, Jeffrey, Ryan, Daniel, Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Savage, Sabrina, Seaton, Daniel B., Stęślicki, Marek, and Woods, Thomas N.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
It is essential that there be coordinated and co-optimized observations in X-rays, gamma-rays, and EUV during the peak of solar cycle 26 (~2036) to significantly advance our understanding of impulsive energy release in the corona. The open questions include: What are the physical origins of space-weather events? How are particles accelerated at the Sun? How is impulsively released energy transported throughout the solar atmosphere? How is the solar corona heated? Many of the processes involved in triggering, driving, and sustaining solar eruptive events -- including magnetic reconnection, particle acceleration, plasma heating, and energy transport in magnetized plasmas -- also play important roles in phenomena throughout the Universe. This set of observations can be achieved through a single flagship mission or, with foreplanning, through a combination of major missions (e.g., the previously proposed FIERCE mission concept)., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 5 pages, 1 figure
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- 2023
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38. Detecting Depegs: Towards Safer Passive Liquidity Provision on Curve Finance
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Cintra, Thomas N. and Holloway, Maxwell P.
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Quantitative Finance - Computational Finance - Abstract
We consider a liquidity provider's (LP's) exposure to stablecoin and liquid staking derivative (LSD) depegs on Curve's StableSwap pools. We construct a suite of metrics designed to detect potential asset depegs based on price and trading data. Using our metrics, we fine-tune a Bayesian Online Changepoint Detection (BOCD) algorithm to alert LPs of potential depegs before or as they occur. We train and test our changepoint detection algorithm against Curve LP token prices for 13 StableSwap pools throughout 2022 and 2023, focusing on relevant stablecoin and LSD depegs. We show that our model, trained on 2022 UST data, is able to detect the USDC depeg in March of 2023 at 9pm UTC on March 10th, approximately 5 hours before USDC dips below 99 cents, with few false alarms in the 17 months on which it is tested. Finally, we describe how this research may be used by Curve's liquidity providers, and how it may be extended to dynamically de-risk Curve pools by modifying parameters in anticipation of potential depegs. This research underpins an API developed to alert Curve LPs, in real-time, when their positions might be at risk.
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- 2023
39. Small Platforms, High Return: The Need to Enhance Investment in Small Satellites for Focused Science, Career Development, and Improved Equity
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Mason, James Paul, Begbie, Robert G., Bowen, Maitland, Caspi, Amir, Chamberlin, Phillip C., Chandran, Amal, Cohen, Ian, DeLuca, Edward E., de Wijn, Alfred G., Dissauer, Karin, Eparvier, Francis, Filwett, Rachael, Gibson, Sarah, Gilly, Chris R., Herde, Vicki, Ho, George, Hospodarsky, George, Jaynes, Allison, Jones, Andrew R., Kasper, Justin C., Kohnert, Rick, Lee, Zoe, Mason, E. I., Merkel, Aimee, Mesquita, Rafael, Moore, Christopher S., Nikoukar, Romina, Pesnell, W. Dean, Regoli, Leonardo, Savage, Sabrina, Seaton, Daniel B., Spence, Harlan, Thiemann, Ed, Vievering, Juliana T., Wilder, Frederick, and Woods, Thomas N.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
In the next decade, there is an opportunity for very high return on investment of relatively small budgets by elevating the priority of smallsat funding in heliophysics. We've learned in the past decade that these missions perform exceptionally well by traditional metrics, e.g., papers/year/\$M (Spence et al. 2022 -- arXiv:2206.02968). It is also well established that there is a "leaky pipeline" resulting in too little diversity in leadership positions (see the National Academies Report at https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/increasing-diversity-in-the-leadership-of-competed-space-missions). Prioritizing smallsat funding would significantly increase the number of opportunities for new leaders to learn -- a crucial patch for the pipeline and an essential phase of career development. At present, however, there are far more proposers than the available funding can support, leading to selection ratios that can be as low as 6% -- in the bottom 0.5th percentile of selection ratios across the history of ROSES. Prioritizing SmallSat funding and substantially increasing that selection ratio are the fundamental recommendations being made by this white paper., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 6 pages, 1 figure
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- 2023
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40. Refined parameters of the HD 22946 planetary system and the true orbital period of planet d
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Garai, Z., Osborn, H. P., Gandolfi, D., Brandeker, A., Sousa, S. G., Lendl, M., Bekkelien, A., Broeg, C., Cameron, A. Collier, Egger, J. A., Hooton, M. J., Alibert, Y., Delrez, L., Fossati, L., Salmon, S., Wilson, T. G., Bonfanti, A., Tuson, A., Ulmer-Moll, S., Serrano, L. M., Borsato, L., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Asquier, J., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Barros, S. C. C., Bárczy, T., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Biondi, F., Bonfils, X., Buder, M., Cabrera, J., Cessa, V., Charnoz, S., Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Ehrenreich, D., Erikson, A., Van Eylen, V., Fortier, A., Fridlund, M., Gillon, M., Van Grootel, V., Güdel, M., Günther, M. N., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Kristiansen, M. H., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lovis, C., Luntzer, A., Magrin, D., Maxted, P. F. L., Mordasini, C., Nascimbeni, V., Olofsson, G., Ottensamer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Ségransan, D., Simon, A. E., Smith, A. M. S., Steller, M., Szabó, Gy. M., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Venturini, J., and Walton, N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Multi-planet systems are important sources of information regarding the evolution of planets. However, the long-period planets in these systems often escape detection. HD 22946 is a bright star around which 3 transiting planets were identified via TESS photometry, but the true orbital period of the outermost planet d was unknown until now. We aim to use CHEOPS to uncover the true orbital period of HD 22946d and to refine the orbital and planetary properties of the system, especially the radii of the planets. We used the available TESS photometry of HD 22946 and observed several transits of the planets b, c, and d using CHEOPS. We identified 2 transits of planet d in the TESS photometry, calculated the most probable period aliases based on these data, and then scheduled CHEOPS observations. The photometric data were supplemented with ESPRESSO radial velocity data. Finally, a combined model was fitted to the entire dataset. We successfully determined the true orbital period of the planet d to be 47.42489 $\pm$ 0.00011 d, and derived precise radii of the planets in the system, namely 1.362 $\pm$ 0.040 R$_\oplus$, 2.328 $\pm$ 0.039 R$_\oplus$, and 2.607 $\pm$ 0.060 R$_\oplus$ for planets b, c, and d, respectively. Due to the low number of radial velocities, we were only able to determine 3$\sigma$ upper limits for these respective planet masses, which are 13.71 M$_\oplus$, 9.72 M$_\oplus$, and 26.57 M$_\oplus$. We estimated that another 48 ESPRESSO radial velocities are needed to measure the predicted masses of all planets in HD 22946. Planet c appears to be a promising target for future atmospheric characterisation. We can also conclude that planet d, as a warm sub-Neptune, is very interesting because there are only a few similar confirmed exoplanets to date. Such objects are worth investigating in the near future, for example in terms of their composition and internal structure.
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- 2023
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41. TOI-5678 b: A 48-day transiting Neptune-mass planet characterized with CHEOPS and HARPS
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Ulmer-Moll, S., Osborn, H. P., Tuson, A., Egger, J. A., Lendl, M., Maxted, P., Bekkelien, A., Simon, A. E., Olofsson, G., Adibekyan, V., Alibert, Y., Bonfanti, A., Bouchy, F., Brandeker, A., Fridlund, M., Gandolfi, D., Mordasini, C., Persson, C. M., Salmon, S., Serrano, L. M., Sousa, S. G., Wilson, T. G., Rieder, M., Hasiba, J., Asquier, J., Sicilia, D., Walter, I., Alonso, R., Anglada, G., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Barros, S. C. C., Baumjohann, W., Beck, M., Beck, T., Benz, W., Billot, N., Bonfils, X., Borsato, L., Broeg, C., Bárczy, T., Cabrera, J., Charnoz, S., Cointepas, M., Cameron, A. Collier, Csizmadia, Sz., Cubillos, P. E., Davies, M. B., Deleuil, M., Deline, A., Delrez, L., Demangeon, O. D. S., Demory, B. -O., Dumusque, X., Ehrenreich, D., Eisner, N. L., Erikson, A., Fortier, A., Fossati, L., Gillon, M., Grieves, N., Güdel, M., Hagelberg, J., Helled, R., Hoyer, S., Isaak, K. G., Kiss, L. L., Laskar, J., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Lovis, C., Magrin, D., Nascimbeni, V., Otegi, J., Ottensammer, R., Pagano, I., Pallé, E., Peter, G., Piotto, G., Pollacco, D., Psaridi, A., Queloz, D., Ragazzoni, R., Rando, N., Rauer, H., Ribas, I., Santos, N. C., Scandariato, G., Smith, A. M. S., Steller, M., Szabó, G. M., Ségransan, D., Thomas, N., Udry, S., Van Grootel, V., Venturini, J., and Walton, N. A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
A large sample of long-period giant planets has been discovered thanks to long-term radial velocity surveys, but only a few dozen of these planets have a precise radius measurement. Transiting gas giants are crucial targets for the study of atmospheric composition across a wide range of equilibrium temperatures and for shedding light on the formation and evolution of planetary systems. Indeed, compared to hot Jupiters, the atmospheric properties and orbital parameters of cooler gas giants are unaltered by intense stellar irradiation and tidal effects. We identify long-period planets in the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) data as duo-transit events. To solve the orbital periods of TESS duo-transit candidates, we use the CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) to observe the highest-probability period aliases in order to discard or confirm a transit event at a given period. We also collect spectroscopic observations with CORALIE and HARPS in order to confirm the planetary nature and measure the mass of the candidates. We report the discovery of a warm transiting Neptune-mass planet orbiting TOI-5678. After four non-detections corresponding to possible periods, CHEOPS detected a transit event matching a unique period alias. Joint modeling reveals that TOI-5678 hosts a 47.73 day period planet. TOI-5678 b has a mass of 20 (+-4) Me and a radius of 4.91 (+-0.08 Re) . Using interior structure modeling, we find that TOI-5678 b is composed of a low-mass core surrounded by a large H/He layer with a mass of 3.2 (+1.7, -1.3) Me. TOI-5678 b is part of a growing sample of well-characterized transiting gas giants receiving moderate amounts of stellar insolation (11 Se). Precise density measurement gives us insight into their interior composition, and the objects orbiting bright stars are suitable targets to study the atmospheric composition of cooler gas giants., Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted to A&A
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- 2023
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42. X-ray polarimetry and spectroscopy of the neutron star low-mass X-ray binary GX 9+9: an in-depth study with IXPE and NuSTAR
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Ursini, F., Farinelli, R., Gnarini, A., Poutanen, J., Bianchi, S., Capitanio, F., Di Marco, A., Fabiani, S., La Monaca, F., Malacaria, C., Matt, G., Mikušincová, R., Cocchi, M., Kaaret, P., Kajava, J. J. E., Pilia, M., Zhang, W., Agudo, I., Antonelli, L. A., Bachetti, M., Baldini, L., Baumgartner, W. H., Bellazzini, R., Bongiorno, S. D., Bonino, R., Brez, A., Bucciantini, N., Castellano, S., Cavazzuti, E., Chen, C. -T., Ciprini, S., Costa, E., De Rosa, A., Del Monte, E., Di Gesu, L., Di Lalla, N., Donnarumma, I., Doroshenko, V., Dovčiak, M., Ehlert, S. R., Enoto, T., Evangelista, Y., Ferrazzoli, R., Garcia, J. A., Gunji, S., Hayashida, K., Heyl, J., Iwakiri, W., Jorstad, S. G., Karas, V., Kislat, F., Kitaguchi, T., Kolodziejczak, J. J., Krawczynski, H., Latronico, L., Liodakis, I., Maldera, S., Manfreda, A., Marin, F., Marinucci, A., Marscher, A. P., Marshall, H. L., Massaro, F., Mitsuishi, I., Mizuno, T., Muleri, F., Negro, M., Ng, C. -Y., O'Dell, S. L., Omodei, N., Oppedisano, C., Papitto, A., Pavlov, G. G., Peirson, A. L., Perri, M., Pesce-Rollins, M., Petrucci, P. -O., Possenti, A., Puccetti, S., Ramsey, B. D., Rankin, J., Ratheesh, A., Roberts, O. J., Romani, R. W., Sgrò, C., Slane, P., Soffitta, P., Spandre, G., Swartz, D. A., Tamagawa, T., Tavecchio, F., Taverna, R., Tawara, Y., Tennant, A. F., Thomas, N. E., Tombesi, F., Trois, A., Tsygankov, S. S., Turolla, R., Vink, J., Weisskopf, M. C., Wu, K., Xie, F., and Zane, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a comprehensive analysis of simultaneous X-ray polarimetric and spectral data of the bright atoll source GX 9+9 with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) and NuSTAR. The source is significantly polarized in the 4--8 keV band, with a degree of $2.2\% \pm 0.5\%$ (uncertainty at the 68% confidence level). The NuSTAR broad-band spectrum clearly shows an iron line, and is well described by a model including thermal disk emission, a Comptonized component, and reflection. From a spectro-polarimetric fit, we obtain an upper limit to the polarization degree of the disk of 4% (at 99% confidence level), while the contribution of Comptonized and reflected radiation cannot be conclusively separated. However, the polarization is consistent with resulting from a combination of Comptonization in a boundary or spreading layer, plus reflection off the disc, which gives a significant contribution in any realistic scenario., Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
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43. Azithromycin in severe malaria bacterial co-infection in African children (TABS-PKPD): a phase II randomised controlled trial
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Connon, Roisin, Olupot-Olupot, Peter, Pistorius, Arthur M. A., Okiror, William, Ssenyondo, Tonny, Muhindo, Rita, Uyoga, Sophie, Mpoya, Ayub, Williams, Thomas N., Gibb, Diana M., Walker, A. Sarah, ter Heine, Rob, George, Elizabeth C., and Maitland, Kathryn
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- 2024
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44. Squamous Cell Carcinoma with Prominent Eosinophils
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Helm, Thomas N., Bhele, Sanica, and Fanburg-Smith, Julie C.
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- 2024
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45. Identification of diagnostic candidates in Mendelian disorders using an RNA sequencing-centric approach
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Jaramillo Oquendo, Carolina, Wai, Htoo A., Rich, Wil I., Bunyan, David J., Thomas, N. Simon, Hunt, David, Lord, Jenny, Douglas, Andrew G. L., and Baralle, Diana
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- 2024
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46. A Global Dataset of Potential Chloride Deposits on Mars as Identified by TGO CaSSIS
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Bickel, V. T., Thomas, N., Pommerol, A., Tornabene, L. L., El-Maarry, M. R., and Rangarajan, V. G.
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- 2024
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47. SARS-CoV-2 viremia but not respiratory viral load is associated with respiratory complications in patients with severe COVID-19
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Chen, Lingye, Olson, Lyra B., Naqvi, Ibtehaj A., Sullenger, Bruce A., Que, Loretta G., Denny, Thomas N., and Kraft, Bryan D.
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- 2024
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48. Glutathione synthesis in the mouse liver supports lipid abundance through NRF2 repression
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Asantewaa, Gloria, Tuttle, Emily T., Ward, Nathan P., Kang, Yun Pyo, Kim, Yumi, Kavanagh, Madeline E., Girnius, Nomeda, Chen, Ying, Rodriguez, Katherine, Hecht, Fabio, Zocchi, Marco, Smorodintsev-Schiller, Leonid, Scales, TashJaé Q., Taylor, Kira, Alimohammadi, Fatemeh, Duncan, Renae P., Sechrist, Zachary R., Agostini-Vulaj, Diana, Schafer, Xenia L., Chang, Hayley, Smith, Zachary R., O’Connor, Thomas N., Whelan, Sarah, Selfors, Laura M., Crowdis, Jett, Gray, G. Kenneth, Bronson, Roderick T., Brenner, Dirk, Rufini, Alessandro, Dirksen, Robert T., Hezel, Aram F., Huber, Aaron R., Munger, Joshua, Cravatt, Benjamin F., Vasiliou, Vasilis, Cole, Calvin L., DeNicola, Gina M., and Harris, Isaac S.
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- 2024
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49. Regulatory T cells use heparanase to access IL-2 bound to extracellular matrix in inflamed tissue
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Martinez, Hunter A., Koliesnik, Ievgen, Kaber, Gernot, Reid, Jacqueline K., Nagy, Nadine, Barlow, Graham, Falk, Ben A., Medina, Carlos O., Hargil, Aviv, Zihsler, Svenja, Vlodavsky, Israel, Li, Jin-Ping, Pérez-Cruz, Magdiel, Tang, Sai-Wen, Meyer, Everett H., Wrenshall, Lucile E., Lord, James D., Garcia, K. Christopher, Palmer, Theo D., Steinman, Lawrence, Nepom, Gerald T., Wight, Thomas N., Bollyky, Paul L., and Kuipers, Hedwich F.
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- 2024
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50. Residual Complex I activity and amphidirectional Complex II operation support glutamate catabolism through mtSLP in anoxia
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Ravasz, Dora, Bui, David, Nazarian, Sara, Pallag, Gergely, Karnok, Noemi, Roberts, Jennie, Marzullo, Bryan P., Tennant, Daniel A., Greenwood, Bennett, Kitayev, Alex, Hill, Collin, Komlódi, Timea, Doerrier, Carolina, Cunatova, Kristyna, Fernandez-Vizarra, Erika, Gnaiger, Erich, Kiebish, Michael A., Raska, Alexandra, Kolev, Krasimir, Czumbel, Bence, Narain, Niven R., Seyfried, Thomas N., and Chinopoulos, Christos
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- 2024
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