13,779 results on '"Trump"'
Search Results
2. Threat-Agnostic Resilience: Framing and Application for Critical Infrastructure
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Trump, Benjamin D., Mitoulis, Stergios, Argyroudis, Sotirios, Kiker, Gregory, Palma-Oliveira, Jose, Horton, Robert, Pescaroli, Gianluca, Pinigina, Elizaveta, Trump, Joshua, and Linkov, Igor
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Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
Critical infrastructure is not indestructible. Threats, both emergent and systemic, have propagated beyond historical norms that risk mitigation efforts alone cannot alleviate. Interdependencies between infrastructural systems compound consequences at vulnerable locations but can be harnessed to maximize operational efficiency and recovery capability. Characterizing practical forms of resilient infrastructure through 5 basic principles (modularity, distributedness, redundancy, diversity, and plasticity) provides a foundation for critical infrastructure systems to absorb, recover, and adapt to disruptions agnostic of threat source. Challenges exist in developing methodological foundations for these principles within practical applications to prevent sunk cost and over-constraining operational procedures. This study evaluates each principle, establishing practical forms, quantification strategies, and their impact on critical infrastructure resilience., Comment: na
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- 2025
3. The Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey (CEERS)
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Finkelstein, Steven L., Bagley, Micaela B., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Kocevski, Dale D., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lotz, Jennifer M., Papovich, Casey, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Somerville, Rachel S., Trump, Jonathan R., Yang, Guang, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Fontana, Adriano, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Kewley, Lisa J., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Larson, Rebecca L., Pentericci, Laura, Ravindranath, Swara, Wilkins, Stephen M., Almaini, Omar, Amorin, Ricardo O., Barro, Guillermo, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bisigello, Laura, Brooks, Madisyn, Buitrago, Fernando, Calabro, Antonello, Castellano, Marco, Cheng, Yingjie, Cleri, Nikko J., Cole, Justin W., Cooper, M. C., Cooper, Olivia R., Costantin, Luca, Cox, Isa G., Croton, Darren, Daddi, Emanuele, Davis, Kelcey, Dekel, Avishai, Elbaz, David, Fernandez, Vital, Fujimoto, Seiji, Gandolfi, Giovanni, Gardner, Jonathan P., Gawiser, Eric, Giavalisco, Mauro, Gomez-Guijarro, Carlos, Guo, Yuchen, Gupta, Ansh R., Hathi, Nimish P., Harish, Santosh, Henry, Aurelien, Hirschmann, Michaela, Hu, Weida, Hutchison, Taylor A., Iyer, Kartheik G., Jaskot, Anne E., Jha, Saurabh W., Jung, Intae, Kokorev, Vasily, Kurczynski, Peter, Leung, Gene C. K., Llerena, Mario, Long, Arianna S., Lucas, Ray A., Lu, Shiying, McGrath, Elizabeth J., McIntosh, Daniel H., Merlin, Emiliano, Morales, Alexa M., Napolitano, Lorenzo, Pacucci, Fabio, Pandya, Viraj, Rafelski, Marc, Rodighiero, Giulia, Rose, Caitlin, Santini, Paola, Seille, Lise-Marie, Simons, Raymond C., Shen, Lu, Straughn, Amber N., Tacchella, Sandro, Vanderhoof, Brittany N., Vega-Ferrero, Jesus, Weiner, Benjamin J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Zhu, Peixin, Bell, Eric F., Wuyts, Stijn, Holwerda, Benne W., Wang, Xin, Wang, Weichen, and Zavala, Jorge A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) Survey, a 77.2 hour Director's Discretionary Early Release Science Program. CEERS demonstrates, tests, and validates efficient extragalactic surveys using coordinated, overlapping parallel observations with the JWST instrument suite, including NIRCam and MIRI imaging, NIRSpec low (R~100) and medium (R~1000) resolution spectroscopy, and NIRCam slitless grism (R~1500) spectroscopy. CEERS targets the Hubble Space Telescope-observed region of the Extended Groth Strip (EGS) field, supported by a rich set of multiwavelength data. CEERS facilitated immediate community science in both of the extragalactic core JWST science drivers ``First Light" and ``Galaxy Assembly," including: 1) The discovery and characterization of large samples of galaxies at z >~ 10 from ~90 arcmin^2 of NIRCam imaging, constraining their abundance and physical nature; 2) Deep spectra of >1000 galaxies, including dozens of galaxies at 6
3; and 4) Characterizing galaxy mid-IR emission with MIRI to study dust-obscured star-formation and supermassive black hole growth at z~1-3. As a legacy product for the community, the CEERS team has provided several data releases, accompanied by detailed notes on the data reduction procedures and notebooks to aid in reproducibility. In addition to an overview of the survey and quality of the data, we provide science highlights from the first two years with CEERS data., Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables - Published
- 2025
4. A Comparative Study of Braided versus Barbed Suture for Cystotomy Repair
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Shapiro R, Sunyecz A, Zaslau S, Vallejo MC, Trump T, and Dueñas-Garcia O
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barbed suture ,cystotomy ,minimally invasive surgery ,obesity ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Robert Shapiro,1,2 Alec Sunyecz,3 Stanley Zaslau,1,2 Manuel C Vallejo,1,4 Tyler Trump,2 Omar Dueñas-Garcia1 1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA; 2Department of Urology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA; 3West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA; 4Department of Anesthesiology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USACorrespondence: Robert ShapiroHealth Science Center North, West Virginia University, PO Box 9001A, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USATel +1 304-293-5631Fax +1 304-293-5160Email rshapiro@hsc.wvu.eduBackground: In this study, we aim to compare outcomes after cystotomy repair between standard sutures (910 polyglactin, poliglecaprone) versus barbed (V-LocTM 90) suture. As a secondary outcome, we analyzed factors for suture preference between the two groups.Methods: A retrospective chart review was undertaken for surgeries complicated by cystotomy, identified by ICD-9/10 codes from 2016 to 2019 at West Virginia University (WVU) Hospital. Comparisons were made between cystotomy repair using barbed suture versus standard braided suture. Injuries were categorized by procedure, surgical route, type of suture used in repair, and subsequent complications related to repair. Primary endpoints were examined by Pearson’s Chi-square test and interval data by t-test. A p < 0.05 was significant.Results: Sixty-eight patients were identified with iatrogenic cystotomy at WVU. Barbed suture was used for cystotomy repair in 11/68 (16.2%) patients. No significant difference was seen in postoperative outcomes between patients repaired with barbed suture versus standard braided suture. Barbed suture was significantly more likely to be used for cystotomy repair in minimally invasive surgery (p = 0.001). It was most often utilized in a robotic approach 7/11 (63.6%) followed by laparoscopic 3/11 (27.3%). Body mass index (BMI) was significantly higher in patients receiving a barbed suture repair (p = 0.005).Conclusion: Barbed suture may be comparable to standard braided suture for cystotomy repair. Barbed suture may offer a practical alternative to facilitate cystotomy repair in minimally invasive surgery, especially in patients with a high BMI.Keywords: barbed suture, cystotomy, minimally invasive surgery, obesity
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- 2021
5. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Insights on Maximizing Efficiency in Lag Measurements and Black-Hole Masses
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Homayouni, Y., Jiang, Yuanzhe, Brandt, W. N., Grier, C. J., Trump, Jonathan R., Shen, Yue, Horne, Keith, Hall, Patrick B., Anderson, Scott F., Ho, Luis C., and Schneider, D. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Multi-year observations from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping (SDSS-RM) project have significantly increased the number of quasars with reliable reverberation-mapping lag measurements. We statistically analyze target properties, light-curve characteristics, and survey design choices to identify factors crucial for successful and efficient RM surveys. Analyzing 172 high-confidence ("gold") lag measurements from SDSS-RM for the H$\beta$, MgII, and CIV emission lines, we find that the Durbin-Watson statistic (a statistical test for residual correlation) is the most significant predictor of light curves suitable for lag detection. Variability signal-to-noise ratio and emission-line placement on the detector also correlate with successful lag measurements. We further investigate the impact of observing cadence on survey design by analyzing the effect of reducing observations in the first year of SDSS-RM. Our results demonstrate that a modest reduction in observing cadence to $\sim$1.5 weeks between observations can retain approximately 90% of the lag measurements compared to twice-weekly observations in the initial year. Provided similar and uniform sampling in subsequent years, this adjustment has a minimal effect on the overall recovery of lags across all emission lines. These results provide valuable inputs for optimizing future RM surveys., Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, and 3 tables. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
6. Can Comorbidity Data Explain Cross-State and Cross-National Difference in COVID-19 Death Rates?
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Cegan JC, Trump BD, Cibulsky SM, Collier ZA, Cummings CL, Greer SL, Jarman H, Klasa K, Kleinman G, Surette MA, Wells E, and Linkov I
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comorbidity ,health outcomes ,covid-19 ,mortality rates ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Jeffrey C Cegan,1 Benjamin D Trump,1 Susan M Cibulsky,2 Zachary A Collier,3 Christopher L Cummings,4 Scott L Greer,5 Holly Jarman,5 Kasia Klasa,1,5 Gary Kleinman,2 Melissa A Surette,6 Emily Wells,1 Igor Linkov1 1US Army Engineer Research and Development Center, US Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg, MS, USA; 2US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Boston, MA, USA; 3Radford University, Davis College of Business and Economics, Department of Management, Radford, VA, USA; 4North Carolina State University, Genetic Engineering and Society Center, Raleigh, NC, USA; 5University of Michigan, School of Public Health, Department of Health Management and Policy, Ann Arbor, MI, USA; 6Federal Emergency Management Agency, Region I, Boston, MA, USACorrespondence: Jeffrey C Cegan; Igor LinkovUS Army Engineer Research and Development Center, US Army Corps of Engineers, 696 Virginia Road, Concord, MA, 01742, USATel +1-978-318-8881; +1-617-233-9869Email Jeffrey.C.Cegan@usace.army.mil; Igor.Linkov@usace.army.milAbstract: Many efforts to predict the impact of COVID-19 on hospitalization, intensive care unit (ICU) utilization, and mortality rely on age and comorbidities. These predictions are foundational to learning, policymaking, and planning for the pandemic, and therefore understanding the relationship between age, comorbidities, and health outcomes is critical to assessing and managing public health risks. From a US government database of 1.4 million patient records collected in May 2020, we extracted the relationships between age and number of comorbidities at the individual level to predict the likelihood of hospitalization, admission to intensive care, and death. We then applied the relationships to each US state and a selection of different countries in order to see whether they predicted observed outcome rates. We found that age and comorbidity data within these geographical regions do not explain much of the international or within-country variation in hospitalization, ICU admission, or death. Identifying alternative explanations for the limited predictive power of comorbidities and age at the population level should be considered for future research.Keywords: comorbidity, health outcomes, COVID-19, mortality rates
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- 2021
7. Rocky wonderland
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
8. From the shadowlands
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
9. Come together
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
10. Going up Central
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
11. Using their loaves
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
12. Spirited away
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Trump, Eric
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- 2023
13. Recurrent Incontinence After Transvaginal Partial Sling Excision in Patients with Prior Mid-Urethral Sling
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Shapiro R, Dueñas-Garcia OF, Vallejo M, Trump T, Sufficool M, and Zaslau S
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sling excision ,mesh ,incontinence ,mid-urethral sing ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Robert Shapiro,1,2 Omar Felipe Dueñas-Garcia,1 Manuel Vallejo,1 Tyler Trump,2 Makenzy Sufficool,3 Stanley Zaslau1,2 1Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA; 2Department of Urology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA; 3West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV 26506, USACorrespondence: Robert ShapiroDepartment of Obstetrics & Gynecology, West Virginia University School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV 26506, USAEmail rshapiro@hsc.wvu.eduIntroduction: Patients may develop recurrent urinary tract infections, pain syndromes, dyspareunia, and voiding difficulty after mid-urethral sling placement that can be treated by partial sling excision.Objective: The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the incidence of de novo incontinence and voiding difficulty after partial sling excision. A secondary objective was to assess risk factors associated with future incontinence surgery in this subset of patients.Methods: From 2009 to 2017, 95 female patients with subjective complaints of pelvic pain, dyspareunia, or voiding difficulty following synthetic mid-urethral sling placement for stress urinary incontinence underwent partial sling excision at a single institution. The incidence of urinary incontinence was assessed 6 months after partial sling excision. Patients were also assessed for resolution of voiding difficulty and future incontinence surgery. Primary endpoints were examined by Pearson’s Chi-square test and interval data by t-test. A p < 0.05 was significant.Results: About 72% of patients were more likely to be continent after partial sling excision irrespective of initial symptoms prior to surgery. No difference was seen in voiding difficulty between the continent and incontinent patients after partial sling excision (p=0.09). Patients with a retropubic mid-urethral sling were more likely to be continent after partial sling excision (p=0.03). Preoperative maximum flow rate > 16 mL/sec was associated as an independent variable to develop incontinence surgery after partial sling excision (p=0.009).Conclusion: In conclusion, partial sling excision poses a low risk for de novo urinary incontinence regardless of preoperative symptoms. Stress urinary incontinence may be less likely to reoccur in those patients having a retropubic approach. A preoperative maximum flow rate of > 16 mL/sec is a risk factor for future incontinence surgery after partial sling excision and should be taken into consideration when formulating a treatment plan.Keywords: sling excision, mesh, incontinence, mid-urethral sing
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- 2021
14. Here There Be (Dusty) Monsters: High Redshift AGN are Dustier Than Their Hosts
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Brooks, Madisyn, Simons, Raymond C., Trump, Jonathan R., Taylor, Anthony J., Backhaus, Bren, Davis, Kelcey, Buat, Véronique, Cleri, Nikko J., Finkelstein, Steven L., Hirschmann, Michaela, Holwerda, Benne W., Kocevski, Dale D., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lucas, Ray A., Pacucci, Fabio, and Seillé, Lise-Marie
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
JWST spectroscopy has discovered a population of $z \gtrsim 3.5$ galaxies with broad Balmer emission lines, and narrow forbidden lines, that are consistent with hosting active galactic nuclei (AGN). Many of these systems, now known as ``little red dots" (LRDs), are compact and have unique colors that are very red in the optical/near-infrared and blue in the ultraviolet. The relative contribution of galaxy starlight and AGN to these systems remains uncertain, especially for the galaxies with unusual blue+red spectral energy distributions. In this work, we use Balmer decrements to measure the independent dust attenuation of the broad and narrow emission-line components of a sample of 29 broad-line AGN identified from three public JWST spectroscopy surveys: CEERS, JADES, and RUBIES. Stacking the narrow components from the spectra of 25 sources with broad H$\rm{\alpha}$ and no broad H$\rm{\beta}$ results in a median narrow H$\rm{\alpha}$/H$\rm{\beta}$ = $2.47^{+0.05}_{-0.05}$ (consistent with $A_{v} = 0$) and broad H$\rm{\alpha}$/H$\rm{\beta}$ $> 8.85$ ($A_{v} > 3.63$). The narrow and broad Balmer decrements imply little-to-no attenuation of the narrow emission lines, which are consistent with being powered by star formation and located on larger physical scales. Meanwhile, the lower limit in broad H$\rm{\alpha}$/H$\rm{\beta}$ decrement, with broad H$\rm{\beta}$ undetected in the stacked spectrum of 25 broad-H$\rm{\alpha}$ AGN, implies significant dust attenuation of the broad-line emitting region that is presumably associated with the central AGN. Our results indicate that these systems, on average, are consistent with heavily dust-attenuated AGN powering the red parts of their SED while their blue UV emission is powered by unattenuated star formation in the host galaxy., Comment: 4 figures, 3 tables
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- 2024
15. The SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project: A Kinematically Variable Broad-Line Region and Consequences for Masses of Luminous Quasars
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Fries, Logan B., Trump, Jonathan R., Horne, Keith, Davis, Megan C., Grier, Catherine J., Shen, Yue, Anderson, Scott F., Dwelly, Tom, Homayouni, Y., Morrison, Sean, Runnoe, Jessie C., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Assef, Roberto J., Bizyaev, Dmitry, Brandt, W. N., Breiding, Peter, Browstein, Joel, Chakraborty, Priyanka, Hall, P. B., Koekemoer, Anton M., Ibarra-Medel, Héctor J., Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Negrete, C. Alenka, Pan, Kaike, Ricci, Claudio, Scheider, Donald P., Sharp, Hugh W., Smith, Theodore B., Stone, Zachary, and Temple, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a velocity-resolved reverberation mapping analysis of the hypervariable quasar RM160 (SDSS J141041.25+531849.0) at z = 0.359 with 153 spectroscopic epochs of data representing a ten-year baseline (2013-2023). We split the baseline into two regimes based on the 3x flux increase in the light curve: a 'low state' phase during the years 2013-2019 and a 'high state' phase during the years 2022-2023. The velocity-resolved lag profiles (VRLP) indicate that gas with different kinematics dominates the line emission in different states. The H\b{eta} VRLP begins with a signature of inflow onto the BLR in the 'low state', while in the 'high state' it is flatter with less signature of inflow. The H{\alpha} VRLP begins consistent with a virialized BLR in the 'low state', while in the 'high state' shows a signature of inflow. The differences in the kinematics between the Balmer lines and between the 'low state' and the 'high state' suggests complex BLR dynamics. We find that the BLR radius and velocity (both FWHM and {\sigma}) do not obey a constant virial product throughout the monitoring period. We find that BLR lags and continuum luminosity are correlated, consistent with rapid response of the BLR gas to the illuminating continuum. The BLR kinematic profile changes in unpredictable ways that are not related to continuum changes and reverberation lag. Our observations indicate that non-virial kinematics can significantly contribute to observed line profiles, suggesting caution for black-hole mass estimation in luminous and highly varying quasars like RM160., Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures
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- 2024
16. Broad-Line AGN at $3.5<z<6$: The Black Hole Mass Function and a Connection with Little Red Dots
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Taylor, Anthony J., Finkelstein, Steven L., Kocevski, Dale D., Jeon, Junehyoung, Bromm, Volker, Amorin, Ricardo O., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Backhaus, Bren E., Bagley, Micaela B., Bañados, Eduardo, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Brooks, Madisyn, Calabro, Antonello, Ortiz, Oscar A. Chavez, Cheng, Yingjie, Cleri, Nikko J., Cole, Justin W., Davis, Kelcey, Dickinson, Mark, Donnan, Callum, Dunlop, James S., Ellis, Richard S., Fernandez, Vital, Fontana, Adriano, Fujimoto, Seiji, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Guo, Jingsong, Hathi, Nimish P., Holwerda, Benne W., Hirschmann, Michaela, Inayoshi, Kohei, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Khusanova, Yana, Koekemoer, Anton M., Kokorev, Vasily, Larson, Rebecca L., Leung, Gene C. K., Lucas, Ray A., McLeod, Derek J., Napolitano, Lorenzo, Onoue, Masafusa, Pacucci, Fabio, Papovich, Casey, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Somerville, Rachel S., Trump, Jonathan R., Wilkins, Stephen M., Yung, L. Y. Aaron, and Zhang, Haowen
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a sample of 50 H-alpha detected broad-line active galactic nuclei (BLAGN) at redshifts 3.5
0), independent of the contributions of emission lines to the broadband photometry. We construct the black hole (BH) mass function at 3.5 - Published
- 2024
17. ASTRODEEP-JWST: NIRCam-HST multiband photometry and redshifts for half a million sources in six extragalactic deep fields
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Merlin, E., Santini, P., Paris, D., Castellano, M., Fontana, A., Treu, T., Finkelstein, S. L., Dunlop, J. S., Haro, P. Arrabal, Bagley, M., Boyett, K., Calabrò, A., Correnti, M., Davis, K., Dickinson, M., Donnan, C. T., Ferguson, H. C., Fortuni, F., Giavalisco, M., Glazebrook, K., Grazian, A., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N., Hirschmann, M., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kewley, L. J., Kirkpatrick, A., Kocevski, D. D., Koekemoer, A. M., Leung, G., Lotz, J. M., Lucas, R. A., Magee, D. K., Marchesini, D., Mascia, S., McLeod, D. J., McLure, R. J., Nanayakkara, T., Napolitano, L., Nonino, M., Papovich, C., Pentericci, L., Pérez-González, P. G., Pirzkal, N., Ravindranath, S., Roberts-Borsani, G., Somerville, R. S., Trenti, M., Trump, J. R., Vulcani, B., Wang, X., Watson, P. J., Wilkins, S. M., Yang, G., and Yung, L. Y. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a set of photometric catalogs primarily aimed at providing the community with a comprehensive database for the study of galaxy populations in the high redshift Universe. The set gathers data from eight JWST NIRCam observational programs, targeting the Abell 2744 (GLASS-JWST, UNCOVER, DDT2756 and GO3990), EGS (CEERS), COSMOS and UDS (PRIMER), and GOODS North and South (JADES and NGDEEP) deep fields, for a total area of $\sim$0.2 sq. degrees. Photometric estimates are obtained by means of well-established techniques, including tailored improvements designed to enhance the performance on the specific dataset. We also include new measurements from HST archival data, thus collecting 16 bands spanning from 0.44 to 4.44 $\mu$m. A grand total of $\sim$530 thousand sources is detected on stacks of NIRCam 3.56 and 4.44 $\mu$m mosaics. We assess the photometric accuracy by comparing fluxes and colors against archival catalogs. We also provide photometric redshift estimates, statistically validated against a large set of robust spectroscopic data. The catalogs are publicly available on the Astrodeep website., Comment: 28 pages, 16 figures; accepted for publication on Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2024
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18. Russian Cyber Onslaught was Blunted by Ukrainian Cyber Resilience, not Merely Security
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Kott, Alexander, George, Dubynskyi, Paziuk, Andrii, Galaitsi, Stephanie E., Trump, Benjamin D., and Linkov, Igor
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Russian cyberattacks on Ukraine largely failed to produce meaningful outcomes not merely due to robust Ukrainian cyber defenses but were instead primarily a result of Ukraine's effective cyber resilience.
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- 2024
19. The SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project: Multi-Line Dynamical Modeling of a Highly Variable Active Galactic Nucleus with Decade-long Light Curves
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Stone, Zachary, Shen, Yue, Anderson, Scott F., Bauer, Franz, Brandt, W. N., Chakraborty, Priyanka, Davis, Megan C., Fries, Logan B., Grier, Catherine J., Hall, P. B., Koekemoer, Anton M., Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Long, Knox, Morrison, Sean, Ricci, Claudio, Schneider, Donald P., Temple, Matthew J., and Trump, Jonathan R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present dynamical modeling of the broad-line region (BLR) for the highly variable AGN SDSS J141041.25+531849.0 ($z = 0.359$) using photometric and spectroscopic monitoring data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping project and the SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper program, spanning from early 2013 to early 2023. We model the geometry and kinematics of the BLR in the H$\beta$, H$\alpha$, and MgII, emission lines for three different time periods to measure the potential change of structure within the BLR across time and line species. We consistently find a moderately edge-on $(i_{\rm full-state} = 53.29^{\circ} \,{}^{+7.29}_{-6.55})$ thick-disk $(\theta_{\rm opn, \; full-state} = 54.86^{\circ} \,{}^{+5.83}_{-4.74})$ geometry for all BLRs, with a joint estimate for the mass of the supermassive black hole (SMBH) for each of three time periods, yielding $\log_{10}(M_{\rm BH} / M_{\odot}) = 7.66^{+0.12}_{-0.13}$ when using the full dataset. The inferred individual virial factor $f$ $\sim 1$ is significantly smaller than the average factor for a local sample of dynamically modeled AGNs. There is strong evidence for non-virial motion, with over $80\%$ of clouds on inflowing/outflowing orbits. We analyze the change in model parameters across emission lines, finding the radii of BLRs for the emission lines are consistent with the following relative sizes $R_{\rm H\beta} \lesssim R_{\rm MgII } \lesssim R_{\rm H\alpha}$. Comparing results across time, we find $R_{\rm low-state} \lesssim R_{\rm high-state}$, with the change in BLR size for H$\beta$, being more significant than for the other two lines. The data also reveal complex, time-evolving, and potentially transient dynamics of the BLR gas over decade-long timescales, encouraging for future dynamical modeling of fine-scale BLR kinematics., Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures, 4 tables. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2024
20. Case numbers in South should peak next week, modeller says
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Trump, Eric
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- 2022
21. Lean times force store to close
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Ryder, Wyatt and Trump, Eric
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- 2022
22. Study puts lives in perspective
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Trump, Eric
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- 2022
23. Anti-vax vandals strike
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Trump, Eric
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- 2022
24. Building bridges
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Trump, Eric
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- 2022
25. Fighting for ‘what should be here’
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Trump, Eric
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- 2022
26. CEERS Key Paper. IX. Identifying Galaxy Mergers in CEERS NIRCam Images Using Random Forests and Convolutional Neural Networks
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Rose, Caitlin, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Snyder, Gregory F., Huertas-Company, Marc, Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Bisigello, Laura, Calabrò, Antonello, Cleri, Nikko J., Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Finkelstein, Steven L., Fontana, Adriano, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Holwerda, Benne W., Iyer, Kartheik G., Kewley, Lisa J., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Kocevski, Dale D., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lotz, Jennifer M., Lucas, Ray A., Napolitan, Lorenzo, Papovich, Casey, Pentericci, Laura, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Somerville, Rachel S., Straughn, Amber N., Trump, Jonathan R., Wilkins, Stephen M., and Yang, Guang
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
A crucial yet challenging task in galaxy evolution studies is the identification of distant merging galaxies, a task which suffers from a variety of issues ranging from telescope sensitivities and limitations to the inherently chaotic morphologies of young galaxies. In this paper, we use random forests and convolutional neural networks to identify high-redshift JWST CEERS galaxy mergers. We train these algorithms on simulated $3
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- 2024
27. The SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project: CIV BAL Acceleration in the Quasar SBS 1408+544
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Wheatley, Robert, Grier, Catherine J., Hall, Patrick B., Brandt, W. N., Lotz, Jonah, Schneider, D. P., Trump, Jonathan R., Shen, Yue, Seaton, Lucas M., Anderson, Scott F., Temple, Matthew J., Assef, Roberto, Fries, Logan B., Homayouni, Y., Kakkad, Darshan, Koekemoer, Anton M., Martınez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Negrete, C. Alenka, Ricci, Claudio, Bizyaev, Dmitry, Brownstein, Joel R., Morrison, Sean, and Pan, Kaike
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of an investigation of a highly variable CIV broad absorption-line feature in the quasar SBS 1408+544 (z=2.337) that shows a significant shift in velocity over time. This source was observed as a part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project and the SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project, and has been included in two previous studies, both of which identified significant variability in a high-velocity CIV broad absorption line (BAL) on timescales of just a few days in the quasar rest frame. Using ~130 spectra acquired over eight years of spectroscopic monitoring with SDSS, we have determined that this BAL is not only varying in strength, but is also systematically shifting to higher velocities. Using cross-correlation methods, we measure the velocity shifts (and corresponding acceleration) of the BAL on a wide range of timescales, measuring an overall velocity shift of delta v = -683 (+89, -84) km s-1 over the 8-year monitoring period. This corresponds to an average rest-frame acceleration of a=1.04 (+0.14, -0.13) cm s-2, though the magnitude of the acceleration on shorter timescales is not constant throughout. We place our measurements in the context of BAL-acceleration models and examine various possible causes of the observed velocity shift., Comment: Published in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
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28. Quasars can Signpost Supermassive Black Hole Binaries
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Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Mingarelli, Chiara M. F., Greene, Jenny E., Goulding, Andy D., Chen, Siyuan, and Trump, Jonathan R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are found in the centers of massive galaxies, and galaxy mergers should eventually lead to SMBH mergers. Quasar activity has long been associated with galaxy mergers, so here we investigate if supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) are preferentially found in quasars. Our multimessenger investigation folds together a gravitational wave background signal from NANOGrav, a sample of periodic AGN candidates from the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey, and a quasar mass function, to estimate an upper limit on the fraction of quasars which could host a SMBHB. We find at 95\% confidence that quasars are at most seven times as likely to host a SMBHB as a random galaxy. Quasars should therefore be prioritized as targets for SMBHB searches in pulsar timing arrays., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 1 appendix
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- 2024
29. Radiocarbon Dating and Italian Prehistory by R. Skeates and R. Whitehouse (review)
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Trump, David
- Published
- 2018
30. The Convergence of AI and Synthetic Biology: The Looming Deluge
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Vindman, Cindy, Trump, Benjamin, Cummings, Christopher, Smith, Madison, Titus, Alexander J., Oye, Ken, Prado, Valentina, Turmus, Eyup, and Linkov, Igor
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Quantitative Biology - Other Quantitative Biology - Abstract
The convergence of artificial intelligence (AI) and synthetic biology is rapidly accelerating the pace of biological discovery and engineering. AI techniques, such as large language models and biological design tools, are enabling the automated design, build, test, and learning cycles for engineered biological systems. This convergence promises to democratize synthetic biology and unlock novel applications across domains from medicine to environmental sustainability. However, it also poses significant risks around reliability, dual use, and governance. The opacity of AI models, the deskilling of workforces, and the outdated nature of current regulatory frameworks present challenges in ensuring responsible development. Urgent attention is needed to update governance structures, integrate human oversight into increasingly automated workflows, and foster a culture of responsibility among the growing community of bioengineers. Only by proactively addressing these issues can we realize the transformative potential of AI-driven synthetic biology while mitigating its risks.
- Published
- 2024
31. The Rise of Faint, Red AGN at $z>4$: A Sample of Little Red Dots in the JWST Extragalactic Legacy Fields
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Kocevski, Dale D., Finkelstein, Steven L., Barro, Guillermo, Taylor, Anthony J., Calabrò, Antonello, Laloux, Brivael, Buchner, Johannes, Trump, Jonathan R., Leung, Gene C. K., Yang, Guang, Dickinson, Mark, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Pacucci, Fabio, Inayoshi, Kohei, Somerville, Rachel S., McGrath, Elizabeth J., Akins, Hollis B., Bagley, Micaela B., Bisigello, Laura, Bowler, Rebecca A. A., Carnall, Adam, Casey, Caitlin M., Cheng, Yingjie, Cleri, Nikko J., Costantin, Luca, Cullen, Fergus, Davis, Kelcey, Donnan, Callum T., Dunlop, James S., Ellis, Richard S., Ferguson, Henry C., Fujimoto, Seiji, Fontana, Adriano, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish P., Hirschmann, Michaela, Huertas-Company, Marc, Holwerda, Benne W., Illingworth, Garth, Juneau, Stéphanie, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Koekemoer, Anton M., Li, Wenxiu, Lucas, Ray A., Magee, Dan, Mason, Charlotte, McLeod, Derek J., McLure, Ross J., Napolitano, Lorenzo, Papovich, Casey, Pirzkal, Nor, Rodighiero, Giulia, Santini, Paola, Wilkins, Stephen M., and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a sample of 341 "little red dots" (LRDs) spanning the redshift range $z\sim2-11$ using data from the CEERS, PRIMER, JADES, UNCOVER and NGDEEP surveys. Unlike past use of color indices to identify LRDs, we employ continuum slope fitting using shifting bandpasses to sample the same rest-frame emission blueward and redward of the Balmer break. This enables the detection of LRDs over a wider redshift range and with less contamination from galaxies with strong breaks that otherwise lack a rising red continuum. The redshift distribution of our sample increases at $z<8$ and then undergoes a rapid decline at $z\sim4.5$, which may tie the emergence of these sources to the inside-out growth that galaxies experience during this epoch. We find that LRDs are $\sim1$ dex more numerous than X-ray and UV selected AGN at z~5-7. Within our sample, we have identified the first two X-ray detected LRDs. An X-ray spectral analysis confirms that these AGN are moderately obscured with $\log\,(N_{\rm H}/{\rm cm}^{2}$) of $23.3^{+0.4}_{-1.3}$ and $22.72^{+0.13}_{-0.16}$. Our analysis reveals that reddened AGN emission dominates their rest-optical light, while the rest-UV originates from their host galaxies. We also present NIRSpec observations from the RUBIES survey of 17 LRDs that show broad emission lines consistent with AGN activity. The confirmed AGN fraction of our sample is 71\% for sources with F444W<26.5. In addition, we find three LRDs with blue-shifted Balmer absorption features in their spectra, suggesting an outflow of high-density, low-ionization gas from near the central engine of these faint, red AGN., Comment: 32 pages, 28 figures, accepted or publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2024
32. Physical properties of extreme emission-line galaxies at $z\sim 4-9$ from the JWST CEERS survey
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Llerena, M., Amorín, R., Pentericci, L., Haro, P. Arrabal, Backhaus, B. E., Bagley, M. B., Calabrò, A., Cleri, N. J., Davis, K., Dickinson, M., Finkelstein, S. L., Gawiser, E., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Hirschmann, M., Kartaltepe, J. S., Koekemoer, A. M., McGrath, E. J., Mobasher, B., Napolitano, L., Papovich, C., Pirzkal, N., Trump, J. R., Wilkins, S. M., and Yung, L. Y. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Extreme emission line galaxies (EELGs) are typically characterized by high equivalent widths (EWs) which are driven by elevated specific star formation rates (sSFR) in low-mass galaxies with subsolar metallicities and little dust. Such extreme systems are rare in the local universe, but the number density of EELGs increases with redshift. Such starburst galaxies are currently presumed to be the main drivers of hydrogen reionization over 5.5
0.4-1 which indicates that star formation may be the dominant source of ionization. Based on the photometric fluxes, we find an increase of EW([OIII]+H$\beta$) with sSFR and $\Sigma_{SFR}$, and a decrease with age and stellar mass. The sample of EELGs can reach $\Sigma_{SFR}>$10Msun yr$^{-1}$kpc$^{-2}$ which indicate they are strong candidates of LyC leakers. Another indirect indicator is the high values of O32>5 that can be reached for some galaxies in the sample., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. We updated the manuscript following referee's suggestions - Published
- 2024
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33. A Survey of Music Generation in the Context of Interaction
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Agchar, Ismael, Baumann, Ilja, Braun, Franziska, Perez-Toro, Paula Andrea, Riedhammer, Korbinian, Trump, Sebastian, and Ullrich, Martin
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Computer Science - Sound ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
In recent years, machine learning, and in particular generative adversarial neural networks (GANs) and attention-based neural networks (transformers), have been successfully used to compose and generate music, both melodies and polyphonic pieces. Current research focuses foremost on style replication (eg. generating a Bach-style chorale) or style transfer (eg. classical to jazz) based on large amounts of recorded or transcribed music, which in turn also allows for fairly straight-forward "performance" evaluation. However, most of these models are not suitable for human-machine co-creation through live interaction, neither is clear, how such models and resulting creations would be evaluated. This article presents a thorough review of music representation, feature analysis, heuristic algorithms, statistical and parametric modelling, and human and automatic evaluation measures, along with a discussion of which approaches and models seem most suitable for live interaction.
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- 2024
34. Peering into cosmic reionization: the Ly$\alpha$ visibility evolution from galaxies at $z$ = 4.5-8.5 with JWST
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Napolitano, L., Pentericci, L., Santini, P., Calabrò, A., Mascia, S., Llerena, M., Castellano, M., Dickinson, M., Finkelstein, S. L., Amorin, R., Haro, P. Arrabal, Bagley, M., Bhatawdekar, R., Cleri, N. J., Davis, K., Gardner, J. P., Gawiser, E., Giavalisco, M., Hathi, N., Hu, W., Jung, I., Kartaltepe, J. S., Koekemoer, A. M., Merlin, E., Mobasher, B., Papovich, C., Park, H., Pirzkal, N., Trump, J. R., Wilkins, S. M., and Yung, L. Y. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The resonant scattering interaction between Ly$\alpha$ photons and neutral hydrogen implies that a partially neutral IGM can significantly impact the detectability of Ly$\alpha$ emission in galaxies. The redshift evolution of the Ly$\alpha$ equivalent width distribution of galaxies thus offers a key probe of the degree of ionization during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). Previous in-depth investigations at $z$ $\geq$ 7 were limited by ground-based instrument capabilities. We present an extensive study of Ly$\alpha$ emission from galaxies at 4 < $z$ < 8.5, observed from the CEERS and JADES surveys in the JWST NIRSpec/PRISM configuration. The sample consists of 235 galaxies, among which we identify 65 as Ly$\alpha$ emitters. We first measure Ly$\alpha$ escape fractions from Balmer lines, and explore the correlations with the inferred galaxies' physical properties, which are similar to those found at lower redshift. We also investigate the possible connection between the escape of Ly$\alpha$ photons and the inferred escape fractions of LyC photons obtained from indirect indicators. We then analyze the redshift evolution of the Ly$\alpha$ emitter fraction, finding lower average values at $z$ = 5 and 6 compared to ground-based observations. At $z$ = 7 we find a very large difference in Ly$\alpha$ visibility between the EGS and GOODS-South fields, possibly due to the presence of early reionized regions in the EGS. Such large variance is also expected in the Cosmic Dawn II radiation-hydrodynamical simulation. Our findings suggest a scenario in which the ending phase of the EoR is characterized by $\sim$ 1 pMpc ionized bubbles around a high fraction of moderately bright galaxies. Finally, we characterize such two ionized regions found in the EGS at $z$ = 7.18 and $z$ = 7.49 by estimating the radius of the ionized bubble that each of the spectroscopically-confirmed members could have created., Comment: Submitted to A&A
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- 2024
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35. Gone
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Trump, Eric
- Published
- 2021
36. Characterizing the Average Interstellar Medium Conditions of Galaxies at $z\sim$ 5.6-9 with UV and Optical Nebular Lines
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Hu, Weida, Papovich, Casey, Dickinson, Mark, Kennicutt, Robert, Shen, Lu, Amorín, Ricardo O., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Cleri, Nikko J., Cole, Justin W., Dekel, Avishai, de la Vega, Alexander, Finkelstein, Steven L., Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish P., Hirschmann, Michaela, Holwerda, Benne W., Hutchison, Taylor A., Jung, Intae, Koekemoer, Anton M., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Lucas, Ray A., Llerena, Mario, Mascia, S., Mobasher, Bahram, Napolitano, L., Newman, Jeffrey A., Pentericci, Laura, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Trump, Jonathan R., Wilkins, Stephen M., and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Ultraviolet (UV; rest-frame $\sim1200-2000$ A) spectra provide a wealth of diagnostics to characterize fundamental galaxy properties, such as their chemical enrichment, the nature of their stellar populations, and their amount of Lyman-continuum (LyC) radiation. In this work, we leverage publicly released JWST data to construct the rest-frame UV-to-optical composite spectrum of a sample of 63 galaxies at $5.6
- Published
- 2024
37. Exploring Changing-look Active Galactic Nuclei with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey V: First Year Results
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Zeltyn, Grisha, Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Eracleous, Michael, Yang, Qian, Green, Paul, Anderson, Scott F., LaMassa, Stephanie, Runnoe, Jessie, Assef, Roberto J., Bauer, Franz E., Brandt, W. N., Davis, Megan C., Frederick, Sara E., Fries, Logan B., Graham, Matthew J., Grogin, Norman A., Guolo, Muryel, Hernández-García, Lorena, Koekemoer, Anton M., Krumpe, Mirko, Liu, Xin, Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Ricci, Claudio, Schneider, Donald P., Shen, Yue, Śniegowska, Marzena, Temple, Matthew J., Trump, Jonathan R., Xue, Yongquan, Brownstein, Joel R., Dwelly, Tom, Morrison, Sean, Bizyaev, Dmitry, Pan, Kaike, and Kollmeier, Juna A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
"Changing-look" active galactic nuclei (CL-AGNs) challenge our basic ideas about the physics of accretion flows and circumnuclear gas around supermassive black holes. Using first-year Sloan Digital Sky Survey V (SDSS-V) repeated spectroscopy of nearly 29,000 previously known AGNs, combined with dedicated follow-up spectroscopy, and publicly available optical light curves, we have identified 116 CL-AGNs where (at least) one broad emission line has essentially (dis-)appeared, as well as 88 other extremely variable systems. Our CL-AGN sample, with 107 newly identified cases, is the largest reported to date, and includes $\sim0.4\%$ of the AGNs reobserved in first-year SDSS-V operations. Among our CL-AGNs, 67% exhibit dimming while 33% exhibit brightening. Our sample probes extreme AGN spectral variability on months to decades timescales, including some cases of recurring transitions on surprisingly short timescales ($\lesssim 2$ months in the rest frame). We find that CL events are preferentially found in lower-Eddington-ratio ($f_{Edd}$) systems: Our CL-AGNs have a $f_{Edd}$ distribution that significantly differs from that of a carefully constructed, redshift- and luminosity-matched control sample (Anderson-Darling test yielding $p_{\rm AD}\approx 6\times10^{-5}$; median $f_{Edd}\approx0.025$ vs. $0.043$). This preference for low $f_{Edd}$ strengthens previous findings of higher CL-AGN incidence at lower $f_{Edd}$, found in smaller samples. Finally, we show that the broad MgII emission line in our CL-AGN sample tends to vary significantly less than the broad H$\beta$ emission line. Our large CL-AGN sample demonstrates the advantages and challenges in using multi-epoch spectroscopy from large surveys to study extreme AGN variability and physics., Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Full tables and figure-sets will be published upon acceptance, and can be made available upon request$.$
- Published
- 2024
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38. When will people with low moral identity importance support a charitable cause?
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Trump, Rebecca K. and Newman, Kevin P.
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- 2024
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39. The Next Generation Deep Extragalactic Exploratory Public Near-Infrared Slitless Survey Epoch 1 (NGDEEP-NISS1): Extra-Galactic Star-formation and Active Galactic Nuclei at 0.5 < z < 3.6
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Pirzkal, Nor, Rothberg, Barry, Papovich, Casey, Shen, Lu, Leung, Gene C. K., Bagley, Micaela B., Finkelstein, Steven L., Vanderhoof, Brittany N., Lotz, Jennifer M., Koekemoer, Anton M., Hathi, Nimish P., Cheng, Yingjie, Cleri, Nikko J., Grogin, Norman A., Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Gardner, Jonathan P., Jung, Intae, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Ryan, Russell, Simons, Raymond C., Ravindranath, Swara, Berg, Danielle A., Backhaus, Bren E., Casey, Caitlin M., Castellano, Marco, Ortiz, Óscar A. Chávez, Chworowsky, Katherine, Cox, Isabella G., Davé, Romeel, Davis, Kelcey, Estrada-Carpenter, Vicente, Fontana, Adriano, Fujimoto, Seiji, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Hutchison, Taylor A., Jaskot, Anne E., Kewley, Lisa J., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Kocevski, Dale D., Larson, Rebecca L., Matharu, Jasleen, Natarajan, Priyamvada, Pentericci, Laura, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Snyder, Gregory F., Somerville, Rachel S., Trump, Jonathan R., and Wilkins, Stephen M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Next Generation Deep Extragalactic Exploratory Public (NGDEEP) survey program was designed specifically to include Near Infrared Slitless Spectroscopic observations (NGDEEP-NISS) to detect multiple emission lines in as many galaxies as possible and across a wide redshift range using the Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS). We present early results obtained from the the first set of observations (Epoch 1, 50$\%$ of the allocated orbits) of this program (NGDEEP-NISS1). Using a set of independently developed calibration files designed to deal with a complex combination of overlapping spectra, multiple position angles, and multiple cross filters and grisms, in conjunction with a robust and proven algorithm for quantifying contamination from overlapping dispersed spectra, NGDEEP-NISS1 has achieved a 3$\sigma$ sensitivity limit of 2 $\times$ 10$^{-18}$ erg/s/cm$^2$. We demonstrate the power of deep wide field slitless spectroscopy (WFSS) to characterize the star-formation rates, and metallicity ([OIII]/H$\beta$), and dust content, of galaxies at $1
- Published
- 2023
40. A Census from JWST of Extreme Emission Line Galaxies Spanning the Epoch of Reionization in CEERS
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Davis, Kelcey, Trump, Jonathan R., Simons, Raymond C., Mcgrath, Elizabeth J., Wilkins, Stephen M., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Dickinson, Mark, FernÁndez, Vital, AmorÍn, Ricardo O., Backhaus, Bren E., Cleri, Nikko J., Llerena, Mario, Brunker, Samantha W., Barro, Guillermo, Bisigello, Laura, Brooks, Madisyn, Costantin, Luca, De La Vega, Alexander, Dekel, Avishai, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hathi, Nimish P., Hirschmann, Michaela, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lucas, Ray A., Papovich, Casey, PÉrez-GonzÁlez, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Rodighiero, Giulia, Rose, Caitlin, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a sample of 1165 extreme emission-line galaxies (EELGs) at 4
5000 AA. JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopic observations of a subset (34) of the photometrically selected EELGs validate our selection method: all spectroscopically observed EELGs confirm our photometric identification of extreme emission, including some cases where the SED-derived photometric redshifts are incorrect. We find that the medium-band F410M filter in CEERS is particularly efficient at identifying EELGs, both in terms of including emission lines in the filter and in correctly identifying the continuum between Hb + [OIII] and Ha in the neighboring broad-band filters. We present examples of EELGs that could be incorrectly classified at ultra-high redshift (z>12) as a result of extreme Hb + [OIII] emission blended across the reddest photometric filters. We compare the EELGs to the broader (sub-extreme) galaxy population in the same redshift range and find that they are consistent with being the bluer, high equivalent width tail of a broader population of emission-line galaxies. The highest-EW EELGs tend to have more compact emission-line sizes than continuum sizes, suggesting that active galactic nuclei are responsible for at least some of the most extreme EELGs. Photometrically inferred emission-line ratios are consistent with ISM conditions with high ionization and moderately low metallicity, consistent with previous spectroscopic studies., Comment: 24 pages, 25 figures, submitted to ApJ - Published
- 2023
41. Reliable Identification of Binary Supermassive Black Holes from Rubin Observatory Time-Domain Monitoring
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Davis, Megan C., Grace, Kaylee E., Trump, Jonathan R., Runnoe, Jessie C., Henkel, Amelia, Blecha, Laura, Brandt, W. N., Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Charisi, Maria, and Witt, Caitlin
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Periodic signatures in time-domain observations of quasars have been used to search for binary supermassive black holes. These searches, across existing time-domain surveys, have produced several hundred candidates. The general stochastic variability of quasars, however, can masquerade as a false-positive periodic signal, especially when monitoring cadence and duration are limited. In this work, we predict the detectability of binary supermassive black holes in the upcoming Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). We apply computationally inexpensive sinusoidal curve fits to millions of simulated LSST Deep Drilling Field light curves of both single, isolated quasars and binary quasars. Period and phase of simulated binary signals can generally be disentangled from quasar variability. Binary amplitude is overestimated and poorly recovered for two-thirds of potential binaries due to quasar accretion variability. Quasars with strong intrinsic variability can obscure a binary signal too much for recovery. We also find that the most luminous quasars mimic current binary candidate light curves and their properties: false positive rates are 60\% for these quasars. The reliable recovery of binary period and phase for a wide range of input binary LSST light curves is promising for multi-messenger characterization of binary supermassive black holes. However, pure electromagnetic detections of binaries using photometric periodicity with amplitude greater than 0.1 magnitude will result in samples that are overwhelmed by false positives. This paper represents an important and computationally inexpensive way forward for understanding the true and false positive rates for binary candidates identified by Rubin., Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2023
42. The Complete CEERS Early Universe Galaxy Sample: A Surprisingly Slow Evolution of the Space Density of Bright Galaxies at z ~ 8.5-14.5
- Author
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Finkelstein, Steven L., Leung, Gene C. K., Bagley, Micaela B., Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Papovich, Casey, Akins, Hollis B., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Dave, Romeel, Dekel, Avishai, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Kocevski, Dale D., Koekemoer, Anton M., Pirzkal, Norbert, Somerville, Rachel S., Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Amorin, Ricardo, Backhaus, Bren E., Behroozi, Peter, Bisigello, Laura, Bromm, Volker, Casey, Caitlin M., Ortiz, Oscar A. Chavez, Cheng, Yingjie, Chworowsky, Katherine, Cleri, Nikko J., Cooper, Michael C., Davis, Kelcey, de la Vega, Alexander, Elbaz, David, Franco, Maximilien, Fontana, Adriano, Fujimoto, Seiji, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grogin, Norman A., Holwerda, Benne W., Huertas-Company, Marc, Hirschmann, Michaela, Iyer, Kartheik G., Jogee, Shardha, Jung, Intae, Larson, Rebecca L., Lucas, Ray A., Mobasher, Bahram, Morales, Alexa M., Morley, Caroline V., Mukherjee, Sagnick, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Ravindranath, Swara, Rodighiero, Giulia, Rowland, Melanie, Tacchella, Sandro, Taylor, Anthony J., Trump, Jonathan R., and Wilkins, Stephen
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a sample of 88 candidate z~8.5-14.5 galaxies selected from the completed NIRCam imaging from the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) survey. These data cover ~90 arcmin^2 (10 NIRCam pointings) in six broad-band and one medium-band imaging filter. With this sample we confirm at higher confidence early JWST conclusions that bright galaxies in this epoch are more abundant than predicted by most theoretical models. We construct the rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity functions at z~9, 11 and 14, and show that the space density of bright (M_UV=-20) galaxies changes only modestly from z~14 to z~9, compared to a steeper increase from z~8 to z~4. While our candidates are photometrically selected, spectroscopic followup has now confirmed 13 of them, with only one significant interloper, implying that the fidelity of this sample is high. Successfully explaining the evidence for a flatter evolution in the number densities of UV-bright z>10 galaxies may thus require changes to the dominant physical processes regulating star formation. While our results indicate that significant variations of dust attenuation with redshift are unlikely to be the dominant factor at these high redshifts, they are consistent with predictions from models which naturally have enhanced star-formation efficiency and/or stochasticity. An evolving stellar initial mass function could also bring model predictions into better agreement with our results. Deep spectroscopic followup of a large sample of early galaxies can distinguish between these competing scenarios., Comment: Submitted to ApJL. Main paper is 33 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Two appendices with additional figures and tables
- Published
- 2023
43. Bubbles enable volumetric negative compressibility in metastable elastocapillary systems
- Author
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Caprini, Davide, Battista, Francesco, Zajdel, Paweł, Di Muccio, Giovanni, Guardiani, Carlo, Trump, Benjamin, Carter, Marcus, Yakovenko, Andrey A., Amayuelas, Eder, Bartolomé, Luis, Meloni, Simone, Grosu, Yaroslav, Casciola, Carlo Massimo, and Giacomello, Alberto
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Seizure
- Author
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Trump, Donna
- Published
- 2014
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45. Galaxies Going Bananas: Inferring the 3D Geometry of High-Redshift Galaxies with JWST-CEERS
- Author
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Pandya, Viraj, Zhang, Haowen, Huertas-Company, Marc, Iyer, Kartheik G., McGrath, Elizabeth, Barro, Guillermo, Finkelstein, Steven L., Kuemmel, Martin, Hartley, William G., Ferguson, Henry C., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Primack, Joel, Dekel, Avishai, Faber, Sandra M., Koo, David C., Bryan, Greg L., Somerville, Rachel S., Amorin, Ricardo O., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Bell, Eric F., Bertin, Emmanuel, Costantin, Luca, Dave, Romeel, Dickinson, Mark, Feldmann, Robert, Fontana, Adriano, Gavazzi, Raphael, Giavalisco, Mauro, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Guo, Yuchen, Hahn, ChangHoon, Holwerda, Benne W., Kewley, Lisa J., Kirkpatrick, Allison, Koekemoer, Anton M., Lotz, Jennifer M., Lucas, Ray A., Pentericci, Laura, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Kocevski, Dale D., Papovich, Casey, Ravindranath, Swara, Rose, Caitlin, Schefer, Marc, Simons, Raymond C., Straughn, Amber N., Tacchella, Sandro, Trump, Jonathan R., de la Vega, Alexander, Wilkins, Stephen M., Wuyts, Stijn, Yang, Guang, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The 3D geometry of high-redshift galaxies remains poorly understood. We build a differentiable Bayesian model and use Hamiltonian Monte Carlo to efficiently and robustly infer the 3D shapes of star-forming galaxies in JWST-CEERS observations with $\log M_*/M_{\odot}=9.0-10.5$ at $z=0.5-8.0$. We reproduce previous results from HST-CANDELS in a fraction of the computing time and constrain the mean ellipticity, triaxiality, size and covariances with samples as small as $\sim50$ galaxies. We find high 3D ellipticities for all mass-redshift bins suggesting oblate (disky) or prolate (elongated) geometries. We break that degeneracy by constraining the mean triaxiality to be $\sim1$ for $\log M_*/M_{\odot}=9.0-9.5$ dwarfs at $z>1$ (favoring the prolate scenario), with significantly lower triaxialities for higher masses and lower redshifts indicating the emergence of disks. The prolate population traces out a ``banana'' in the projected $b/a-\log a$ diagram with an excess of low $b/a$, large $\log a$ galaxies. The dwarf prolate fraction rises from $\sim25\%$ at $z=0.5-1.0$ to $\sim50-80\%$ at $z=3-8$. If these are disks, they cannot be axisymmetric but instead must be unusually oval (triaxial) unlike local circular disks. We simultaneously constrain the 3D size-mass relation and its dependence on 3D geometry. High-probability prolate and oblate candidates show remarkably similar S\'ersic indices ($n\sim1$), non-parametric morphological properties and specific star formation rates. Both tend to be visually classified as disks or irregular but edge-on oblate candidates show more dust attenuation. We discuss selection effects, follow-up prospects and theoretical implications., Comment: Accepted version to appear in ApJ, main body is 36 pages of which ~half are full-page figures
- Published
- 2023
46. Theoretical strong line metallicity diagnostics for the JWST era
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Garg, Prerak, Narayanan, Desika, Sanders, Ryan L., Davè, Romeel, Popping, Gergö, Shapley, Alice E., Stark, Daniel P., and Trump, Jonathan R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The ratios of strong rest-frame optical emission lines are the dominant indicator of metallicities in high-redshift galaxies. Since typical strong-line based metallicity indicators are calibrated on auroral lines at $z=0$, their applicability for galaxies in the distant Universe is unclear. In this paper, we make use of mock emission line data from cosmological simulations to investigate the calibration of rest-frame optical emission lines as metallicity indicators at high redshift. Our model, which couples the SIMBA cosmological galaxy formation simulation with cloudy photoionization calculations, includes contributions from HII regions, post-AGB stars and Diffuse Ionized Gas (DIG). We find mild redshift evolution in the 12 indicators that we study, which implies that the dominant physical properties that evolve in our simulations do have a discernible impact on the metallicity calibrations at high redshifts. When comparing our calibrations with high redshift auroral line observations from James Webb Space Telescope we find a slight offset between our model results and the observations and find that a higher ionization parameter at high redshifts can be one of the possible explanations. We explore the physics that drives the shapes of strong-line metallicity relationships and propose calibrations for hitherto unexplored low-metallicity regimes. Finally, we study the contribution of DIG to total line fluxes. We find that the contribution of DIG increases with metallicity at z $\sim$ 0 for singly ionized oxygen and sulfur lines and can be as high as 70% making it crucial to include their contribution when modeling nebular emission., Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, typo corrected: in polynomial fits, x represents metallicity and y represents the line ratio
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- 2023
47. New insight on the nature of cosmic reionizers from the CEERS survey
- Author
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Mascia, S., Pentericci, L., Calabrò, A., Santini, P., Napolitano, L., Haro, P. Arrabal, Castellano, M., Dickinson, M., Ocvirk, P., Lewis, J. S. W., Amorín, R., Bagley, M., Cleri, R. N. J., Costantin, L., Dekel, A., Finkelstein, S. L., Fontana, A., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N. A., Hathi, N. P., Hirschmann, M., Holwerda, B. W., Jung, I., Kartaltepe, J. S., Koekemoer, A. M., Lucas, R. A., Papovich, C., Pérez-González, P. G., Pirzkal, N., Trump, J. R., Wilkins, S. M., and Yung, L. Y. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Epoch of Reionization (EoR) began when galaxies grew in abundance and luminosity, so their escaping Lyman continuum (LyC) radiation started ionizing the surrounding neutral intergalactic medium (IGM). Despite significant recent progress, the nature and role of cosmic reionizers are still unclear: in order to define them, it would be necessary to directly measure their LyC escape fraction ($f_{esc}$). However, this is impossible during the EoR due to the opacity of the IGM. Consequently, many efforts at low and intermediate redshift have been made to determine measurable indirect indicators in high-redshift galaxies so that their $f_{esc}$ can be predicted. This work presents the analysis of the indirect indicators of 62 spectroscopically confirmed star-forming galaxies at $6 \leq z \leq 9$ from the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) survey, combined with 12 sources with public data from other JWST-ERS campaigns. From the NIRCam and NIRSpec observations, we measured their physical and spectroscopic properties. We discovered that on average $6
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- 2023
48. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Investigation of Continuum Lag Dependence on Broad-Line Contamination and Quasar Properties
- Author
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Sharp, Hugh W., Homayouni, Y., Trump, Jonathan R., Anderson, Scott F., Assef, Roberto J., Brandt, W. N., Davis, Megan C., Fries, Logan B., Grier, Catherine J., Hall, Patrick B., Horne, Keith, Koekemoer, Anton M., Martínez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Menezes, David M., Pena, Theodore, Ricci, C., Schneider, Donald P., Shen, Yue, and Trakhtenbrot, Benny
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
This work studies the relationship between accretion-disk size and quasar properties, using a sample of 95 quasars from the SDSS-RM project with measured lags between the $g$ and $i$ photometric bands. Our sample includes disk lags that are both longer and shorter than predicted by the \citet{SS73} model, requiring explanations which satisfy both cases. Although our quasars each have one lag measurement, we explore the wavelength-dependent effects of diffuse broad line region (BLR) contamination through our sample's broad redshift range, $0.1
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- 2023
49. CEERS Key Paper VII: JWST/MIRI Reveals a Faint Population of Galaxies at Cosmic Noon Unseen by Spitzer
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Kirkpatrick, Allison, Yang, Guang, Bail, Aurelien Le, Troiani, Greg, Bell, Eric F., Cleri, Nikko J., Elbaz, David, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hathi, Nimish P., Hirschmann, Michaela, Holwerda, Benne W., Kocevski, Dale D., Lucas, Ray A., McKinney, Jed, Papovich, Casey, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., de la Vega, Alexander, Bagley, Micaela B., Daddi, Emanuele, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Fontana, Adriano, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman A., Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Kewley, Lisa J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lotz, Jennifer M., Pentericci, Laura, Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Somerville, Rachel S., Trump, Jonathan R., Wilkins, Stephen M., and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science (CEERS) program observed the Extended Groth Strip with the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) in 2022. In this paper, we discuss the four MIRI pointings that observed with longer wavelength filters, including F770W, F1000W, F1280W, F1500W, F1800W, and F2100W. We compare the MIRI galaxies with the Spitzer/MIPS 24$\mu$m population in the EGS field. We find that MIRI can observe an order of magnitude deeper than MIPS in significantly shorter integration times, attributable to JWST's much larger aperture and MIRI's improved sensitivity. MIRI is exceptionally good at finding faint ($L_{\rm IR}<10^{10} L_\odot$) galaxies at $z\sim1-2$. We find that a significant portion of MIRI galaxies are "mid-IR weak"--they have strong near-IR emission and relatively weaker mid-IR emission, and most of the star formation is unobscured. We present new IR templates that capture how the mid-IR to near-IR emission changes with increasing infrared luminosity. We present two color-color diagrams to separate mid-IR weak galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGN) from dusty star-forming galaxies and find that these color diagrams are most effective when used in conjunction with each other. We present the first number counts of 10$\mu$m sources and find that there are $\lesssim10$ IR AGN per MIRI pointing, possibly due to the difficulty of distinguishing AGN from intrinsically mid-IR weak galaxies (due to low metallicities or low dust content). We conclude that MIRI is most effective at observing moderate luminosity ($L_{\rm IR}=10^9-10^{10}L_\odot$) galaxies at $z=1-2$, and that photometry alone is not effective at identifying AGN within this faint population., Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures. Resubmitted to ApJS after revision
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- 2023
50. (O-D6) CP-”R” You Ready for Residency
- Author
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Saini, Amritpal, McNulty, Nora, Trump, Noah, Dhillon, Sandeep K., Singh, Maninder, and Restivo, Andrew
- Published
- 2024
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